Star Wars Demolition
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Four game modes are offered to players. In Tournament mode players compete in successively harder rounds at a given location. The first round has one enemy combatant, the second has two, and so on. Here players can unlock new characters by completing the mode with at least 10,000 points. Battle Mode is a free-for-all in which players can practice their skills. High Stakes mode adds a gambling aspect to gameplay. Prior to the round start players are given their odds of winning, a bet is then placed, and the player either receives a payout or has credits deducted based on whether they win or lose. Finally, Hunt-a-Droid mode provides only roaming Imperial probe droids to shoot for target practice and is limited to three minutes. Each mode can be played with one or two players on the PlayStation, while the Dreamcast version supports up to four players.[1][2]
Every year for the last several years, there have been at least a few games vying for the \"vehicular combat\" crown. This year, the main stars of the vehicular combat stage, Twisted Metal and Vigilante 8, haven't made any sequential appearances, but the makers of the Vigilante 8 series have kept busy with Star Wars Demolition, which may appear to some as a \"Vigilante 8 with Star Wars skins.\"
So far, Star Wars Demolition may sound like any other vehicular combat game, but there are slight variations in its gameplay that allow it to break away from the norm. Instead of beginning with several lives, each contestant starts with a number of credits. If you run out of credits, you're out of the game (and likely into the sarlaac pit). But if you can earn 10,000 credits in four rounds, you can open up locked extras in the game. You gain credits by attacking enemies and lose them when you need to repair your vehicle's weapons or shields. Each vehicle comes with a laser weapon, but special weapons such as thermal detonators and tractor beams and power-ups such as energy absorbers and shield reflectors can be picked up in the playing field. Both your basic and special weapons can be charged into powerful special attacks, which can gain you huge credit bonuses if executed correctly. The constant balance between the need to repair your ship and the need to squirrel away 10,000 credits lends a strategic feel to the gameplay. It's quite easy to survive four rounds by unleashing special attacks on enemies and visiting the pit stops between rounds, but to make that amount of cash, you need to play smart and take risks - not run to the recharge units every time your shields or weapons are low.
Absurdly High-Stakes Game: Makes sense for some of the participants, since Jabba is basically forcing them to compete, but for others like General Otto and the Wookiee Quagga, this game will either make them or break them. The Cameo: The three secret characters are all from past (or \"future\") movies: Darth Maul, Lobot, and Princess Leia disguised as Boussh. Leia is slightly less of this since she is featured in the opening cutscene and has a big part of both Tia/Ghia's and Tamtel Skreej's Victory Movies. Canon Discontinuity: As this is a Legends entry in the Star Wars Universe, it has been effectively declared non-canon by Disney along with all other Legends material. Canon Ending: It's implied that of all the movies, Wade Vox's, Tia and Ghia's, and Boba Fett's victory movies are canon to the game at least. Wade appears in Aurra Sing's victory movie, implying that even if she wins he still manages to escape and is currently being hunted by her. Therefore, evidence points toward Wade escaping from Jabba in the end. His bio page on Wookieepedia also claims this ending to be Legends canon, even claiming he participated in the Yuuzhan Vong war. Tia and Ghia are still wearing their dancing-girl costumes during their victory movie, implying that Jabba intended to keep them as his personal slaves regardless of their performance. Also, they didn't escape on their own but were rescued by Princess Leia, whose character would never let her abandon her comrades. Boba Fett's defeat movie has him getting unceremoniously kicked out of the palace. Given that he is still around by the time Return of the Jedi rolls around, it's safe to assume that didn't happen. Come to Gawk: Most of the characters' defeat movies show Jabba's entourage more than happy to cheer on the poor character's punishment. Cruel and Unusual Death: Several of the characters' bad endings are just not particularly pleasant ways to go: General Otto ends up delivered straight to Darth Vader for desertion. The Empire Strikes Back shows how intolerant he is of people who at least try to do their job. We can guess from the look on Otto's face that it's not going to be pretty. Pugwis is dragged through the desert by his podracer before falling rather embarrassingly into the Sarlacc pit. To add insult to injury, Jabba passes by in his Sail Barge just long enough for a chuckle. Get-Rich-Quick Scheme: Wittin, General Otto, and Quagga's main reason for entering the tournament.' Loose Canon: Even before the Legends cutout, there are a lot of inconsistencies with the Star Wars main timeline: Lando engaging in a demolition derby in and of itself. Princess Leia is depicted as possibly being deeply embedded in Jabba's Palace for a while, and (according to different scraps of info from the Wookieepedia) apparently, while Oola was still alive. In Return of the Jedi, she arrives immediately after Oola's execution, which calls the time frame into question. Multiple Endings: The Tournament Mode is the closest thing to a story mode in the game. Your character goes through four rounds of combat with increasing difficulty. If you win, you're treated to a cutscene of your character getting a happy ending, whether it be through freedom, credits, or adulation. If you lose enough times, you're treated to a cutscene of your character being humiliated, executed, or enslaved. Power Up Mount: Subverted; the power-ups in this game are \"mounted\" onto your vehicle without being vehicles themselves: Astromech Droids and Weapons. Public Execution: Several of the defeat movies are this. Wade Vox's defeat movie implies he is murdered by Aurra Sing right in front of Jabba's Throne. Shows Damage: When your vehicle loses 50% of its integrity, it'll start to show battle damage. Vehicular Combat: Zack Zwiezen's review on Kotaku called it \"Twisted Metal with Rancors.\" Win Your Freedom: This is basically Wade Vox's along with Tia and Ghia's Victory cutscenes. Subverted in the case of Tia and Ghia. You unlock their cutscene by winning, but it is strongly implied that Jabba double-crossed them and fully intended to keep them enslaved to him due to the fact that they are rescued by Princess Leia rather than escaping on their own.
Taking place sometime around Return of the Jedi, the Empire outlaws the sport of podracing. To counteract this, Jabba the Hut begins an underground demolition derby deathmatch series where the winner takes all. The characters all have their reasoning for entering the tournament, some of their own volition while others are forced. While there's no set timeline, the reason why it's heavily assumed to be around RotJ is because of two specific characters.
The Tournament Mode would start off with you facing one opponent, then two, three and finally four; the opponents are chosen at random as are the locations. To acquire a new vehicle, you need to pass the tournament with at least 10,000 credits, and if you are destroyed during a match, then there is an option to replay, but at a cost of 500 credits. If you are constantly losing, the tournament will end when you run out of credits. This is how you unlock locked characters and video clips. 781b155fdc