Follow TV Tropes

Following

Characters / LEGO Star Wars

Go To

This is a list of all playable characters in the LEGO Star Wars video game series, organized by group affiliation and first appearance.

Warning! Unmarked spoilers follow, as we can only assume if you are playing these games, you're familiar with the basic story of Star Wars.


    open/close all folders 

Main Cast note 

    Obi-Wan Kenobi 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/generalkenobi.jpg
Click here to see his Complete Saga appearance

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: James Arnold Taylor (young, The Skywalker Saga), Stephen Stanton (old, The Skywalker Saga)

Trained by Qui-Gon, he was also sent to Naboo to negotiate the blockade. After his master's death, he found himself training Anakin Skywalker at his request. Eventually, after surviving Anakin's turn to the Dark Side and Order 66, he would instruct Luke Skywalker in the ways of the force.


  • And Your Reward Is Clothes:
    • He starts in his The Phantom Menace outfit in the original, but his Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith outfits are unlockable as well.
    • In The Original Trilogy, you start with his A New Hope attire, and can unlock a "force ghost" version too.
    • You get a revamped version of his Attack of the Clones outfit at the beginning of The Clone Wars, and get his outfit from the series shortly afterwards. His arctic gear from one episode is a handheld exclusive.
  • Badass in Distress: During the Droid Factory chapter in The Video Game, Obi-Wan is captured (offscreen in the console version, onscreen in the GBA version). In the console version, Anakin and Padmé manage to reach him, only for him to get re-captured by Jango anyway. He's later taken to the Petranaki Arena, where he's rescued by his Jedi allies. In the GBA version, he later appears free from being captured for seemingly no reason.
  • Change the Uncomfortable Subject: In The Skywalker Saga, rather than tell Luke what happened with Anakin he instead changes the subject.
  • Cool Starship:
    • His Et-2 has been playable since the first game.
    • His Delta-2 became a playable minikit in The Original Trilogy.
    • His Delta-7B in The Clone Wars.
  • The Ditz: As an apprentice in his depiction in the first LEGO Star Wars. Even turning on his lightsaber was a struggle for him.
  • Final Boss: He can become this in The Video Game if you're playing as Anakin when the final battle begins. However, defeating him results in the same ending as if Anakin was fought.
  • Laser Blade: As a Jedi, his weapon of choice is a blue Lightsaber.
  • Our Ghosts Are Different: His Ghost variant is Nigh-Invulnerable due to permanent Intangibility, yet can still slaughter enemies with his lightsaber.
  • Palette Swap: His Padawan and Jedi Master variants use the exact same model, re-textured to match his appearances. Averted with the Jedi Knight variant (different hair model), and Ben Kenobi (same basic model, new animations).
  • Ret-Canon:
    • His Geonosis variant from the original was redesigned in The Clone Wars to better match his appearance from the installment it is based on.
    • His Revenge of the Sith and Classic variants were given significantly better details in The Force Awakens.
  • Secret Character:
    • His "Original trilogy" outfit is a minikit in The Clone Wars.
    • His "Classic" and Revenge of the Sith outfits can be unlocked by unfreezing carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens.
  • Translator Buddy: Is capable of understanding Astromech droid speech.

    Anakin Skywalker/Darth Vader 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_anakin_jediknight.png
Click here to see his Complete Saga appearance
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_darthvader.png

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Matt Lanter (Anakin, The Skywalker Saga), Matt Sloan (Vader, The Force Awakens), Darin De Paul (Vader (unmasked), The Force Awakens), Fred Tatasciore (Vader, The Skywalker Saga)

A young slave boy from Tatooine, hand-picked to be trained in the force by Qui-Gon before his death. After years of training by Obi-Wan, he was seduced to the Dark Side by Chancellor Palpatine, and went on a Jedi-killing spree that ended with the death of Padmé. Ultimately stopped by his former master, he was rebuilt as the cyborg Darth Vader. He may be the Emperor's right hand, but he secretly has designs of his own, particularly for his unknowing son Luke.


