Gaming Guide

Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced: Microtransaction Pricing Explained

The in-game store adds up to more than the game itself, even after you buy the Deluxe Edition.

The in-game store adds up to more than the game itself, even after you buy the Deluxe Edition.

Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced launched on July 9, 2026 to solid reviews, sitting at an 84 on Metacritic, but the in-game store quickly became the biggest talking point. The remake carries paid microtransactions on top of its $59.99 base price, and buying every extra costs more than the game does.

Quick answer: The optional in-game purchases can total roughly $85 to $90, which is more than the $69.99 Deluxe Edition. None of them are required to finish the single-player campaign, and the Deluxe Edition does not unlock the full store.

Image credit: Ubisoft

What the in-game store charges

The store sells cosmetic packs, gear with perks, and time-savers. Bought in full, these add-ons run higher than the standalone game and higher than the Deluxe Edition that many buyers assumed would cover everything. The point of friction is simple. Paying $59.99 or $69.99 does not give you the complete set of items, and closing that gap costs more than the box price.

ItemPrice
Standard Edition (base game)$59.99
Deluxe Edition$69.99
Full in-game microtransaction store~$85 to $90

The purchases are optional. You do not have to spend anything beyond the game price to complete the campaign, and the extras are cosmetic packs, gear, and time-savers rather than story content.

Image credit: Ubisoft

What the Deluxe Edition actually includes

The Deluxe Edition costs $10 more than Standard and bundles two extra packs plus the pre-order bonus. Its contents are mostly cosmetic, with a few small gameplay perks attached to gear and ship customization. It does not include the items sold separately in the store.

Deluxe Edition contentsWhat it adds
Base gameThe full remake
Blackbeard’s Crimson PackCostume, sword, and pistol (also the pre-order bonus)
Master Assassin Character PackCostume, swords, pistols, and a trinket with perks
Master Assassin Naval PackSails, ship pet, crew outfit, wheel, figurehead, and hull trim

Note: The Deluxe packs are the ceiling on bundled extras. Anything beyond them, and the wider store catalog, is a separate purchase on top of the edition you already own.

Image credit: Ubisoft

The other launch complaints

Pricing was not the only sticking point at launch. Several issues pushed early Steam reviews toward mixed before they recovered to mostly positive.

  • Cutscenes are locked at 30 FPS, which stands out against the rest of the game running at higher frame rates.
  • Some players describe the menus as a promotion for Assassin’s Creed Shadows, since viewing certain item stats requires owning that game.
  • Reports say Ubisoft removed players’ accumulated UPlay points.

The underlying game earned praise for its visuals and reworked mechanics. The frustration comes from paying $59.99 or more and still running into a paid store, capped cutscene frame rates, and cross-promotion inside the menus.


Which edition to pick

For most players, the Standard Edition covers everything that matters in play. It contains the full remake with all of the new systems and content. The Deluxe Edition adds only cosmetics and minor perks, so the $10 upgrade is worthwhile only if those items appeal to you. Neither edition unlocks the store, and buying the full store catalog is the expensive path that costs more than the game.

You can compare the current editions and prices directly on the game’s Steam store page before deciding whether any of the extras are worth it. If you only want to play through Black Flag again with its updated visuals and combat, the base game is enough, and the store items stay optional throughout.

Image credit: Ubisoft