Crossover Battlefront 2

Battlefront II expands upon the original game's single-player experience with mission-based objectives drawn from Star Wars Episodes I through VI. It is a story-based campaign which revolves around the 501st Legion as the unit evolves from the Old Republic clone troopers to Imperial stormtroopers. The storyline spans more than 16 new locations, many from Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, including volcanic Mustafar and the space battle above Coruscant. Many maps that came from the original Battlefront were edited and improved, like the Naboo battlefield. Also included are battles from the original trilogy, such as fights aboard the Tantive IV, Princess Leia's blockade runner, shown immediately at the beginning of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope. Battlefront II also features an online play option, where you can play online through GameSpy in various servers that people host. But if you only want to play with friends, you can create your own server (whether it be dedicated [you can't play] or not dedicated [you can play]) with a custom name, password, and settings.

How to Install CrossOver to run Star Wars: Battlefront II Click the Download Free Trial button above and get a 14-day, fully-functional trial of CrossOver. After you've downloaded CrossOver check out our YouTube tutorial video to the left, or visit the CrossOver Chrome OS walkthrough for specific steps. The new Han Solo has entered the field in the latest Star Wars: Battlefront II trailer. The footage shows off gameplay from The Han Solo Season, EA Games’ upcoming crossover between Battlefront.

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Crossover Star Wars Battlefront 2

Battlefront

Crossover Battlefront 2

  • It only runs with 'emulate windows desktop' enabled. Some minor timing and glitch issues. After selecting a campaign or instant action map, it loads OK, but it takes about 30-120 secs to load.
  • But mostly, we're software liberators. And we're very, very good at what we do. Lots of developers work with open source, but only a tiny fraction of those are good enough to get software that was designed for one platform to work on another one.