Assassin's Creed Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks
Getting Started
Assassin's Creed places you in the role of Desmond Miles, a modern-day man kidnapped by a shadowy pharmaceutical company called Abstergo Industries. Your captors force you to relive the genetic memories of your ancestor, Altaïr Ibn-La'Ahad, a master assassin operating during the Third Crusade in the year 1191. Before diving into the historical sandbox, you must navigate a brief but crucial modern-day prologue.
The Animus and the Boot Sequence
When you first gain control of Desmond, you are confined to the Animus room. Interact with the device to trigger a tutorial sequence set in a virtual void. This segment teaches you the absolute basics of movement, camera control, and simple combat. Pay close attention here, as the game does not offer a way to replay this basic tutorial once you progress. After completing the virtual tests, you will officially wake up in the Animus room as Desmond.
Desmond's Room
Do not ignore your surroundings before jumping back into the Animus. Approach the bed and examine the items to trigger short dialogue sequences with your captor, Dr. Warren Vidic, and his assistant, Lucy Stillman. These conversations establish the overarching narrative and provide essential context for the historical memories you are about to experience. Furthermore, interacting with Lucy and examining the computer monitors early on sets up the meta-narrative that carries through the rest of the franchise.
Entering the Animus
Once you have exhausted the dialogue options in the room, approach the Animus chair and press the interaction button. You will be transported to Masyaf, the mountain stronghold of the Assassin Brotherhood. There is no character creation in Assassin's Creed; you are playing a strictly linear narrative as Altaïr. However, you do have control over his progression. At the start of the game, Altaïr is arrogant and reckless, which results in him being stripped of his rank and weapons. Your primary goal is to help him reclaim his former glory by completing missions and restoring his arsenal.

Core Mechanics
Assassin's Creed was revolutionary upon release because it introduced a movement system that completely removed the concept of "fall damage" from platforming. Understanding how the game interprets your button inputs is the key to mastering its world.
Social Stealth
Unlike stealth games that rely on hiding in shadows, Assassin's Creed uses social stealth. The fundamental rule is that Altaïr must blend into the crowd to remain undetected. If you run across rooftops, scale walls in plain view, or draw your weapon near guards, your notoriety will increase, indicated by a glowing yellow or red sync meter around Altaïr's head. To lower your notoriety, you must break the line of sight of the guards and then perform a "blending" action, such as sitting on a bench or walking slowly within a group of scholars.
The Free-Running System
The game uses a context-sensitive button system for movement. Holding the "High Profile" button (typically the Right Trigger on Xbox or R2 on PlayStation) shifts Altaïr into an athletic mode. In this mode, if you push the movement stick forward, Altaïr will sprint. If you point the camera at a wall and hold the legs button (typically A or X), Altaïr will automatically scale the architecture. The left analogue stick dictates direction, while the "High Profile" and "Legs" buttons dictate speed and elevation. You rarely need to look for specific ledges; simply holding the correct buttons and pointing the camera where you want to go will prompt Altaïr to find a path.
Eagle Vision
Pressing the Eagle Vision button (usually Y or Triangle) shifts the screen to a high-contrast, grayscale filter. This is your most vital investigative tool. In Eagle Vision, friendly targets and allies glow blue. Enemies and hostile targets glow red. Points of interest, such as investigation targets or hidden items, glow gold. Use this frequently during investigation phases to avoid wasting time chasing down dead ends.
The Synchronization System
Your health in the historical world is represented by a synchronization bar. Because you are reliving a memory, you cannot technically "die." Instead, taking damage or killing innocent civilians desynchronizes you from Altaïr's true memories. If the bar fully depletes, the memory resets. You can replenish synchronization by resting at Assassin Bureau locations or by successfully performing low-profile actions, such as quietly assassinating a target without being spotted.

Early Game Tips
The first few hours in Masyaf and the surrounding cities of Damascus and Jerusalem can be overwhelming due to the sheer size of the crowds and the map. Prioritizing the right actions will make your transition from novice to master assassin much smoother.
- Save the Citizens: Whenever you hear a woman screaming, immediately track down the source. Rescuing citizens from aggressive guards yields two massive rewards. First, they will expand your " synchronization bar" by one block, making you significantly more resilient in combat. Second, they will provide a group of vigilantes who will hold back pursuing guards, giving you an easy escape route.
