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Star Wars Jedi Knight Dark Forces II PC Game File Size: 607 MB System Requirements: CPU: Intel Pentium III Processor 1.0 GHz OS: Windows Xp,7,Vista,8,10 RAM: 512 MB.

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In Dark Forces, Kyle Katarn, a young mercenary successfully infiltrated the Empire. Jedi Knight continues the story of Katarn as he embarks on a quest into his past and learns the mysterious ways of the Jedi. With this knowledge, he must stop seven Dark Jedi from unlocking the powers of a hidden Jedi burial ground. This task forces Katarn to decide his destiny. If he chooses the Dark side, he will come into enormous power. If he chooses the Light side, he faces seemingly insurmountable evil. Whatever path Katarn chooses will change the face of the galaxy forever. [LucasArts]

How to install the savegame ? (save game location)

1. Extract the .zip archive
2. Copy savegame files to => <Game directory>player

replace <Game directory> by your game directory, example
C:Program Files (x86)Jedi Knight – Dark Forces IIplayer

Star Wars: Dark Forces

Publication information

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Star Wars: Dark Forces is a first-person shooter computer game released on February 28, 1995, by LucasArts. The game introduces the character of Kyle Katarn, a former Imperial Stormtrooper and agent, now a mercenary for hire in the service of the Rebel Alliance. The story takes place both just before and mostly after the events of Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope.

Opening crawlEdit

DARK FORCES

SynopsisEdit

Kyle Katarn infiltrates an Imperial base on the planet Danuta, in order to steal the Death Star plans. The Mission to Danuta results in Rebel possession of the plans that would later be given to PrincessLeia and the destruction of the Death Star.

After the Battle of Yavin, Kyle is again contacted by Mon Mothma to investigate an Imperial assault on the Tak Base of Talay, using a type of Imperial trooper never encountered previously. After the attack on Tak Base Kyle infiltrates the ruins of the base and discovers a prototype dark trooper weapon. The initials 'M.R.' are discovered on it, which are found to stand for MoffRebus, an infamous Imperial weapons engineer. This investigation reveals the dark trooper project, led by GeneralRom Mohc, and this leads Katarn to Anoat, where he finds the Moff hiding in the sewage system of Anoat City.

During interrogation, Moff Rebus reveals the location of a testing facility for the mineral phrik, used in the construction of dark troopers, on the planet Fest. After obtaining a sample of this mineral, Kyle is led to the Gromas system, where phrik is mined and the phase-I dark troopers are manufactured. After the destruction of this facility, Crix Madine is found to have been captured by the Empire and sent to an Imperial detention center on Orinackra. Once Kyle has rescued Madine, he provides Kyle with critical information regarding the dark trooper project.

Kyle travels to the Ramsees Hed docking port on Cal-Seti, which is used for Imperial runs to the frozen planet of Anteevy, where the second phase of dark trooper construction was completed. After smuggling himself aboard an Imperial ship, Kyle reaches Anteevy and destroys the Ice Station Beta facility. He is afterwards led to Nar Shaddaa, where he obtains a Nava card. At this point in the scenario, the Empire has placed a large bounty on his head, and as he pulls out of Nar Shaddaa, the Moldy Crow is captured by Jabba the Hutt in the Star Jewel.

Here, Kyle is stripped of his weapons and has to fight hand-to-hand with a kell dragon. After obtaining his weapons, he and Jan Ors escape to Coruscant, the only place where Kyle can insert the Nava Card into a decoder to reveal data chips used for additional information. On his way to his ship, Kyle finds the Crow missing and Boba Fett (hired by Mohc) waiting for him. He defeats Fett after a hard fight and then travels to the Imperial Fuel Station Ergo, where he sneaks onto the Executor. From here, he smuggles himself aboard the Arc Hammer, where the third and final phase of the dark troopers is being overseen.

Finally, Kyle faces Rom Mohc, spearhead of the operation (who is using the only phase-III dark trooper exoskeleton in existence), and defeats him. Kyle proceeds to blow up the Arc Hammer and escape. Watching from the Executor, Darth Vader comments that this 'is an unfortunate setback' and somewhat prophetically notes that 'the Force is strong with Katarn.'

