Star Wars Outlaws is having one of those “wait, people are actually coming back?” moments. According to the latest Steam tracking chatter, Ubisoft and Massive Entertainment’s open-world Star Wars adventure has climbed high on Steam’s trending activity, with Bespin Bulletin reporting that the game was sitting as the 4th most trending title on Steam with a 125.7% 24-hour change on May 6. It was also listed around the 43rd best-selling game on the platform at the time. Not bad for a game that launched into one of the messier Star Wars gaming discourse storms in recent memory. The Star Wars Day Effect Is Real The timing is not exactly mysterious. May the 4th usually drags every Star Wars game out of hyperspace, slaps a discount on it, and politely asks everyone whether they really need food this week. In Outlaws’ case, that discount appears to be doing actual work. SteamDB…
Battlefront II Is Back in the PS4 Download Charts — and the Player Surge Is Real
Star Wars Battlefront II continues to behave like a game that absolutely refuses to stay in the archive. According to PlayStation’s official April 2026 PlayStation Store download charts, Star Wars Battlefront II was the 8th most downloaded PS4 game in the US/Canada and the 10th most downloaded PS4 game in Europe last month. That would be notable for any older multiplayer shooter. For Battlefront II, it is even louder because the game has not had a major official content update since EA and DICE wrapped up the live content roadmap with The Battle on Scarif back in 2020. EA’s own Battlefront page still points to the April 2020 update as the moment the game’s “vision” was completed after more than two years of free content. In other words: no new official expansion. No new season. No big publisher comeback campaign. Just players coming back anyway. The Numbers Are Moving Again…
Maul: Shadow Lord’s Soundtrack Turns Pain Into Power
Maul was never going to sound gentle. But the new official feature on the music of Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord makes one thing very clear: this score is not just here to make the Sith Lord look cooler while he broods in red lighting. It is doing emotional damage. Professionally. In a new StarWars.com interview about the Maul: Shadow Lord soundtrack, composers Kevin Kiner, Sean Kiner, and Deana Kiner break down how they approached the sound of Maul, Devon Izara, and Detective Brander Lawson across the animated series. The full Season 1 soundtrack is also now available to stream, giving fans a cleaner way to hear just how nasty, distorted, and surprisingly emotional this thing gets. Maul, But Make It Heavy Metal One of the more interesting details is that Matt Michnovetz wrote many episodes while listening to metal bands like Iron Maiden, Queensrÿche, Tool, and Ratt. That…
Star Wars Celebration 2027 Has Already Sold Out
Well, that did not take long. Star Wars Celebration 2027 has officially sold out, with the event’s own ticket page now stating that tickets are no longer available. The convention is set to take place April 1–4, 2027, at the Los Angeles Convention Center, and it is already looking like one of the biggest Star Wars fan events in years. That should not be a huge surprise. Celebration 2027 is not just another convention stop. It lands during the franchise’s 50th anniversary year, with Star Wars heading back into a major theatrical moment, new shows and games in motion, and an extremely online fanbase that can apparently refresh ticket pages faster than a podracer with unpaid debts. A Sold-Out Celebration Before the Hype Really Starts The official Star Wars Celebration ticket page now says tickets are sold out, while the main Star Wars Celebration site thanks fans and tells them…
SWGOH Is Sending Eligible Players 30,000 Crystals After Cassian Compensation Change
That is not a typo. Star Wars: Galaxy of Heroes is sending 30,000 Crystals to eligible players after changing its Cassian compensation plan. Capital Games confirmed in its official Update on Cassian Compensation that the original make-good tied to the Cassian situation has been replaced with a much simpler reward: a very large pile of Crystals. What Changed? The earlier plan, outlined in a previous Hotfix Update + Compensation Update, included 3,000 Crystals and Episode Pass Plus access for eligible players connected to the Cassian (Undercover) issue. That has now changed. Instead, eligible players are getting 30,000 Crystals sent directly to their inbox. In SWGOH terms, that is not a small apology. That is “suddenly opening the game very carefully” money. Why 30,000 Crystals Matters Crystals are the most flexible kind of compensation Capital Games could offer. Players can use them for energy refreshes, shipments, gear, signal data, event prep,…
