Add this page to your home screen to play over 100 games without downloading the app!

Star Wars Jedi: Survivor Players Love Unclogging Toilets, Dying In The Dumbest Way Possible

EA has just revealed a lot of stats for its recent game Star Wars Jedi: Survivor, for the last month, detailing the choices players have made in the game's customization options and how they're dying the most.

Thanks to the official EA Star Wars account, we know that one of the most popular things to do is unclogging Greez's toilet, because over 861,000 players have done it so far. On top of that, Rick The Door Technician somehow managed to kill 489 players.

In addition to Rick killing nearly 500 players, the single lightsaber was the most popular fighting stance. Sadly, the Extended Mustache Beard / Mullet wasn't the most popular hairstyle. Instead, it was the Crew Cut / Short Beard combo.

star war jedi survival


Most players played the game on the Jedi Knight difficulty, which can be considered medium, 14.5% of players played on Story Mode, and only 4% played on Jedi Grand Master, which can be considered extreme difficulty. But the difficulty mode meant nothing to the Rancor, because it was able to kill over 9 million players.

Since the game's release, players have managed to defeat over 9 billion enemies, and the most popular color they used for their lightsaber was white. A lot more other information was shown off, such as 11.5% of people finding Cal's poncho, 3 million bounties collected, fifteen million seeds planted, eight million Holotactics rounds won, and lastly, 100% of the playerbase loving Turgle.

In our Star Wars Jedi: Survivor review, we gave it an 8/10, and Jordan Ramée wrote, "Survivor builds on Fallen Order in several meaningful ways, tightening up the combat mechanics, expanding the variety of lightsaber styles, alleviating the frustration of platforming and puzzles, and digging into less-mainstream Star Wars lore to tell a fantastic story about a Jedi trying to defeat a tyrannical evil at all costs and coming to the realization that you can't just fight for good--you have to fight for good in the right way."