Star Wars Zero Company just took a small but very useful step toward feeling like a real upcoming release instead of just a cool reveal trailer memory.
EA now has a dedicated official page live for the game, and it does more than just slap the logo on a dark background. The new site lets fans wishlist Star Wars Zero Company across Steam, Epic Games Store, PlayStation, and Xbox, while also offering an email signup for updates.
That matters more than it sounds.
This is the kind of update that makes a game feel real
A lot of upcoming games exist in that awkward in-between stage where everybody knows the name, remembers the reveal, and then spends months waiting for signs of actual retail life. A proper official page with platform wishlisting is one of the clearest signs that the marketing machine is slowly shifting from reveal mode to release-track mode.
And in Zero Company’s case, that is a welcome sight.
The new EA page explicitly positions the game as something fans can now track across multiple storefronts, rather than just passively wait for. That does not mean a release date is suddenly around the corner, but it does mean the game now has a much more concrete public-facing footprint than it did before. That last part is an inference based on the new official page and expanded wishlist links.
Steam, Epic, PlayStation, and Xbox are all now in the mix
The most useful part of the update is the platform spread.
According to EA’s official page, players can now add Star Wars Zero Company to their wishlist on Steam, Epic Games Store, PlayStation, and Xbox. The page also includes a signup form for news and promotions tied to the game.
That wider storefront presence is a nice little momentum boost for a game that already stood out at reveal for being something Star Wars does not throw at fans every year: a single-player turn-based tactics game instead of another safer action template. Even without a big new trailer drop attached, this kind of platform rollout helps keep the game visible. The genre point is established from the official reveal, while the current storefront expansion is visible on the new page.
Why this is worth watching
No, this is not the kind of update that blows the doors off the internet.
But it is exactly the kind of quiet infrastructure move that often comes before a more serious marketing push. Once the official site is live and the wishlist footprint widens, the game starts looking less like a concept and more like a product being gradually moved into position.
For Star Wars Zero Company, that is good news.
Because the game has already done the hard part: getting people interested. Now it needs the slower follow-through — official pages, storefront hooks, signups, and the little signals that tell fans this thing is still moving. Based on the new EA page, that process is clearly happening.
If nothing else, it is one more reminder that Zero Company is still very much on the board.