Thursday, 8 November 2012

'Angry Birds Star Wars' Released


Angry Birds Star Wars unites the most popular video game of this generation with the most popular film franchise ever. Such a high profile combo may trigger a gag-reflex in the throats of gamers and Jedis alike, and understandably so. Both have been thoroughly spurned by insipid tie-ins and cash grabs. But Rovio's latest flies to the tender core of such cynicism and blasts it to stardust, with a payload of creativity, playfulness and reverence for the beloved sci-fi classic.

Understand that the Angry Birds games, in the most basic sense, are about gravity. The original Angry Birds pitted the player against Earth's gravity, requiring him to use the familiar up and down arch of a projectile to attack an enemy. Angry Birds Space improved upon this concept by adding and subtracting gravities, demanding players navigate multiple gravitational fields and the frictionless space between them.



Angry Birds Star Wars is the first in the series to allow players to manipulate gravity. The Obi-Wan-bird (that sound you hear is a thousand Star Wars fans groaning at such a phrase) has the ability to use the Force (a telekinetic-like power) to bend the gravity surrounding objects on the screen, batting them like tinker toys in any which direction, often toppling nearby, precariously built architecture in the process. The Force also serves the enemy pigs. Darth Vader-pig levitates platforms in certain stages, and taking him out releases the objects, raining down on helpless Empire-pigs. The Force isn't just a gimmick in Angry Birds Star Wars, it's a layer of strategy.

This app is the inverse, a game clearly made by people who love Star Wars films. Bonus levels, unlocked by collecting stars in the campaign, go so far to let the player play as R2D2 and C-3PO-birds — both with unique abilities — while a cut-scene reveals who truly shot first in a certain controversial showdown on Tatooine.


Angry Birds Star Wars leaves plenty of room for expansion. The first two sets of levels track the events of A New Hope, while a soon-to-be-released free Hoth level pack will dig into the beginning of Empire Strikes Back. If you're looking for more, you can buy an additional level pack, set in Dagobah, at a cost of $1.99. It's a bit irritating to see this sort of thing on the release day of a comparably brief game.

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