
It's immediately evident that there's a lot of content here.

You don't get much of a chance to discover the differences between the two factions are, but I chose Jedi because I'm a nice guy like that. You pick a side to follow, either Jedi or Sith. I imagine there are already 599 players with that name, but don't ask me my name and then set it as something slightly different - that's just plain rude. The game automatically found that my name is Peter, which was nice, but when I confirmed this selection it renamed me to "Peter#600", which wasn't. Star Wars: Galactic Defense begins by asking you what you'd like to be referred to as.

I'm going to try and find out if that's the case with Star Wars: Galactic Defense over the course of seven days, and if you like you can follow me as I do so by coming back here every couple of days. There aren't actually that many towers in the entire canon of Star Wars, and they certainly don't play a pivotal role in any scene from the series - or at least not from what I can recall about the six main movies.īut there must be a good reason to make a TD game out of this cherished licence, beyond just the potential for big sacks of cash. Adding Star Wars into the tower defence genre mix is an odd choice.
