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Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II - The Sith Lords

  • Video Game
  • 2004
  • T
IMDb RATING
8.9/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
Grey DeLisle, Sara Kestelman, Louis Mellis, and Kristoffer Tabori in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II - The Sith Lords (2004)
Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords
Play trailer1:24
1 Video
17 Photos
Dark FantasySpace Sci-FiActionAdventureDramaFantasyMysterySci-Fi

You play an exiled and depowered Jedi Knight who has returned to the Republic and must restore both your powers and the devastated Jedi Order to challenge the Sith.You play an exiled and depowered Jedi Knight who has returned to the Republic and must restore both your powers and the devastated Jedi Order to challenge the Sith.You play an exiled and depowered Jedi Knight who has returned to the Republic and must restore both your powers and the devastated Jedi Order to challenge the Sith.

  • Writers
    • Chris Avellone
    • Ferret Baudoin
    • Michael Chu
  • Stars
    • Sara Kestelman
    • Nicky Katt
    • Roger Guenveur Smith
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.9/10
    5.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Writers
      • Chris Avellone
      • Ferret Baudoin
      • Michael Chu
    • Stars
      • Sara Kestelman
      • Nicky Katt
      • Roger Guenveur Smith
    • 40User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords
    Trailer 1:24
    Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords

    Photos17

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    Top cast55

    Edit
    Sara Kestelman
    Sara Kestelman
    • Kreia
    • (voice)
    Nicky Katt
    Nicky Katt
    • Atton Rand
    • (voice)
    Roger Guenveur Smith
    Roger Guenveur Smith
    • Bao-Dur
    • (voice)
    Kelly Hu
    Kelly Hu
    • Visas Marr
    • (voice)
    Daran Norris
    Daran Norris
    • G0-T0
    • (voice)
    • …
    Grey DeLisle
    Grey DeLisle
    • Handmaiden
    • (voice)
    • …
    Kristoffer Tabori
    Kristoffer Tabori
    • HK-47
    • (voice)
    • …
    Emily Berry
    Emily Berry
    • Mira
    • (voice)
    Louis Mellis
    • Darth Sion
    • (voice)
    Greg Ellis
    Greg Ellis
    • Disciple
    • (voice)
    Elizabeth Rider
    Elizabeth Rider
    • Atris
    • (voice)
    John Cygan
    John Cygan
    • Mandalore
    • (voice)
    Edward Asner
    Edward Asner
    • Master Vrook Lamar
    • (voice)
    André Sogliuzzo
    André Sogliuzzo
    • Rutum
    • (voice)
    • …
    Andrew Chaikin
    • Davrel
    • (voice)
    • …
    Andy Secombe
    Andy Secombe
    • Quello
    • (voice)
    Anthony May
    Anthony May
    • Serroco Leader
    • (voice)
    • …
    Billy Brown
    Billy Brown
    • Master Zez-Kai Ell
    • (voice)
    • …
    • Writers
      • Chris Avellone
      • Ferret Baudoin
      • Michael Chu
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    8.95.8K
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    Featured reviews

    sheepgood307

    KOTOR2-- The Force is with this one

    It's hard to try and live up to a game that's been voted "Best Game of the Year" by at least 6 different groups. But this game almost does it. Enhanced interaction and influence with highly developed party members, more upgrades for your weapons, and a fascinating plot leave few weaknesses. If you've been reading the IMDb threads about this game or Xbox magazine, you know this already: the bosses are just not as menacing as Darth Malak was in the first game. Even so, I was playing this for hours at a time, whenever I could muster it in my schedule, and it became dangerous how much emotion I poured into that game. If you've played KOTOR 1, definitely play KOTOR 2.
    9Metamorphosis89

    The writing is amazing.

    I wish the new star wars movies had a story and writing this good. They took the star wars ip and added more adult themes, they added choices which werent just either black or white ( Kotor 1), they expanded on the story by exploring the force and adding philosophy to it. They also found the perfect balance. the conversations dont bore me like the later games of obsidian, talking about pillars of eternity which was a total letdown story wise for me. So much meaningless text which became a chore to read each time i talked to someone. Kotor 2 doesnt have that, 90% of the time, expecially with kreia, i listen like i would listen to some intellectual celebrity (neil degrasse tyson or carl sagan come to mind). When she talks about the force i feel like i listen to carl sagan talking about the universe. A little more time and a higher budget would have made this game legendary.
    9isaactheanimator

    I am genuinely surprised.

    This is only my first playthrough with the game. There's still a little more I want to learn about the story with a few more replays. With what I've experienced so far. This is quite possibly the smartest Star Wars story I've ever came across and nothing else even comes close.

