Star Wars Jedi: Survivor: How To Use Photo Mode

Something that most major games have these days is a robust photo mode. It allows players to take in the sights of their new favorite game and snap some pics to share across the web. These photos can capture easter eggs or just get an epic shot of a character doing something crazy in front of some neon lights. EA and Respawn’s latest Star Wars title, Star Wars Jedi: Survivor isn’t going to let fans down – its photo mode offers a pretty great set of tools to allow players to get Cal and BD-1 to participate in some fantastic images. This guide will talk about the photo mode in Star Wars Jedi: Survivor and explain everything it offers. Let’s jump right into it!

Getting Started With Photo Mode in Star Wars Jedi: Survivor

Jedi Survivor Photo Mode Tools

The first thing you’ll want to do in order to bring up your photo mode is pausing the game and accessing the photo mode tab via the pause menu. Alternatively, if you’re on a PC, you’ll be able to access it without having to do this if you press the Backspace key on your keyboard. This makes it a bit easier to grab a quick shot of something epic as you witness it. You should also be able to map this feature to a controller button from within the game’s controller settings page as well, as it’s just not natively mapped for that kind of device.

Once you do that, you’ll be met with a new screen of options and controls to bounce between. Below, we’ve jotted down all of the controls you’ll have access to in photo mode as well as what other fun tools can be used in crafting beautiful works of art from a galaxy far, far away!

Controls

These basic controls adjust the camera’s position and angle so that you can line up that perfect shot! This is also where you can choose to actually take your photo!

  • Move
  • Aim
  • Reset
  • Camera Height
  • Take Photo
  • Hide UI
  • Exit Photo Mode

Camera Options

Here, you’ll be able to tweak the camera’s lens, as well as other elements that go into getting the perfect shot. These are really the ones that you’re going to want to play with a bit in order to see how they actually work in terms of the shot you’re trying to get. You can focus your image, make it crispier or grainier, zoom in and out, and more!

  • Zoom
  • Tilt
  • Focal Distance
  • F-Stop
  • Exposure
  • Vignette
  • Film Grain
  • Camera Position

Filter Options

Filter options allow you to breathe new life into areas or subjects to transform them by changing to the overall color, making them pop with more vivid imagery or washing them out with duller shades. Star Wars Jedi: Survivor offers a number of colorful filters to choose from.

  • Filter
  • Filter Strength

 

Icon Options

These icons allow you to watermark your image with things such as the Jedi symbol or the game’s own logo. Like with filters, Star Wars Jedi: Survivor will offer you plenty of options!

  • Icons
  • Placement
  • Opacity

Border Options

Borders allow you to make Star Wars-themed postcards with unique designs. These are perfect to share with your friends!

  • Borders
  • Opacity

Spotlight Options

If you’re looking to give Cal or other objects in your photo some better lighting, these options will surely help you in a pinch. You can adjust each spotlight – up to three per photo – in order to highlight different angles within the shot.

  • Spotlight 1
  • Spotlight 2
  • Spotlight 3
  • Color
  • Intensity

Character Options

You can leave all characters you captured in your photo or remove them altogether if you’d prefer an environmental snapshot. Characters are removed by category, which include:

  • Cal
  • BD-1
  • Friends
  • Enemies

That’s everything that you’re going to need if you want to become a Star Wars Jedi: Survivor photo mode expert! Hopefully, this gave you a bit of a sigh of relief, as the game’s photo mode can look daunting once you first get started with it. But once you get some photos under your belt, it’s not really all that scary!

What do you think about photo mode’s inclusion in Star Wars Jedi: Survivor? Did Respawn do a good job? What would you have added or done different? And what kind of photos are you taking out there in the galaxy? Comment below and let us know!

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