(Corrects Assassin’s Creed name in headline)
By Leo Marchandon
Feb 12 – French video game publisher Ubisoft confirmed its full-year financial targets on โThursday after third-quarter bookings exceeded company forecasts, driven by its flagship “Assassin’s โCreed” franchise.
Net bookings for the quarter reached 338 million euros ($402 million), up 12% year-on-year and โabove the 305 million euro guidance the company issued in November.
Ubisoft maintained its forecast for full-year bookings of around 1.5 billion euros and an operating loss of roughly 1 billion euros.
Ubisoft’s shares have fallen more than 80% from their โ2018 peak as the โ company grappled with game delays, weak execution, and investor concerns over its ability to return to profitability.
The guidance was initially โ announced in January when Ubisoft unveiled a reorganization that included cancelling six games and closing studios in Halifax, Canada, and Stockholm. The company had originally projected โ1.9 โbillion euros in bookings before the January โoverhaul, which split operations into โfive genre-focused divisions called “Creative Houses.”
The appointment of Creative House leadership will start in March and include external hires of industry veterans, Ubisoft said.
Ubisoft, also behind the “Far Cry” franchise, said its brands attracted around 130 million unique active users across consoles and PC in 2025. The third quarter’s outperformance was โdriven by solid performance from “Assassin’s Creed Shadows,” which โlaunched on Nintendo’s Switch 2 in December.
Ubisoft โsaid it expects cash reserves โof between 1.25 billion and 1.35 billion euros by โend-March, sufficient to cover a bond maturity โof just under โ500 million euros due in November 2027.
Chief Financial Officer Frederick Duguet said in a call the company is “looking at several options” to extend โthe average maturity โof its debt beyond that date. The company’s total debt stood โat 1.15 billion euros at end-September.
($1 = 0.8412 euros)
(Reporting by Leo Marchandon โin Gdansk; Editing by Matt Scuffham)



