Despite using the outdated Quake 3 engine, Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy has become a worthy sequel to Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast. Players got access to lightsabers from the very first minutes, the graphics and physics evoked vivid emotions, the plot did not allow them to look up from the screens until the very end. And although the project's multiplayer is completely dead in 2020, we still recommend playing a single-player campaign. Especially if you like the Star Wars setting and you miss the spectacular battles using Force and lightsabers.