Shielded Droideka reinforcement firing in Battlefront II reveal alongside TX‑130 gameplay text and Anakin hero tag.

On This Day in Battlefront History: The Droidekas Arrived

June 26, 2019 marked one of Battlefront II’s most vibrant content drops: the “Where are those Droidekas?” update, which rolled in a trio of ground-shaking features:

New Clone Wars–era Trooper and Hero skins including General Skywalker, 212th Recon and 41st Scout Battalion

Droideka Enforcers for the Separatists (reinforcement units with rolling shields)

TX‑130 Saber‑class Fighter Tank for the Galactic Republic

Capital Supremacy on Naboo (Theed) map

Let’s roll back the years and relive the moment the meta shifted into full siege mode.

📅 Timeline: June 2019 Update Highlights

DateUpdate Highlights
June 26, 2019Droideka Enforcer, TX‑130 tank, Naboo Supremacy & Clone Wars skins added
March 2019Launch of Capital Supremacy mode
June 21, 2019Naboo included in Capital Supremacy alongside Droideka & TX‑130

🚨 Droidekas: The Meme, the Myth, the Meta

Droidekas (or Destroyer Droids, for the lore-committed) had been requested since Battlefront II launched in 2017. With their twin repeating blasters, energy shields, and signature wheel-form movement, they were a menace in the Clone Wars and an absolute fan favorite.

When they finally dropped in June 2019, they did not disappoint.

  • Mobility: You could roll through chokepoints faster than most Reinforcements.
  • Defense: Their energy shields made them nearly invulnerable to frontal assault.
  • Offense: Dual blasters could melt infantry in seconds.

Sure, their hitbox was weird. Sure, you couldn’t crouch. But the intimidation factor of three Droidekas rolling through a hallway was unmatched. It wasn’t just an update—it was a declaration: Battlefront II was still evolving.


🛡 TX-130: The Republic’s Heavy Hitter

Not to be overshadowed, the TX-130 Saber-class Fighter Tank also debuted in this update, finally giving the Galactic Republic a proper ground-pounding equivalent to the Separatist AAT.

Equipped with:

  • Primary cannon fire
  • Laser barrage
  • Anti-vehicle capabilities

The TX-130 became a staple in modes like Galactic Assault and Supremacy. It added depth to the Republic’s arsenal, especially in those chaotic vehicle vs. trooper skirmishes on Geonosis or Kashyyyk.


🏛 Naboo Supremacy: Clone Wars Goes Urban

Capital Supremacy mode launched earlier in 2019, but this update brought it to Theed, Naboo’s jewel of a city. And it worked.

  • Tight urban combat? Check.
  • Open plazas for Saber tank duels? Check.
  • High verticality for clone snipers and BX droid antics? Also check.

Naboo Supremacy gave players a new kind of challenge—far from the wide-open deserts of Geonosis or the forests of Kashyyyk. It was beautiful, brutal, and one of the most replayable Supremacy maps to date.


🎨 New Appearances: Clone Wars Glow-Up

In true Battlefront II fashion, the update didn’t just bring vehicles and maps—it brought style.

This patch added several new Trooper appearances, including alternate Clone Legion skins that gave even more personalization to your clone army. More drip, more immersion.

There were also adjustments to unlock paths and a stronger emphasis on customization—pushing Battlefront further into RPG-lite territory.


🔥 A Turning Point in Battlefront II’s Redemption Arc

By mid-2019, Battlefront II had already clawed its way back from its rocky launch. But the Droideka update was a cultural moment. It wasn’t just a content drop—it was a signal.

This game was still alive. And it was still listening.

The update reinvigorated matchmaking queues, rebalanced the power dynamic in Supremacy, and reminded players that DICE knew how to deliver a Star Wars experience that felt authentic, chaotic, and cinematic.


Final Thoughts: Rolling Strong, Six Years Later

Six years after Droidekas stormed onto the battlefield, their legacy remains cemented in Battlefront II’s history. They weren’t perfect. They weren’t subtle. But they were the embodiment of everything the game had become—fan-driven, content-rich, and unapologetically fun.

So, here’s to the shielded chaos. To the screech of rolling droids on tile. And to the day the meme became real.