Ubisoft is going back to its hacker-centric open-world formula with Watch Dogs: Legion, which marks the third game in the series. It looks to expand on the central ideas of the series pretty significantly. You'll still use your amped-up smartphone to hack the planet in every mission, activating and deactivating security cameras, alarms, weapons, traffic lights, and other connected devices at a whim. But with Legion, Ubisoft is adding a lot of systems that make the world of hacker group DedSec feel deeper and more customizable. You're not just a part of a hacker revolution--you're building it from the ground up.
With the imminent launch of Watch Dogs: Legion, we've compiled everything we've learned about the game, including the release date, next-gen version details, multiplayer, and more. We'll continue to update this as more information like our incoming review.
Table of Contents [hide]Watch Dogs: Legion Review -- 8/10Release Date And Will It Be On PS5/Xbox Series X|S?Will It Support Cross-Gen Saves?What Is Watch Dogs: Legion?How Legion's NPC System WorksTrailers And GameplayIs There Multiplayer?PC System SpecsDLC/Post-Launch Content
Speaking of which, Watch Dogs: Legion is set to release on next-gen consoles. It will arrive as a launch title for both Microsoft's Xbox Series X|S and PS5 on November 10 and November 12 respectively. Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot said the game will "take full advantage" of the power of those machines.
In Watch Dogs 2, Ubisoft switched to a new character, Marcus, and his group of anarchist hackers known as DedSec. In that game, ctOS had spread to San Francisco, and the hackers were trying to overthrow the system and free the city. It also had a fairly political bent, satirizing tech culture in the city and leaning into a few charged topics of the modern world, such as police violence against minorities and people of color.
Watch Dogs: Legion continues down the path set by Watch Dogs 2. You're again working with DedSec, but things have gone full-on dystopia. The game is set in a possible future of our current world, taking place in a post-Brexit London that has become a police state as the government has struggled to deal with the fallout from the current political climate. Instead of joining a hacker collective of various characters as in Watch Dogs 2, however, in Legion, you're building DedSec from the start of the game. You do that by recruiting various non-player characters into the fold. The biggest change in Legion is the fact that every character in the game could potentially become a player character if you do what's necessary to recruit them, which includes exercising your hacker abilities to learn about their backstories, changing their opinions about DedSec, and completing loyalty missions to turn them to your cause. Any NPC in the city is a potential recruit, and they all have randomized abilities and foibles that can make them assets to your team under the right circumstances.
While most of the hacking gameplay systems from the past two games persist into Legion, it's the NPC system that really sets it apart.
The Profiler is an essential tool in Legion, however. Every time you use it to scan an NPC in the game, you learn key information about that person. You'll see their occupation and what they're currently up to--all the NPCs have jobs and schedules in Legion--as well as their intrinsic traits. A given person might deal significantly more melee damage than other characters, or be adept at hacking. They might also have physical ailments; one elderly character we played at E3 was a great hacker but physically weak, and moved more slowly than our other recruits because of her advanced age. (In the same way you learn about potential recruits, you can also use the Profiler on enemies to learn their strengths and weaknesses ahead of a battle.)
You'll also receive a little backstory about each NPC you scan and get a look at their opinion on DedSec. The authorities in London consider DedSec a terrorist organization and rail against it in the media, so some people have a critical view of the hackers, while others are more sympathetic to their cause.
In order to recruit an NPC, you first need to raise their opinion of DedSec, which you can do by helping them with their problems you learn about from the Profiler or doing deeds they appreciate in a Robin Hood-like way. Characters also remember negative things about DedSec's actions, so you'll need to be careful about what you do and how people see you. As you raise those opinions, you'll eventually get a chance to complete a specific mission for that character tied to their backstory. One character we recruited at E3 was being blackmailed by corrupt cops, requiring us to infiltrate New Scotland Yard and erase the dirt they had on our would-be DedSec addition. After completing the mission, the guy joined up, which added him to the roster of up to 20 DedSec characters we could have at any given time.
Once you have characters, you open up a host of other systems related to them. Legion includes three character classes, and when you get a new recruit, you assign them one of your choice:
Enforcer, a combat-heavy class for characters who are good at shooting.Infiltrator, a class better suited for stealth and melee fighting, with the ability to briefly become invisible.Hacker, a class that can control London's police drones and gets a spider bot to help with sneaking around, manipulating computers.You generally want to choose classes for your characters that align with their intrinsic traits; melee fighters are better as Infiltrators, while characters who can soak up a lot of damage make good Enforcers, and so on. Playing as your character can also level them up to unlock additional abilities and perks over time, so it's worth investing time in your recruits.
As you recruit characters, you'll be able to switch to them on the fly whenever you want. Since everybody still has a job and a schedule, characters you're not playing as will go about their lives in the meantime; when you swap to them, you'll find them wherever they are in the city. When you're not using characters, they're still an active part of the group, however. They'll chime in on the radio to comment on your missions and actions, and some have passive perks that can affect your gameplay even when they're not around. In our E3 demo, we found ourselves fleeing police, and got a notification that another character's passive trait would increase police response times to make it a bit easier to get away. Abilities like that effectively make it feel as if the rest of DedSec is working with you and helping you out, even when they're not around.
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Watch Dogs Legion Full Presentation | Ubisoft Forward 2020
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If you're more interested in uninterrupted gameplay, you can check out our video showcasing 20 minutes of footage where we took on a serious story mission in the game about AI tech gone horribly wrong and human trafficking.
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20 Minutes of Surprisingly Serious Gameplay - Watch Dogs: Legion
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CPU: Intel Core i7-4790 / AMD Ryzen 5 1600GPU: Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 / GTX 1660 Super / AMD Radeon RX 480VRAM: 6GBRAM: 8GB (Dual-Channel)Storage: 45GBHigh / 1440p
CPU: Intel Core i7-9700 / AMD Ryzen 5 3600GPU: Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 Super / AMD RX 5700VRAM: 8GBRAM: 16GB (Dual-Channel)Storage: 45GBUltra / 4K
CPU: Intel Core i7-9700k / AMD Ryzen 7 3700XGPU: Nvidia RTX 2080 Ti / RTX 3080VRAM: 10GBRAM: 16GB (Dual-Channel)Storage: 45GB (+20GB for high resolution texture pack)High / 1080p / Ray Tracing Medium
CPU: Intel Core i5-8400 / AMD Ryzen 5 2600GPU: Nvidia RTX 2060VRAM: 6GBRAM: 16GB (Dual-Channel)Storage: 45GBDLSS: QualityVery High / 1440p / Ray Tracing High
CPU: Intel Core i7-9700 / AMD Ryzen 5 3600GPU: Nvidia RTX 3070VRAM: 8GBRAM: 16GB (Dual-Channel)Storage: 45GBDLSS: QualityUltra / 4K / Ray Tracing Ultra
CPU: Intel Core i9-9900k / AMD Ryzen 7 3700XGPU: Nvidia RTX 3080VRAM: 10GBRAM: 16GB (Dual-Channel)Storage: 45GB (+20GB for high resolution texture pack)DLSS: Performance
The first paid DLC (as part of a paid season pass) is called Bloodline. It stars the original Watch Dogs protagonist Aiden Pearce who is supported by Watch Dogs 2 character Wrench, both of which are both playable. The expansion will bring players up to speed on each character and what they've been up to since the events of their previous games' stories. You can find out more about the game's DLC plans in our detailed Watch Dogs: Legion post-launch content explainer.