In fact, Battlefront remains the best-selling Star Wars game in the US. While they're always portrayed as more powerful than the average grunt soldier, in the context of a video game there still has to be a chance for both the Jedi to fail, and for other players (assuming they are not Jedi) to be able to counter them. This is where Star Wars Battlefront (2015) and Star Wars Battlefront II (2017) really shine. One more defining feature of playing a Jedi in a Star Wars game is how the Jedi interacts with the non-Jedi around him. Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order (2019) took a more modern approach, combining the best aspects of similar single-player hack-and-slash games like Sekiro and Dark Souls with classic Jedi Force Powers. Mobility, terrain, and some cleverness with Force Powers were what defined the winner of a fight, rather than the size of their health bar. Kyle Katarn returns as the main character of Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy (2003), a game that perfects the lightsaber combat of Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast (2002), its predecessor. The game quickly takes the Force beyond expectations, however, with area-of-effect powers like Force Repulse and Lightning Shield, leading up to the iconic moment when Starkiller pulls a Star Destroyer from the sky. Playing as Starkiller, a Sith apprentice Darth Vader took on in secret, the lightsaber is keyed to one button on the controller, while Force Powers reign supreme.
Though it was made almost fifteen years ago, the series did this so well, there are still rumors of a Force Unleashed 3.