  • And Your Reward Is Clothes:
    • His "Padawan", "Jedi", and "Darth Vader" outfits in the Prequel Trilogy.
    • His "Ghost" form in The Original Trilogy.
    • His normal show appearance, "Darth Vader", and a battle-damaged Vader variant in The Clone Wars. His snow gear from one episode is a handheld exclusive.
  • Adaptational Badass: His child self is a skilled hand-to-hand fighter in The Skywalker Saga, whereas he was basically The Load during the Battle of Naboo, both in canon and previous games, until he got into the cockpit of a Naboo starfighter.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: In The Skywalker Saga, while now being the direct cause of Padmé's death, his last interaction with her is revamped. In the original, he actively Force Choked her when he found out she was now against him, where here he instead Force Chokes a wedding topper of himself, the thing popping off and hitting Padme by accident.
  • Adapted Out:
    • For ease of plot, he helps the heroes win the podrace and leaves Tatooine without a fuss, with no mention of his mother, at least in the console version. The GBA version shortens this further, as Watto agrees to give Anakin to Qui-Gon for free, skipping the podrace.
    • His storyline with Padmé and his mother is not in the Attack of the Clones story. The GBA version, while still not touching on his relation with Padmé, includes Anakin's short-lived reunion with his mother.
    • Also, a bit like the movie, his participation in Operation: Knightfall is kept entirely off-screen in both games.
  • All-Loving Hero: When Episode II Anakin spawns, he'll declare he's not just there to help the men, but the women and the children, too. Obviously not so much as Darth Vader.
  • Archnemesis Dad: To Luke and Leia.
  • Bad Powers, Good People: In games adapting Return of the Jedi, he's the only story-unlocked character with access to Dark Force and Force Choke, and he only becomes playable after his Heel–Face Turn. Every other character with those Sith powers is either a Free Play collectable, gotten from a Villain Episode special mission, or comes packed in a DLC.
  • Battle Boomerang: The lightsaber throw was his special ability in the Game Boy Advance version of the first game, before it became a standard Jedi ability starting with The Clone Wars.
  • Cool Car: His podracer might count.
  • Cool Starship:
    • His yellow Eta-2 Actis has been playable since the original game, in full-sized and minikit forms.
    • His TIE Advanced from A New Hope becomes playable in The Original Trilogy, again in regular and mini varieties.
    • His N-1 from The Phantom Menace becomes playable in The Complete Saga.
    • His airspeeder from Attack of the Clones becomes a drivable vehicle in The Complete Saga.
    • His yellow Delta-7B and The Twilight in The Clone Wars.
    • On a much larger scale, his flagship, the Resolute, forms one half of The Clone Wars' Hub Level.
  • Covered in Scars: His lava-scarred form is playable in The Skywalker Saga.
  • The Ditz: Seems to be the norm for Jedi Apprentices. Even when dead, his ghost burns his toes on the funeral pyre.
  • Enemy Mine: Unlike most other depictions, his duel with Obi-Wan on Mustafar has the two of them cooperating to get past obstacles in order to facilitate the series' co-op gameplay formula. Any fighting they do before the final showdown is done entirely in cutscenes. The Skywalker Saga averts this, as R2-D2 and C-3PO are the second and third characters of the Mustafar level, meaning Anakin is on the offensive throughout the entire level.
  • Face–Heel Turn: By the events of Order 66 in Revenge of the Sith, Anakin has succumbed to the dark side and massacred the Jedi Temple. Unlike the original film, the reasons for why he did this are never hinted upon, at least not in the original games.
  • Final Boss: Of the original game (assuming you were playing as Obi-Wan when the battle begins), as well as the Prequel Trilogy in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Heel–Face Turn: During the final battle in Return of the Jedi, Darth Vader turns against The Emperor after the latter attempted to torture Luke to death with Force Lightning.