For his actions and bravery in the face of defeat, Mon Mothma awards Kyle the Star of Alderaan.

LevelsEdit

Unlike many other Doom-based games, Dark Forces attempts a realistic approach: The missions follow a certain storyline, sometimes interrupted by videos to progress the tale. Each mission has its own briefing and objective. The levels were designed to represent actual bases, mines, facilities, and other known places from the Star Wars universe, like Star Destroyer interiors, Jabba's ship, Coruscant, etc.

DevelopmentEdit

Dark Forces was released during the hype started with Doom a year earlier. Often labeled a 'Doom clone' like other games following that trend, Dark Forces may have been created to counter the many unofficial Star Wars–themed WADs for Doom. LucasArts is rumored to have reverse-engineered the Doom engine to find out how to build their own. The 'Jedi Engine' was more advanced than that of Doom. It allowed designers to construct overlapping sectors ('room-over-room') to create multistory buildings, bridges, and similar structures; most earlier first-person shooter engines, such as Doom, do not support this ability. The Jedi Engine does not support perspective correction when looking up and down.

Doom had shared textures for all levels, one solid objective (which was simply to move from entry to exit), and maps which were designed often very abstractly, with the architecture often somewhat unrealistic. The levels of Dark Forces each had their own unique texture sets that were rarely reused, their own briefings and objectives which often varied, and maps which were designed to represent actual bases, mines, facilities, and other known places from the Star Wars universe, like Star Destroyer interiors, Jabba's ship, Coruscant, etc.

Several cinematics reused images from earlier games, such as Star Wars: X-Wing (Vader's talking animation with Mohc and Mon Mothma's awarding cutscene) and Star Wars: TIE Fighter (Vader's closeup in the final cutscene). Like TIE Fighter, several space scenes in Dark Forces were 3D-rendered. Not until Star Wars: Rebel Assault II: The Hidden Empire did LucasArts began using original filming with actors and stunts.

Lead artist and author Justin Chin stated that weapons like the Bryar pistol and Packered mortar gun were named after his personal favorites, such as composer Gavin Bryars and 1950s Packard automobiles, respectively.[1]

A character named Ruu San was meant to appear in the game, and was briefly described as an antagonist of Kyle Katarn in the article Revving Up the 'Jedi Engine' in Star Wars Galaxy Magazine 1. However, she did not appear in the final release of the game.

All Dark Forces cheat codes start with LA- (LucasArts), paralleling the cheat codes of id Software titles, which always began with ID-.

ReleaseEdit

Free

George Lucas appeared on CNN's Future Watch show and demonstrated/promoted the game. Lucas and Daron Stinnett also promoted it in Disneyland when they traveled there for the opening of the Indiana Jones train.

The first mission was released independently as a demo of the game. The intro of the demo is different from the published product in that it contains a Rambo-ish cutscene showing Kyle preparing his gear for the mission. This was omitted from the final game. The reason for this is not clear since the files of that sequence already exist in the CD. However, it's possible to reinsert the missing scene into the game.[2]

The game was originally published with a manual which contained additional backstory text. On April 29, 2015, the game was released on PlayStation Network, and made available to play on both PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable.

ReceptionEdit

Dark Forces was the 11th best selling computer game of the period 1993 to 1999, with an estimated 952,000 copies sold. The game was followed by novelizations and a sequel, Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II. Jedi Knight spawned an entire series of games which includes the expansion Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Mysteries of the Sith, Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast and Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy. This series, with the exception of Jedi Academy, focuses on the continuing exploits of Kyle Katarn, many of which take place after the events of Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi.

