

Very few droids are as ride-or-die as VZ-626, Iden Versio’s ID10 tactical backpack droid from Star Wars Battlefront II. VZ-626 from Star Wars Battlefront II (2017) In-game, you can watch him jump from Maris Brood to Shaak Ti to the all-powerful Darth Maul without batting an eye.
He’s a robo-actor with the widest range in the galaxy, basically the Meryl Streep of Star Wars.

PROXY is a holodroid created by Darth Vader that is equipped with a Mimetic Combat Processor that allows him to transform his entire body into pretty much anybody he wants.

Starkiller) isn’t the friendliest dude in the galaxy far, far away, but he somehow found a friend in PROXY, a droid that was literally designed specifically to kill him. Star Wars: The Force Unleashed’s Galen Marek (a.k.a. PROXY from Star Wars: The Force Unleashed (2008) They’re still low on this list because it takes like 0.112324 seconds to kill them if they don’t have their blue deflector shield generator up (which is always down if you play the game like it’s Sonic). Their fantastic speed and mobility mean you can disregard your teammates and tumble around the map to enjoy the Star Wars scenery from the unique Destroyer Droid perspective. These robotic pill bugs are always rolling around at the speed of sound, catching opponents by surprise, and then unleashing a flurry of blaster shots from their twin gun arms. The Droidekas, or “Destroyer Droids” first introduced in The Phantom Menace, made their mark in the 2005 version of Star Wars: Battlefront II, and were so popular that fans demanded DICE bring them back in the 2017 sequel. Droidekas from Star Wars Battlefront II (2017) A lot of fans thought he was in Disney+’s new show The Mandalorian, but it was actually another one of his robot bros, IG-11. He’s a boss that isn’t too challenging, but he makes up for it with the terrifying noises he makes while he squares up with you on a mound of trash. You can find IG-88 in a junkyard literally just vibing in Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire, after what might be the worst train level in any video game ever. IG-88 from Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire (1996) It definitely isn’t the best Star Wars game, but it was one of the first times that you could actually play as a droid in-game. Even though you play as the most iconic droids in the galaxy, these dudes still get last place because the gameplay was both confusing and boring at the same time. Developer Binary Design and publisher Mastertronic made a very weird video game version of it that had you walking around as the titular droid duo, throwing what looks like hacky sacks to destroy enemies, collecting key cards, and hacking computers in an ominous cave.
