Jedi Knight Collection Available on Steam

Tom Goldman

Crying on the inside.
Aug 17, 2009
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Jedi Knight Collection Available on Steam



Some of the higher quality Star Wars games have recently been made available on Steam.

If you haven't played Star Wars: Dark Forces or the titles that came after it, now is the perfect time. Dark Forces, along with Star Wars Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II, Star Wars Jedi Knight: Mysteries of the Sith, Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast, and Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy are all now available for purchase on Steam in a collection for the low price of $19.99.

Purchasing the collection saves about $13, and is well worth it. These titles are first and third-person action/FPS titles set in the Star Wars universe. Yes, you do get to wield a lightsaber, and you do get to shoot the crap out of white helmet wearing imperial troopers.

I would put any of these games up against the more recent Star Wars: The Force Unleashed, though admittedly that may be some of the nostalgia in me talking. Dark Forces is still one of my most memorable first-person-shooters of all time. The gameplay moment that I remember best was throwing a thermal detonator at an imperial trooper, exploding him off the ledge of a cliff, and hearing him scream the whole way down. This may be nothing new nowadays, but when the game first came out in 1995 this was pretty cool. I may have always had to use cheats when I got stuck on some of the switch flipping puzzles, or when fighting the invincible Dark Troopers, but that doesn't stop my fond memories of the game.

Kyle Katarn, Dark Forces' protagonist, returned in Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II and its expansion Mysteries of the Sith. These games took the series to a whole new level, adding the ability to use a lightsaber and force powers, and including a new multiplayer mode. Dark Forces II now allowed me to force push these same enemies off of a cliff to hear them scream instead of using a thermal detonator, and it was great. Jedi Outcast saw the return of Katarn yet again, while in Jedi Academy players take on the role of Kyle's apprentice. The games are worthy additions to any FPS or Star Wars fan's library, and perfect to soak up some time while waiting for Star Wars: The Old Republic.

Via: 1up [http://www.1up.com/do/newsStory?cId=3176072]

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sunami88

New member
Jun 23, 2008
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Damn you Steam! I get a tiny bit of money, then they always release something like this.

I was basically raised on the 3 Dark Forces games (Dark Forces, Jedi Knight and Mysteries of the Sith).

Damn *pulls out credit card*.
 

Volucer

New member
Sep 4, 2008
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Dammit, I love these games, but lost the disks years ago...but..must..save...money...
 

Proteus214

Game Developer
Jul 31, 2009
2,270
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Ah, that brings me back...

Dark Forces was the second FPS I ever played, Doom being the first.
 

The Last Parade

New member
Apr 24, 2009
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I bought it and the files I downloaded were corrupted, Jedi Academy is missing the menu text file and Jedi Outcast is missing the default.cbf and mpdefault.cbf
 

Daniel Cygnus

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Jan 19, 2009
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I just got Jedi Knight, and I'm remembering why the first few levels scared me at age 6. There are some enormous heights to fall from, and they tend to make the enemies sneak up on you.

Soooo fun. This is the best thing I ever found on Steam. :D
 

INF1NIT3 D00M

New member
Aug 14, 2008
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I bought a LucasArts computer game set around the time Mysteries of the Sith came out. I used to spend my time playing Dark Forces, X-Wing, TIE Fighter, and the trials of both Dark Forces II and Mysteries of the Sith. I LIVED for Star Wars, the movies, the games... When I found this collection on steam I downloaded it immediately. Definitely worth it. Jedi Academy has proven to be a massive black hole, sucking up all my summer vacation time. Currently I'm downloading the MovieBattles II mod, which is pretty much another game in and of itself. Once I'm done with Jedi Academy I'm going to finish Dark Forces and play through the rest of the series in order.
Totally worth the 20 dollars. And they say you can't buy happiness...