The game was criticized at the time for lacking a multiplayer mode; however, given the growing complexity of games as the 21st century approached, developers had to decide whether to trade off online play for the single-player storyline missions. It also did not have mid-level saves, instead having extra lives like Doom's predecessor Wolfenstein 3D. While Doom's gameplay placed an emphasis on fast-paced action and combat, Dark Forces was considerably slower paced. Dark Forces also included numerous puzzles that the player had to solve to advance. While difficult for the casual player and often frustrating, this gave Dark Forces much appeal among hardcore gamers and critics. The 'omission' of the lightsaber was frequently questioned on forums by casual fans who were not satisfied with having the fist as the only melee weapon. However, those familiar with Star Wars noted that only Force-sensitive users could effectively wield such a weapon. This controversy no doubt influenced the direction of the sequel.

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Many of the key data files in Dark Forces were actually plain-text files, allowing fans to decipher the formats and write tools to edit them. These have been used to create a wide variety of new levels for the game.[3] Many of the same fans have gone on to create tools and editors for the later games in the series; and at least two, Yves Borckmans and Don Sielke, joined LucasArts to work on Dark Forces II. In 2002, a team of fans began the Dark Forces Mod project, planning to remake the game utilizing the Quake III engine used in the latest sequel, Star Wars: Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast (later adapted to Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy when it was released). Later, they announced that they would be ending the project,[4] and posted a final release containing full remakes of the first six levels of the game.[5] However, an effort to remake the remaining levels was still underway as of January 2009.[6]

CreditsEdit

By type
Cast Crew

Cast

  • Nick Jameson: Kyle Katarn
  • Jack Angel: Rom Mohc
  • Denny Delk: Stormtrooper/Toka/Narrator
  • Julie Eccles: Jan Ors
  • Scott Lawrence: Darth Vader
  • Peggy Roberts-Hope: Mon Mothma

AppearancesEdit

Master Qui-Gon, more to say, have you?

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See the request on the listing or on this article's talk page. Once the improvements have been completed, you may remove this notice and the page's listing.

By type
CharactersCreaturesDroid modelsEventsLocations
Organizations and titlesSentient speciesVehicles and vesselsWeapons and technologyMiscellanea

Characters

  • Kyle Katarn(First appearance)
  • Rom Mohc(First appearance)
  • Meck Odom(First appearance)
  • Leia Organa(Mentioned only)
  • Jan Ors(First appearance)
  • Palpatine(Mentioned only)
  • Rebus(First appearance)
  • Toka(First appearance)
  • Unidentified Gamorrean 1(First appearance)
  • Unidentified Gamorrean 2(First appearance)

Creatures

Download Star Wars Jedi Knight Dark Forces 2

  • Kell dragon(First appearance)

Droid models

  • Battle droid
    • Dark trooper(First appearance)
      • Phase I dark trooper(First appearance)
      • Phase II dark trooper(First appearance)
      • Phase III dark trooper(First appearance)
  • Interrogation droid
  • Probe droid

Events

  • Clone Wars(Mentioned only)
  • Galactic Civil War
    • Operation Skyhook
      • Mission to Danuta(First appearance)
    • Dark Trooper Project(First appearance)
      • Attack on Tak Base(First appearance)
      • Mission to Talay(First appearance)
      • Mission to Anoat(First appearance)
      • Battle of Fest(First appearance)
      • Mission to Gromas(First appearance)
      • Mission to Orinackra(First appearance)
      • Mission to Cal-Seti(First appearance)
      • Mission to Anteevy(First appearance)
      • Battle aboard Jabba's Cruiser(First appearance)
      • Mission to Coruscant(First appearance)
      • Mission to Fuel Station Ergo(First appearance)
      • Mission to the Executor(First appearance)
      • Mission to the Arc Hammer(First appearance)

Locations

  • Anoat(First appearance)
    • Anoat City(First appearance)
  • Anteevy(First appearance)
    • Ice Station Beta(First appearance)
  • Cal-Seti(First appearance)
    • Ramsees Hed(First appearance)
  • Coruscant
    • Imperial City
      • Imperial Security Operations Building(First appearance)
  • Danuta(First appearance)
    • Trid(First appearance)
  • Fest(First appearance)
    • Weapons Research Facility(First appearance)
  • Fuel Station Ergo(First appearance)
  • Gromas system(First mentioned)
    • Gromas 16(First appearance)
      • Gromas Mines(First appearance)
    • Gromas Belt(First appearance)
  • Orinackra(First appearance)
  • Talay(First appearance)
    • Tak Base(First appearance)