- Map Out the City: Before doing anything else in a new district, climb the Viewpoints. These are tall towers marked on your map. Synchronizing from the top not only reveals the map and nearby investigation icons, but it also acts as a fast-travel point. A fully revealed map saves hours of aimless wandering.
- Do All Investigations: Before attempting an assassination, you must complete a certain number of investigation missions (eavesdropping, pickpocketing, interrogation, and informer races). While the game only requires you to do a fraction of them, completing all available investigations often reveals bonus information about your target or unlocks special assassination strategies that make the actual kill much easier.
- Walk, Don't Run, Near Guards: Sprinting everywhere is the fastest way to get yourself into a fight you don't want. When navigating crowded streets, especially near guards, ease off the "High Profile" button. Altaïr will adopt a casual walking pace that draws zero attention.
- Use the Horse: The Kingdom—the massive stretch of land connecting the three main cities—is dangerous to traverse on foot. Always use a horse to move between cities. While on a horse, you can gallop past guards without automatically triggering a chase, provided you don't trample any civilians.

Common Mistakes to Avoid
Many players bounce off the original Assassin's Creed because they approach it like a standard action game. Avoiding these critical errors will drastically improve your experience.
- Fighting Instead of Fleeing: This is the number one mistake new players make. Combat in the original Assassin's Creed is slow, clunky, and repetitive. You are an assassin, not a soldier. If you are spotted after an assassination, immediately break line of sight, find a rooftop, hide in a hay bale, or blend with scholars. Standing your ground against ten guards is a recipe for desynchronization.
- Killing Innocent Civilians: Striking a civilian instantly drains a large portion of your synchronization bar and makes every guard in the immediate vicinity aggressive toward you. There is never a strategic reason to kill a civilian. If you accidentally hit one during a fight, immediately flee.
- Rushing the Main Target: Entering an assassination mission without gathering enough intelligence will leave you disoriented. The target will be heavily guarded, and you will lack the knowledge of alternate entry points or escape routes provided by the investigation missions.
- Ignoring the Hidden Blade Counter: Many players rely solely on the sword for combat. The hidden blade is actually your most powerful weapon because it guarantees an instant kill. Mastering the hidden blade counter-attack makes every encounter trivial, but failing to master it makes combat a frustrating slog.
- Forgetting to Return to the Bureau: After you assassinate a target, you are tasked with returning to the local Assassin Bureau to speak with the Rafiq (your handler). If you immediately fast-travel to another city, you will miss out on the narrative closure for that assassination and fail to progress the story properly.
- Panicking During Chases: When the alert status goes red, players often scramble up the nearest wall and just sit there. Guards in this game are exceptional climbers. If you climb a wall and stop, they will follow you up and kill you. You must keep moving, utilizing leap-of-faiths into hay carts, and utilizing the vigilantes saved from scholars to break the chase.

Essential Controls & Settings
Understanding the dual-layer control scheme is vital. The face buttons are divided into two categories: the head, the feet, the weapon hand, and the empty hand. How these buttons behave depends entirely on whether you are holding the "High Profile" button.
Key Bindings Breakdown
- Head (Y / Triangle): In Low Profile, this triggers Eagle Vision. In High Profile, it is used to target enemies during combat or lock onto interactive objects.
- Feet (A / X): In Low Profile, this makes Altaïr walk or step backwards/forwards gently. In High Profile, this makes Altaïr sprint, jump, and scale walls.
- Weapon Hand (X / Square): In Low Profile, this gently pushes civilians out of the way without hurting them. In High Profile, this swings your currently equipped weapon to attack.
- Empty Hand (B / Circle): In Low Profile, this is your primary defense button, used to grab and throw enemies or gently blend. In High Profile, this triggers a dodge, a break-free maneuver, or the "Leap of Faith" when standing near an edge.
Recommended Settings
If you are playing a modern port of the game, take a few moments to adjust the settings before starting.
- Camera Sensitivity: Increase the horizontal and vertical sensitivity slightly above the default. The default camera speed is notoriously slow, making it difficult to track fast-moving guards or reorient yourself during a chase.