  • Good Colors, Evil Colors: In the original video game, one cutscene has Anakin's blue lightsaber turning red to show that he has turned evil. This was corrected in The Complete Saga, though the DS version of the game still shows him with a red lightsaber in that cutscene. The Skywalker Saga gives Anakin's Episode III version an idle animation calling back to this, where he ignites the saber red, before confusedly shaking and hitting it to turn it back to blue, referencing how in that appearance he's on the verge of falling to the Dark Side.
  • Just You and Me and My GUARDS!: During The Empire Strikes Back level "Cloud City Trap", it's not just a one-on-one fight versus Luke. Vader calls in troopers to slow down his progress.
  • Kick the Dog: Actually does physically kick R2 in the Skywalker Saga version of The Empire Strikes Back.
  • Kingpin in His Gym: In The Skywalker Saga, since Tarkin is excised from the plot, Obi-Wan finds Vader actually exercising before they fight. He also glimpses him having caf with the Stormtroopers.
  • Laughably Evil: As Vader he gets up to plenty of The Comically Serious moments, having his dark image often give way to exasperation over his minions idiocy and occasional moment-killing scenarios..
  • Lighter and Softer: Since the games are more family-friendly, Anakin's worse deeds from Revenge of the Sith are removed — rather than strangling Padmé, he just dumps her in a huff. Also, his defeat on Mustafar is less horrific, with Anakin merely getting his limbs sliced off (which, due to being depicted in Lego, isn't very graphic at all).
  • Manchild: How he's depicted in the retelling of Revenge of the Sith in The Skywalker Saga. When denied the rank of Jedi Master, he angrily sulks off to a kiddie table and scribbles in a coloring book. During his fall to the Dark Side, he also defaces the Jedi Temple with juvenile graffiti.
  • My Future Self and Me: Free Play in The Skywalker Saga can have Child Anakin and Darth Vader playable at the same time, though the young Anakin doesn't realize he's looking at himself, simply thinking Vader looks cool.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: After smacking Padmé’s head with the wedding topper of himself, he starts to regret it…And then Obi-Wan comes stomping down the ramp.
  • Never Heard That One Before: Episode III Anakin is getting just a little tired of hearing about the Tragedy of Darth Plagueis, while Darth Vader is completely fed up.
  • Our Ghosts Are Different: His Ghost variant is Nigh-Invulnerable due to permanent Intangibility, yet can still slaughter enemies with his lightsaber.
  • Ret-Canon:
    • His ghost form is based on Hayden Christensen's appearance in the 2004 and later special editions of Return of the Jedi, rather than Sebastian Shaw's original appearance.
    • His Geonosis variant from the original was redesigned in The Clone Wars to better match his appearance from the show of the same name.
    • His Podracer and Jedi Knight forms were both updated in The Force Awakens, replacing the then 10-year old models used in the original game.
  • Running Gag: He really, really hates sand. His appearance in Rise of Skywalker even has him complaining about it a good thirty years on from his death.
  • Secret Character:
    • Vader is technically this in the original, as you unlock him through the Bonus Level.
    • Both regular and battle-damaged Vader are minikits in The Clone Wars.
    • His podracer and Revenge of the Sith variants can be unlocked by finding collectibles in The Force Awakens.
  • Smug Super: How The Skywalker Saga portrays Anakin as a Jedi.
  • Sociopathic Hero: In The Skywalker Saga, Obi-Wan is appalled that Anakin seems willing to shoot down the commuters of Coruscant in his efforts to get to Zam.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Darth Vader is frequently seen in facepalm mode.
  • Took a Level in Badass: First unlocked a defenseless little boy. All the rest of his forms are either a battle-hardened Jedi or a deadly Sith.
  • Tragic Keepsake: His purple teddy bear from Skywalker Saga serves as an allegorical representation of his innocence, which was shattered when he had to leave his mother.
  • The Voiceless: In The Skywalker Saga, Sith Anakin and the helmetless Vader are silent when playable.
  • Youthful Freckles: His younger self has these.

