Skip to main content

EA’s Star Wars games likely won’t see a release on the Wii U

Star Wars 1313In light of recent revelations it seems EA’s upcoming slew of Star Wars games won’t release on Wii U in any form. EA’s Star Wars games will be built on the company’s Frostbite 3 engine, an engine that a developer recently revealed does not run on the Wii U. Granted, neither Nintendo nor EA has come right out and explicitly said that EA’s future games won’t be released on the system, but as Digital Spy points out it’s not difficult to connect the dots.

The first clue arrived earlier this week when EA and Disney announced a partnership that will see EA developing multiple Star Wars games in the coming years. At the time, EA Labels President Frank Gibeau wrote in an EA blog post that EA’s Star Wars games will be built on EA’s Frostbite 3 engine. Nothing strange about that.

Recommended Videos

The very same day, though, Johan Andersson, Frostbite Technical Director at EA’s Battlefield studio DICE, tweeted that the Frostbite 3 engine does not run on Wii U. “FB3 has never been running on WiiU,” he wrote. “We did some tests with not too promising results with FB2 & chose not to go down that path.”

With all upcoming Star Wars games built using the Frostbite 3 engine, the Wii U seems to be on the outside looking in.

This is all by no means confirmation that EA’s Star Wars games won’t release on Wii U, but unless something changes, or unless EA decides to bring in another team specifically to create a port using a different engine (which would be difficult, costly, and time consuming) that certainly seems to be the case.

Michael Rougeau
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Mike Rougeau is a journalist and writer who lives in Los Angeles with his girlfriend and two dogs. He specializes in video…
Respawn’s most exciting upcoming project isn’t Star Wars
Titanfall Key Art of Soldier sitting on his Titan

EA has confirmed that Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order and Apex Legends developer Respawn Entertainment is working on three brand-new Star Wars games: A Fallen Order sequel, a first-person shooter, and a strategy game being co-developed with Bit Reactor. These announcements are great news for Star Wars fans, but it's not the project that excites me the most at Respawn.

While Star Wars is sure to rake in some easy money for EA, Respawn has always been at its best when tackling original ideas. A mysterious project not involving Star Wars or Apex Legends is in the works at Respawn and has the potential to tap into the kinetic gameplay and engaging worldbuilding that make Respawn games so fantastic.
Doing what works
Since 2019, the two main pillars for Respawn Entertainment have been clear. The first is Apex Legends. Set in the universe of Titanfall despite not using the series' name, it was one of the first battle royales able to truly compete with PUBG and Fortnite. It retains millions of players to this day, so Respawn needs to use a lot of resources to support it.

Read more
The best Wii U games of all time

The Wii U era wasn’t the most commercially successful for Nintendo, with the system shipping only 13.5 million units over the course of its life. Despite the hardware being a commercial failure, the Wii U featured some of the best games ever released on a Nintendo platform.

In this guide to the best Wii U games, we’re going to highlight our favorites. Although there are still a handful of games that you can only play on the Wii U, many of the top games from the console have been ported to Switch (read our best Nintendo Switch games roundup for more on that). Even so, if you have a Wii U gathering dust, these games will breathe new life into it.

Read more
Super Mario 3D World made it to Switch, but other Wii U games are still stranded
Wii U Composite

Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury comes to Nintendo Switch this weekend giving the console another excellent first-party game. It’s the latest in a line of Wii U titles to receive a Switch port in the past few years, salvaging the best of the ill-fated two-screen system’s surprisingly strong library.

Even with games like Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker and Pikmin 3 making the jump to Switch, there’s a handful of strong Wii U games that haven’t -- and probably never will. That’s creating a generational dead zone that may leave games that dared to take advantage of the console’s bold concept forever trapped on the Wii U.

Read more