Assassin's creed mirage Ever wondered what separates the Hidden Ones from the Assassins we know and love? Welcome to Baghdad, 861 CEâwhere the shadows hold more secrets than the light.
Introduction: More Than Just Proto-Assassins
When you slip through the bustling streets of 9th-century Baghdad in Assassin's Creed Mirage, you're not just playing as an early Assassinâyou're experiencing something fundamentally different. The Hidden Ones weren't simply "Assassins before they were cool." They were their own distinct organization with unique philosophies, tactics, and goals that would evolve over centuries into the Brotherhood we recognize.
But here's what most players miss: Basim's Hidden Ones operate at the peak of their power, nearly 900 years after Bayek and Aya founded the order in ancient Egypt. By the time we reach Baghdad, they've become something remarkableâand understanding their true nature reveals why the Assassin's Creed universe is so much richer than surface-level stealth gameplay.
Historical Context: Baghdad's Golden Reality
The Baghdad of AC Mirage isn't just atmospheric set dressingâit's a meticulously researched recreation of one of history's most remarkable cities. According to historians who consulted on the game, 9th-century Baghdad was the largest city in the world, serving as the crown jewel of the Islamic Golden Age under the Abbasid Caliphate.
The real Baghdad of 861 CE was a city where:
The House of Wisdom served as a global center of learning, translating Greek, Persian, and Indian texts into Arabic
Multiple trade routes converged, making it incredibly wealthy and cosmopolitan Â
Political intrigue ran deep, with Turkish military forces clashing with Abbasid elites
The Zanj Rebellions were creating social upheaval across the region
What makes Mirage special is that much of this history was lost when the Mongols destroyed Baghdad in 1258, burning libraries and scholarly works. As the game's art director noted, "This is uncharted territoryânobody knows that time period really well." Ubisoft essentially had to reconstruct a lost world from fragments.
The original Baghdad was designed as a perfectly round city by Caliph Al-Mansur in 762 CE, but by Basim's time, it had grown far beyond those geometric walls. The game captures this organic expansion beautifullyâsprawling neighborhoods, bustling markets, and most importantly for the Hidden Ones, countless rooftops and hidden passages perfect for their operations.
Game vs. Reality: The Hidden Ones' Evolution
What the Hidden Ones Actually Were
Here's where it gets fascinating: the Hidden Ones in Mirage represent something historians call the "institutional phase" of the pre-Assassin Brotherhood. Unlike Bayek's desperate resistance movement in Origins, Basim's Hidden Ones are:
Highly organized with established bureaus and hierarchies
Politically connected to government officials and rebel leaders
Tactically sophisticated using poison, explosives, and information networks
Ideologically mature with fully developed tenets and training systems
But they're also fundamentally different from later Assassins in crucial ways:
The Hidden Ones prioritized:
Subtlety over spectacle â assassinations were means to an end, not messages
Flexibility over dogma â they'd let others take credit if it served their goals
Information over intimidation â knowledge was their primary weapon
Later Assassins (pre-AltaĂŻr) emphasized:
Public executions as statements of defiance
Martyrdom as an acceptable outcome
Open confrontation with established powers
One detail Mirage gets historically right: Alamut fortress appears in the game as a Hidden Ones stronghold. In reality, this would become the legendary base of Hassan-i SabbÄh's Assassins centuries later. The game subtly suggests this continuityâthe Hidden Ones are already building the infrastructure that would later become the Assassin Brotherhood's power base.
Player Strategies: Using Lore for Better Gameplay
Understanding the Hidden Ones' true nature actually makes you a better player:
Embrace the Ghost Approach
Unlike later Assassins who sometimes favored dramatic confrontations, Hidden Ones were masters of invisibility. The game rewards players who:
Complete missions without raising alarms
Use environmental kills over direct combat
Leverage NPC factions against each other
The Hidden Ones operated as information brokers first, killers second. Pay attention to:
Conversations that reveal faction weaknesses
Documents that expose corrupt officials
NPCs who can be turned into assets
One key difference from later Assassin doctrine: Hidden Ones had no prohibition against poison. The game's blow darts and poisoned weapons aren't just gameplay mechanicsâthey're historically accurate tools that later Assassins (briefly) rejected as "coward's weapons."
The Symbolism Behind the Creed
Every Hidden One symbol in Mirage connects to Bayek's eagle companion, Senu. The iconic Assassin crest itself originated from an eagle skull impression in sandâa detail the creative team discovered years before they knew its significance. When you activate Eagle Vision in Baghdad, you're channeling a 900-year-old tradition.
The Hidden Blade's Sacrifice
By Basim's time, the ritual finger removal has become symbolic rather than necessary. The Hidden Ones have perfected their blade design, but they maintain the tradition as a sign of commitment. This represents the organization's evolution from desperate improvisation to refined doctrine.
That distinctive white hood wasn't just styleâin the blazing heat of Baghdad and earlier Egypt, it served the practical purpose of sun protection. The game captures this perfectly in its cloth physics and how NPCs react to hooded figures in different districts.
Community Questions: What Do You Think?
After diving deep into Hidden Ones lore, I'm curious about your experiences:
Which Hidden One ability surprised you most and why? The smoke bombs? The noise-makers? Or something more subtle like the information-gathering mechanics?
Do you prefer the Hidden Ones' subtle approach or the later Assassins' more dramatic methods? There's something appealing about being a ghost vs. being a symbol of rebellion.
What details did you notice in Baghdad that made the historical setting feel authentic? The call to prayer? The market conversations? The political intrigue in the background?
How do you think Hassan-i SabbÄh will transform this organization in the next century? We know from history that major changes are comingâwhat's your theory on why?
The Legacy That Shapes Everything
The Hidden Ones of Baghdad represent the evolutionary bridge between Bayek's desperate resistance and AltaĂŻr's legendary Brotherhood. They're not just proto-Assassinsâthey're the institutional memory that preserves the Creed through its most crucial centuries.
When you play as Basim, you're not just experiencing a prequel. You're witnessing the moment when a secret society became a shadow empire that would influence world history for the next millennium.
What aspect of Hidden Ones lore fascinated you most? Drop your theories in the commentsâI love discussing the deeper layers of AC's historical worldbuilding!