    Over the past few years, I've been growing burned out of Star Wars. And the new content and fan discussions around it have driven me further than I thought I would ever have in my teenage years. I also had this guilty feeling that maybe Star Wars isn't really that interesting anymore, especially because of how minimized it has been recently as a basic fairy tale story for children by both the makers of the new content and the consumers who defend it constantly.

    KOTOR not only brought me back to what I used to feel about Star Wars, it opened it into a completely new direction. It's way better than what I wished before of how I wanted Star Wars to be more complex and self aware about its themes of good and evil. I don't play any RPG, and admittedly am not a fan of it. I admittedly came to this game because I was once a Star Wars fan and I heard this is some of the best storytelling we've not only gotten from Star Wars but of all time. I went through KOTOR the first game and thought it was pretty good. The story, while the main plot was pretty much a retelling of A New Hope with aspects from other movies, did a really good job bringing me in to the Star Wars universe I cannot see any other RPG pull off, and the character work/side quests/ planets are very interesting and you can tell have a lot of idea put into them.

    KOTOR 2 takes what the first game was good at and tripled a fraction of it. The story is better, the characters are better, the decision making is much more intriguing in this game than the first because the themes of good vs evil is taken SO MUCH more seriously, and you are more afraid of choosing a good decision that maybe would lead to worse consequences or a friend would lose trust in you. The game has so many aspects about its events and backstories that I couldn't come to a full conclusion on how to really about any of it morally. The movies usually make it clear that the blowup of Alderaan is bad and the blowup of the Death Star is good. I have no idea on what to feel about the wars that happened before the events of this game. The Mandialorian Wars, the Battle of Malachor V. The game gave such a strong theme that no action anyone ever took is great. Even when a character acted on the best intentions, it always ends up horribly in the price of war. It also added so much more depth to the Force than anything I've ever seen. It put more emphasis on what kind of choices you can make with it, such as can you use the Dark Side for the greater good? Or can a Jedi who hasn't fallen do something worse than a Jedi that has fallen. While still keeping the Light vs Dark concept consistent and making sense. Yes, the dark side still consumes you and you will still create/face consequences, but I love the idea that this game came across, that some of the Jedi, including Revan, just HAD to turn to the Dark Side in order to understand how the Sith can be defeated while sacrificing their own goodwill in order to do it. It's even much more complex than that.

    All the character monologues, even when they go for a long time, are almost always intriguing and never usually boring, especially when they're backed up by amazing voice acting and storytelling within their dialogue. It especially helped make for some great characters that we barely get to see. Like Darth Sion and Darth Nihilus only showed up for one or two scenes before the climax, but are given so much depth from some of Kreia's monologues that it barely matters and their payoff is worth it.

    Kreia is hands down, the most intriguing, and one of the best written characters I have ever seen in Star Wars. She carries the entire game, she's much more intelligent and manipulative than even characters like Palpatine can ever dream to be. Her words of advice are genuinely smart and believable, and her ideas and philosophy of the Force can be applied to much of real life as well, the same reason Empire Strikes Back's themes are so great. Except her philosophy is much more brutal and grey than any of what other movies or EU content taught. Her philosophy is more about which action you take, good or bad, works best for your purpose or others', and depending on which side of the galaxy you're in. Giving a stranger you don't know some money, is that a helpful case or is giving someone what they not have earned 'cheapening' their problem? Her philosophy works like this, it's more about doing the right thing but being fully committed to it without being cheap. If you want to know how to defeat the Sith, act like or become a Sith and then you'll know. You want to understand how powerful or special you are? Look at yourself without your Jedi powers and see how you hold on your own. You hate the Force and it's prophetic will that destroys billions of people for every generation? Work your way towards the rarest, darkest knowledge possible to DESTROY THE FORCE. Kreia thrived on these ideas and always talked about people she knew that thrived on them as well. But you still had your own choice as a player to deny these teachings and reject Kreia as a teacher. Because this game gives perspective, not preach. But her teachings were still the most intriguing part of the game. And I could listen to hours of her all day. She makes for some of the greatest villains ever made, period.

