
It succeeds with bombastic battle sequences and some interesting narrative turns and only falters in a few places. Overall, Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith is a solid ending to the prequel trilogy. As far as the plot and acting are concerned, Revenge of the Sith is far more believable and effective than before.

Ewan McGregor maintains his likable performance as Obi-wan, and the supporting cast is satisfactory as well. Hayden Christensen steps up his acting game, delivering a mostly believable descent into the dark side as Anakin. Although viewers will most likely go into the film already knowing the outcome, the path there is surprisingly effective. Whereas past attempts at world-building have yielded unsavory results (look no further than Jar-Jar Binks in The Phantom Menace), Revenge of the Sith’s narrative developments feel mostly earned.

In order to unlock all ships, the player will have to win in deathmatch against one of the movie's characters (Grievous, Luke Skywalker, Darth Vader, Anakin Skywalker, Boba Fett, Han Solo).Everything plays nicely into the overarching narrative the one that leads viewers into the original Star Wars trilogy. The game is multi-card play and let you play against 3 other bots and/or players. In multiplayer, the player can pilot one of the 17 spacefighters in one of the 8 maps (2 in Coruscant, 4 in space, Hoth, Tatooine). There is also 3 3D levels in each path that has been added to enhance the singleplayer experience.

It is actually the GBA version of the game but you can make the specials moves of the characters by pressing them on the touch screen. As you progress in the levels, the player can pick Mission Points that will help him to customize his character. The singleplayer mode is a side-scroller with a depth of field, which give a new dimension to explore while not in 3D. Decide which Jedi between Anakin Skywalker and Obi Wan Kenobi you would like to be choose between 2 levels of difficulty and live the movie's storyline in single player mode.