    Padmé Amidala/Naberrie 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Catherine Taber (The Skywalker Saga)

The Queen of Naboo, who briefly traded places with one of her body doubles. After the Battle of Geonosis, she was secretly married to Anakin Skywalker. However, he killed her upon his Face–Heel Turn. Before she died however, she bore their two twins, Luke and Leia.


  • Action Girl: The same badass and capably commanding lady as in canon.
  • Adapted Out: Her infamous Unlimited Wardrobe from the movies is reduced to a smaller handful of outfits, for practicality's sake.
  • Adaptation Personality Change: In Attack of the Clones, Padmé was initially unreceptive to Anakin's crush, then tried to dismiss it, not acknowledging she did have feelings until they were about to be executed. The Skywalker Saga has her crushing on teenaged Anakin the minute she sees him.
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes:
    • In addition to her standard Royal garb, her normal clothes, Battle of Naboo attire, Senator outfit, and her "Clawed" look from Geonosis are unlocked throughout the story.
    • In The Clone Wars, her normal attire reappears in addition to her default "Geonosis" look.
  • Big Eater: Like most pregnant women, Padmé has a huge craving for cakes.
  • Chewing the Scenery: Mildly, whenever she spawns in Skywalker Saga, she'll admit she's getting a little carried away.
  • Clothing Damage: Her Geonosis arena variant.
  • Cool Starship: Her H-Type Nubian from Attack of the Clones, which is playable as a minikit in Original Trilogy, and became a full-sized vehicle in The Clone Wars.
  • Dies Differently in Adaptation: In Skywalker Saga. For family friendly reasons, as well as the fact that most fans disliked the explanation of her death, Padmé supposedly dies from subdural hematoma after Anakin strikes her head hard with the wedding topper figure of himself. As per the movie, she survives long enough to give birth to Luke and Leia.
  • Girly Girl: First seen in Attack of the Clones checking her nails. And has lipstick in every single character variant. Doesn't stop her from kicking some major brick, though.
  • Pregnant Badass: One of Padmé's playable forms in The Skywalker Saga is her pregnant self from Revenge of the Sith, who despite being very pregnant is still capable of fighting.
  • Ret-Canon:
    • Her Geonosis variant from The Video Game was redesigned in The Clone Wars to better match her appearance from the movie it is based on.
    • Her Geonosis and Queen variants were updated to more closely match the newer minifigures in The Force Awakens.
  • Secret Character: Her Geonosis and Queen variants can be unlocked by finding collectibles in The Force Awakens.
  • Unlimited Wardrobe: Not quite as much as her film and TV depictions, but Padmé does have a lot of outfits. Apparently citizens in Theed feel the need to keep up with her habit of changing five times a day.

    R2-D2 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_r2d2_8.png

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

This small blue astromech droid started off as a repair droid on a Naboo shuttle. After becoming acquainted with Anakin Skywalker, he always seems to be around whenever something interesting happens.


  • Discard and Draw: The Skywalker Saga removes his rocket boosters in exchange for making him properly combat-capable.
  • Mighty Glacier: He's always been rather slow and ignored by enemy attacks, thus technically resistant to damage, but he only truly qualifies in The Skywalker Saga, where he gains the ability to genuinely hurt and destroy enemies.
  • Non-Action Guy: Throughout most of the games he has no combat ability and limited mobility, meaning he's only really used for solving puzzles.
  • Remember the New Guy?: In The Video Game he just suddenly pops up in the "Retake Theed Palace" level for The Phantom Menace, already a member of the heroes squad, with absolutely no prior scenes of him joining them or even existing.
  • Shock and Awe: His combos in Skywalker Saga allow him to zap enemies with his shock probe.
  • Support Party Member: His built-in rocket boosters let him cross some gaps that other characters can't and he can use astromech droid panels, and his shock attack can disable enemies temporarily, cutting down on the amount of fire his partner has to deal with. He has no real combat ability beyond that, but at least enemies tend to ignore him.
  • Took a Level in Badass: The Skywalker Saga makes it where his attacks can genuinely be used to destroy enemies, after spending real-world decades being at best able to distract them.

    C-3PO 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Anthony Daniels

A protocol droid hand-built by a young Anakin Skywalker, him and his friend R2-D2 seems to always be around when something interesting is happening.


  • Adapted Out:
    • Aside from a generic protocol droid that may be himnote , he is absent on the Game Boy Advance version.
    • The plot point of being shot to pieces in The Empire Strikes Back is removed from The Skywalker Saga.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: The Skywalker Saga removes most of his nastier moments from A New Hope.
  • Non-Action Guy: In the earliest games, his ability was to unlock doors... and that's it. He's slow, can't fight, can't jump and can't defend himself.
  • Remember the New Guy?: He appears in Attack of the Clones without explanation. The Skywalker Saga fixes this by having him picked up from Tatooine after Shmi’s death.
  • Secret Character: Only playable via code on the Game Boy Advance.
  • Shows Damage: In the original games, the more damage Threepio took, the more limbs he loses. By the final heart, he's down to hopping everywhere on one leg, and operating panels by heatbutting them.
  • Stop Worshipping Me: Is more than a little annoyed by the Ewoks thinking he's a god, even after he tries setting them straight.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Starting with The Force Awakens he gained the ability to punch enemies, while The Skywalker Saga made him genuinely handy for combat through the ability to hack turrets.