Star Wars: Galactic Racer Collector’s Edition Is Already Selling Out in Some Regions
The game is still months away, but Star Wars: Galactic Racer is already hitting that dangerous collector phase: people are checking retailer pages like they’re tracking bounty pucks. The Collector’s Edition for Star Wars: Galactic Racer has reportedly started selling out at some retailers in select regions, while stock remains available elsewhere and more retailers are expected to receive allocations depending on region. That is the important bit: this is not a clean “sold out everywhere” situation. It is a messy, very Star Wars collecting situation — which means panic, refresh buttons, regional stock weirdness, and someone somewhere saying, “I only bought it for the art book.” The Collector’s Edition Is the One Everyone Is Watching The official Star Wars: Galactic Racer site lists the Collector’s Edition as a physical-only release for PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC, and it is clearly built for the shelf-space crowd. It includes the…
The Empire Strikes Back (1982): The First Real Star Wars Game Was a Tiny Hoth War
Before Star Wars games became sprawling RPGs, online sandboxes, or massive shooter franchises, they had to solve a much simpler problem: how do you squeeze one of the biggest sci-fi universes on Earth into a home console that could barely keep its own snowstorm together? The Empire Strikes Back for the Atari 2600 is one of the first answers to that question, and it is still a fascinating one. Released by Parker Brothers for the Atari 2600 in July 1982, with an Intellivision version following in 1983, the game is widely recognized as the first officially licensed Star Wars video game. It was programmed by Rex Bradford, based on the Battle of Hoth, and built around one very clean fantasy: you are in a snowspeeder, Imperial walkers are marching toward Echo Base, and your day is getting worse at speed. That makes it a perfect follow-up to Star Wars: The…
SWG Restoration Drops “Revenge of the Fifth” Hotfix as Its Anniversary Nears
Star Wars Day is over. Revenge of the Fifth has arrived. And over in the Star Wars Galaxies corner of the galaxy, SWG Restoration is still doing exactly what makes these private-server projects so fascinating: quietly keeping an old MMO alive with new fixes, systems, and community momentum. The team has posted Hotfix 1.4.0.4 — Revenge of the Fifth, a fresh patch arriving as Restoration heads toward its fifth anniversary later this month. The official SWG Restoration hotfix post frames the update around both maintenance and celebration, with anniversary preparation now clearly on the radar. The Galactic Civil War Keeps Getting Tuned One of the more interesting notes in the hotfix concerns watchtowers and PvP base discovery. The patch listing notes that watchtowers can now grant discovery missions for finding PvP bases, with clearer messaging to indicate when a discovered target is a PvP base. That might sound tiny if…
Star Wars Insider Is Over — And a Huge Piece of Fan History Goes With It
Before Star Wars news lived on YouTube thumbnails, Reddit threads, Discord servers, leaks accounts, and algorithmic chaos, there was Star Wars Insider. Now, after nearly four decades of official magazine history, that run has come to an end. The final issue, Star Wars Insider #237, is out now, closing a publication lineage that stretches back through Star Wars Insider, The Lucasfilm Fan Club Magazine, and the old-school fan-club era when getting official Star Wars news meant waiting for paper to arrive like some kind of ancient Jedi ritual. It sounds dramatic because it is dramatic. For a lot of readers, Insider was not just a magazine. It was the magazine. The Final Issue Has Arrived Lucasfilm announced last year that Star Wars Insider would launch its final issue in 2026, with issue #237 marking the end of the magazine’s current run with Titan. At the time, editor Christopher Cooper described…
Battlefront II Fans Are Mobilizing Again — Resurgence Day 2026 Is Set
Star Wars Battlefront II is getting another community rally day, because apparently this game has looked at “dead multiplayer shooter” status and politely declined. The Battlefront II Resurgence Day 2026 event is officially set for Saturday, May 23, with players encouraged to jump back into the game across PC, PlayStation, and Xbox for one full day of matches, nostalgia, chaos, and a very loud reminder that the Battlefront community is still here. According to KYBER’s official Resurgence Day announcement, the event runs all day and is designed as a global celebration of Star Wars Battlefront II across all platforms. One Day, All Platforms, One Very Loud Message The idea is simple: on May 23, players log into Star Wars Battlefront II and play. No complicated sign-up ritual. No sacred Holocron password. Just show up, squad up, and fill the servers. KYBER describes Resurgence Day as more than just a day…
