HomeNewsStar Wars: Dark Forces

System Shock devs are remastering cult classic Star Wars shooter Dark Forces in 4KKyle Katarn is back, again.

Kyle Katarn is back, again.

Image credit:Nightdive Studios/Lucasfilm Games

Image credit:Nightdive Studios/Lucasfilm Games

Darth Vader points at a lackey in a remastered cutscene from Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster

Star Wars’ nineties first-person shooterDark Forcesis returning in a 4K-ified remaster from Nightdive Studios, the folks behind the recentSystem Shock remake. The upcoming Dark Forces Remaster will see its visuals bumped up to a crisp 4K, running at 120 frames per second, along with a number of quality-of-life improvements.

Star Wars™: Dark Forces Remaster - Reveal TrailerWatch on YouTube

Star Wars™: Dark Forces Remaster - Reveal Trailer

Cover image for YouTube video

Nightdive is working with Lucasfilm Games on the remaster of the 1995 FPS, which takes place before the events of Episode IV: A New Hope (or just Star Wars, if you prefer) and follows Rebel merc Kyle Katarn - and recurring Star Wars video game hero - as he uncovers the creation of the Empire’s dangerous new Dark Troopers. (While Dark Forces’ place in the Star Wars Expanded Universe is now considered non-canonical in modern Star Wars lore, the Dark Troopers showed up in Disney+ series The Mandalorian.)

While on its face Dark Forces looks much like a Doom hack with Stormtroopers in place of Cacodemons, the game attempted to be more of an adventure-driven experience than a straight shooter, with a focus on plot and puzzles melded into laser-blasting action levels andpunishing stealth missions. Said levels could also play out across multiple connected floors, a novel first for the genre. It also let you look up and down on the Y axis, jump and swim, which was pretty wild at the time.

Image credit:Nightdive Studios/Lucasfilm Games

The player shoots a blaster at Stormtroopers below in gameplay from Star Wars: Dark Forces Remaster

Nightdive said it would be rebuilding Dark Forces in its own KEX Engine, which was previously used in the studio’s re-release ofDoom 64andQuake II, as well as the Enhanced Edition of System Shock. The engine will replace the original game’s suitably-titled Jedi engine, which was only ever used in Dark Forces and Lucasfilm’s 1997 Wild West FPS Outlaws, and will allow for improved 3D rendering of levels including the likes of the planet Coruscant, a Star Destroyer and Jabba the Hutt’s yacht.

Star Wars: Dark Forces Remasteris due to hit PC via Steam later this year, accompanying a release on PlayStation 5, PS4, Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch.