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The State of Star Wars Battlefront

Days ago, gamers and Star Wars fans began expressing their desire for another Star Wars Battlefront game. DICE’s Battlefront II from 2017 has seen a surge in attention lately, with its player count growing on PC. The community aims to capitalize on this renewed popularity with a day-long global event to increase its numbers and showcase the enduring spirit of the Battlefront community.

The Recent Surge in Popularity

This renewed interest has been spurred by Star Wars‘ May 4 holiday and Andor star Muhannad Ben Amor’s recent call for another entry: "Grew up with Battlefront II; been a veteran since day one, let’s hope a Battlefront III happens." The multiplayer shooter series has had two lives over its almost 20-year existence, with its first two games released during the Star Wars prequel era and made by Pandemic Studios, while the second, more recent pair come from Battlefield developer DICE.

The History of the Series

Neither iteration has made it to a third installment, although a Battlefront III for the original series was in development from several developers, including Timesplitters creator Free Radical Design. Before EA took hold of the Star Wars game license, LucasArts tried restarting the games with an online-only entry, a smaller-scale multiplayer entry, and a fourth game set in an alternate reality where Obi-Wan and Luke were Sith Lords, but nothing came of these efforts. The Battlefront sub-series is once again MIA.

Image: Pandemic Studios/LucasArts

The Challenges of Reviving the Series

The questions of whether Star Wars Battlefront can come back—and why it should be brought back—are closely linked and tricky to answer. Making games for this property has occasionally been a tough ask throughout the years. Some of the most famous Star Wars games are the ones that never happened, like the Boba Fett-starring 1313 or third entries for Knights of the Old Republic and Force Unleashed, two sub-series that existed alongside Battlefront. Even EA’s had its troubles, canceling a pirate-focused project from Visceral Games and Motive Studios, and more recently killing a first-person shooter centered on a Mandalorian that was in the works over at Respawn, creators of the acclaimed Star Wars Jedi games.

The Current State of EA and DICE

DICE is currently focused entirely on the next Battlefield game, and several other EA studios are on hand as support, meaning another Battlefront couldn’t reasonably come from EA, let alone any time soon. Mats Holm, a former live producer on Battlefront II, recently suggested a remaster of the previous game as a primer before developing a proper sequel, preferably with anyone from the previous team who wanted to work on it. However, the problem lies with EA, which can be selective about what it chooses to remaster or remake.

The Shift to Single-Player Titles

Since 2019’s Fallen Order, Star Wars has kept its video game eye mostly focused on single-player titles, including Ubisoft’s Star Wars Outlaws and 2026’s Zero Company from Bit Reactor. Other than the space combat-focused Star Wars Squadrons, EA’s yet to recommit to Star Wars multiplayer, possibly due to the controversy surrounding Battlefront II‘s initial monetization.

The Impact of Fortnite

Thanks to the recent "Galactic Battle" tie-in event, numerous in-game skins for several franchise characters, and the plot-important audio log that reveals Palpatine’s return for Rise of Skywalker, Epic Games’ Fortnite has become the most important multiplayer shooter the franchise could have. Both previous incarnations of Star Wars Battlefront existed at a time where they could be the only place where all of the franchise could exist. Battlefront II was already marketed as a unification point for all three trilogies, and as part of the game’s rehabilitation efforts, DICE poured everything it had and then some into post-launch updates that incorporated maps, weapons, and characters from the sequels and prequels, Rogue One, and Solo.

Image: DICE/EA

The Future of Star Wars Battlefront

Come 2026, The Mandalorian & Grogu will likely get a Fortnite tie-in, as will the Disney+ series Maul: Shadow Lord and the 2027 Starfighter film. Like Andor‘s Lonni Jung, Star Wars has become trapped in the web of Epic Games, and it’s doubtful Disney will cease that partnership anytime soon. Hope for a Star Wars Battlefront III could never truly die, no matter how much the odds are stacked against. However, as Star Wars enters a new phase of its life, one has to wonder how it would fit into the franchise’s designs, and who will be around for it at a time when online games, regardless of their size, are quick to be cast aside.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.


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