Assassin's Creed II (Part 13)
The Florentine return β the game circling back to where Ezio started, the city whose beauty was always the canvas for the conspiracy that produced him. Corruption painting clearly is the game's ironic observation: the Renaissance is the period of Western civilization's most spectacular artistic production and its most baroque political violence, and the two are not unrelated. The picture corruption paints is the clearest because it does not need to maintain the performance the beauty requires.