    Chancellor Sheev Palpatine/Darth Sidious/The Emperor 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_darthsidious_ep9_reborn.png

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Sam Witwer (The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga)

After being made Chancellor during the Naboo Crisis, Chancellor Palpatine stayed in office far beyond his term, including through the entirety of the Clone Wars. After converting his friend Anakin Skywalker to the Dark Side, he issued Order 66, which led to a massive galaxy-wide purge of Jedi. After framing the Jedi Order for treason, he appointed himself ruler of the Galactic Empire.


  • Adapted Out: The original games completely omit his predecessor Chancellor Valorum, along with Palpatine's rise to power. The Skywalker Saga restores both, showing the vote of No Confidence for Valorum's leadership, along with Palpatine getting out a bucket of popcorn to watch Valorum leave office in disgrace so a better leader note  can turn the Republic into something more awesome than its pitiful corrupt state.
  • Ain't Too Proud to Beg: Some of his final lines in The Skywalker Saga are begging Anakin to help him again, only to remember he's not there this time.
  • Big Bad: Of the entire series.
    • In The Video Game, the ending cutscene of Attack of the Clones reveals that he was the one who hired Count Dooku, his new apprentice. In Revenge of the Sith, he corrupts Anakin into becoming his new apprentice, and appointed himself as the ruler of the Galactic Empire. He was also Playing Both Sides and hired Darth Maul, but due to his lack of screentime, this is never hinted upon.
    • By the events of The Original Trilogy, he's still under control of the Galactic Empire. Though, due to all of his scenes except for his boss fight being cut, he comes across as an offscreen Greater-Scope Villain.
    • His status as the primary villain of Star Wars is fully realized in The Skywalker Saga, since the voiced adaptation of his every plot in the Original, Prequel, and Sequel trilogies properly portrays how all the evil that occurs in the story can tie itself back to him in some way.
  • Bragging Rights Reward: His Sith form in the original game is unlocked after completing the secret level, which itself requires completing every minikit in the game. While he is a fully capable combatant in this form as opposed to his helpless regular form, he's functionally no different from any other Dark Side character.
  • Climax Boss: He's not the Final Boss of The Skywalker Saga's Prequel Trilogy (that honor goes to Anakin again), but he is the penultimate boss, facing off against Yoda in a duel to determine the fate of the galaxy.
  • The Dreaded: Due to his long list of atrocities, almost everyone fears The Emperor. As The Force Awakens shows, even his own Imperial Guards are terrified of him.
  • Evil Laugh: He retains his canonical tendency to chuckle when amused. Whenever his Emperor version is left idle in any game, including during his boss fights, he'll let out a crazy cackle every 10-15 seconds like the madman he is.
  • Final Boss: He's the last boss faced in The Original Trilogy (and, by extension, The Complete Saga), though there is still one more level after him where the Death Star II is destroyed. He's also the final boss of the Original Trilogy and the Sequel Trilogy (if the latter can be called a boss fight) in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Greater-Scope Villain:
    • Due to The Clone Wars only adapting the first two seasons, he's only shown in his Bitch in Sheep's Clothing Chancellor persona (his Emperor persona is a plot irrelevant Secret Character), but he's still the one Running Both Sides, subtly manipulating the Republic and Separatists to further his goals.
    • His most notable role in The Force Awakens is being the Starter Villain fought in the prologue, but the overall sequel story only happens due to the consequences of his every action in the prior two trilogies, especially the influential legacy his Empire and apprentice Darth Vader had on the First Order and Kylo Ren. This also isn’t going into his reappearance in The Rise of Skywalker where he's revealed to have orchestrated even that, though there was no way of knowing this at the time of the game's release.
  • I Surrender, Suckers: Near the end of his duel in The Force Awakens's adaptation of The Battle of Endor, he raises his hands in surrender after Luke and Darth Vader 'defeat' him. When Luke turns off his lightsaber, Palpatine strikes Luke and Vader with Force Lightning.
  • Joke Character: Chancellor Palpatine in The Video Game and The Complete Saga is one of the few characters with no practical use whatsoever. This gets rectified in later games, by giving him either a blaster and the ability to punch in The Clone Wars or a lightsaber in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Kick the Dog: He is seen Force Lighting Moff Jerjerodd (who is trying to rearrange the Stormtrooper dummy back) in the intro of Return of the Jedi.
