Best Star Wars games and some PC prebuilt to play them
Star Wars games are amazing, and, if you are over 30 years old, i would add legendary to that. I remember even this days, after 20 years, how i broke my first joystick playing Tie Fighter. It was amazing! I will talk about the Star Wars game series and few PC builds to play the games at max settings.
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords – Obsidian’s 2004 sequel to Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic follows an exiled former Jedi on the run from monstrous Sith. This legendary role-playing game takes place 4,000 years before the dawn of the Galactic Empire, features some of the best dialogue in any Star Wars game to date, and lets you fight your way through classic RPG dungeons with all the strength of a Jedi Master. Find out why everyone adores this unmissable sequel when you download it from the App Store, GOG.com, Steam, or Xbox One.
It may have launched itself into a scandal with an initial build that put way too much focus on microtransactions, but subsequent updates to Star Wars Battlefront II have transformed it into an easy game to love. It has the epic multiplayer battles, heaps of characters, loads of nerdy references, and an engaging story that centres on an attention-grabbing new character named Iden Versio (an Imperial-turned-Rebel played brilliantly by Janina Gavankar). The show-stealing moment in the campaign falls to Luke Skywalker, here voiced by Matthew Mercer, who takes part in an emotionally-satisfying scene that lasts long in the memory. See more reviews of Star Wars video Games at YourMoneyGeek.
The Phantom Menace was a pile of…bantha fodder. I’ll never forgive George Lucas for Jar Jar Binks, or for (spoiler alert!) killing off Darth Maul after having him on screen for about five minutes. But, it’s hard to argue against how exciting the Pod Racer scene was. Turns out, it didn’t make for a bad game, either. Originally for the Nintendo 64 (Dreamcast, PS2 and even a superior arcade machine version – complete with full-scale racer cockpit – were eventually produced too), Star Wars Episode I: Racer turned the scene quite effortlessly into a racing title. Somewhere between Wipeout and Mario Kart, it had a great campaign mode that let you upgrade parts for your pod racer, buying scrap from sleazy merchant Watto. With winding canyon courses that require you to do the floating-on-one-side-to-fit-through-a-chasm trick, it had a few heart-in-mouth moments, too.
The most pivotal decision you’ll make when purchasing a gaming desktop is which card you get. One option, of course, is no card at all; the integrated graphics silicon on modern Intel Core and some AMD processors is fine for casual 2D games. But to really bring out the beast on 3D AAA titles, you need a discrete graphics card or cards, and these cards are what distinguish a gaming desktop. Whether you go with an AMD- or Nvidia-based card is based partly on price, partly on performance. Some games are optimized for one type of card or another, but for the most part, you should choose the card that best fits within your budget. If you’re buying a complete gaming desktop, you of course don’t have to pay for a card in isolation, but this should help you understand how the card factors into the total price. You also have to know what you’re shopping for.
PC configuration pick of the month to play Star Wars intensive GPU games : If you’re thinking I just want a regular tower after looking through mini-PCs, cube PC, and a gaming PC that’s basically a triangle, the Omen Desktop is the system for you. It’s about as normal as gaming PC get from the major brands, but it still incorporates a few tricks like the two top panels that open to reveal hot-swappable hard drive bays. The system is pretty well loaded as far as gaming PCs go. Users can configure their system with up to an Intel Core i7-9700K processor and Nvidia RTX 2080 Ti graphics as seen above. It costs a pretty penny at $2,350, but it’s a solid system that will take anything on and is easy to upgrade without tools. Read extra details at gaming PC.