Villains maps, a new reinforcement for the Rebels and the Empire (the Ewok Hunter and ISB Agent, respectively), reworks for Leia and Chewbacca that make them more viable as heroes, improvements to solo play in Instant Action, and the promise of more maps coming to other modes soon, including original trilogy content for Supremacy. There are now seven new original trilogy Co-op maps, two extra Co-op and Heroes vs. The Age of Rebellion update exceeded expectations, bringing the original trilogy to Co-op, but also adding tons of unexpected new features. Just earlier this month, DICE added Disney's sequel movie era to Supremacy and Instant Action, nearly completing Battlefront 2's content library and teasing a return to original trilogy-era gameplay. These modes have been around for a while, of course, but the Age of Rebellion update nearly filled them out.
Between Battlefront 2's Co-op mode and large-scale Supremacy battles (as well as a slate of other, smaller modes), there's enough content to provide regular, compelling playtime. Loot box purchases were removed, the progression system was overhauled, and two years of free updates have made Battlefront 2 into a truly fun Star Wars game. Yet, somehow, possibly to save face after such a notorious event, EA and DICE have managed to turn things around. Related: The Video Game Loot Box Problem Goes Deeper Than Star Wars: Battlefront II The shooting was fine, and the graphics were great, but the meat of the game was marred by EA's apparent drive to milk players for cash. But Battlefront 2's problems went beyond predatory monetization: Its single-player story was mediocre, and worst of all, its progression system was terrible, forcing players to obtain character upgrades and cosmetics from random loot box openings. The Battlefront 2 loot box mess kick-started conversations about gambling-esque microtransactions within the video games industry and without, contributing to an overall decline in the use of the tactic in most triple-A games today. Star Wars: Battlefront 2 is a great video game in 2020.īattlefront 2's launch is perhaps the most infamous in modern gaming history. At launch, Battlefront 2 was straight-up bad, but - capped off by this week's Age of Rebellion update - it's now more than just OK. DICE's continuous patches, reworks, and content drops for EA's Star Wars: Battlefront 2 have long been constructing a triumphant comeback story, and its latest update is the near-final building block.