
Why lead when they won't follow? Why fight when you can't win?" Beyond that, we get a quick shot of his ship the Mantis crashed on a desert planet, Cal crossing sabers with a hooded Sith, and a mysterious figure in an abandoned bacta tank. A Pau'an character, possibly chief Jedi-hunter The Grand Inquisitor, shows up to deliver a threatening voice over: "Tell me, Cal Kestis.

The first teaser trailer for Jedi: Survivor (opens in new tab) didn't give too much away, but Cal and BD were certainly still prominent. Oh, and at one point he's hang-gliding from a pterodactyl. Clearly shooting for the "dark middle chapter" vibe, we're given plenty of quick shots of protagonist Cal Kestis employing some new additions to his Soulslike lightsaber combat-like dual sabers and a Kylo Ren-esque great saber-while generally being a menace to stormtroopers. This Game Awards 2022 trailer (opens in new tab) gives us our first looks at Star Wars Jedi: Survivor gameplay. Not only does it stop people with no internet from playing these games it may also lead to some physical games being unable to be shared or resold.What other Jedi: Survivor trailers are there? Selling a physical, disc-based game without the actual game on the disc is a pretty shitty practice. Who’s to say that the license key on the disc wouldn’t somehow end up being tied to the first user’s console and therefore not work on any other console? Some developers would rather have no game on the disc or just digital games only And if you have no internet at all, a physical game should still let you install and play the game, albeit without any patches or updates.Īnd possibly even more concerning is the fact that having only a license key on a disc could potentially mean the end of sharing physical games with friends or reselling or trading them in.

This means that downloading games takes a long time. Most people do have internet access in their homes these days but quite a lot do not and there are still hundreds of thousands with very poor internet connections.

Having just a license key instead of the full game on the physical disc copy of a game completely defeats the purpose of physical copies in my opinion. Having no game on the disc defeats the purpose of physical games
