Assassins Creed Connor Saga [work] Jun 2026
They fought, then fought together—a temporary, hateful alliance against a common British officer. For a single, terrible moment, Connor saw what could have been: a father and son, back to back. But Haytham smiled, and the smile was a lie wrapped in silk.
To experience the full Assassin’s Creed Connor Saga in chronological order, follow this path: Assassins Creed Connor Saga
Forsaken redeems the Connor Saga by showing that Haytham’s dying “no” wasn't hate—it was resignation. Connor understands this years later, which makes his loneliness even more profound. To experience the full Assassin’s Creed Connor Saga
He met his father again. Haytham Kenway, Grand Master of the Colonial Templars, elegant and cold as a steel trap. They did not embrace. They circled each other like wolves. Haytham Kenway, Grand Master of the Colonial Templars,
“No,” he said. “He was a man who loved too much. And that is the only kind of hero worth remembering.”
This narrative detour served as a metaphysical exploration of Connor’s identity. By rejecting the Assassin robes and embracing the Animal Spirits, the game highlighted the part of Connor that Assassin’s Creed III often kept in the background: his spirituality. It was a "What If?" scenario that allowed the character to be a fantasy hero, providing a strange, surreal counterpoint to the grounded tragedy of the main game.
The video games don't tell the whole story. The Connor Saga is significantly expanded in written media, specifically the official novel Assassin’s Creed: Forsaken by Oliver Bowden.