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Matt McMuscles: Star Wars The Force Unleashed II - What Happened?

IbizaPocholo

NeoGAFs Kent Brockman


Star Wars: The Force Unleashed II is an action-adventure platform video game developed and published by LucasArts. It is the second installment of The Force Unleashed multimedia project, and the sequel to Star Wars: The Force Unleashed (2008). The game was released in the United States on October 26, 2010, and throughout Europe on October 29 for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and Nintendo Wii consoles, as well as Windows and the Nintendo DS and iOS portable devices.

The game takes place approximately six months after the events of the first game,[2] and a year before the film A New Hope.[3][4] The Force Unleashed II is described as the "dark entry" in the series,[4] and a more personal story for the game's protagonist than the first game.[2] Players control a clone of Starkiller, the first game's protagonist and Darth Vader's secret apprentice who sacrificed himself after helping to form the Rebel Alliance. Vader's attempts to breed a perfect apprentice from the original Starkiller's DNA leads to the creation of the clone who, possessing his predecessor's memories and realizing he will similarly be betrayed, escapes Vader. While on a quest across the galaxy to understand his identity and escape from Vader's influence, Starkiller becomes caught in the war between the Alliance and the Galactic Empire.

Production for The Force Unleashed II transpired over an approximate period of nine months; while it possesses some similarities to the previous game, producers modified several aspects such as the sound effects and gameplay. Sam Witwer again provides the voice and likeness for Starkiller, and several cast members return to voice and provide likeness to their respective roles.

The Force Unleashed II received mixed reviews from critics who praised the graphics and sound design, but criticized the repetitive gameplay, short length, and underwhelming story. During the first few weeks after its release it placed fifth or higher in sales for several regions. A sequel, entitled Star Wars: The Force Unleashed III, was planned, but it was ultimately scrapped following Disney's acquisition of Lucasfilm in 2012. As a result of the acquisition, The Force Unleashed project became part of the non-canonical Star Wars Expanded Universe (also known as Star Wars Legends) and never received a proper conclusion.
 

IbizaPocholo

NeoGAFs Kent Brockman


The Force Unleashed series has receded entirely into the background, and there's little to no hope that it will ever come back. Given the direction that the entire franchise has now taken (and not just in games), The Force Unleashed is highly unlikely to make a comeback- but how did it go from being this fan-favorite surprise hit to fading into the oblivion like a Force Ghost? What the hell happened?
 

Wvrs

Member
All I wanna know is... is this game Canon to the lore?
Actually, prior to the Disney purchase, TFU was the first Star Wars game to be designated by Lucas as a canon chapter in the saga and one of the few pieces of overall SW media to get that acclaim.

So if you're a purist then, yeah, it's more canon than 99% of SW.

But the answer is no.
 
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