On This Day: EA’s Star Wars Deal Changed a Decade of Games
On May 6, 2013, Star Wars gaming changed overnight. Disney and Lucasfilm announced a major multi-year agreement with Electronic Arts, giving EA the keys to Star Wars games for the “core gaming audience.” At the time, the official Lucasfilm announcement framed it as an exciting new phase, with DICE, Visceral Games, and BioWare all attached to future Star Wars projects. In hindsight, it was not just a licensing deal. It was the beginning of an era — messy, controversial, occasionally brilliant, and impossible to ignore. The Deal That Replaced LucasArts The timing mattered. Disney had acquired Lucasfilm in 2012, and LucasArts’ days as a major internal game studio were effectively over. As WIRED reported at the time, EA would become the exclusive provider of Star Wars games for the core gaming market, while Disney kept certain rights for mobile, social, tablet, and online categories. That distinction would shape everything that…
SWGOH May the 4th Celebration Brings Free Gifts, Bonus Drops, and a Very Sithy May 5th
The Holotables are getting the full Star Wars Day treatment — and yes, Capital Games remembered the Sith too. Capital Games has outlined the Star Wars: Galaxy of Heroes May the 4th celebration, with daily rewards, a free calendar, a massive inbox gift, Crystal deals, Trove Packs, Lightspeed Bundles, bonus drops, and a packed event schedule running through the middle of May. The official post also gives a polite nod to “May the 5th” for the Sith crowd, because even galactic villains deserve calendar representation. Daily Rewards and a Huge Inbox Gift The biggest immediate reason to log in is the free stuff. Starting May 4, players can visit the Web Store and PC Store every day to claim special Mystery Chests. While there, players can also grab the free May the 4th calendar from the Web Store. Capital Games is also dropping a large inbox gift to kick off…
Fate of the Old Republic’s BioWare DNA Is Starting to Look Very Real
The new Old Republic game is not technically Knights of the Old Republic 3. Lucasfilm has been careful about that. But if the team keeps filling up with former BioWare veterans, people are going to keep squinting at it like it just walked into a cantina wearing Revan’s old cloak. A new PC Gamer report highlights a fresh update to the Arcanaut Studios team page, revealing more of the senior talent working on Star Wars: Fate of the Old Republic. And the short version is simple: this thing has a lot of BioWare blood in the tank. Casey Hudson Was Only the Beginning When Star Wars: Fate of the Old Republic was revealed at The Game Awards 2025, the headline was already enormous: Casey Hudson was back in the Old Republic era. That alone mattered. Hudson was the project director on the original Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic…
SWTOR’s May 4th Rewards Are Still Live — Free Droid, Double XP, and a Razor Crest-Inspired Moun
May the 4th may be over, but Star Wars: The Old Republic is still handing out the good stuff like a vendor who forgot to close shop. Broadsword has launched its SWTOR May 4th celebration, running from May 1 through May 22, with free rewards, Cartel Market discounts, Double XP, and a subscriber mount inspired by Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu. In other words: log in now, ask questions later, and try not to spend your entire Cartel Coin reserve in one heroic mistake. Free BX-RC Probe Droid Minipet for All Players The easiest reward is also the one nobody should miss. According to the official SWTOR May 4th celebration post, all players who log in during the event window can receive the BX-RC Probe Droid Minipet. It is small, floaty, mechanical, and exactly the kind of companion you claim you do not need until it starts hovering behind…
SWTOR Galactic Seasons Objectives: May 5 – June 8 — Week 9 Begins
