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March 29, 2026

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster (PS5) review: surprisingly fast and authentic



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Details

(Image credit: Atari)

Publisher Atari / Limited Run

Developer: Nightdive Studios (Lucasfilm Games)

Format PS5 (Reviewed), Xbox Series X/S, Xbox One, PC, PS4, Switch

Platform KEX Engine

Release date 28 February 2024 (digital), Physical release

I thought I had Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster all figured out after the first mission was done. Objectives ticked off. Enemies cleared. I leaned back, pleased with myself, only for the end screen to inform me I’d uncovered only about 40% of the level’s secrets. That’s the thing about Dark Forces Remaster, as recreated by Nightdive Studios in this new PS5 physical release (also on Switch), there’s more going on behind those simple ‘90s polygons than you may first think.

(Image credit: Nightdive Studios / Atari)

The biggest surprise, though, is just how fast this moves on PS5. My memories of the original Dark Forces are of something far clunkier, a bit sluggish, a bit compromised by its own ambition, because my PC was, well… crap. Here on PS5, it absolutely flies and transforms the game’s feel. Blaster bolts streak across the screen in that unmistakable ‘77 Star Wars fashion – bright, noisy, and slightly chaotic – while my own shots hit rapidly and spark off Stormtroopers just like the old movies. It’s messy and a far cry from modern shooters, and even the auto-lock is a little loose, just to give that sense of chaos.

Crucially, for good and bad, this remaster doesn’t try to modernise that feel into something it’s not. The shooting is loose, movement has a floaty feel and combat encounters are fast, scrappy affairs that lack precision. Thankfully, instead of massaging away those edges, the game preserves them, as a remaster should, and in doing so captures the retro personality of the original Dark Forces.

(Image credit: Nightdive Studios / Atari)

galaxy without over-explaining any of it. Dark Forces Remaster, in its unique bygone way, feels authentically Star Wars.

But for everything it gets right, Dark Forces Remaster is also unapologetically a game of its time. There’s no handholding here as objectives can be vague, progression isn’t always clear, and if you don’t like backtracking, or the idea of combing through near-identical corridors trying to find a hidden switch or secret door, this will wear thin quickly. The level design, as clever as it can be, occasionally tips over into frustration and old-school obtuseness. Likewise, it feels old; even with modern controls, there’s a looseness to the movement and shooting that won’t click with everyone.

(Image credit: Nightdive Studios / Atari)



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