IMDb RATING
8.0/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
You are the protector of Luke Skywalker.You are the protector of Luke Skywalker.You are the protector of Luke Skywalker.
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Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire is probably the most ambitious and overly-stretched game of the franchise in terms of gameplay styles, but it actually adds to the sense of gaming variety; at least its non-conventionality worked in favor of it as opposed to something like Superman 64 did (which was the opposite of innovative or well-done), and Nintendo was still testing the waters of 3D video-gaming in general. So historically speaking, Shadows of the Empire was probably too far ahead of its time and not meant for the right system technically speaking (the N64 cartridges could only manage mere 12MBs) but kudos to Lucasfilm for pushing the boundaries of a young technology and medium in 1996.
Shadows gets 4/5 stars.
Shadows gets 4/5 stars.
I loved how this was a multimedia release and had read the books, comics and had the tie ins years ago. But alas, nothing to play the game on! Well GOG finally released it and I just finished it on 'easy'. I did NOT find easy to be easy! But I enjoyed the way its story ties into the book and comic. The only thing really stopping me giving it 10 is 3 little details. 1. Some of the scenes were too dark. Whether it was an age thing or what, it made it hard to see to navigate. 2. auto aim was atrocious. Never worked if the robot shooting at me was beneath me.
3. Dash has an annoying habit of running off cliffs. Hitting back space, crouching, sometimes nothing stopped him. Finally I found a Logitech Gamepad worked better than the keyboard.
I did find the swoop riding fun when I got the hang of it and the space combat was great!
The graphics are dated. But that's okay because those dianoga monsters in the sewers are one thing I do not want greater detail on.
Given its age it was a great game and reminded me a lot of the Dark Forces series. I just wish it had let me do the aiming!
3. Dash has an annoying habit of running off cliffs. Hitting back space, crouching, sometimes nothing stopped him. Finally I found a Logitech Gamepad worked better than the keyboard.
I did find the swoop riding fun when I got the hang of it and the space combat was great!
The graphics are dated. But that's okay because those dianoga monsters in the sewers are one thing I do not want greater detail on.
Given its age it was a great game and reminded me a lot of the Dark Forces series. I just wish it had let me do the aiming!
This was a game I rented multiple times back in the day, as it was pretty fun and quite frankly there were not all that many fun games for the Nintendo 64. It was this one and Turok, both rather fun games and both had a flaw to them that made them less than ideal. Extreme difficulty. Well to be fair, a person can easily win this game on the lowest difficulty selection. The problem? Well, you do not get much of an ending on this setting. "No problem," You are probably thinking to yourself, "I won the game easily enough on the easy level, I can probably handle the next one up". Well I do not know about anyone else, but neither my friend or me could handle it on the next difficulty level and I applaud anyone else who could. My friend could not make it past the first level, I got to the boss in the ice cavern stage where the boss took me out in like two shots and I pretty much sat there with my jaw opening wondering how in the world can anyone survive the game on such a insane degree of difficulty and there was at least one more degree of difficulty beyond the one up from easy, there may of been two! Still, it is a fun game on the easy mode as you play as some made up character that is buddies with Han Solo so unfortunately no light saber here. Still, some of the levels are a blast to play (unless on the aforementioned higher difficulty). I especially enjoyed the level where you were on the desert planet and you could see enemies far off and I used to blast them before they even saw me coming. I also liked the level where you had to fight that strange creature that was underwater in a sewer like stage. Of course, I made it all the way through, but I have no idea if Dash survived, because you had to be the best of the best to see beyond the shabby ending you get on the easiest section. I guess George Lucas wanted you to earn it!
An original effort from Lucasarts to build a game with no defined genre, which combines the best of many situations. An arcade excitement, which benefits from a very special asset. It's like this: I would have given it a 7, but one point goes for the Joel McNeely score, which is by far the best music written for a videogame, and is a great match to John Williams' classic score. Fantastic gameplay and graphics are aided by these fantastical musical pieces, which would fit in a Hollywood epic. Good fun, and many hours of gaming.
Shadows of the Empire was originally a PC game.But when Nintendo 64 appeared, Lucasarts launched this game in the new Nintendo console. The game does not have good graphics or a good gameplay, but is a Fun-Factor game, is very cool. You play as Dash Rendar, an old friend of Han Solo(He is a smuggler, too) and his loyal droid LE-BO729, or just Leebo.In this game you have to stop Prince Xizor's evil plans. For this, you can count with Dash's multifunctional Blaster, a Snowspeeder, a Speederbike and his starship, the Outrider, a ship that is strangely similar to the Millennium Falcon. Shadows of the Empire was the first Star Wars game in N64.And it is a very good game. My score for Star Wars Shadows of the Empire is 9/10
Did you know
- TriviaThe piece of music played at the title screen/select file screen was not composed for the game, it was unused music composed for L'Empire contre-attaque (1980).
- Crazy credits"Never Actively Tried to Sabotage the Project, Tim Schafer, the Raccoon King"
- Alternate versionsThe N64 and PC version differ greatly. The PC version has sharper and smoother gameplay graphics (using a 3D card) than the N64 version. The PC version and N64 version have slightly different cutscenes, that being the PC version has full-motion cinematic cutscenes with sound effects and voices, while the N64 version just has drawn sketches with text at the bottom of the screen. Plus, during gameplay, where in the N64 version you had to read what the characters were saying to you, the PC version has voices.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Gamesmaster: Episode #5.11 (1995)
- SoundtracksMain Title/The Ice Planet Of Hoth
(from L'Empire contre-attaque (1980))
Written by John Williams
Used in opening cinematic and main title screen
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