The next batch of SWTOR Galactic Seasons 10 objectives is live, which means one thing: it is time to pretend your weekly plan is organized before Conquest points immediately turn it into spreadsheet archaeology. BioWare/Broadsword has posted the updated Galactic Seasons Objectives for May 5 through June 8, covering Weeks 9–13 of Galactic Seasons 10: Secrets of the Syndicate. The season began with Game Update 7.8.1, and this new objective block starts with Week 9: May 5–May 11. Week 9 Starts With Altuur, Conquest, and Coreward Worlds As usual, the daily objective is simple: Influencing the Galaxy, which asks players to earn 25,000 Personal Conquest Points across their Legacy. The weekly structure is also familiar: complete any 7 of 11 available objectives. For Week 9, the big companion objective is Recon Across the Galaxy, requiring 200,000 Personal Conquest Points with Altuur zok Adon as your companion. There is also Perseverance,…
SWG Legends Just Gave Star Wars Galaxies Modern Housing Tools in 2026
A 2003 Star Wars MMO just got a housing upgrade in 2026, because apparently Star Wars Galaxies still refuses to behave like a dead game. SWG Legends, the long-running community server based on Star Wars Galaxies, has rolled out a major May the Fourth update with one headline feature that veteran decorators will immediately understand: a new decoration mode gizmo. In normal human language, that means decorating houses in Galaxies should now feel much less like ancient Sith punishment with a radial menu attached. MassivelyOP reports that the new tool lets players use a pop-up panel to free-move, rotate, yaw, and pitch objects, snap items to the floor, float the camera, and even undo mistakes. SWG Housing Was Already Legendary — Just Not Easy The funny thing is that Star Wars Galaxies housing has always been one of the game’s greatest strengths. Long before modern MMOs turned player housing into…
On This Day: Rage of the Wookiees Took Star Wars Galaxies to Kashyyyk
Before Star Wars Galaxies became one of the great “you had to be there” MMO legends, it did something wonderfully 2005: it tied a full expansion to Revenge of the Sith and sent players straight into Wookiee country. On May 5, 2005, Star Wars Galaxies: Episode III – Rage of the Wookiees launched for PC as the MMO’s second major expansion, landing just two weeks before Revenge of the Sith hit theaters in the U.S. It was a very specific kind of Star Wars moment: film hype, MMO ambition, Kashyyyk, space content, creature mounts, and the faint sound of every Wookiee roleplayer suddenly clearing their calendar. Kashyyyk Finally Entered the MMO The headline feature was obvious: Kashyyyk. The Wookiee homeworld had always felt perfect for an online Star Wars world. Giant trees, tribal conflict, Separatist pressure, hidden danger, and enough vertical drama to make every speeder mechanic quietly nervous. Unlike…
Return of the Jedi Comes to Disney SpellStruck With New Star Wars Maps
Star Wars has invaded shooters, RPGs, racing games, LEGO adventures, card battlers, mobile strategy, and Fortnite islands. Naturally, the next battlefield is spelling. Disney SpellStruck has added new Adventure Mode maps inspired by Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi, giving the Apple Arcade word game another dose of galactic scenery. The update also adds Boba Fett and Wicket as playable characters, which is a gloriously specific pairing: one fearsome bounty hunter, one brave Ewok, and presumably several very stressed vowels. Apple’s own April Apple Arcade update listed the new Return of the Jedi-inspired maps and characters as arriving on April 23, 2026, while StarWars.com also highlighted the update as part of its Star Wars Day gaming round-up. A Word Game With a Star Wars Detour For anyone who has not been tracking Disney SpellStruck between lightsaber duels and Holotable panic, the game is a word-based puzzle battler…
On This Day: Revenge of the Sith Turned Star Wars’ Darkest Movie Into a Brutal Action Game
Before Revenge of the Sith reached theaters and emotionally ruined an entire generation of prequel kids, LucasArts let players swing the lightsaber themselves. On May 4, 2005, Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith launched for PlayStation 2 in North America, according to MobyGames and GameFAQs listings, with the Game Boy Advance version also listed for the same date. The wider multi-platform rollout is often cited as May 5, but May the 4th gives the PS2 and GBA releases a perfect little Star Wars history stamp. A Movie Tie-In From the Last Great LucasArts Rush The early 2000s were a very different era for Star Wars games. LucasArts was still firing out titles with the confidence of a studio that owned half your childhood: Knights of the Old Republic, Republic Commando, Battlefront, Rogue Squadron, Jedi Knight, and then this — a full action-game adaptation of the final prequel…
Nielsen Says Star Wars Viewing Is Still Movie-First — Even in the Disney+ Era
