Star Wars: Galactic Racer keeps sounding less like “podracing, but new” and more like a racing game that actively wants you to suffer in interesting ways. In a new TechRadar interview from Summer Game Fest, Fuse Games creative director Kieran Crimmins explained that planets in Galactic Racer will have status effects that can directly impact your vehicle. That means Ando Prime can freeze you, Lantaana’s lava can overheat your racer, and water can help cool the vehicle back down. So yes. The track is now part of the enemy. Beautiful. Horrible. Very Star Wars. The Planets Are Not Just Pretty Backgrounds This is the kind of detail that could make Galactic Racer stand out. A lot of arcade racers treat environments as scenery. Sand track. Snow track. Lava track. Jungle track. Drive fast, don’t hit wall, pretend the crash was tactical. Galactic Racer seems to be going further. If each…
Galactic Racer
Galactic Racer’s Smartest Trick Is Making Crashing Matter
Most racing games treat crashing like a mild inconvenience. You hit a wall, swear at yourself, maybe blame the controller, and within three seconds you are back on the track pretending the whole thing was tactical. Very dignified. Very mature. Very “I meant to do that.” Star Wars: Galactic Racer seems to have a different idea. Based on the latest hands-on previews, Fuse Games is not just making a fast Star Wars racer with shiny vehicles and Outer Rim dust. It is building a racing game where bad choices can actually hurt. Not just “you lost a few seconds” hurt. More like “your whole run is now on fire and Hibi is probably judging you from the garage” hurt. That might be the smartest thing Galactic Racer has shown so far. Crashing Is Not Just Slapstick Here GamesRadar’s hands-on preview describes Galactic Racer as having a run-based campaign built around…
Star Wars: Galactic Racer Is Turning Racing Into a Buildcraft Problem
Star Wars: Galactic Racer could have taken the easy route. Give players fast vehicles, dusty Outer Rim tracks, a few nods to Sebulba, and let nostalgia do the heavy lifting. Honestly, that would probably work for about five minutes. Star Wars racing still has a very loud corner of the fandom that hears “podracing” and immediately starts remembering the Nintendo 64 like it was sacred scripture with rumble pack support. But the more we see of Galactic Racer, the clearer it becomes that Fuse Games is not just building a modern Episode I: Racer tribute. This thing sounds dangerously close to a full-blown Star Wars buildcraft machine with engines. And that might be the hook that makes it matter. This Is Not Just About Going Faster The latest hands-on previews make Galactic Racer sound far deeper than a simple arcade racer with Star Wars paint. TechRadar reports that the game…
When Episode I: Racer Returned, Star Wars Remembered Podracing Still Works
On June 23, 2020, Star Wars Episode I: Racer came roaring back onto Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4. And somehow, the old podracing game still knew exactly what it was doing. No overcomplicated reboot. No grim cinematic reinvention. No one standing in a dark hangar explaining that podracing was actually a metaphor for galactic trauma. Just two engines, too much speed, flaming methane lakes, Tusken Raider attacks, anti-gravity tunnels, and the eternal question: How close can you fly to a wall before your entire life becomes smoke? The Podracing Fantasy Never Really Left The original Episode I: Racer arrived in 1999, built around one of the most immediately game-friendly sequences in The Phantom Menace. Say what you want about the movie, but the podrace was basically a video game pitch hiding inside a Star Wars film. Fast machines. Dangerous tracks. Weird alien racers. Exploding engines. A tiny child making health…
Star Wars Galactic Racer Might Be Weirder Than Simple Podracing Nostalgia
At first glance, Star Wars: Galactic Racer looks like the easiest nostalgia pitch in the galaxy. Fast ships. Dusty tracks. Dangerous turns. Sebulba lurking around like a small, angry insurance problem. But the latest story trailer suggests this is not just Episode I: Racer with modern lighting and a shinier menu. Galactic Racer may actually be doing something stranger: mixing Star Wars racing with a runs-based structure that sounds suspiciously close to roguelite design. And honestly? That might be the smartest thing about it. This Is Not Just “Go Fast, Win Race” The new Star Wars: Galactic Racer story trailer introduces Shade, an up-and-coming racer trying to take down corrupt Galactic League champion Kestar Bool. That is already a solid racing-game setup. New challenger. Big villain. Personal grudge. Dangerous circuits. A sponsor probably pretending this is all very safe. But the gameplay structure is where things get interesting. The game…
