DSHesHow to Get Free STAR WARS ™ Battlefront ™ II: Celebration Edition. Epic Game again gives you a free game  STAR WARS ™ Battlefront ™ II: Celebration Edition. You can get the STAR WARS ™ Free Game from Epic Game for free and don’t have to pay.Epic Game again gives you a free game  STAR WARS ™ Battlefront ™ II: Celebration Edition. You can get the STAR WARS ™ Free Game from Epic Game for free and don’t have to pay.

Game STAR WARS ™ Battlefront ™ II: Celebration Edition is distributed free of charge by Epic Game.

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1 Go to Epic.com

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1. Download or download the Epic Game Launcher Program which can be downloaded in the epic game

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7. After downloading, you can play STAR WARS ™ BATTLEFRONT ™ II CELEBRATION EDITION for free without buying it in Epic Game.

About STAR WARS ™ Battlefront ™ II: Celebration Edition

STAR WARS ™ Battlefront ™ II: Celebration Edition

Heroes are born on the battlefront

Be the hero in the ultimate STAR WARS ™ battle fantasy with STAR WARS ™ Battlefront ™ II: Celebration Edition! Get STAR WARS Battlefront II and the complete collection of customization content acquirable through in-game purchases from launch up to – and including – items inspired by STAR WARS ™: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER ™. *

* Customization content released after December 20, 2019 is not included in the Celebration Edition.

Radar Game Review

Star Wars has often prided itself on the distinction between good and bad; light side and dark side; do or do not. Star Wars: Battlefront 2, perhaps more befitting of the modern movies (like  Last Jedi ) that highlight the gray areas in between, is neither all good nor all bad. It comes in two distinct parts: the much-demanded single player story, and the historically excellent multiplayer. While both shine to different extents, they’re equally far from perfect. Like Luke at the end of Empire, this game has plenty of ambition and a desire to do the right thing, but it lacks the finesse, patience, and knowledge to purely bask in the light side of the force. So to speak.

Mandatory Jedi similes aside, let’s start by looking at multiplayer – by far the strongest part of the package. In the previous  Star Wars Battlefrontit was (mostly) Walker Assault or GTFO, but Battlefront 2 offers several modes you’ll be playing extensively in the months to come. The new Starfighter Assault mode is an absolute highlight, taking the objective-based ‘attack and defend’ mantra from the old Walker Assault and applying it to epic space battles. While the starfighter stuff in the original is passable, it has been finely tuned for Battlefront 2, and the maps you fly through are wonderful playgrounds for deadly experimentation. The stage set above Endor is a delight, as you weave through debris from the recently detonated Deathstar at the climax of Return of the Jedi, scrapping to destroy targets or desperately attempting to defend your objectives in a decent variety of craft. Yes, you’ll crash into lumps of smashed space-station, yes you’ll be overwhelmed by the chaos of the battle,and sure you’ll score both amazing victories and crushing losses. But Starfighter Assault remains entertaining each time.

“When you blast an enemy trooper it looks and feels like it should in an officially licensed Star Wars game, and the fantasy of being in that universe is palpable”

Galactic Assault is damn good too, and that’s essentially the new ‘Walker Assault’ mode, albeit without the Walkers on some maps. Again, it’s multi-objective, and there are all sorts of troop and vehicles classes to take for a blast around each of the well designed maps. Actual shooting is accurate and easy to do, making the game accessible for players of all skill levels. When you blast an enemy trooper it looks and feels like it should in an officially licensed Star Wars game, and the fantasy of being in that universe is palpable.

Crucially, you always feel like you’re making small differences in Galactic Assault, even if you’re just one of the 32 players running around the battlefield. In some big game modes it can be easy to get lost, but the objectives and maps perfectly funnel players through giving the illusion that you’re making your own contribution to each fight. Even the special characters and vehicles system works perfectly – you simply build up Battle Points and spend them on a hero or craft of your choice. The game even gives you 100 points for dying… so everyone will eventually climb into an AT-ST or roll up as Yoda. These two modes are where you’ll spend 95% + of your time in the game, if you want to truly get the most out of it, and they’re worth the price of admission alone.

8 Things I wish I knew before playing Star Wars Battlefront 2

The remainder of the multiplayer modes are neat little novelties, without the staying power of the ‘big two’. Hero Hunt just throws a couple of groups of heroes against each other for a big scrap, and Blast is your standard team deathmatch. Strike offers smaller-scale objective-based shooting, but it’s no more complicated than ‘go here, capture that thing’ stuff. Arcade mode – which is technically multiplayer – lets you buddy up with friends locally and shoot up waves of troops (or occasionally swing a lightsaber at them). They’re small snacks to keep you busy between the Assault modes, and perfectly entertaining with it.

Each of the ground-based maps scale incredibly well to suit every mode and, while some like the Palace at Theed lack much imagination, there’s a decent variety to the locations, allowing each of the different classes and heroes to shine at some point. So, Star Wars Battlefront 2 does really nail the basic stuff. It’s the finishing touches that it shoots wide with.

Star Cards, for example, have been greatly overhauled since Battlefront 1. There are loads more of them, and they’re separated into ‘Boost’ (they make you better at stuff) and ‘Ability’ (they give you new stuff) types . The sheer variety allows you to really customize your class, but unlocking them is a confusing mess. You can win Star Cards from the ever popular random loot crate system, or you can buy them with Crafting Points – one of the game’s three unique currencies. Star Cards have four levels of variety, ranging from Common to Epic, and the more Star Cards you own the more slots you unlock to equip them in battle. Then there’s character XP, which allows you to upgrade cards, and milestones that need to be completed, and… so much to keep track of.

The issue here is that while this convoluted system of ‘getting new abilities’ and customizing your character builds is indeed much deeper than the original game, it’s also massively overcomplicated. And very poorly explained. It took me about five hours of regular play to figure out that grabbing five Star Cards for my Assault Trooper actually opened up the second equip slot. It’s such a bizarre leveling-up system, and one that gives you very little sense of actual progression. The problem is that everything in Star Wars Battlefront 2’s multiplayer is tied to the opening of random crates, and while you can simply unlock the Star Cards you want with Crafting Points… they’re not as easy to acquire as Credits, which are used to grab those loot boxes. Oh, and if you want to pay real money for crates, then you fork-out for Crystals,which is the game’s third type of currency. It’s a real, real mess.

Shame, because the game lurking underneath this grubby veneer of gambling and money-minding is first-class. The addition of fresh challenges each week, heavily ‘borrowed’ from Destiny’s online model, will mean there’s always something to do or achieve. And eventually, the progression system will make sense to you, in its own weird way.

“The campaign often feels like a collection of cameos rather than an actual story”

So, what about that single-player campaign? Everyone demanded it after the previous Battlefront, and what we’ve now got is a fan-pleasing ramble through the ‘untold story’ between the end of Return of the Jedi and the start of Force Awakens. Clocking in around 4-5 hours it isn’t the most entertaining or substantial of campaigns and, given the fact you only spend about half that time playing as anti-hero Iden Versio, it often feels like a collection of cameos rather than an actual story. The plot kinda follows Versio as she carries out missions for the Empire before and after Return of the Jedi, and it features all the lavish cut-scenes and blatantly obvious twists you’d expect. While the presentation is first-class here, with  most things looking and sounding 100% like they belong in the Star Wars universe, there are a handful of problems.

Hero characters look and sound somewhat akin to their silver-screen counterparts, like the fans who come in third-place at the Star Wars cosplay competitions. Versio herself is a dull character with very little to contribute to the canon, and her two comrades Del and Hask are forgettable stereotypes of a slightly different variety. Still, the shooting is fun, if a little repetitive. Missions are largely predictable affairs where you go somewhere, kill all the enemies, then escape. The campaign does mix up dogfighting well with on-ground shooting, and there are a couple of standout stages right at the end that are exactly what the rest of the story should have been. And I’m not sure whether it’s some kind of weird joke, but collectibles in the story are… generic-looking crates with zero actual purpose. Just saying, Battlefront,that if you rely on a controversial loot crate system for multiplayer progression, it might be best to avoid the whole ‘crate theme’ as collectibles in your story. Overall, though, it’s a fairly unimaginative, short collection of winks and nods to fans that severely lacks an identity of its own. Play it, to say you did, then get stuck into the multiplayer again.

If you’re not planning to play Battlefront 2 online, don’t even bother picking this one up. While the campaign looks and feels like a Star Wars experience, it’s an unfulfilling one, like a really good knock-off Han Solo action figure. You can play with it for a few hours, but you’ll ultimately feel a little cheated. Multiplayer, on the other hand, is exceptionally polished and entertaining, and once you learn to accept the frustrating progression system, it’ll keep you visiting the galaxy far, far away for months.

THE VERDICT

4 OUT OF 5

STAR WARS BATTLEFRONT 2 (2017)

A very strong multiplayer offering tarnished by overly complicated character progression, and a lavish, beautiful story campaign lacking in substance or subtlety.

Minimum
Recommended
Windows OS

64-bit Windows 7 SP1 / Windows 8.1 / Windows 10

Windows OS

64-bit Windows 10 or later

Windows Processor

Processor (AMD): AMD FX 6350 Processor (Intel): Intel Core i5 6600K

Windows Processor

Processor (AMD): AMD FX 8350 Wraith Processor (Intel): Intel Core i7 6700 or equivalent

Windows Memory

8GB

Windows Memory

16GB

Windows Storage

60GB

Windows Storage

60GB

Windows Direct X

11

Windows Direct X

11

Windows Graphics

Graphics card (AMD): AMD Radeon ™ HD 7850 2GB Graphics card (NVIDIA): NVIDIA GeForce® GTX 660 2GB

Windows Graphics

Graphics card (AMD): AMD Radeon ™ RX 480 4GB Graphics card (NVIDIA): NVIDIA GeForce® GTX 1060 3GB