- Invert Y-Axis: Set this according to your personal preference, but be aware that the game's climbing mechanics rely heavily on precise camera angles. Ensure whatever setting you choose feels completely natural before leaving Masyaf.
- Vibration/Controller Rumble: Keep this turned on. The controller provides distinct haptic feedback when you are near a ledge, when you successfully lock onto an enemy, and when a guard is about to strike. It is a crucial layer of communication from the game.
- Subtitles: Turn these on. The game features a mix of English voice acting and historical languages (like Arabic and French). The accents can sometimes be thick, and the subtitles will help you catch the nuances of the investigation dialogue.
Progression System
Because Altaïr begins the game as a Master Assassin who is stripped of his rank for breaking the tenets of the Creed, the progression system is framed as a restoration of his lost abilities rather than traditional leveling.
The Rank System
There are ten ranks in the Assassin Brotherhood, starting at Rank 10 (Novice) and ending at Rank 1 (Master Assassin). You cannot gain experience points by killing random guards. The only way to increase your rank is to successfully assassinate a high-profile target and report back to the Assassin Bureau. There are nine main targets in the game, meaning you will rank up after almost every major assassination.
Weapon and Skill Unlocks
As you move up in rank, the Rafiq will return a piece of your equipment or grant you a new skill. The progression follows a strict path:
- Rank 9: Restores the Hidden Blade (your primary assassination tool).
- Rank 8: Unlocks the Counter-Attack ability, allowing you to instantly kill an enemy who strikes at you while you are holding the defense button.
- Rank 7: Restores the Short Blade (a faster, weaker weapon ideal for quick strikes).
- Rank 6: Unlocks the Throwing Knives, allowing you to eliminate targets from a distance without breaking stealth.
- Rank 5: Restores the Longsword (your primary melee weapon for sustained combat).
- Rank 3: Unlocks the Grab-Break ability, allowing you to escape if a guard grabs you.
- Rank 2: Unlocks the Dodge ability, letting you sidestep incoming attacks.
- Rank 1: Unlocks the ability to perform a Counter-Attack with the Hidden Blade. This is the ultimate skill in the game, turning Altaïr into an unstoppable force.
Synchronization Bar Upgrades
Separate from your rank is your health bar. You start with a mere five blocks of synchronization. Every time you save a citizen (up to a certain cap per city), your maximum synchronization increases. Upgrading this bar is absolutely necessary to survive the later assassination missions, where archers will constantly shoot at you and bosses deal massive damage. Always prioritize saving citizens in new districts before taking on investigations.
Resources & Where to Find Help
While the original Assassin's Creed is a standalone experience, its age means that some of its mechanics can feel obscure to modern gamers. If you find yourself stuck or simply want to deepen your understanding of the lore, there are several excellent resources available.
Community Hubs
- r/assassinscreed (Reddit): This is the largest active community for the franchise. If you have a specific question about a boss fight or a mechanical quirk, searching this subreddit will almost certainly yield an answer. The community is generally very welcoming to newcomers playing the older titles for the first time.
- Assassin's Creed Wiki (Fandom): An exhaustive database containing detailed breakdowns of every weapon, every target, and every piece of optional dialogue in the game. If you want to know exactly how many flags are in the Kingdom or the specific historical context of a side character, this is the place to look.
Video Guides
- YouTube Walkthroughs: Because the game is older, there are hundreds of high-quality, text-free walkthroughs available. If you are stuck on an investigation mission that seems bugged (a common issue in older open-world games), watching a two-minute clip of someone else completing the mission is the fastest way to unstick yourself.
- Hidden Blade Counter Tutorials: Searching YouTube specifically for "AC1 Hidden Blade Counter" is highly recommended. Because the timing window for this specific move is much stricter than the standard sword counter, watching a visual demonstration of when to press the button is incredibly helpful.
Lore Expansion
- The Codex: As you play, you will unlock codex pages written by Altaïr. Reading these in the pause menu provides fantastic background lore that contextualizes the war between the Assassins and the Templars. Do not skip these if you care about the story.
- Assassin's Creed: The Secret Crusade (Novel): If you finish the game and want more of Altaïr's story, this novelization covers his entire life, including the events of the game and what happens to him after the credits roll. It fills in many narrative gaps left by the original game.





