Star Wars: The Old Republic and Storytelling
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In Star Wars: The Old Republic you will have an emotional attachment to your character and face decisions in the game which will guide the development of your character and determine the direction of the character's storyline. Whatever your choices may be, you'll still be the hero (or villain) of an epic storyline which gives extra meaning to the other gameplay pillars. Character advancement will be much more than coming up with efficient statistics. Exploration will be about experiencing new places, new people, and new stories. Finally, instead of just reaching for that next level, you will be engaging in visceral combat reminiscent of the Star Wars movies where you're motivated to fight for more than just yourself but also for a cause....and writing stories in the Star Wars universe.
We believe that choice is the most gripping and crucial element of these stories. The team has left a lot open so that your decisions have a significant impact on the way the storylines and the characters develop. Because each storyline offers multiple paths, Star Wars: The Old Republic writers create much more content than you would expect from a linear game storyline. In fact, Star Wars: The Old Republic will contain more story content than all other BioWare games combined. As with the original Star Warsâ„¢: Knights of the Old Republicâ„¢, some stories intertwine, and some decisions may lead your character down a completely unexpected path. Smaller choices may yield small results, but on some occasions may later lead to larger consequences.
We can all list familiar elements from the Star Wars films: Jedi, Sith, the Force, droids, lightsabers and starships; themes of heroism, redemption, learning, friendship and oppression; a trilogy structure, pulp-inspired (episode) names, and so on.
These iconic elements are the basic tools the writing team uses to build uniquely Star Wars stories stories that feel like they're part of the same fictional universe as the films. Not every Star Wars story needs a cantina or a wise old mentor, of course, but the films are the foundation for everything we do. If you're not using at least some of those iconic elements, your story probably isn't about Star Wars at all.
The original Star Warsâ„¢: Knights of the Old Republicâ„¢ is a great example of a story that uses this foundation well. Even without characters like Luke and Leia, it's clearly Star Wars it's a story about Jedi, Sith and redemption, taking place against a galactic backdrop of strange planets and alien species.