  • Knight of Cerebus:
    • In The Video Game and The Original Trilogy, aside from Chancellor Palpatine hiding behind a chair when the Invisible Hand is about to crash, none of his scenes are Played for Laughs. Said scenes include celebrating the start of the Clone Wars with Count Dooku, issuing Order 66 via a Throat-Slitting Gesture, congratulating Darth Vader for massacring the Jedi Temple, and torturing Luke with Force Lightning.
    • Downplayed in the opening level of The Force Awakens. His evil nature is taken seriously, and he successfully goads Luke into attempting to strike him down with all of his hatred. However, he's also subjected to Amusing Injuries during the fight.
  • Laughably Evil:
    • Averted in The Video Game and The Original Trilogy. Unlike the antics of Darth Vader, The Emperor is played dead seriously.
    • Played straight in The Force Awakens, he makes an Imperial Guard briefly panic over the thought of being executed for laughing along with him, and gets put through Amusing Injuries.
    • Downplayed in The Skywalker Saga, reaching a balance between the two prior depictions; while he's just as comedic as the rest of the cast, he is still depicted rather seriously in some scenes.
  • Laugh with Me!: Inverted in the opening level of The Force Awakens. When he laughs at Luke being unaware that he led the Rebels into a trap, one of the Imperial Guards laughs with him. When Palpatine stops laughing in annoyance, the Imperial Guard anxiously stops in fear of retaliation.
  • Lightning Bruiser: Despite his frail appearance, he swings his lightsaber just as fast and strongly as any other Force user, is very agile for somebody who doesn't look like he could run, let alone jump all over the place repeatedly, and in his Original Trilogy boss fights for both the original games and The Skywalker Saga he has absurd amounts of health befitting of a Final Boss.
  • Mundane Utility: In The Force Awakens, Palpatine's threatening and evil Force lightning can also be used to... charge switches in lieu of a BB unit. In The Skywalker Saga, he also use Force lightning to made popcorn.
  • Obviously Evil: The Skywalker Saga plays up his blatantly shifty nature right from the start, such as manhandling an uncomfortable Padmé during the last scene of The Phantom Menace.
  • Oh, Crap!:
    • In The Original Trilogy's opening cutscene to Jedi Destiny, he goes silent in both shock and confusion when Darth Vader stops him from killing Luke.
    • Near the end of his duel in The Force Awakens's adaptation of The Battle of Endor, he stops electrocuting Luke and shows horror when he sees Darth Vader recover from getting blasted by Force Lightning.
  • Pass the Popcorn: He likes to pull out a bucket of popcorn whenever things are going his way, which is often.
  • Ret-Canon: He received a redesign in The Clone Wars to match his appearance from the show it's based on.
  • Secret Character:
    • Both of his forms in The Clone Wars. His Chancellor form is given for conquering the whole galaxy in Republic Conquest mode, while his Sith form is a minikit.
    • In The Force Awakens both Emperor and Chancellor are available as Carbonite bricks.
  • Shock and Awe: His Force Lightning ability, which replaces the other Sith characters' Force Choke and becomes an entirely separate ability in The Force Awakens. He doesn't use it as much as a playable character in The Skywalker Saga, though he does shoot small bursts of lightning as his Heavy Attack.
  • Spectacular Spinning: The Emperor's jumping saber lunge is his spinning leap from Revenge of the Sith. His double-jump saber slam is a vertical version.
  • Throat-Slitting Gesture: In The Video Game, he issues Order 66 by making this gesture to a Clone Commander.
  • Took a Level in Badass: His "Chancellor Palpatine" form gets a gun in The Clone Wars and gets his lightsaber in The Force Awakens.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: In The Skywalker Saga, he has a thing for popcorn.
  • Unnecessary Combat Roll: In The Force Awakens, he occasionally rolls when swinging his lightsaber. Even when he's swinging at nothing.
  • Vile Villain, Saccharine Show: In a series where almost every character is a comedian, The Emperor in The Video Game and The Original Trilogy is completely humorless and horrifying. Captain Phasma and General Hux both rival him in evil, yet even they have their comedic moments.
  • Villainous Rescue: In the ending cutscene of Revenge of the Sith, he locates and saves Darth Vader on Mustafar after the latter has his legs cut off by Obi-Wan.
  • Warm-Up Boss: Of all characters, Palpatine is the first and easiest boss of The Force Awakens, as the prologue chapter recaps the ending of Return of the Jedi.

