The Nintendo Wii brings the fun and excitement of a lightsaber battle into your living room with Star Wars The Clone Wars: Lightsaber Duels. Clearly, the Wii control is well-suited for lightsaber fights, and Lucasarts delivers an immersive gameplay with characters, locations, and epic duels from the Star Wars animated feature film and television series set between Episode II and Episode III. 
Star Wars The Clone Wars: Lightsaber Duels features an intuitive motion-controlled combat system. View larger. |

Play with your friends as your favorite Clone Wars characters, such as Ahsoka Tano or Asajj Ventress. View larger. |
Built from the ground-up for the Wii, Lightsaber Duels features an intuitive motion-controlled combat system that puts the Lightsaber weapon in your hand. Finally, with the Nintendo Wii, mastering the Jedi's distinctive weapon is within reach. You are a Jedi Knight
You'll love fighting in the most memorable duels from The Clone Wars feature film and TV series. Wielding your Wii remote like a lightsaber, the gameplay allows you to experience first-hand the unique weapon of the Jedi Knights with intuitive controls. Regardless of your general gaming experience, Lightsaber Duels will enable you with the skills to become a lightsaber master.
Play as Memorable Clone War Characters
Lightsaber Duels allows you to play with your friends as your favorite Clone Wars hero, such as Anakin Skywalker or Ahsoka Tano, to fight evil. However, not all who wield the lightsaber are good. This game also provides ample opportunity to enter battlefield as your favorite villains. With the likes of General Grievous and Asajj Ventress at your fingertips you can fight to strengthen the dark side of the force, as well.
Interactive gameplay and Environments
Each character, villain or hero, comes equipped with a unique fight style and set of skills. Once mastered, you can exploit your interactive surrounds to defeat your opponent. For example, you can slice down pillars and use the Force to throw them at your foe. Whether you're dueling your way through Tatooine or Teth, you're sure to be impressed with the beautiful surrounds, interactive environments, and realistic lightsaber gameplay.
Each character, villain or hero, comes equipped with a unique fight style and set of skills.
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Fun until it hurts
I picked this up as a rental and am glad I did. It is pretty entertaining for about an hour, but 30 minutes later my arm was killing me. Also, that coincides with the amount of time it took to finish the storyline. It is mostly a mortal combat type of gameplay, with a set sized arena where you fight the best of three matches and then you get a cut scene that moves the story along. Oddly enough, it is how the Clone Wars cartoon is moving on the TV. You only get 7 fighters, but it looks like you can unlike 3-4 more. I just don't have the arm or wrist strength to open them up. My best tactic (Single or Duel mode) was to just spin my wii mote in a circle in a clockwise or counter clockwise motion and I did well enough. The duel (multiplayer) was pure mortal combat, one one one best of three fighting. The game overall was entertaining for a moment, but for my money I prefer Star Wars the Force Unleashed.
[Monday, November 24, 2008]
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WAIT FOR A PROPER LIGHTSABER GAME-- IT SUCKS
Here's what all of the fans and wishful thinkers out there need to hear: The game does not mimic your moves like you would expect. You'll find yourself chopping and pitching with no reason. Does it give you a workout? Yes... but an ultimately frustrating one due to the fact that your character is not responding as you are.
After buying this, I discovered that the game, like mostly ALL Star Wars games (sans Battlefront), is a cash-in, folks.
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[Sunday, November 16, 2008]
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Big Disappointment
Understand how much I wanted this game, and for how long. I wanted a Wii as soon as I knew the system was being created because it seemed to have been designed with a lightsaber in mind. I imagined a game much like those samurai games in the arcade where you hold the sword in different positions to block and counter.
Sorry... this game offers nothing close to resembling pseudo-realistic saber combat. The aforementioned blocking is done by holding B. The lightsaber strokes have almost nothing to do with the motions of the remote, and certainly don't correspond directly. I'm sure you've heard of button-mashing. This is 'mote-spasming. Wiggle the remote until you hit something. Same annoyance; different form.
You might think I came to this game with high expectations. I think of it instead that I came to it with high optimism. Sadly, that optimism was not rewarded.
[Friday, November 14, 2008]
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