Not every Star Wars game arrives with the same kind of cultural blast radius as Knights of the Old Republic, Battlefront, or Empire at War. Some games land in a quieter lane, tied to a specific platform, a specific moment, and a fanbase that only really discovers later that something interesting was hiding there all along. Star Wars: Lethal Alliance is one of those games. Released in late 2006 for PSP and Nintendo DS, Lethal Alliance came from Ubisoft during a period when Star Wars games were branching into all kinds of directions. On one end of the spectrum, the franchise had blockbuster strategy and shooter titles. On the other, it had handheld experiments like this one: an original story, a new lead character, and a mission set in the volatile gap between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope. Ubisoft positioned it as the first original Star Wars…
Nintendo DS
Star Wars Battlefront: Elite Squadron Released 16 Years Ago Today – A Portable Classic Worth Remembering
Sixteen years ago today, Star Wars Battlefront: Elite Squadron launched on PSP and Nintendo DS — delivering one of the most ambitious handheld Star Wars shooters ever made. Yep, before Battlefront II stole our hearts (and hours of our sleep), Elite Squadron was busy proving that you didn’t need a console to wage a galactic war. And honestly? It still deserves more love. A Battlefront Experience Built for Players on the Move Released on November 3, 2009, Elite Squadron let fans jump into massive Star Wars battles from their handhelds — at a time when most portable shooters could barely handle a laser pointer, let alone the Battle of Hoth. The game delivered: The PSP version especially felt like a full-scale Battlefront game squeezed into your backpack — and for a generation of fans, it was their Battlefront. X2, Clone Lore, and a Surprisingly Strong Story Long before Clone Wars…