There’s a Star Wars sport on the market that’s arduous to play in 2024 as a result of, for no matter purpose, it stays trapped on the hard-to-emulate OG Xbox with none official remakes, remasters, or backward compatibility help. That sport is Star Wars: Obi-Wan.
Final week, Lucasfilm Video games and Aspyr introduced a remastered model of 2002’s Star Wars: Bounty Hunter, a sport that first launched on PlayStation 2 and GameCube. The brand new remaster is ready to replace a number of the textures, enhance the lighting, and even add a brand new flashlight choice, too. That each one sounds good, and I’m excited to see yet one more previous Star Wars sport dropped at extra fashionable platforms. Nevertheless, seeing Bounty Hunter get the remaster therapy made me take into consideration Obi-Wan on Xbox, a sport that launched only a 12 months earlier than Bounty Hunter that’s nonetheless trapped on the unique Xbox console over 20 years after its launch.
In 2001, two years after the discharge of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, Lucasarts launched Star Wars: Obi-Wan as an unique sport for the Xbox. This third-person motion sport starred, you guessed it, Obi-Wan Kenobi and was each a prequel to and retelling of the Phantom Menace movie.
It’s not an excellent sport, to be clear. Nevertheless it featured some attention-grabbing concepts—like utilizing the fitting stick for lightsaber fight—and provided a enjoyable approach to expertise the primary Star Wars prequel earlier than Assault of the Clones hit theaters in 2002. Apart from, it’s not like Bounty Hunter is an unimaginable online game, both. But it’s getting a brand new remaster (after being launched on PS4 as a PS2 basic already), whereas Obi-Wan on Xbox is left behind.
Tips on how to play Star Wars: Obi-Wan in 2024
Star Wars: Obi-Wan by no means obtained a PC port, was by no means launched on PS2, and has by no means been up to date to help backward compatibility on Xbox One or Collection X/S. If you wish to play Obi-Wan you have got one good choice and one dangerous choice.
The great choice: You go purchase an OG Xbox and a duplicate of Obi-Wan. Set it up and there you go, you’re taking part in Star Wars: Obi-Wan. Nicely, that’s assuming the Xbox you got works correctly and the copy of the sport you bought isn’t too broken. (Fortunately pre-owned copies of the sport aren’t very costly, so if you need to purchase two of them it received’t break the financial institution.)
The dangerous choice is emulation. I like emulating video games! I’m not in opposition to it in any respect and I believe fan-developed emulators are an essential a part of sport preservation. So after I say emulating Obi-Wan is dangerous, I wish to be clear that it’s not as a result of I’m in opposition to taking part in previous video games utilizing third-party software program. No, taking part in Obi-Wan on an Xbox emulator is dangerous as a result of it sucks and is (as of this writing) not an excellent expertise.
When you play on CXBX-Reloaded, a fan-made Xbox emulator, you may be capable to make it by the sport, however many gamers have reported crashes, graphical bugs, and different issues that spoil the expertise. I’ve additionally tried to play Obi-Wan on XEMU, a unique Xbox emulator, and had even worse luck—I couldn’t get previous the second degree. Whereas some gamers have been in a position to tinker sufficient to get Obi-Wan working nicely on CXBX, it’s nonetheless not a perfect approach to play the sport.
Assist me Lucasfilm Video games, you’re my solely hope
So now, right here’s my plea: Somebody at Lucasfilm Video games, please contact Nightdive Studios, Aspyr, or one other developer that’s good at reviving previous video games and pay them the cash to convey Star Wars: Obi-Wan to extra platforms.
Cleaned up and working at 60FPS, Obi-Wan could be a strong hit on consoles just like the Swap. Plus the Star Wars prequels are presently experiencing a renaissance amongst followers who grew up watching the movies. Pleasure for prequel-era content material is at an all-time excessive in 2024 and I believe a well-done Obi-Wan port or remaster could be a slam dunk.
And if that’s not potential, on the very least it will be good to get the sport ported to PC so followers can preserve updating it and modding it simply for years to come back. Or somebody at Xbox flip the change and make this factor backwards suitable on Xbox One and Collection X/S consoles. I’d take that at this level!
However what I really need is a pleasant remaster. It will save part of online game historical past and rescue a Star Wars sport from being forgotten. It’s actually a win-win scenario and it’s about time Obi-Wan will get the remaster he deserves.
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