• Latest
  • Trending
Star Wars Dark Forces Remaster review

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster Review – The Force is Strong with This One

Daydreamers Review

Daydreamers Review: Saigon’s Stylish But Stumbling Vampires

Most People Die On Sundays Review

Most People Die On Sundays Review: Resisting the Cathartic Release

Chronicles of the Wolf Review

Chronicles of the Wolf Review: Forging a Path Through the Past

Surviving Ohio State Review

Surviving Ohio State Review: The Weight of Witness

Countdown Season 1 Review

Countdown Season 1 Review: Assembling the Parts of a Soulless Machine

JDM Japanese Drift Master Review

JDM: Japanese Drift Master Review – When Mechanics Meet Manga

M3GAN 2.0 Review

M3GAN 2.0 Review: When Silicon Valley Nightmares Meet Summer Blockbuster Ambitions

Trainwreck Poop Cruise Season 1 Review 1

Trainwreck: Poop Cruise Season 1 Review: Sensationalism on the High Seas

Head Over Heels Season 1 Review

Head Over Heels Season 1 Review: The Shaman and the Cursed Boy

Blood Bar Tycoon Review

Blood Bar Tycoon Review: A Bloody Good Idea, Poorly Executed

Pushers Review

Pushers Review: Weaponizing Invisibility for Laughs

Grenfell: Uncovered Review

Grenfell: Uncovered Review: The Human Cost of Calculated Neglect

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Thursday, June 26, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    28 Years Later 1

    Young Fathers Rewrite the Apocalypse With 28 Years Later Score

    Hitmakers Netflix

    Netflix Tunes Up July Line-up With Songwriter Show ‘Hitmakers’

    Doctor Who

    BBC Faces Backlash Over Early Doctor Who Drops

    The Pavilion

    Sarajevo Picks Mustafić’s Rebel Comedy ‘The Pavilion’ for Opening Night

    Thomas H. Brodek

    Producer Tom Brodek, Master of Stephen King Miniseries, Dies at 86

    BET Paramount

    BET Joins Paramount Layoff Wave as Cable Declines Deepen

    Roofman

    Channing Tatum Drills Into Oscar Season With Cianfrance’s ‘Roofman’

    Mindhunter

    David Fincher Weighs Mindhunter Revival as Film Trilogy

    How to Train Your Dragon

    ‘Elio’ Lands With a Thud as Pixar Records Its Worst Opening Weekend

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Daydreamers Review

    Daydreamers Review: Saigon’s Stylish But Stumbling Vampires

    Most People Die On Sundays Review

    Most People Die On Sundays Review: Resisting the Cathartic Release

    Surviving Ohio State Review

    Surviving Ohio State Review: The Weight of Witness

    Countdown Season 1 Review

    Countdown Season 1 Review: Assembling the Parts of a Soulless Machine

    M3GAN 2.0 Review

    M3GAN 2.0 Review: When Silicon Valley Nightmares Meet Summer Blockbuster Ambitions

    Trainwreck Poop Cruise Season 1 Review 1

    Trainwreck: Poop Cruise Season 1 Review: Sensationalism on the High Seas

    Head Over Heels Season 1 Review

    Head Over Heels Season 1 Review: The Shaman and the Cursed Boy

    Pushers Review

    Pushers Review: Weaponizing Invisibility for Laughs

    Grenfell: Uncovered Review

    Grenfell: Uncovered Review: The Human Cost of Calculated Neglect

  • Game Reviews
    Chronicles of the Wolf Review

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review: Forging a Path Through the Past

    JDM Japanese Drift Master Review

    JDM: Japanese Drift Master Review – When Mechanics Meet Manga

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review: A Bloody Good Idea, Poorly Executed

    Ghost Frequency Review

    Ghost Frequency Review: All Atmosphere, No Conclusion

    Death Stranding 2 On the Beach Review 1

    Death Stranding 2: On the Beach Review – Kojima’s Outback Odyssey

    RAIDOU Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army Review

    RAIDOU Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army Review: The Detective Who Couldn’t Investigate

    Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest Review

    Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest Review – Revisiting a Sunken Legacy

    TRON: Catalyst Review

    TRON: Catalyst Review: More Style Than Substance

    FBC: Firebreak Review

    FBC: Firebreak Review: Corporate Chaos and Cooperative Action

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    28 Years Later 1

    Young Fathers Rewrite the Apocalypse With 28 Years Later Score

    Hitmakers Netflix

    Netflix Tunes Up July Line-up With Songwriter Show ‘Hitmakers’