    Chewbacca 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A young Wookiee who helped Yoda and the Clone Army on Kashyyyk. After Order 66, he helped his Jedi ally escape. During the Galactic Civil War, he found himself the companion of Han Solo aboard the Millennium Falcon.


  • An Arm and a Leg: His melee attack is to rip the arms off an enemy, defeating it instantly. This returns in The Skywalker Saga as one of his counterattacks.
  • Awesome Backpack: An extra in The Original Trilogy lets him carry around C-3PO as one, a la The Empire Strikes Back.
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: He's a goof ball, but one of the fiercest warriors you'll ever meet.
  • Dude, Where's My Reward?: The fact he didn't get a medal is played up, where Leia tries to give him one, but circumstances mean he never gets it. He finally does at the end of Rise of Skywalker.
  • Fun with Subtitles: He speaks only in roars, but sometimes The Skywalker Saga shows what those roars mean. Turns out he's exasperated by what he has to go through.
  • Mighty Glacier: His melee attack is slow, but can take down most enemies in one hit, even if they normally take multiple hits to defeat. In The Force Awakens and The Skywalker Saga, his bowcaster has a slower rate of fire but does much more damage than a normal blaster.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: In The Original Trilogy, Chewie has to disguise himself as a Stormtrooper, same as Han and Luke. Problem is, the helmet piece doesn't fit on him, since Chewie's headpiece is a single block, so it just sort of dangles off the top of his head. No-one suspects a thing unless Chewie attacks someone.
  • Secret Character: Is a minikit in The Clone Wars.
  • Sherlock Scan: As a Scoundrel-class character, he can scan purple bricks and know which one to shoot.
  • Skewed Priorities: During Han's search for Luke, Chewie calls up to complain about dinner, and when Han points out that Chewie's the one still inside, Chewie hangs up on him.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: Called out Luke for nearly hit him and Han during his lightsaber training in the Falcon.

    Princess Leia 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Shelby Young (young, The Skywalker Saga), Carolyn Hennesy (old, The Skywalker Saga)

The daughter of Anakin Skywalker and Padmé, and the sister of Luke Skywalker, Leia was adopted by Senator Bail Organa upon her Mother's Death. She eventually became involved with the Rebel Alliance, which led to her home planet Alderaan's destruction. She has a strange relationship with the smuggler Han Solo.


  • Action Girl: Shares her mothers skill in both combat and leadership.
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: Her Hoth, Bespin, Bounty Hunter, slave girl, and Endor Clothes in The Original Trilogy.
  • Blatant Lies: As in the movies, Episode IV Leia will try to claim she's simply on a diplomatic mission when she spawns. Unlike the movies, she gives up halfway because it's so patently not true.
  • Dressing as the Enemy: Her Bounty Hunter form.
  • Lady Not-Appearing-in-This-Game: Her outfit from the front cover of The Original Trilogy shows up nowhere in the game proper, not even in cutscenes. The game cover, however, references a poster for A New Hope.
  • Pre-Asskicking One-Liner: The Skywalker Saga moves her telling Poe "it's time to board your transport" around so she says it before zapping him unconscious.
  • Secret Character:
    • She is unlocked through the Bonus Level in the original. As she's the most expensive character you can buy after beating it, she's arguably the most difficult character to unlock.
    • She reappears as a minikit in The Clone Wars.
    • Her classic outfit is one of the carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens.
  • They Call Me MISTER Tibbs!: Sequel Trilogy Leia will declare "It's General Organa" whenever she spawns.

