Assassin's Creed Brotherhood is an action-adventure stealth title developed by Ubisoft Montreal and published by Ubisoft. The game continues the story of Ezio Auditore da Firenze, the Italian master assassin first introduced in Assassin's Creed II. Players step into Renaissance-era Rome, a sprawling open city filled with crowded markets, ancient ruins, and political intrigue. The main hook of the game centers on rebuilding the Assassin Brotherhood from the ground up after a devastating attack on Monteriggioni. Players climb cathedrals, sprint across rooftops, and blend into crowds while planning silent kills against members of the Templar Order. The free-running parkour system feels tighter than previous entries, and the combat introduces fluid counter chains that reward aggressive play. Side missions tied to the Borgia family give the city a sense of pressure, since burning watchtowers liberates districts and opens shops. The historical setting carries real weight, mixing fictional drama with figures like Cesare Borgia and Leonardo da Vinci. Brotherhood stands out as a turning point for the franchise on home consoles.
Updated: Jun 22, 2026
Screenshots

7.2 GB · GameCube ROMs
External mirror link — Roms Portal hosts no ROM files. Always verify a file's checksum against the known-good hash before use.
Specifications
| Platform | GameCube ROMs |
|---|---|
| Genre | Action |
| File Size | 7.2 GB |
| Developer | Ubisoft Montreal |
| Updated | Jun 22, 2026 |
Overview
Assassin's Creed Brotherhood is an action-adventure stealth title developed by Ubisoft Montreal and published by Ubisoft. The game continues the story of Ezio Auditore da Firenze, the Italian master assassin first introduced in Assassin's Creed II. Players step into Renaissance-era Rome, a sprawling open city filled with crowded markets, ancient ruins, and political intrigue. The main hook of the game centers on rebuilding the Assassin Brotherhood from the ground up after a devastating attack on Monteriggioni. Players climb cathedrals, sprint across rooftops, and blend into crowds while planning silent kills against members of the Templar Order. The free-running parkour system feels tighter than previous entries, and the combat introduces fluid counter chains that reward aggressive play. Side missions tied to the Borgia family give the city a sense of pressure, since burning watchtowers liberates districts and opens shops. The historical setting carries real weight, mixing fictional drama with figures like Cesare Borgia and Leonardo da Vinci. Brotherhood stands out as a turning point for the franchise on home consoles.
The game introduces a recruitment system that lets players train apprentice assassins and send them on contracts across Europe. Recruits gain experience, level up through ranks, and can be summoned during missions to support Ezio in tough fights. The arsenal grows to include the crossbow, poison darts, and a wrist-mounted pistol for ranged takedowns. Leonardo da Vinci side quests task players with destroying war machines such as a tank, a naval ship, and a flying glider. Multiplayer arrives for the first time in the series, pitting players against each other in tense hunter versus target matches across recreated historical locations. Modes like Wanted, Manhunt, and Alliance reward patience and disguise over brute force, giving the genre a fresh competitive angle. The single-player campaign runs roughly twenty hours, with dozens of optional tombs, glyph puzzles, and collectibles for completionists. Brotherhood polishes every system from its predecessor and delivers one of the strongest chapters in the Ezio trilogy on the GameCube hardware.