    Doctor Who

    BBC Faces Backlash Over Early Doctor Who Drops

    The Pavilion

    Sarajevo Picks Mustafić’s Rebel Comedy ‘The Pavilion’ for Opening Night

    Thomas H. Brodek

    Producer Tom Brodek, Master of Stephen King Miniseries, Dies at 86

    BET Paramount

    BET Joins Paramount Layoff Wave as Cable Declines Deepen

    Roofman

    Channing Tatum Drills Into Oscar Season With Cianfrance’s ‘Roofman’

    Mindhunter

    David Fincher Weighs Mindhunter Revival as Film Trilogy

    How to Train Your Dragon

    ‘Elio’ Lands With a Thud as Pixar Records Its Worst Opening Weekend

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Daydreamers Review

    Daydreamers Review: Saigon’s Stylish But Stumbling Vampires

    Most People Die On Sundays Review

    Most People Die On Sundays Review: Resisting the Cathartic Release

    Surviving Ohio State Review

    Surviving Ohio State Review: The Weight of Witness

    Countdown Season 1 Review

    Countdown Season 1 Review: Assembling the Parts of a Soulless Machine

    M3GAN 2.0 Review

    M3GAN 2.0 Review: When Silicon Valley Nightmares Meet Summer Blockbuster Ambitions

    Trainwreck Poop Cruise Season 1 Review 1

    Trainwreck: Poop Cruise Season 1 Review: Sensationalism on the High Seas

    Head Over Heels Season 1 Review

    Head Over Heels Season 1 Review: The Shaman and the Cursed Boy

    Pushers Review

    Pushers Review: Weaponizing Invisibility for Laughs

    Grenfell: Uncovered Review

    Grenfell: Uncovered Review: The Human Cost of Calculated Neglect

  • Game Reviews
    Chronicles of the Wolf Review

    Chronicles of the Wolf Review: Forging a Path Through the Past

    JDM Japanese Drift Master Review

    JDM: Japanese Drift Master Review – When Mechanics Meet Manga

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review

    Blood Bar Tycoon Review: A Bloody Good Idea, Poorly Executed

    Ghost Frequency Review

    Ghost Frequency Review: All Atmosphere, No Conclusion

    Death Stranding 2 On the Beach Review 1

    Death Stranding 2: On the Beach Review – Kojima’s Outback Odyssey

    RAIDOU Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army Review

    RAIDOU Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army Review: The Detective Who Couldn’t Investigate

    Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest Review

    Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest Review – Revisiting a Sunken Legacy

    TRON: Catalyst Review

    TRON: Catalyst Review: More Style Than Substance

    FBC: Firebreak Review

    FBC: Firebreak Review: Corporate Chaos and Cooperative Action

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Star Wars Dark Forces Remaster review

The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy Review: Why Prime Video's Newest Comedy Is Out of This World

Apple Aims for Sci-Fi Supremacy with Neuromancer Series

Home Games Reviews Games

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster Review – The Force is Strong with This One

Rebel Yell: Celebrating the rough magic of 90s Star Wars while recognizing the limitations of dated design

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
1 year ago
in Games, Nintendo, PC Games, PlayStation, Reviews Games, Xbox
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

It’s hard to overstate the influence of LucasArts’ 1995 sci-fi shooter Star Wars: Dark Forces. One of the earliest true 3D first-person shooters, it expanded on genre classics like Doom with its Jedi graphics engine allowing for multi-layered levels, objective-driven gameplay, and a surprisingly complex story. You play as Kyle Katarn, a mercenary turned Rebel agent, across 14 gritty missions spanning the galaxy.

Fast forward to today and Nightdive Studios, known for their stellar revivals of retro classics, have given Dark Forces a glorious remastering. By porting the original code to their KEX engine, they’ve smoothed out controls, boosted resolutions up to 4K and 120 FPS, and even given a facelift to the blocky cutscenes and sprites.

The result is the definitive way to experience this trailblazing piece of Star Wars history. Newcomers can enjoy slick modern presentation while series veterans can bask in a faithfully preserved slice of childhood. Either way, it’s a remaster done right.

So strap on your blaster, secure that glowing door passkey, and get ready to save the Rebel Alliance from an Imperial onslaught. It’s time to revisit the magic of LucasArts’ pioneering opus.

