A magnifying glass at the bottom of the stand used in the scanning process helped the iPad camera read that miniature QR code during a hands-on session at Comic-Con. Unlike the RFID chip-powered Skylanders and Disney Infinity, Angry Birds Star Wars 2 relies on QR codes to import its characters. Place a Star Wars-themed bird or pig onto a clear plastic stand, position that over the camera lens and they'll teleport into the game. Those characters can also be scanned into the game via the iPad or iPhone camera. Using a slingshot toy, players can launch the little plastic birds at a Star Destroyer play set or battle with Count Dooku. Rovio will sell Telepod Angry Birds toys in sets that promise a playable experience on their own. The characters of Angry Birds Star Wars 2 accent their arcs of destruction with Force powers, spinning lightsaber blades and, in the case of Jar-Jar Binks, a sticky tongue that can snatch throwable objects and then hurl them at enemy pig structures. Like previous Angry Birds games, each strain of bird or pig has its own special skills. Borrowing a page from the Skylanders playbook, the Telepods, as Rovio has branded them, unlock playable characters in Angry Birds Star Wars 2, like pig-shaped versions of Darth Maul and Darth Sidious and angry bird versions of Mace Windu and young Anakin Skywalker. The dollar price tag of Angry Birds Star Wars 2 will likely just be the starting point for the game's audience, as developer Rovio will sell Angry Birds Star Wars toys - a new line of plastic figures and play sets - that tie into the game. For the longtime Star Wars fan, the ability to launch Jar-Jar Binks' head as a weapon may provide a catharsis that goes well beyond the $0.99 asking price of Angry Birds Star Wars 2.
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