or all the talk about Star Wars becoming a streaming-first franchise, the numbers are doing something very old-fashioned: pointing back at the movies. According to new Nielsen data on Star Wars viewing in 2025, live-action movies accounted for the biggest share of total Star Wars viewing, with 44.2% of watch time. Live-action series followed closely at 38.9%, while animation made up 16.8% and documentaries barely registered at 0.2%. In other words: Disney+ may have turned Star Wars into a year-round TV machine, but the films are still the franchise’s gravitational center. The Movies Still Run the Galaxy Nielsen reports that U.S. viewers spent more than 33 billion minutes watching Star Wars content across linear TV and streaming in 2025, with streaming accounting for most of that total. That is not exactly a franchise quietly fading into the twin suns. The most-watched Star Wars film of the year was not a…
Star Wars: Galaxy of Heroes Launches 2026 Extra Life Charity Events With New Donation Packs
Star Wars: Galaxy of Heroes is turning the Holotables into something more useful than another argument about Omicrons: a charity push for children’s healthcare. Capital Games has kicked off its Extra Life Charity Events 2026, once again teaming with Extra Life and Children’s Miracle Network to raise money for UC Davis Children’s Hospital. The first stream was scheduled for May 1, 2026, from 3–5 PM PT on the Capital Games charity Twitch channel, with the campaign now shifting into a year-long format rather than one giant marathon. A Year-Long Charity Push, Not One Big Sprint This year’s big change is the format. Instead of building everything around one long fundraising event, Capital Games says the 2026 campaign will feature smaller, more casual streams throughout the year. That is probably a smart move. A single marathon can be fun, chaotic, and mildly dangerous to everyone’s sleep schedule, but a year-long series…
Star Wars Outlaws Gold Edition Can Drop to $17.50 in Ubisoft’s May Sale
If you skipped Star Wars Outlaws at launch because the price felt a little too Imperial, this might be the moment to smuggle it into your library. Ubisoft’s current Legendary Sale has knocked Star Wars Outlaws down hard on PC, with the Gold Edition listed at $27.50 on the U.S. Ubisoft Store. Add the store’s current LEGEND coupon — which takes $10 off purchases of $19.99 or more — and that brings the Gold Edition down to $17.50 before regional taxes and store quirks enter the chat. The offer is listed as running until May 19. The Gold Edition Is the Real Deal Here The Standard Edition is also sitting at $17.50, which is already a chunky discount from its usual $69.99 price. But the better value is the Gold Edition, because that version includes the base game and the Season Pass. Ubisoft’s own store listing describes the Gold Edition…
Star Wars: The Arcade Game (1983): The Cabinet That Let You Blow Up the Death Star
Before Star Wars games got big enough to swallow entire weekends, before they started chasing cinematic storytelling, RPG choices, or multiplayer wars with patch notes and balance drama, there was a much simpler fantasy: sit down, grab the controls, and blow up the Death Star yourself. That is the magic of Star Wars: The Arcade Game. Released by Atari in 1983, it turned the final act of A New Hope into a first-person vector-graphics shooter and, in the process, gave Star Wars one of its earliest true gaming classics. And this is exactly why it feels like the right next stop after Star Wars: Battle for Naboo (2000). That game showed how polished and expansive Star Wars vehicle combat had become by the N64 era. The Arcade Game shows the raw original spark: the point where Star Wars game design realized that “you are in the cockpit now” was already…
Monopoly: Star Wars Heroes vs. Villains PC Specs Revealed — And Your Rig Can Probably Handle It
Good news for anyone worried that Monopoly: Star Wars Heroes vs. Villains might demand the power of a fully armed and operational battle station: the PC requirements are extremely reasonable. Ubisoft has now shared the PC specifications for the upcoming Star Wars-themed Monopoly game, and unless your computer still sounds like a podracer trying to start in a sandstorm, you are probably fine. The game is set to launch on June 11, 2026, with Ubisoft listing it for PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch, and Nintendo Switch 2. A Surprisingly Light Trip Around the Galactic Board The official PC specs show three performance targets: Minimum, Recommended, and Ultra. Even the minimum target is aiming for 1080p at 60 FPS on High preset, which is a pretty friendly starting point for a modern licensed game. For minimum settings, players will need an Intel Core i3-8100 or AMD Ryzen 3…