Prices Of A Forgotten Star Wars Game Have Skyrocketed Because It’s Integral To A New PlayStation 5 Jailbreaking Method

Jack Coleman (He/Him) is a News Editor from Ireland. This is his third full year in games media, having previously worked freelance for various outlets, including DualShockers and NME.
Previously, he’s interviewed breakout indie developers, broken big news stories, reviewed massive releases and recounted his time living as a humble woodsman in Oblivion.
A lifelong gamer, Jack is primarily interested in RPGs and narrative experiences. He’s also been playing League of Legends for a decade, unfortunately.
You’ve probably never heard of Star Wars: Racer Revenge, the beloved 2002 sequel to Star Wars Episode I: Racer. The good people of the early 2000s couldn’t get enough of all things pod racing, and Racer Revenge was a product of that popularity.
24 years later, pod racing isn’t the cultural powerhouse it once was and yet, Star Wars: Racer Revenge has returned. It turns out, the physical version of the PlayStation 4 release of Racer Revenge is integral to a new PlayStation 5 jailbreaking method. Essentially, executing code from Racer Revenge’s disc allows users to access pirated content on the console (nice spot, IGN).
Very Specific Requirements
One of the developers of the upcoming jailbreak, Gezine, confirmed the necessity of Racer Revenge in a post on X. In the video, we see Gezine entering Racer Revenge’s Hall of Fame, which causes a debug menu to appear.
This discovery has caused the price of Racer Revenge to increase threefold over the last couple of days. On the re-selling website eBay, the price of Racer Revenge has gradually increased in the days since the method’s discovery. Currently, prices are over $300 with no signs of the price dropping anytime soon.
Worse yet, the PlayStation 4 version of Racer Revenge never had a widespread release. The physical version was published by Limited Run Games, and the retail site Resell Calendar estimates that only a maximum of 8,500 copies are currently in circulation.
This means that any aspiring pirate or hacking hobbyist who wants to perform this jailbreak method needs to acquire a physical copy of a scarce game in a market where prices are rapidly increasing.
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As for pod racing enthusiasts, they’ll be ecstatic that pod racing is coming back in a big way with Star Wars: Galactic Racer. Announced at The Game Awards, Galactic Racer is the debut project of Fuse Games and will be published by Secret Mode. Galactic Racer will have both a multiplayer mode and a story-driven single-player campaign, and is set for release at some point in 2026.
Between the revival of a dormant genre and the bizarre emergence of a decades-old bug, will 2026 be a renaissance year for pod racing?
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