Star Wars: Galactic Racer’s Collector’s Edition Knows Exactly Which Fans It Wants to Hurt
Star Wars: Galactic Racer is already doing something dangerous. It is not just bringing back the old Star Wars racing fantasy. It is also going directly after the shelf space, wallets, and nostalgia centers of fans who still hear “Now this is podracing” somewhere deep in the brain. The game is set to launch on October 6, 2026 for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC, with Standard, Deluxe, and Collector’s Editions available. Pre-order bonuses include an extra livery for your repulsorcraft and a special player banner for multiplayer modes. That is the normal stuff. The Collector’s Edition is where the wallet starts hearing boss music. What Comes in the Galactic Racer Collector’s Edition? The Star Wars: Galactic Racer Collector’s Edition is aimed squarely at the kind of fan who looks at a racing game and thinks, “Yes, but what if it also came with things I can put on…
Star Wars: Galactic Racer Unveils Official Gameplay Trailer and New Key Art
The engines are officially roaring. Star Wars: Galactic Racer just dropped its first full gameplay trailer — along with striking new key art — and confirmed it arrives later this year on PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC. This isn’t just a logo reveal anymore. This is a real game. And it looks fast. First Real Look at Gameplay The official gameplay trailer finally shows what Galactic Racer actually feels like in motion. And it’s not just podracing nostalgia. We’re seeing: The footage leans into pure speed. Not cinematic storytelling. Not Jedi drama. Just momentum. And that’s refreshing. A Return to Star Wars Racing Star Wars hasn’t had a dedicated racing game in decades. Yes, there was Episode I: Racer.Yes, there have been racing segments across other titles. But Galactic Racer is the first modern, fully built racing experience under the Lucasfilm Games banner in years. Developed by Fuse Games…
Missing Sebulba While Waiting for Galactic Racer? Beyond Victory Has You Covered
Let’s be honest: if you’re even mildly excited about Star Wars: Galactic Racer, there’s a good chance you’re also wondering one very specific thing — when do we get Sebulba back? The galaxy’s most infamous podracing menace may not be tearing up the track just yet, but Star Wars: Beyond Victory is stepping in with something arguably even more dangerous: a Solo-era heist, with Sebulba right in the middle of it. And somehow, that feels exactly right. Back to the Galaxy’s Shadier Lanes Beyond Victory is set around the time of Solo: A Star Wars Story, an era that thrives on chaos, questionable deals, and people who smile while planning to double-cross you. This isn’t a story about heroes or destiny. It’s about survival, credits, and knowing when to run. Putting Sebulba at the center of a heist setup immediately tells you what kind of experience this is aiming for….
Star Wars: Galactic Racer Announced — A New Racing Game Is Coming in 2026
Star Wars is officially heading back to the fast lane. A brand-new racing game titled Star Wars: Galactic Racer has been announced, with a confirmed 2026 release window. After years of fans asking whether Star Wars would ever return to high-speed racing gameplay, the answer is finally yes—and this time, it’s going galactic. What Is Star Wars: Galactic Racer? Unlike classic podracing titles that focused on a single sport or era, Star Wars: Galactic Racer is being positioned as a galaxy-spanning racing experience. The emphasis appears to be on high-stakes competition across the Outer Rim, with dangerous tracks, outlaw racers, and escalating risk-and-reward mechanics. Early descriptions point toward a runs-based structure, where races aren’t just about finishing first—they’re about survival, momentum, and pushing your luck. Lose everything, or escape with massive winnings. It’s a racing game built around tension, not just lap times. Not Just Podracing While the word Racer…