HOW TO PLAY STAR WARS: EDGE OF THE EMPIRE 4: 10 out of 10, Would Play Again
Release Date: 04/02/2026
The RPGBOT.Podcast
Show Notes In this final installment of the RPGBOT.Podcast How to Play Fantasy Flight Star Wars: Edge of the Empire series, the crew wraps things up with a deep dive into questions, answers, and overall system impressions after completing their multi-part Star Wars RPG actual play. After surviving pirate stations, clone cults, and barely escaping Imperial pursuit, the hosts analyze what worked, what didn’t, and what makes the Fantasy Flight Games Star Wars RPG system stand out compared to other tabletop RPGs. The discussion opens with discusson of the system’s signature narrative dice...
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Show Notes In Part 3 of this Star Wars Edge of the Empire actual play, the RPGBOT crew finally delivers on the promise teased since Episode 1: full-on Star Wars space combat! And it is every bit as chaotic, cinematic, and barely-survivable as you’d hope. Picking up immediately after their explosive escape from the pirate station, the crew aboard the Malarkey finds themselves pursued by TIE fighters. What follows is a crash course in Fantasy Flight Games Star Wars starship combat mechanics, including initiative slots, range bands, shield management, and the ever-chaotic narrative dice system....
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The party stands heroically on the docks. The bard composes a sea shanty. The fighter sharpens his sword. The wizard prepares a speech about buoyancy physics he read on a forum at 3:00 AM. The rogue realizes sneak attack requires not drowning. The cleric discovers healing word does not cure lack of oxygen (or does it?). The DM Googles drowing rules mid-initiative because everyone forgot how breathing works. Welcome to underwater combat, where your character sheet becomes a flotation device and the real boss monster is physics. Show Notes In this episode the RPGBOT crew dives into underwater...
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Last time on RPGBOT.Podcast: we attempted a stealth infiltration of a pirate space station and immediately turned it into a full-blown crisis involving the Empire. This time? It gets worse. Show Notes In Part 2 of this Star Wars Edge of the Empire actual play, the RPGBOT crew continues their mission to infiltrate a hidden pirate station and hack its central maintenance terminal, but things escalate in the most RPGBOT way possible. After escaping the chaos of an iconic Star Wars-style cantina and evading Imperial forces, the crew descends into the station’s maintenance tunnels. What should...
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Welcome back to the RPGBOT.Podcast, where we’re teaching you how to play the Star Wars tabletop RPG the best possible way: by immediately committing crimes in space. In this episode, Randall introduces a Wookie slicer with Force powers on the run from the law, while Ash debuts a former Imperial smuggler who solves problems the traditional way: shooting first and then leaving without askin questions. Tyler GMs a Star Wars RPG actual play session which quickly becomes a chaotic adventure featuring pirate stations, suspicious hookahs, questionable dice math, and a cantina band legally...
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Randall, Tyler, and Ash explore the Ethereal Plane: the ghostly plane of existence where your barbarian can’t punch anything, your wizard can’t read the signage, and your rogue is absolutely certain there’s loot “just on the other side” of a wall they can’t quite touch. Welcome to the Ethereal Plane, where (almost) everything is fog and spooky vibes. Show notes In this episode of the RPGBOT.Podcast, the hosts dive into The Ethereal Plane, the enigmatic realm that sits alongside the Material like a paranormal overlay, perfect for interplanar travel, spooky...
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Welcome back to the RPGBOT.Podcast, where today’s travel brochure reads: “The Elemental Plane of Fire: Come for the lava rivers, stay because you physically cannot leave.” Congratulations. You’re about to plan a vacation to a place where the weather forecast is “burning with a chance of more burning.” Let’s talk about the Elemental Plane of Fire. Show Notes In this episode of the RPGBOT.Podcast, hosts Randall James, Tyler Kamstra, and Ash Ely explore the Elemental Plane of Fire in Dungeons & Dragons and Pathfinder, diving into the lore, cosmology, monsters, and adventure...
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Every RPG player knows the real game doesn’t start when the dice hit the table. No, the real adventure begins when some nerds open a rulebook, stare at a character sheet, and argue about whether a Wookiee hacker with a moral crusade for droid rights is mechanically viable. In this episode of the RPGBOT.Quickstart series, the crew tackles FFG Star Wars RPG character creation in Fantasy Flight’s Edge of the Empire. Randall decides the galaxy clearly needs a Force-sensitive Wookie slicer, Ash plans to become the smooth-talking Twi’lek pilot with questionable ethics, and Tyler guides them...
