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Star Wars Rogue Leader – Gamecube Game

Original price was: $41.00.Current price is: $26.97.

-34%
(296 customer reviews)
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Product total
Options total
Grand total

only 10 left in stock

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

The game is fully working. It’s the cartridge / disc only.
Join Luke Skywalker and the Star Wars galaxy’s most daring pilots as they return to face off against the Empire. From X-Wings to Snow Speeders, every ship is rendered in incredibly authentic 3D detail. Pilot them all in 11 exciting missions from the snow-capped peaks of Hoth to the trenches of the Death Star. Rogue Leader features stunning, movie-like visuals and immerses players in an intense action-arcade experience. The squadron is yours, Rogue Leader!

Product Details

UPC: 023272652586
Condition: Used
Genre: Action & Adventure
Platform: Nintendo Gamecube
Region: NTSC (N. America)
ESRB: Teen
SKU: GC_STAR_WARS_ROGUE_LEADER

This game is fully clean, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs. This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.

Star Wars Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader

Star Wars Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader is an action game co-develop by Factor 5. And LucasArts and is the second of the Rogue Squadron series. It was publish by LucasArts and release as a launch title for the GameCube in North America on November 18, 2001. And Europe on May 3, 2002. Set in the fictional Star Wars galaxy, the game spans all three original trilogy Star Wars films. However, the player controls either Luke Skywalker or Wedge Antilles. As the game progresses, Skywalker, Antilles and the Rebel Alliance fight the Galactic Empire in ten missions across various planets.

The game receive critical acclaim from critics who praise the game’s graphics, sound and gameplay, though the lack of multiplayer was criticize. The third and last game in the series, Star Wars Rogue Squadron III: Rebel Strike, was release in 2003 for the GameCube.

Description

Think you’ve got what it takes to lead the elite Rogue Squadron? Now’s your chance to jump into the cockpit of an X-wing and find out. Moreover, join Luke Skywalker and the Star Wars galaxy’s most daring pilots as they return to face off against the Empire. As in the original hit game for N64, you’ll relive favorite Star Wars battles including the perilous Death Star trench run, a daring space attack on a Star Destroyer, and the legendary battle on the ice planet Hoth. Aerial conflict takes place in a variety of craft such as the legendary X-wing, A-wing, and B-wing. Rogue Leader immerses players in an intense action arcade experience.

Additional information

Weight 8 lbs
Product Type

Platform

GameCube

ESRB Rating

Teen

Genre

Shooter, simulation

Players

1-2

Condition

Used

296 reviews for Star Wars Rogue Leader – Gamecube Game

  1. Bonnie X

    My kids love all thing Star Wars . They I joyed this game .

  2. Mark Wille

    Honestly, my only complaint is the game is too short. Wish I could get some more Rogue Squadron in my life.

  3. Irish

    Star Wars: Rogue Leader (Rogue Squadron 2) marks the first time that Nintendo has launched a new platform without its main launch title being from the Mario family of games. While the initial set of launch games does keep the Mario series going with Luigi’s Mansion, Rogue Leader is Nintendo’s crown jewel for the GameCube and it plays like it. Some Star Wars games have show the tendency to be very mediocre and disappointing (Rebel Assault II comes to mind), but I was pleasantly surprised with quality and replay value of the original Rogue Squadron for N64. The challenge wasn’t only in beating the game, it was in obtaining gold medals on each of the levels in the game. The challenge of obtaining the medals (bronze, silver, and gold) drove me to keep playing each board even after defeating it. It made me a more disciplined player and gave me a greater sense of satisfaction when I achieved the desired medal. I eventually got all the gold medals around the time that talk of the sequel, Rogue Leader, was getting started up. As soon as I got the GameCube for Christmas, I made sure Rogue Leader was the first game I bought. What an amazing game!!! The graphics are unparalleled on any game on any platform that I have seen (and this includes Playstation 2 and X-Box). Unlike Rogue Squadron, which followed a storyline in a time period independent of the movies, Rogue Leader’s storyline runs parallel to the original trilogy. As a result, the gameplayer gets engage in battles abo.

