Star Wars: The Force Unleashed (PS3)

Release Date: 19/09/2008

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Star Wars: The Force Unleashed for PS3

    The Star Wars saga continues in Star Wars: The Force Unleashed for PS3. Casting players as Darth Vader's "Secret Apprentice", Star Wars: The Force Unleashed for PS3 promises to unveil new revelations about the Star Wars galaxy. The expansive story of Star Wars: The Force Unleashed, created under direction from George Lucas, is set during the largely unexplored era between Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith and Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope. In Star Wars: The Force Unleashed for PS3, players assist Darth Vader in his quest to rid the universe of Jedi - and face decisions that could change the course of their destiny.

    • Developer: LucasArts
    • Publisher: Activision Blizzard
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Game Reviews

Mark pulls one out of the sky...

Star Wars: The Force Unleashed is fashioned, first and foremost, to make legions of sci-fi fans feel like a Jedi in the Galaxy Far, Far Away. And on that count it succeeds; possibly moreso than anything before it.

It's as empowering as games get: letting you liberally spray around Force Grip, Lightning and Push powers (amongst others) with the reckless Dark Side abandon you'd expect from Darth Vader's secret Sith apprentice. But only where the game tells you you can. And that's the biggest disappointment with an otherwise stellar fan service – the technology powering The Force Unleashed is at once liberating, and limiting.

Strictly come sabering

But at its best, The Force Unleashed is a dizzying dance of lightsaber-led melee combat and an ever-growing arsenal of satisfyingly potent Force powers, spread across planets all packing a feel you'd expect from Lucasarts' iconic IP.

A toolset any action game would be proud of; giving the gameworld weight, momentum, breakability and believability.

Indeed, from the skyrise treehouses of Kashyyyk to imposing imperial construction yards, the dazzling fauna of Felucia, ramshackle debris-strewn junk planet Raxus Prime and beyond, The Force Unleashed evokes an eyecandy and atmosphere that's unmistakably Star Wars. That familiar themetune booms, yellow text scrawls across the star-studded sky, and suddenly you're there – exploring the era between the two film trilogies. Playing first as Vader and then as Starkiller, this tale of the Rebellion's beginnings will, for true Star Wars fans, be unmissable.

But The Force Unleashed doesn't succeed solely on its license. The core innovations create a toolset any action game would be proud to call its own; with Havok physics, Digital Molecular Matter and Euphoria giving the gameworld weight, momentum, breakability and as much believability as you can expect from a game featuring Wookies.

Let me en-lightning you

Pick up a boulder with the Force and smash it into an onrushing TIE Fighter to see sparks fly. Watch with glee as you dangle a panicked, flailing stormtrooper ten feet in the air – then hurl him through a window into the vacuum of space. Fry enemies with searing bolts of fingertip-propelled electricity and feel like the biggest badass around. It's about as far from the Jedi Code as it gets – and it's disturbingly fun to do, over and over again, until you've seen both endings.

Pleasingly, you only get more powerful as you progress. The Force Unleashed siphons through a Super Star Destroyer's worth of melee combos and Force powers, costumes and lightsaber crystals, plus neat little touches (we're pretty sure we know what happened to Jar Jar Binks after Episode III) and some impressively powerful foes – including fellow Force exponents, and some unerringly enormous monsters.

A Super Star Destroyer's worth of melee combos and Force powers, costumes and lightsaber crystals, neat touches and powerful foes.

Sadly, it's these battles that bring about the biggest frustration with The Force Unleashed. Instead of unleashing the Force on a whim, boss battles end with a simple QTE. Facing Rancors, AT-ST's and rival Jedi should be amongst the game's most bombastic battles; but at the crucial climax, The Force Unleashed holds your hand. All that fancy tech isn't an ever-present, either; only certain objects will bend, break and explode as they should, shattering the illusion somewhat. Shame.

The 'Moon' and back

It's all a bit unbalanced as well. The Force Unleashed features temperamental auto-targeting which won't always pick the ideal enemy (kind of a cardinal sin in a short-range action game), and when later levels start throwing enemy snipers into the mix, you might find yourself wanting to Force Push your control pad into a wall.

Still, Star Wars: The Force Unleashed boasts a story, setting and style that fans will adore, and features enough lightsaber swinging, Force-slinging, interstellar superbeing fun to keep even the most avid action aficionados hooked to the brilliantly bitter-sweet ending and back again.

GAME's Verdict
plus points
  • Makes good on its name: you'll feel like a real badass dark Jedi.
  • Superb production values befitting a Star Wars title.
  • Crackin' story, plus two endings ensuring replay value.
minus points
  • QTEs take the edge off your Force-powered freedom.
  • The physics-powered destruction isn't consistent across the gameworld.
  • Annoying auto-targeting creates some imbalance - especially when the snipers start appearing.

Review by: Mark 'Light Side' Scott
Version Tested: PS3
Review Published: 01.10.08

User Reviews

Sengul Morris posted on 14 Apr 2010
i have never seen the force from a sith point of veiw and i am amazed at the power.the famous scene on the back where you crash a death star destroyer wowed me although i am stuck on the part where u r in the death star and you have to allighn force rings that power the laser...HELP!..............
Keir B posted on 12 Dec 2009
This is a brilliant game, one of the best Star Wars games ever - it's almost as good as Battlefront 2! It's amazing how characters and objects react so realistically, and it is so satisfying using the force to throw stormtroopers off cliffs, and jumping on top of TIE fighters (when they're moving) and stabbing them to make them explode. Although the storyline could have been a little bit longer, it is just so addictive, and will have you playing for hours.
saqlain riaz posted on 05 Sep 2009
pretty good game some good trophies and the graphics and gameplay are ok overall 8/10
Thomas Law posted on 22 Aug 2009
Brilliant game! Some of the levels are a bit long, and it gets tedious at times but definitely a must buy! I think the upgrade system could have been done a little better but other than that the game was absolutely brilliant. 9/10!
Jethro Nickless posted on 07 Aug 2009
Brilliant game, albeit quite short. An 'ultimate edition' is being released some point in the future and has three more levels. Wait for that instead of buying this.
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