- #STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS MOVIE#
- #STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS PC#
- #STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS PS3#
- #STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS SERIES#
Rebel Assault's on steam now too! I think it's a bundle for both Rebel Assault's.
#STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS PC#
I have a big box copy of Rebel Assault 1 for PC haha.
#STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS MOVIE#
And now look where we are! A couple good books, an okay movie or two and the rest is garbage! Foolishly, I thought that Lucasfilm actrually had a plan going forward like Marvel did lol. Yeah, I was actually really excited when Disney first bought them, because up to that point the Marvel acquistion had gone well. They may have oversaturated, but when you consider how consistent (or if not consistent just how frequently) the titles were great, I was pretty okay with it haha. I played Outcast on PC first and then Academy on Xbox first I think.
#STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS PS3#
I'm all about things like Episode I - The Phantom Menace on PSone, Bounty Hunter on PS2, The Force Unleashed on PS3 and Jedi: Fallen Order on PS4. That aforementioned focus on PlayStation gaming means I've missed a lot of other classic Star Wars games over the years, including many you just listed as the best ever. I think the variety was its biggest strength, although I also appreciated the return of a "choice" moment and the fact that, if you want it to be, it's one of those rare things a Star Wars game with a non-human hero (Kel-Dor all the way!). Completed my Light Side playthrough last night, and went back this morning to see the Dark Side outcome. Which is weird, because I just loved Jedi Academy from start to finish. Whilst I could get picky about it (no divergent endings, different actors, etc.) I reckon the bottom line is that I simply missed the boat. I played Jedi Outcast for the first time last year, when it came to PS4, so it was inevitably gonna fall short of 20+ years of anticipation. Then I got a PSone and never looked back, but it meant I missed so many Star Wars games on other consoles. It informed so much of my tastes in both gaming and wider entertainment, with its live-action cutscenes and clever morality tracking system. Tue 31st Mar When I was a kid, Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II was my first proper videogame, and the only one that'd run on our creaky old PC.Enemies are woefully inept, more likely to spin in circles than actually attack you. The fact the combat has aged as well as it has is truly impressive. Hacking and slashing your way across a surprisingly large number of planets, many of them noteworthy in the expanded universe, has never been as satisfying as it is here. Sure, Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order did a good job, but Jedi Knight’s more action oriented combat has never been surpassed.
#STAR WARS JEDI KNIGHT JEDI ACADEMY PLATFORMS SERIES#
This, paired with the lightsaber combat the series is renowned for, makes for one of the most well-rounded Star Wars titles in Lucasarts’ history.Īfter all, it’s all about the lightsaber combat, isn’t it? Both Jedi Outcast and Academy represent the pinnacle in this. As your force powers grow, so too does the intrigue of the narrative, as faces new and old pop in to weave a compelling tale. You play as a student, learning under Katarn himself, which allows you to grow and develop your force powers in a way that feels more organic than in past entries. Stepping into the boots of Jaden Korr rather than the series’ usual protagonist Kyle Katarn makes for an interesting change of pace. Coming hot off the heels of the acclaimed Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast, Jedi Academy is a surprisingly robust experience given its short development cycle.