It's official: Disney's long-standing exclusivity deal on 'Star Wars' games just ended

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It's official: Disney's long-standing exclusivity deal on 'Star Wars' games just ended
"Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order" was the most recent "Star Wars" game from EA.EA/Respawn Entertainment
  • Since 2013, "Madden" and "FIFA" maker Electronic Arts has held exclusive rights to make "Star Wars" games, per a deal with Disney.
  • The agreement officially ended Wednesday with the announcement of a new "Star Wars" game made in partnership with "Assassin's Creed" maker Ubisoft.
  • "EA has been and will continue to be a very strategic and important partner for us now and going forward," Disney senior vice president of games Sean Shoptaw told Wired. "We did feel like there's room for others."
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Since 2013, just one game publisher has held the rights to make games based on the "Star Wars" license: Electronic Arts, the makers of "FIFA," "Madden," and the "Battlefield" series.

On Wednesday, that exclusivity agreement finally came to an end with the announcement of a new "Star Wars" game from "Assassin's Creed" maker Ubisoft.

Described as a "brand-new, story-driven, open world 'Star Wars' adventure," the game is being made by Ubisoft's Massive studio, which last produced "The Division 2" in 2019.

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It's unlikely to be the only "Star Wars" gaming project in production, including an expected sequel to "Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order" from EA's Respawn Entertainment. Despite ending the exclusivity deal, a Disney executive told Wired it has no plans to terminate its relationship with EA.

"EA has been and will continue to be a very strategic and important partner for us now and going forward," Disney senior vice president of games Sean Shoptaw told Wired. "We did feel like there's room for others."

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The announcement of a new "Star Wars" game from Disney - the first with a new gaming partner in eight years - came the same week that the entertainment giant revealed another collaboration: an entirely new game based on "Indiana Jones," with a new story outside of the filmography, made by Microsoft-owned Bethesda and its subsidiary MachineGames.

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The two projects represent a renewed push into video games from Disney's Lucasfilm group, which also announced a big rebranding earlier this week.

"Lucasfilm Games is now the official identity for all gaming titles from Lucasfilm, a name that encompasses the company's rich catalog of video games and its eye toward the future," the company said in a blog post. To that end, Lucasfilm Games is producing games based on "Star Wars" and "Indiana Jones" that are "developed in collaboration with the finest studios across the [game] industry," it said in the post.

Though Disney has a long history of TV and film production, the company has a rocky history with video game production and outright divested from the production side of the video game business back in 2016.

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