A Complete Visual Overhaul

It’s staggering how far gaming visuals have come since the blocky polygons of early 3D titles like Dark Forces. Yet Nightdive’s wizardry lets you crank those pixels up to crystal clarity across a range of modern displays. We’re talking support for 4K resolutions at buttery smooth 120 FPS frame rates with unlocked widescreen and ultra-widescreen setups.

But the improvements go far beyond boosted pixels and performance. Nightdive has treated Dark Forces to completely reworked visual assets from character models to environments and weapons. Lighting sees a particular glow-up with global illumination effects adding new mood to the brooding Imperial bases. And you can easily toggle between the remastered graphics and original 1995 visuals with a button press.

The cinematics also see love, and you can switch between the charm of the old school cutscenes or slick new animated storyboards. It’s a great cross-section of how far graphics have evolved. Tiny Stormtrooper sprites are now discernible humans in reflective armor from a distance.  What were once murky green garbles are lush new alien vistas.

Of course, polygon counts remain simple by modern standards. The charm of early 3D level design shines through from the maze-like bases to the layered Star Destroyer hangers. Environments dazzle more through imaginative layouts than graphical complexity. But those nostalgic for Dark Forces of old can relax knowing Nightdive has preserved the core visual experience while making it sing on contemporary hardware.

“Uncover the magic and mystery of the Grace family’s adventures in our The Spiderwick Chronicles 2024 review. Join Jared, Mallory, and Simon as they discover the hidden world of faeries and mythical creatures.”

Classic Shooter Action with Modern Polish

Under the slick new presentation, Dark Forces Remastered retains the breakneck first-person shooter gameplay that made the original a hit. As Rebel agent Kyle Katarn, you’ll blast through 14 levels of non-stop running and gunning against the Empire’s forces. We’re talking unrelenting action as you mow down Stormtroopers, Imperial officers, and killer droids with iconic Star Wars weaponry.

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster Review

The complex, almost labyrinthian level design also returns demanding non-linear exploration full of switch puzzles and hidden passages. Each stage features multi-layered Imperial bases and vessels to fight across filled with obstacles to overcome. You may need to backtrack across twisting corridors or locate colored keycards to progress. Some cerebral dexterity is key amidst the trigger-happy chaos.

Where the remaster improves things is through far smoother control and aiming. Things felt slippery in the 1995 release but now play responsive and tight. You can also activate aim assist for more accuracy to your headshots. And the entire control scheme is customizable from button mapping to stick sensitivity.

In an era of guided, hand-holding games, the complexity of Dark Forces may overwhelm some. But amidst the maze navigation and tricky jumps, there’s a purity to the relentless combat challenge that stands the test of time. This plays like the golden age of shooters with a whole new lick of modern polish.

Iconic Audio Immersion

Close your eyes in Dark Forces Remastered, and you could swear you’re on the set of a Star Wars film. The audio design transports you right into the universe with a cacophony of iconic sounds. The electric snap of blaster rifles, squawk of comlinks, and chatter of alien languages envelope your senses. Stormtroopers bellow out authentic gurgled taunts through their helmets as your shots fizz against their armor.

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster Review

The voice acting also impresses considering the compression limitations of 90s game audio. Key talents like legendary announcer Denny Delk narrate events with gravelly gusto. And the MIDI-powered score hits all the right cinematic notes, evoking John Williams’s sweeping Star Wars fanfares.

By modern standards, it all may sound primitive, with certain repeated effects grating over time. But let yourself sink into the experience, and Dark Forces fills your ears with the essence of Star Wars. You won’t just see the lasers zap Rebels and Imperials across monitor-spanning battlescapes, you’ll hear this epic sci-fi struggle raging around you.

So find a nice pair of surround sound headphones, crank up the volume, and let the sounds of blaster-scorched glory carry you back to the mid-90s heyday of LucasArts innovation.

Beyond the Campaign

Beyond the core single player campaign, Dark Forces Remastered packs in some sweet extras for Star Wars fanatics. Within the special Vault section, you’ll uncover a trove of concept art, early sketches, 3D models, and other behind-the-scenes materials showcasing the original development. It’s a nice peek under the hood even if a bit light on content for serious aficionados.

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster Review

More interesting is an additional prototype level created for the 1995 CES demo but never included in the final game. This gives you stormtrooper-blasting action aboard an Imperial Star Destroyer years before Jedi Outcast let you loose inside one. It’s a neat curio for design fans and plays just like the main missions.