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The party had a plan. The Fighter would kick in the door. The Rogue would sneak behind the enemy. The Cleric would prepare a healing spell. And the Sorcerer? The Sorcerer would spend six minutes explaining why Fireball is technically the safest solution to every problem, including diplomacy, stealth, and emotional growth. Because Wizards study magic… Warlocks borrow magic… But a D&D 5e Sorcerer is what happens when magic studies you and decides you’re the group’s primary tactical error. Today on RPGBOT: Sorcerer Levels 5 - 20 optimization, where your spell list gets bigger,...
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Randall: “So this is a Star Wars RPG where we’re not Jedi, not heroes, and not important… we’re basically the guy who owes Jabba rent.” Tyler: “Correct. You’re the reason bounty hunters have a 401k.” Ash: “Finally! A system that understands my characters are emotionally complicated, morally questionable, and one hyperdrive failure away from eating space ramen.” -The RPGBOT.Podcast cast, probably Show Notes In this Star Wars: Edge of the Empire RPG How to Play, the RPGBOT crew dives into the core concepts and themes of Fantasy Flight’s narrative dice system, a tabletop RPG...
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In this final installment of the RPGBOT.Podcast How to Play Fantasy Flight Star Wars: Edge of the Empire series, the crew wraps things up with a deep dive into questions, answers, and overall system impressions after completing their multi-part Star Wars RPG actual play. After surviving pirate stations, clone cults, and barely escaping Imperial pursuit, the hosts analyze what worked, what didn’t, and what makes the Fantasy Flight Games Star Wars RPG system stand out compared to other tabletop RPGs.
The discussion opens with discusson of the system’s signature narrative dice mechanics, widely praised for creating dynamic storytelling through success, advantage, threat, triumph, and despair results. The hosts emphasize how the dice system encourages collaborative storytelling and reduces reliance on binary success/failure outcomes, especially when supported by dice roller tools or the very cool but very expensive custom dice.
From there, the conversation moves into practical gameplay considerations, including the pros and cons of using physical rulebooks vs digital tools. While the books are visually impressive, the lack of searchable digital resources creates friction (especially for online play) highlighting a common challenge in Fantasy Flight Star Wars RPG accessibility and cost in today's digital-heavy TTRPG landscape.
We explore character effectiveness and build satisfaction, with players reflecting on how their builds performed during the actual play. What worked, what didn't, and how it help up against what we wanted from the fantasy of Star Wsars.
The episode also pulls back the curtain on the adventure itself, with Tyler revealing behind-the-scenes design choices like the origin of the bizarre clone cult and reused campaign elements, offering insight into how to build memorable Star Wars RPG adventures and also whatever absolute madness drives Tyler's games.
Key Takeaways
- The narrative dice system is the standout feature of Fantasy Flight Star Wars, enabling rich storytelling through multi-dimensional outcomes.
- Using a dice roller or custom dice is strongly recommended, as manual symbol interpretation slows gameplay significantly.
- Character roles feel impactful but uneven, with combat-focused builds shining more consistently than technical roles like slicing.
- Combat balance relies on GM intuition, as the system lacks traditional level-based scaling.
- The game can feel more lethal than Star Wars fiction, with player characters going down more easily than expected for cinematic heroes.
- Wound thresholds, strain, and critical injuries create meaningful tension, but may clash with the heroic fantasy tone.
- Enemy design (minions, rivals, nemeses) provides flexible encounter building and narrative pacing.
- Destiny Points add a strong collaborative storytelling element, allowing players and GMs to influence outcomes dynamically.
- Starship combat is cinematic but mechanically uneven, with shields feeling underpowered compared to other defensive options.
- Force powers scale through investment, offering flexibility but requiring XP commitment to reach cinematic potential.
- Lack of digital support is a major barrier, especially for online play and new players.
- Improvisation and GM creativity are essential, as the system thrives on narrative flexibility over rigid structure.
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Meet the Hosts
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Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix.
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Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme.
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Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI’s worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy.
Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos.
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