    Luke Skywalker 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_luke_black.png
Click here to see his Complete Saga appearance

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: David Menkin (The Skywalker Saga)

Raised by his Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru after his father, a pilot on a spice freighter, died years ago. After buying a pair of droids from some Jawas, his family was murdered. Under the tutelage of Obi-Wan and Yoda, he learned the Force and went on to destroy the Empire and his father, Darth Vader.


  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: His Stormtrooper, Hoth, Pilot, Dagobah, Jedi, and Endor outfits in The Original Trilogy. His Dagobah, Jedi, and Endor outfits give him the ability to use a lightsaber and the Force, but the Stormtrooper, Hoth, and Pilot outfits are cosmetic.
  • Character Exaggeration: The Skywalker Saga amplifies his fondness for blue milk into a certified addiction.
  • Cool Car: His X34 Landspeeder. It's a vehicle in certain levels and playable as a minikit in The Original Trilogy. It is a fully-playable vehicle on the DS.
  • Cool Starship: His X-Wing. His Snowspeeder may also count in this game, since it can go into space during Free Play mode. Both are available in regular and minikit flavors.
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: More goofy than the filmverse, but still powerful.
  • Cryptically Unhelpful Answer: Rey accuses him of being annoyingly vague in Rise of Skywalker after he says she has "everything [she] needs".
    Luke: You're asking me for clues?
    Rey: You were being extremely vague!
  • Discard and Draw: The Skywalker Saga gives us both Hero and Jedi versions of Luke, and he occasionally shifts from one or the other during the events of The Empire Strikes Back. He sticks as a Jedi after heading to Dagobah and training with Yoda, but the player can still use his Hero version if free-play is available.
  • Dressing as the Enemy: Stormtrooper Luke.
  • Grumpy Old Man: Sequel Trilogy Luke is as grouchy as usual.
    Luke: You called me out here for this? Fine! But then I'm getting some milk.
  • Little "No": In The Original Trilogy, he gives off one when Darth Vader reveals that he is Luke's biological father.
  • Secret Character:
    • He is a minikit in The Clone Wars.
    • His Tatooine and Stormtrooper variants are unlockable through Carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens. Oddly, his present day variant is only playable via hacking.
  • Translator Buddy: He can understand Wookies and droids. Old Luke is also capable of understanding the Lanai after being around them so long.

    Han Solo 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, LEGO Indiana Jones, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: AJ LoCasio (The Skywalker Saga)

A smuggler and captain of the Millennium Falcon who wound up working with the Rebel Alliance after failing to avoid "Imperial Entanglements" on a trip with Luke and Obi-Wan. He enjoys a strange relationship with Princess Leia.


  • Accidental Suicide: He accidentally ignites his son's lightsaber and draws a hole in the walkway, which leads to his Disney Villain Death.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: The Skywalker Saga removes most of his jerkier moments (his dismissal of Obi-Wan, his arguing with Leia, the whole Not in This for Your Revolution thing).
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: His Stormtrooper, Hoth, Skiff, and Endor Clothes in The Original Trilogy.
  • Cool Starship: The Falcon, of course. Playable in both vehicle and minikit levels.
  • Dies Differently in Adaptation: In Skywalker Saga Han isn't stabbed by Kylo Ren in this version's retelling of The Force Awakens. Rather, he accidentally creates a hole in the walkway both of them are standing on when trying to fix Kylo Ren's lightsaber and falls to his doom.
  • Dressing as the Enemy: Stormtrooper Han.
  • Guest Fighter: Is an unlockable Secret Character in LEGO Indiana Jones.
  • Secret Character:
    • His frozen-in-carbonite form is playable in a few levels of The Original Trilogy with Extra Toggle.
    • He is an unlockable Guest Fighter in console versions of LEGO Indiana Jones. In the handheld versions, his pieces are in the character creator.
    • He is a minikit in The Clone Wars.
    • His Classic and Stormtrooper variants are unlockable through Carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens.
  • