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Star Wars: Tiny Death Star is a business simulation video game developed by Disney Mobile and NimbleBit, [4] and published by Disney Mobile for Android, iOS, Windows Phone, and Windows 8/RT devices. [5] It was based on NimbleBit's previous game, Tiny Tower, [6] and was set in the Star Wars universe. [7]
Star Wars: The Roleplaying Game, by West End Games (1987–1999); Star Wars Roleplaying Game, by Wizards of the Coast (2000–2010); Star Wars Roleplaying Game, initially by Fantasy Flight Games (2012–2020), [1] [2] and now by Edge Studio (2020–present) after parent company Asmodee moved the Star Wars Roleplaying Game license [2] [3]
Chris Hind reviewed Death Star Technical Companion in White Wolf #30 (Feb., 1992), rating it a 3 out of 5 and stated that "Death Star Technical Companion's strongest point is its completeness. It contains every important fact concerning the Death Star, without going into excessive detail.
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Richard Ashley reviewed Escape From The Death Star for Games International magazine, and gave it a rating of 4 out of 10, and stated that "On the whole, a good try at converting this subject to a solitaire game, but a waste of time as a competitive multiplayer game." [1]
Like other Living Card Games, each card cycle consists of six packs of pre-determined cards—referred to as “force packs”—that focus on a particular theme or setting from within the Star Wars universe, including story elements that have only made an appearance in the formerly canon expanded universe now known as “Star Wars Legends.”
Quinn Ewers passed for 333 yards and five touchdowns and No. 5 Texas rolled over struggling Florida 49-17 on Saturday, two days after third-year Gators coach Billy Napier was given a public ...
Star Wars: The Interactive Video Board Game: Assault on the Death Star is a board game and accompanying VHS video tape, released by Parker Brothers in 1996. It is notable for including new scenes shot twenty years after the first Star Wars film, featuring Darth Vader walking down the halls of the original Death Star set, in a performance reprised by David Prowse, James Earl Jones, and director ...