The heart of the franchise lies here. Below is the chronological index of Hitman Agent 47 video game releases based on the overarching storyline (excluding remasters).
Each entry in the index follows a JSON-like schema for consistency.
"id": "HIT-001",
"category": "target",
"name": "Jasper Knight",
"aliases": ["Lieutenant J. Knight"],
"game": "Hitman 1 (2016)",
"mission": "The Final Test",
"location": "Kowloon, China (simulated)",
"weaknesses": ["Ejection seat", "Stuck projector screen"],
"disguises_to_use": ["Colonel", "Mechanic", "Interpol Agent"],
"accident_kill": true,
"story_impact": "Training simulation; teaches accident kills."
If you want the real index of Hitman, look no further than IO Interactive’s World of Assassination. This isn't a movie; it's a puzzle box.
Verdict: Play the games. The movie doesn't hold a candle to pulling off a fiber wire kill in a crowded fashion show.
The index serves as a searchable, categorized reference for all key elements in the Hitman universe. It helps players, mission designers, or lore researchers quickly locate:
Hitman: Agent 47 (2015), directed by Aleksander Bach and written by Skip Woods and Michael Finch, is a reboot of the 2007 Hitman film and a loose cinematic adaptation of the long-running IO Interactive video-game series. It centers on Agent 47 (Rupert Friend), a genetically engineered assassin with a barcode tattoo, who is forced to ally with Katia van Dees (Hannah Ware) — the daughter of the scientist who created the Agent program — while battling a shadowy Syndicate and a relentless operative, John Smith (Zachary Quinto). The film runs roughly 96 minutes and was shaped to appeal to global action audiences rather than to be a faithful, strategy-driven translation of the games.