Images Donate icon An illustration of a heart shape Donate Ellipses icon An illustration of text ellipses. EMBED for wordpress. Want more? Advanced embedding details, examples, and help! Topics xbox , og xbox , microsoft xbox , redump , redump. The game plays rather well with a respectable level of challenge. Many of the NES scenes are faithfully reproduced. Fans of the movie will find it a great game on the go.
Star Wars makes a pretty good game for the GameBoy. The game play is similar to the NES version and even features land speeder scenes. The graphics are very detailed for the small black and white screen. Even though the game is limited by the hardware, it is still an above average game.
Horrible blurring throughout. GameBoy, go hibernate, will ya? I hope that the programmers of Star Wars are preparing to create a full-color portable version when Nintendo wakes up and creates the color GameBoy system!
In color, with stable graphics support, Star Wars would be exciting and challenging, but as it is, nah. NES players have already tasted Star Wars, a yummy outer space treat. Now all the same ingredients have been packed into the Game Boy! Just like the movie, this game is a video delicacy! You even get a palatable rendition of the Star Wars theme.
The Game Boy cart features a delicious spread of various gaming styles that are served up in one, tasty adventure. You get overhead-view flying, side-view fighting action, and first-person-perspective flying. Smooth, responsive controls make you feel like you're using the Force to guide your game play! Use the skills of Luke, Princess Leia, or Han.
Each character is suited for specific situations. You begin the game with a multi-scrolling, overhead view of Luke's Landspeeder crisscrossing the vast Tatooine desert. To find them, you enter caves, the Jawa Sandcrawler, and Mos Bsley Spaceport, where the game converts into a side-scrolling adventure.
You get your first taste of the the game's hard-boiled challenge when Luke must run, jump, and blast his way past vicious aliens and impossible obstacles. Guard your life units, because continues are limited and there are no passwords! Aboard the Millenium Falcon, the view shifts to a first-person perspective.
You peer out the ship's view port as you steer the Falcon through a forwardscrolling maelstrom of asteroids. It only takes two hits to fry a shield. Lose your shields and it's game over! Successfully run the asteroid field gauntlet, and you're caught in the Death Star's tractor beam.
There you must rescue Leia, disable the tractor beam, duck into the trash compactor, and return to the Millenium Falcon for the getaway! Then you can monitor your progress on a detailed map of the Death Star's interior. Upon escaping the Death Star, you return to first-person, forward-scrolling action. Roast waves of enemy TIE fighters trying to stop your escape.
The final level features overhead-view, vertically-scrolling action as you try to bake the Death Star. Pilot an X-wing fighter down the Death Star's heavily fortified trenches. Use the Force to blast the gun emplacements and the buzzing TIE fighters.
Great controls, detailed graphics, classic music, and a compelling story line whip up a delectable experience. An hour after playing Star Wars, you'll be hungry for more!
Browse games Game Portals. Star Wars. Install Game. Click the "Install Game" button to initiate the file download and get compact download launcher.
Locate the executable file in your local folder and begin the launcher to install your desired game. View all Star Wars Screenshots. Game review Downloads Screenshots Picture Perfect Star Wars has made another graceful transformation to the small screen. ProTips: When you get on the Death Star, take thefdroids to the control room on your right You can see a map of the level by choosing R2-D2 on the sub-screen. When you see the acid dripping toward the beginning of the cave in the Sand People stage, jump to the rock it's dripping on, then fall just to the right into the gap between the two sets of spikes.
When you reach the rock on the bottom, keep left. Try to find as many Shields as you can. You'll need them when you're on board the Millenium Falcon. If your life is low when you see a Shield and you die, go back and grab the Shield later. While you're searching for the docking bay that's hiding the Falcon, you'll find more green Shields.
Keep to the right, then go up a level and almost to the end of the stage. When you see a black opening in the wall, stand Solo in front of it and press Up to get into the docking bay. When you guide the Falcon through the remains of Alderaan, try to react as soon as you see the debris on your screen.
Swerve left and right, and occasionally up and down. It takes practice. You can easily kill the green Greedo aliens in the Cantina, but leave the blue alien alone. He's almost indestructible. Head right and grab Han Solo. His blaster is more powerful than Luke's and is more effective against Stormtroopers. While floating up air shafts, hold Up on the directional pad.
You and a friend each control one Jedi master and using the same controls as the single player. Initially only two characters and 4 arenas are available at the onset. Playing through and completing of the single player campaign will unlock more Jedis and arenas.
Star Wars: Obi-Wan. Both the force and lightsaber mechanics are mapped very well on the controller, which makes wielding both fairly satisfying. All lightsaber motions are mapped to the right analog stick, which decently mimics the mouse scheme originally planned for the game's PC release.
If you want to swing right, you input commands in that direction, while if you want to attack with a fierce overhead blow, you hold the stick up. The nature of this scheme makes it pretty easy to string together combos of sorts, though you'll find that wild swings will usually result in gaffi sticks to the head. Luckily, if you enter no lightsaber commands, you'll block most attacks issued at you, and you can even reflect blaster fire if your timing is tight. Use of the force revolves around the force-modifier button--the L-trigger by default.
You'll be under the influence of the force for as long as you have the trigger depressed, and this is made evident by the dainty particles that envelope Obi-Wan's body.
In any event, every face button executes a particular effect when used in tandem with the L-trigger: hitting A will let you use a superjump while hitting X will cause nearby enemies to drop any firearms they might be holding.
Use of these powers is regulated by a force meter, which, you'll find, replenishes rather quickly. In all, using these powers lends a decent bit of color to the battles, and it really does come close to salvaging the Jedi experience, despite the game's problematic camera. The camera, in truth, lacks any kind of precision. It moves in wide sweeps, and usually, the only way to get a decent view of certain battles is to pull back significantly and let the mass of enemies be caught in the camera's view.
As such, it's pretty inconvenient to take on more than three enemies at a time, despite the game's propensity to throw gangs 10 deep or greater at you. Mapped to the black button is a quick-turnaround function that serves as an occasional remedy, but its application is too particular to be of any real use most of the time. As you've probably guessed, there is little to the game aside from these pitched battles.
This is particularly frustrating when viewed in the context of its level design. Simply put, many of Obi-Wan's stages are incredibly huge, and, too often, they're incredibly empty, free of any kind of interactive elements.
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