Star Wars: Super Bombad Racing


The game's trademark was the appearance of the characters: in similar style to Mario Kart for the Nintendo 64, the characters all had oversized heads and piloted shrunken vehicles. The vehicles, however, all hovered, making Super Bombad Racing a unique skill to master in the handling department.

Developed by Lucas Learning and published by LucasArts, the game was mainly aimed at children thanks to the "cute" cartoon appearance of the characters and locations. Several of the characters have been toned down from their appearances in Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace, and character taunts between racers are all kid-friendly. Each racer has a special, racer-exclusive weapon or ability. Musically, the game features recognizable themes from the John Williams film scores, but all have been reworked into childish, pop-type beats.

Gameplay


Boba Fett and an AAT are hidden cheat characters, and as such have no specific special weapons or attributes. Several cheats are available that turn all the text on the menu screens into distinctive Jawa phrases or the Battle Droid's "Roger roger!" callsign. Yet another cheat can turn all the racers, no matter which character you've chosen, into kaadu on treadmills.

Racers


Arenas


  • Naboo Battlefield
  • Jedi Temple
  • Great Pit of Carkoon
  • Hoth Asteroid

Unlockable Content


Development


There are several variations on the box art: Darth Maul alone, Darth Maul with Yoda, Darth Maul with Yoda and Jar Jar Binks, and Darth Maul with Yoda and Sebulba.

Continuity


Rather than fitting within the continuity of the Expanded Universe, the game was "made purely for fun" according to Leland Chee, who maintains Holocron continuity database.

Reception


Promotional cover art

Promotional cover art

Super Bombad Racing received mixed responses when released in 2001. Some praised the game, calling it an accomplished kart racer and a welcome addition to the then-short list of PlayStation 2 titles. Others, however, felt that while the game was mechanically sound, the Star Wars setting and appearance felt "tacked on" and therefore a dirty ploy to make money for LucasArts. Others roundly criticized the game, both for turning Star Wars into a childish kart racer and for simply making a bad game. GameSpot.com gave Super Bombad Racing a score of 6.2 out of 10, saying it "...introduces a few clever concepts, but its length and the gameplay flaws significantly limit the game."

A planned PC version of the game was canceled due to poor sales of the PlayStation 2 version.

Sources


Appearances