Star Wars Trilogy Arcade box art

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Star Wars Trilogy Arcade

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Star Wars Trilogy Arcade

Dec 31, 1998

Main game

3.78 average rating based on 54 ratings

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Star Wars Trilogy Arcade is an arcade game first released in 1998. The game is a 3-D rail shooter based on the original trilogy of Star Wars films and was released along with the special editions of these films. Sega also released an accompanying pinball game. The game is not to be confused with Star Wars Arcade, another Star Wars game released to arcades by Sega in 1993.
Developers
LucasArts, Sega Enterprises, Ltd.
Publishers
LucasArts
Franchises
Star Wars
Platforms
Arcade
Genres
Arcade, Shooter
Themes
Action, Science fiction
Release Dates
1998 (Worldwide)
Arcade
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User Stats
110
In Collection
6
Wish Listed
0
Playing
8
Backlogged
How Long Is Star Wars Trilogy Arcade?
Main story: 0.4 hours
Total completions: 1
Stokesology
Stokesology gave Jan 13, 2021
Stokesology gave Jan 13, 2021
The Original Trilogy Experience

At the time of release, this was the one stop arcade for the big moments from the original trilogy. I wiped the drool from my mouth and ran to this behemoth. Story telling here is at the bare minimum, restricted to the big moments of the original trilogy.

All three worlds/levels/missions, Yavin, Hoth & Endor showcase the dogfighting between the Rebels & Empire. Each area has about three segments each & increases in difficulty as the player progresses in the story. Controls are on rail, you control the crosshairs & that blinking event button occasionally gets pressed to call in some reinforcements.

The Battle of Yavin sits us in Skywalker’s boots during the first battle above the Death Star in the easiest of the three choices.

Hoth may be the longest and is the most visually pleasing due to so much happening, walkers, droids, soldiers, wampas, everyone is running in front of your blaster, this was obviously police training to be on the Rebel frontline.

Endor has a high speed chase opening that requires concentration or a roll of quarters. It has a little more variety than its counterparts; watch out for those Ewoks.

Unfortunately the good stuff is hidden, …

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At the time of release, this was the one stop arcade for the big moments from the original trilogy. I wiped the drool from my mouth and ran to this behemoth. Story telling here is at the bare minimum, restricted to the big moments of the original trilogy.

All three worlds/levels/missions, Yavin, Hoth & Endor showcase the dogfighting between the Rebels & Empire. Each area has about three segments each & increases in difficulty as the player progresses in the story. Controls are on rail, you control the crosshairs & that blinking event button occasionally gets pressed to call in some reinforcements.

The Battle of Yavin sits us in Skywalker’s boots during the first battle above the Death Star in the easiest of the three choices.

Hoth may be the longest and is the most visually pleasing due to so much happening, walkers, droids, soldiers, wampas, everyone is running in front of your blaster, this was obviously police training to be on the Rebel frontline.

Endor has a high speed chase opening that requires concentration or a roll of quarters. It has a little more variety than its counterparts; watch out for those Ewoks.

Unfortunately the good stuff is hidden, unless you saw it in the video demo as you stared at the screen in front of the arcade because you were in disbelief you could finally pilot an X-Wing which home consoles couldn’t provide a similar experience at the time. I know I was and I was also dying to swing an imaginary lightsaber.

The Return of the Jedi bonus stages are intriguing but either Vader or Fett require timing & play out like quick time events. The finale above the Endor moon is especially fun, gotta love the Falcon. They serve as nice, quick closers to the story the entire game is telling but it’s a shame they need to be unlocked & can so easily be missed by a few mistakes.

The game is diffcuilt due to the slightly slower response time of the joystick compared to the enemy movement. As with so many arcades the toughness is dialed higher to empty player’s pockets but not so frustrating you walk away never to return. Back in the day I would leave after a $1 spent but eager for more, I could walk away now with half a roll of quarters glad I took the time to experience everything.

Is the game worth seeking out today? Probably no for a younger generation, the game is obviously outdated, hard to find & god help you if it only takes tokens. For myself I have fond memories and due to the fact I grew up a huge Star Wars fan and played this numerous times I would gladly buy it out of an old arcade if the opportunity arose. Gameplay here is better represented in more current titles but nostalgia is such a cruel mistress.

Red Five, standing by. Phew phew!!

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