If Star Wars: Empire at War (2006) gave players the fantasy of commanding the Galactic Civil War, Forces of Corruption asked a much messier question: what happens when the war is no longer just Rebels versus Empire? Released later in 2006 as the official expansion to Empire at War, Forces of Corruption did more than add extra maps and units. It introduced the Zann Consortium, a criminal faction that turned the strategy sandbox into something more unpredictable, more opportunistic, and in some ways more distinctly “Star Wars underworld” than the base game ever was. That shift is exactly why the expansion still matters. It did not simply make Empire at War bigger. It made it stranger. A clean way to frame its legacy is this: Game Information Title: Star Wars: Empire at War – Forces of CorruptionRelease year: 2006Developer: Petroglyph GamesPublisher: LucasArtsPlatforms: PC (Windows), later MacGenre: Real-time strategy (RTS) /…