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  2. Star Wars: Tiny Death Star - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars:_Tiny_Death_Star

    Star Wars: Tiny Death Star. 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.

  3. Star Wars: X-Wing Alliance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars:_X-Wing_Alliance

    Screenshot featuring the second Death Star, the cockpit of the Millennium Falcon, and a few starships and starfighters. Apart from the usual badges and medals for winning missions – a feature shared by the other games of the X-Wing computer game series – progress is also indicated by the number of souvenirs collected in Ace's room. There is ...

  4. Star Wars (1987 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars_(1987_video_game)

    Release. JP: December 4, 1987. Genre (s) Platform. Mode (s) Single-player. Star Wars[ a] is a Family Computer video game released in 1987 by Namco and developed by Piccari Games. Despite being based on the first Star Wars film, some levels are based on the later two Star Wars films. It is one of only two games in the Star Wars franchise that ...

  5. Star Wars: X-Wing (video game series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars:_X-Wing_(video...

    The first game in the series, Star Wars: X-Wing, and the last, X-Wing Alliance, feature as their concluding missions recreations of the attacks on the first and second Death Star, respectively, and are also named after the eponymous vessel. In 1994, X-Wing won the Origins Award for Best Fantasy or Science Fiction Computer Game of 1993.

  6. Sinistar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinistar

    Sinistar is a 1983 [a] multidirectional shooter arcade game developed and manufactured by Williams Electronics. [3] It was created by Sam Dicker, [4] Jack Haeger, [4] Noah Falstein, [5] RJ Mical, Python Anghelo, [1] and Richard Witt. [4] Players control a space pilot who battles the eponymous Sinistar (voiced by John Doremus), a giant ...

  7. Star Wars video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars_video_games

    The game had three levels of play (basic, intermediate, and advanced). Players took turns examining star systems with the aim of avoiding black holes, locating enemies, and searching for MAGNA, "the FORCE-giving star". The game was billed as "the most exciting computer game you will ever play". [7]

  8. Star Wars: Dark Forces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Wars:_Dark_Forces

    Star Wars: Dark Forces is a first-person shooter video game developed and published by LucasArts. It was released in 1995 for MS-DOS and Macintosh, and in 1996 for the PlayStation. The story is set in the fictional Star Wars expanded universe and begins shortly before the original Star Wars film, before flashing forward to a year after the film ...

  9. Deathstar (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deathstar_(video_game)

    Deathstar (video game) Deathstar. (video game) Deathstar (also written as DeathStar) is multidirectional shooter for the Acorn Electron and BBC Micro developed by Peter Johnson and originally published in the UK by Superior Software in 1985. It is a clone of the arcade game Sinistar .