‘Wazir’ is a tale of two unlikely friends, a wheelchair-bound chess grandmaster and a brave ATS officer. Brought together by grief and a strange twist of fate, the two men decide to help each other win the biggest games of their lives. But there’s a mysterious, dangerous opponent lurking in the shadows, who is all set to checkmate them
The film's soundtrack album was composed by a number of artists: Shantanu Moitra, Ankit Tiwari, Advaita, Prashant Pillai, Rochak Kohli and Gaurav Godkhindi.The background score was composed by Rohit Kulkarni while the lyrics were penned by Vidhu Vinod Chopra, Swanand Kirkire, A. M. Turaz, Manoj Muntashir and Abhijeet Deshpande. The album rights of the film were acquired by T-Series, and it was released on 18 December 2015.
It wasn’t about costumes or game soundtracks. It detailed how the Assassin Brotherhood had, for centuries, embedded training into everyday rituals. A specific way of folding a scarf? That was a signal for a dead drop. A recipe for Florentine schiacciata? The herbs masked the smell of gunpowder. A certain yoga pose— Downward-Facing Eagle —was actually a breathing exercise to slow the heart before a leap of faith.
She clicked.
She was a lifestyle content creator— Curated by Mira , 200k followers, all beige sweaters and morning pour-overs. But her secret obsession was Assassin’s Creed . Not the parkour or the stabbing. The lore . The meticulous, insane, real-world-adjacent history that Ubisoft had woven into its digital DNA.
She smiled. Saved the file to a hidden folder. And for the first time, her lifestyle content felt like more than entertainment.
Her phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number: “We enjoyed your video on Venetian architecture. The camera angle at 4:22 showed the Basilica’s blind spot. Care to collaborate? —L.”
Mira scrolled past entries on Altair’s hidden blades, the Apple of Eden, the Monteriggioni villa. Standard stuff. Then she reached the section titled
Mira had been hunting for the file for three weeks. Not on the deep web, not through encrypted forums, but somewhere far more treacherous: her own cluttered desktop.