Far Cry 7 Leaks Reveal Alaska Setting, Protagonist Options, and a Surprising Multiplayer Twist
The Far Cry franchise has been quiet for nearly five years — and apparently, Ubisoft has been busy. A wave of new Far Cry 7 leaks surfaced this week, and if even half of them turn out to be accurate, the next chapter in the series could be one of Ubisoft’s most ambitious projects in years. From a snowy Alaskan setting to a merged multiplayer experience, here’s everything that’s reportedly in the works.
What We Know So Far: The Source Behind the Leaks
Before diving in, context matters. The leaks come from a known Ubisoft insider who goes by “Rogue” — a source with a mixed but notable track record. Rogue has recently come forward with details on Assassin’s Creed Hexe as well, including protagonist name, setting, and Ezio’s return, some of which has since gained corroboration from other leakers. A second source, xJonathan — who has a long history of leaking Assassin’s Creed information — has also backed up parts of Rogue’s claims.
That doesn’t make any of this confirmed. Ubisoft has said nothing officially, and leaks — even from credible sources — carry real risk of being outdated, misinterpreted, or simply wrong. With that caveat firmly in place, what Rogue is describing is genuinely interesting.
Far Cry 7 Is Reportedly Set in Alaska
A Freezing New Frontier for the Franchise
According to the leaks, Far Cry 7 takes players to Alaska — a dramatic departure from the tropical and subtropical settings the series has leaned on heavily since Far Cry 3. From the jungles of Rook Island to the Caribbean shores of Far Cry 6’s Yara, open warmth has defined the franchise’s visual identity for well over a decade.
Alaska represents something genuinely different. Think vast frozen wilderness, isolated communities, and an oppressive sense of remoteness that could serve the series’ signature atmosphere of survival and escalating chaos extremely well. In our view at Dr Gamez, this is one of the most exciting location choices the franchise could have made — the environmental storytelling potential alone is enormous.
Rogue also reportedly shared an audio clip from what they claim is an actual Far Cry 7 trailer before it was hit with a DMCA takedown. The clip apparently features generic action music layered beneath a very deliberate ticking clock — which ties directly into the next major detail.
The Time-Based Mechanic Is Apparently Real
Earlier rumors suggested Far Cry 7 would involve a time-based mechanic alongside a story centered on rescuing family members. Rogue’s latest leaks confirm this storyline is genuine, though specific details on how the time mechanic functions remain unclear. Whether it’s a countdown timer, a day/night cycle tied to narrative stakes, or something more systemic isn’t known yet — but that ticking clock in the audio clip is a hard hint in the direction of urgency-based gameplay.
The Villain, the Protagonist, and What’s Changed
Cillian Murphy Is Not the Villain
One of the more exciting rumors circulating in the Far Cry community over the past several months was that Cillian Murphy — fresh off his Oppenheimer success — was set to play the main villain. Rogue flatly denies this. The Murphy rumor, it seems, has officially been put to rest.
Who is playing the villain? That’s still unknown. But the denial of such a high-profile casting choice is notable in itself — it suggests whoever Ubisoft has lined up might be a genuine surprise rather than a big-name Hollywood get.
Multiple Protagonist Options Are Coming Back
On the player character front, Rogue shared an early development image of what they describe as “one” of the Far Cry 7 protagonists. The wording is significant — the use of “one” strongly implies multiple playable characters or gender options will return, continuing the approach introduced in Far Cry 6 with Dani Rojas.
The image itself is described as unremarkable — an early dev model with a bearded appearance — and Rogue acknowledges it may have changed significantly since. Early dev character models almost always do. What matters here is the confirmation that player choice in protagonist presentation appears to be staying in the franchise.
The Biggest Surprise: Single-Player and Multiplayer Are Now One Game
Two Projects Merged Into One
This is arguably the most significant piece of news in the entire leak. According to Rogue, Far Cry 7 was originally being developed alongside a separate multiplayer-focused title — two distinct projects running in parallel. That plan has since changed. The two projects have been merged into a single game.
What that means in practice is that Far Cry 7 will ship with both a traditional single-player campaign and an integrated multiplayer component. Rogue describes the multiplayer portion as an extraction-style mode, set on its own dedicated map called “Paradise Park” — entirely separate from the main campaign’s world.
Why This Actually Makes Sense
At Dr Gamez, we think this is a smarter move than it might initially appear. The live-service, free-to-play multiplayer experiment era has been brutal for publishers — Ubisoft itself has learned this the hard way with multiple high-profile stumbles. Bundling a multiplayer mode with the main game rather than spinning it out as a standalone product follows a model that worked well for franchises throughout the PS3 and Xbox 360 era, where games like Far Cry 2 and 3 shipped with robust multiplayer without trying to compete with dedicated live-service titles.
An extraction mode set in a location called Paradise Park also carries interesting tonal possibilities. Far Cry’s villains have often built cult-like communities with warped ideas of paradise — the name alone opens up strong narrative and thematic territory.
When Could Far Cry 7 Be Announced?
Rogue’s take is that an announcement this year is entirely possible — Summer Game Fest or a dedicated Ubisoft showcase this summer are the most logical windows. However, the game itself is not expected to release in 2026. A 2027 launch window appears more realistic, which would put it alongside Assassin’s Creed Hexe in what could be a genuinely strong year for Ubisoft if both deliver.
It’s worth remembering that Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Resynced launches on July 9, 2026, and its success or failure will likely influence how aggressively Ubisoft pushes its next wave of major releases. A strong showing from Resynced gives the publisher momentum heading into whatever comes next.
What This Means for Far Cry Fans
Five years is a long time between mainline entries. Far Cry 6, while visually impressive and narratively ambitious, was met with a mixed reception from long-time fans who felt the series needed more than a new location and antagonist. The changes being described for Far Cry 7 — a new environment, a time-based mechanic, merged multiplayer, and what sounds like a genuine structural rethink — suggest Ubisoft is aware that the formula needs evolution, not just iteration.
Alaska as a setting pushes the franchise into genuinely unfamiliar territory. A time mechanic introduces stakes that could fundamentally change how players approach the open world. And an extraction multiplayer mode, bundled with the main game rather than sold separately, avoids the live-service trap that has burned so many publishers in recent years.
None of this is confirmed. Ubisoft could walk out at Summer Game Fest with something completely different from what Rogue has described. But if the leaks hold up, Far Cry 7 looks like it could be exactly the reinvention the franchise needs.
So — what’s your reaction to these leaks? Does an Alaskan Far Cry excite you, or are you skeptical Ubisoft can pull off a genuine reinvention? Drop your thoughts in the comments below and let us know what you’d most want to see from Far Cry 7.