Organizations and titles

  • Alliance to Restore the Republic
    • Rebel Command(Mentioned only)
  • Galactic Empire
    • Imperial officer
  • Sissk(Indirect mention only)

Sentient species

  • Human

Vehicles and vessels

  • Arc Hammer(First appearance)
  • Executor-class Star Dreadnought
  • HWK-290 light freighter(First appearance)
    • Moldy Crow(First appearance)
  • Hyperspace pod
    • Dark Trooper hyperspace capsule(First appearance)
  • Minstrel-class space yacht(First appearance)
    • Star Jewel(First appearance)
  • Tantive IV(Mentioned only)

Weapons and technology

  • Autoturret(First appearance)
  • Armor
  • Blaster
    • Blaster pistol
      • Bryar pistol(First appearance)
    • Blaster rifle
      • Repeating blaster
  • Jeron fusion cutter(First appearance)
  • Mine
    • Land mine
      • I.M. mine(First appearance)
  • Packered mortar gun(First appearance)
  • Power Generating Unit(First appearance)
  • QS100 Welding Arm(First appearance)
  • Sequencer charge(First appearance)
  • Stouker concussion rifle(First appearance)

Miscellanea


BibliographyEdit

  • 'LucasArts Update: The Creation Story'—Star Wars Insider 23
  • 'Revving Up the 'Jedi Engine'—Star Wars Galaxy Magazine 1
  • 'Where Aliens are Fair Game'—Star Wars Galaxy Magazine 2
  • Star Wars: Dark Forces official site on LucasArts.com (backup link)
  • 'Lucasfilm's Latest'—Star Wars Insider 27
  • 'Game Knights'—Star Wars Galaxy Magazine 13
  • Turner, Benjamin & Bowen, Kevin (December 11, 2003). Bringin' in the DOOM Clones (page 2). GameSpy.
  • Dunnigan, James F (2000). The Complete Wargames Handbook (Year 2000 introduction)
  • The Best Star Wars Games of the 16-Bit Generation on StarWars.com

Star Wars Dark Forces Levels

Notes and referencesEdit

Star Wars Dark Forces Cheats

  1. Email from Chin recorded in The Dark Forces FAQList
  2. Patch designed to aid in reinserting the missing cutscene
  3. http://www.df-21.net/downloads/
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20070407194606/http://darkforces.jediknight.net/index2.shtml
  5. http://darkforces.jediknight.net/index2.shtml (news post dated 29.1.2008)
  6. http://dfmod.blogspot.com/

Star Wars Dark Forces 2 Download Pc

External linksEdit

  • Star Wars: Dark Forces at the Internet Movie Database
  • Turi, Tim (February 27, 2015). Doom Clone Troopers – The Story Behind Star Wars: Dark Forces. gameinformer.com. Retrieved on March 4, 2015.
  • DF-21, an active fansite including a forum and an archive of fan-made levels
  • Dark Forces Mod, the website of the now-ended remake project
    • Dark Forces Mod, continuation of the abovementioned project
  • Star Wars: Dark Forces RPG The role-playing game.
  • Dark Forces FAQ Resource page
Dark Forces saga
Video games
Dark Forces · Jedi Knight · Mysteries of the Sith · Jedi Outcast demo · Jedi Outcast · Jedi Academy
Strategy guides
Dark Forces Manual: Coded Transmissions · Dark Forces: Official Player's Guide · Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Dark Forces II: The Official Strategy Guide
Star Wars: Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast: Official Perfect Guide · Star Wars: Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy: Prima's Official Strategy Guide
Novellas
Soldier for the Empire · Rebel Agent · Jedi Knight
Audio dramas
Soldier for the Empire · Rebel Agent · Jedi Knight · The Collector's Trilogy
Comics
Sand Blasted · Equals & Opposites · Jedi vs. Sith
Websites
N.R.I. Reports · The Dark Forces Saga · Kyle Katarn's Tale
[edit]