Logins

Requires EA Origin account

Languages ​​Supported
  • Audio: English, Italian, Spanish – Spain, French, German, Polish, Portuguese – Brazil, Spanish – Latin America | Text: English, Italian, Spanish – Spain, Japanese, Chinese – Traditional, French, German, Polish, Portuguese – Brazil, Russian, Spanish – Latin America
EU (incl. UK), BRAZIL, NORWAY, ICELAND, ANDORRA, BOSNIA & HERZEGOVINA, GEORGIA, KOSOVO, MACEDONIA (FYROM), MOLDOVA, MONACO, MONTENEGRO, SAN MARINO, SERBIA, TURKEY, VATICAN ONLY CITY, LICHIVTE’S ONLY COOKIE POLICY (privacy.ea.com) APPLIES. ALL OTHER RESIDENTS: ACCEPTANCE OF EA PRIVACY & COOKIE POLICY (privacy.ea.com) REQUIRED TO PLAY. INTERNET CONNECTION; EA ACCOUNT; EPIC GAMES ACCOUNT; ACCEPTANCE OF EA USER AGREEMENT (terms.ea.com) & ORIGIN END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT (ea.com/legal) & DOWNLOAD, INSTALLATION & BACKGROUND USE OF THE ORIGIN CLIENT SOFTWARE (origin.com/download) REQUIRED TO PLAY. YOU CONSENT TO ANY PERSONAL DATA COLLECTED THROUGH YOUR USE OF EA’S SERVICES BEING TRANSFERRED TO THE UNITED STATES, AS FURTHER EXPLAINED IN THE PRIVACY & COOKIE POLICY.ALL GAME UPDATES REQUIRED TO ACCESS CELEBRATION CONTENT. INCORPORATES 3RD-PARTY DRM. YOU MUST LINK YOUR EA AND EPIC GAMES ACCOUNTS TO PLAY; EA WILL SHARE YOUR ACCOUNT ID AND INDIVIDUAL GAME AND PLAY RECORDS WITH EPIC GAMES TO VALIDATE YOUR PURCHASE AND / OR REFUND REQUEST. ACCESS TO SOFTWARE CONTENT IS LIMITED TO ONE EA ACCOUNT & ONE EPIC GAMES ACCOUNT & IS NON-TRANSFERABLE AFTER PURCHASE. YOU MAY NEED TO BE 13+ or 16+ TO ACCESS ONLINE FEATURES & CELEBRATION CONTENT (AGE MAY VARY, SEE http://o.ea.com/ea/child-access FOR DETAILS). EA MAY PROVIDE CERTAIN FREE INCREMENTAL CONTENT & / OR UPDATES. ADDITIONAL CONTENT WILL BE DOWNLOADED TO YOUR DEVICE AUTOMATICALLY. YOU MAY HAVE TO PURCHASE THIS CONTENT SEPARATELY. CONTENT DOWNLOADS MAY REQUIRE ADDITIONAL STORAGE OR INCUR BROADBAND USAGE FEES. SOFTWARE COLLECTS DATA FOR IN-GAME ADVERTISING.EA MAY RETIRE ONLINE FEATURES AFTER 30 DAYS NOTICE POSTED ON ea.com/service-updates. EA User Agreement: terms.ea.com/de for German residents and terms.ea.com for all other residents EA Privacy & Cookie Policy: privacy.ea.com/de for German residents and privacy.ea.com for all other residents Origin EULA: ea.com/de-de/legal for German residents and ea.com/legal for all other residents STAR WARS © & TM 2020 Lucasfilm Ltd. All rights reserved. Game code and certain audio and / or visual material © 2020 Electronic Arts Inc. EA, the EA logo, the DICE logo, Motive, the Motive logo, Criterion, and the Criterion logo are trademarks of Electronic Arts Inc.Cookie Policy: privacy.ea.com/de for German residents and privacy.ea.com for all other residents Origin EULA: ea.com/de-de/legal for German residents and ea.com/legal for all other residents STAR WARS © & TM 2020 Lucasfilm Ltd. All rights reserved. Game code and certain audio and / or visual material © 2020 Electronic Arts Inc. EA, the EA logo, the DICE logo, Motive, the Motive logo, Criterion, and the Criterion logo are trademarks of Electronic Arts Inc.Cookie Policy: privacy.ea.com/de for German residents and privacy.ea.com for all other residents Origin EULA: ea.com/de-de/legal for German residents and ea.com/legal for all other residents STAR WARS © & TM 2020 Lucasfilm Ltd. All rights reserved. Game code and certain audio and / or visual material © 2020 Electronic Arts Inc. EA, the EA logo, the DICE logo, Motive, the Motive logo, Criterion, and the Criterion logo are trademarks of Electronic Arts Inc.and the Criterion logo are trademarks of Electronic Arts Inc.and the Criterion logo are trademarks of Electronic Arts Inc.
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