    Not even a week before I played this game, I watched a Bad Batch episode and groaned because of the way the episode just turns out that a senator a clone was told to arrest just comes out and simply states her intentions aren't bad without explaining why and suddenly that was enough for a clone to put down his weapon and realize his mistake. That was not what Star Wars is, never was even going back to the first 3 films. Star Wars is not about denial or the quickest road to redemption in a small world. Growth takes time, and redemption is hard for those who struggle too much with good and evil. We all struggle in a harsh world we ourselves can't control. And what we can control, is up for us to decide, we triumph based on whether that decision we make was hard, not just that it was right. It's easy to make a right choice when nothing holds you back. We triumph when Han went back to help Luke in the Battle of Yavin when he thought he didn't want to. Not with Rey defeating Palpatine in the third film, because it was always eventual. Star Wars needs to go back when things really meant something again. It's a story about war. People die and there's never coming back from it. Even in a simplistic adventure, we can't brush it off like nothing serious came out of it. Accept the reality and show it, not dedicate a whole minute of sadness to one rebel who died in battle we never even met or heard nothing special about. KOTOR 2 is something I don't want to be pretentious and say every Star Wars project should be like it, because it's much better than it needed to be and it's too much to compare with any other Star Wars project, but Star Wars should take inspiration from it and follow its teachings. It's the core idea of how you can keep Star Wars interesting and it really took an advantage on what was simplistic about Star Wars. And it knew how to do it without being pretentious or going against anything of what made SW what it was. I hate the "Jedi and Sith are both bad and need to end" concept that's talked about by so many fans, but I'm glad my hate for it is over the way the fans discuss it than how it was originally brought to the table. This game doesn't go by one idea that opposes another, it explores everything and supports/attacks all sides. Every hero and villain has both redeemable and bad qualities, and every one of them has reasonable but flawed motives, And I feel any author or writer should understand this. For what you would complain about Star Wars being a kiddy-ish unchallenging story, this game turns it away from that in every aspect it can, and it deserves the praise for the way it achieved it way more than TLJ does. It's going as the best written Star Wars story I've came across, not even "one of" to be honest, because it set that high of a bar. Empire Strikes Back is a great movie and it gets its point across very well with way less. But the writing with KOTOR 2 generally is smarter and more compelling. Yoda is a great character but now he doesn't even compare to Kreia. Even Revan through only exposition and dialogue is quite possibly more complex than over half the Star Wars characters in the movies. With some flaws, I already consider it a masterpiece. And I'm glad I came across stuff like this later on in my life than sooner. I'm gonna replay the game a few more times to learn some more about the story. The experience from so far is worth it. One of my favorite Star Wars pieces and I can't think of any other SW stuff to reach this level.
    9lordshen-85571

    The most philosophical Star Wars piece

    By far the best and most complex Star Wars story. You really should play it at least once, even though it has dated graphics and mechanics. Oh, and play it with the fan made restored content mode, since kotor 2 haven't been finished because Lucasarts' greed (that's why I gave it "only" 9 star). Compared to other Star Wars stories it is like books to comics. EA really should remake it with the original content, since sadly not everything could been restored.
    CaptainSkye99

    Brilliant, but different

    KotOR II, eh? I'm sure most fans of the series were a tad surprised when they heard a sequel would be coming out so soon after the first. We've all heard the horror stories about the "expensive expansion pack" kinds of sequels. KotOR II does NOT fit into that category.

    KotOR II's storyline is set 5 years after the event of the original KotOR. While you do not play the same character as the first game, you play a new one that is just as (or maybe even more) interesting. The plot itself can be viewed many ways. While the dialogue is rich and very well written, the plot itself doesn't have much structure (though that's more or less intentional).

    Your party characters interact much more, and this time they don't just stand there and do nothing. However, their stories can't be fleshed out as much as the first game, and you may find yourself loosing interest in some of them later on in the game.

    Overall this is a fantastic game. Its smartly written, and carries a really groovy "fantasy-esque" feel the changes the star wars experience (for the better). The game starts out magnificent, but towards the end you will start really seeing the holes (the game's development schedule was far too ambitious). Really, the only way to form a fair opinion of this game is to play it yourself.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      There was originally meant to be a factory for HK-50 units which the player was to infiltrate and destroy. Content was created for parts of the game, but it was eventually removed due to time constraints. The factory was later restored and made fully playable by fans.
    • Quotes

      Anzanti Zhug: [while the Exile is on his way to meet the Exchange boss of Nar Shaddaa's Refugee Sector, the party is intercepted at the landing plattform] I am Anzanti Zhug, leader of Zhugs, very powerful, very skilled hunters. It would be very smart of you to tell me where the criminal Jedi has gone. And do speak very quick, my patience is very low.

      Atton Rand: Anybody here catch that? All I understood was 'very'.

      Bao-Dur: I think he wanted us to give up the General to his poorly-trained collection of bounty hunters.

      Atton Rand: Ah. Well, that would explain it. Which one do you want?

      Bao-Dur: I'll take the stupid one who decided to threaten us rather than shoot us when he had the chance.

    • Connections
      Edited into Star Wars: Le Pouvoir de la Force (2008)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 6, 2004 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • GOG.com
      • Lucas Arts
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Star Wars: KOTOR II
    • Production company
      • Obsidian Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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