  4. J. Belpedio

    This is WAY better than the N64 version, that is for sure. The combat in some levels can get pretty tight, seen most of the time when you’ve GOT TIE FIGHTERS SWARMING ALL AROUND YOU AND CLOSING IN ON YOUR BUTT!!! Aside from the regular game missions, there are 5 bonus missions yu unlock by getting medals (Bronze, Silver, or Gold) for meeting certain rquierments in the game, and the medals give you points for unlocking the missions. You can also unlock ships to to use on different missions, and the good part about those is that you don’t use your points to unlock those. If you’re one for cheating a lot in games, this is a code filled game. You can use many of the ships found in episodes 4-6, including the X-Wing, Y-Wing, A-Wing, B-Wing, Snowspeeder, Millenium Falcon, and the Cloud Car (only by switching ships on level 7.) You can also unlock the TIE Fighter, TIE Advanced, Imperial Shuttle, even the fast, heavily armored Naboo Starfighter from Episode I!! It’s a great game, and I really think you should get it, even though it’s rated T. It’s only for the violence of blowing ships and ground complexes up!!

  5. SeeTNTX

    Okay, I _have_ bought and played the game, and here’s what think:Initially, I was really disappointed. I had never played any of the N64 games before, so I wasn’t used to the controls. The TIE fighters blended in with the background too often. The radar was confusing. The missions were too hard — TIEs would relentlessly pound me from behind, my tow cable would always snap while trying to down AT-ATs, I wouldn’t understand the objectives of a mission sometimes.But I kept at it, and an hour or so later realized that this is the best Star Wars game ever made, and that this is probably the closest we’ll get to flying in Luke and Wedge’s cockpit for a long, long time. The visuals, of course, are spot on, and look like they were ripped straight out of the three movies. Movie fans are rewarded with cut scenes and dialogue that directly, eerily mirror the action of the movies, except that _you’re_ the hero, and _you’re_ the one to blame if the mission fails. The music is all very good, a blend of classic Star Wars and original Williamsesque tunes that work very well for the missions, adding further to the feeling of immersion within the Star Wars universe.The control — it took me a while to get used to but now I can down TIEs with the greatest of ease. You learn to use your accelerator and decelerator to max effect. You learn to use the targeting computer to quickly highlight hard-to-see TIEs. And you learn the hard way which approaches work best on which types of enemies (hint: tr.

  6. Joshua Swanson

    The must have game for 2002! This is one of the launch titles for Gamecube and the graphics will blow you away! You fly X-wings, A-wings, B-wings, Snowspeeders, and BONUS Craft that you will obtain by completing certain goals. If you have all four Star Wars N64 games then you have to get this one. Even if you have Star Wars Starfighter for PS2 you should by a Gamecube just for this game! Their are 11 missions plus extra bonus missions. Long live the Alliance! You can even strafe snowtroopers in the Hoth level!

  7. AlexRoganFunfD

    Ever feel like you’re the only one at work doing anything? “Johnson, get in here and fix this stapler, and if you don’t do it in under 30 seconds, you’re fired!” Aside from the disturbing graphic prowess and authentic Star Wars action, the game proves to be somewhat stressful at times. Your fellow rebel pilots seem to suffer from a severe incompetence disorder, including Lando (a General!) who refuses to fire a shot at a single TIE on his back. You tell your wingmen to help with the fighters menacing you and the medical frigate, and seconds later you are blown to pieces. Everyone calling for help in the game addresses you and you alone, because your squadron-mates are seeing if their R-droids can make a Gin and Tonic. The game is worth it for those looking for sheer aesthetic beauty or for those who wonder what it’s like to fly the Millenium Falcon, but not for those whose veins may explode when your pals die hopelessly or when you have to start over an impossibly long mission due to ’employee misconduct.’

  8. CR

    I was going to convert it for my WiiU but I need another jail broke wii to do it so…

  9. Jeremy A. Moffitt

    Its hard to describe Rogue Leader without using a long list of superlatives. The graphics in this game are so good that they’re often distracting… seeing hundreds of asteroids in one level, dozens of tie fighters in another, its really amazing. The gameplay is excellent too, you really feel like you’re flying missions straight out of the movies. Most of the missions follow scenes from the movies, though there are a few added to flesh out the game. Players have the oppurtunity to fly a variety of ships from the movies, and theres secret levels and hidden power-ups to search for too. Rogue Leader is not the longest game in the world, most gamers will finish the basic set of missions in 10-20 hours, though they can be replayed to improve your score and open bonus missions. I highly reccomend Rogue Leader to anyone.

  10. matt

    I pretty much bought the Gamecube for this game and Resident Evil. While the graphics and sound are typically great, the controls were frustrating. I much prefer the gameplay of the Starfighter games to the one exhibited in Rogue Squadron. Was also enlessly annoying to have to use the targeting computer to see targets, as the lighting made it otherwise too difficult for me. Perhaps it was just a problem with my tv, but it only happened for this game.

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