Rounding things out is a smattering of cheat codes and challenges to mix up subsequent playthroughs. We’re talking old school perks like god mode, all weapons, and instant level warps that make wiping out the Empire even more satisfying. Friendly difficulty settings also ensure less seasoned gamers can enjoy the ride.

So whether you’re a Star Wars archaeologist keen on gaming relics, nostalgic veteran hungry for some grade-A cheat action, or a modern player seeking accessible customization, Dark Forces Remastered’s extras help take the package to new heights.

A Definitive Blast From the Past

When the credits roll on Dark Forces Remastered, you realize Nightdive’s efforts have culminated in the definitive way to experience this trailblazing piece of Star Wars history. The slick new presentation removes 90s barriers making it accessible for newcomers while remaining faithful enough to delight series veterans.

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster Review

Make no mistake though, with its complex levels full of backtracking and opaque objectives, Dark Forces shows its age at times. Prepare for lots of aimless wandering down corridors as you suss out the next cryptic puzzle solution. Some streamlining of the inventory and map systems would also be welcome.

Yet there’s an intrepid charm to overcoming the challenges of its labyrinthine designs that stands the test of time. And amdist some vintage jankiness, the purity of gameplay Loop – shoot, explore, solve, repeat – retains a nostalgic purity. When those muffled midi trumpets blare as your boots clomp through an Imperial base, you feel LucasArts’ pioneering magic at work.

So if you can stomach the complexity and frustration, Dark Forces Remastered rewards with hours of intense 1990s shooter action refined for modern hardware. Nightdive has successfully resurrected both Kyle Katarn and the Jedi engine that powered his adventures to the delight of newcomers and loyalists alike. Through the raw strength of its run-and-gun core, this remaster emerges a winner.

The Review

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster

8 Score

With its breakneck shooter action heightened by slick modern presentation, Star Wars: Dark Forces Remastered stands tall as both a history lesson in LucasArts innovation and a thoroughly enjoyable blast of retro gaming. Some convoluted designs show the limitations of 1990s level creation and occasional aimless wandering can frustrate, but the purity of the core run-and-gun gameplay still thrills. Nightdive has successfully dusted off this genre pioneer, polishing a genuine classic to renew its magic for both newcomers and longtime fans. The relentless combat, iconic audio, and faithfully complex level designs excel in places while feeling understandably dated in others. Yet through the strength of its core mechanics, Dark Forces Remastered emerges a winner - an lovingly enhanced trip back to the golden era of Star Wars games.

PROS

  • Slick upgraded visuals and performance
  • Faithful recreation of classic gameplay
  • Iconic Star Wars audio design
  • Complex and imaginative level layouts
  • Fun and frantic run-and-gun action

CONS

  • Maze-like levels cause aimless wandering
  • Dated design with convoluted puzzles
  • Lack of guidance around objectives/inventory
  • Controls and mechanics feel antiquated

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Adventure gameFeaturedKEX EngineLucasfilm Games LLCNightdive StudiosShooter Video GameStar Wars: Dark Forces RemasterStar Wars: Jedi Knight
Previous Post

The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy Review: Why Prime Video’s Newest Comedy Is Out of This World

Next Post

Apple Aims for Sci-Fi Supremacy with Neuromancer Series

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Marshmallow Review

    Marshmallow Review: These Woods Hide Unexpected Secrets

    4 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Alma and the Wolf Review: Ethan Embry Shines in a Flawed Fever Dream

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Smoke Review: The Year’s Most Unpredictable and Unsettling Show

    7 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 7 Biggest Station Wagons on the Market

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Outrageous Season 1 Review: Champagne and Cyanide

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Surviving Ohio State Review
Movies

Surviving Ohio State Review: The Weight of Witness

1 hour ago
Countdown Season 1 Review
TV Shows

Countdown Season 1 Review: Assembling the Parts of a Soulless Machine

2 hours ago
M3GAN 2.0 Review
Entertainment

M3GAN 2.0 Review: When Silicon Valley Nightmares Meet Summer Blockbuster Ambitions

14 hours ago
Grenfell: Uncovered Review
Movies

Grenfell: Uncovered Review: The Human Cost of Calculated Neglect

21 hours ago
Ironheart Review
Entertainment

Ironheart Review: Science vs. Magic in Marvel’s Moral Labyrinth

21 hours ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version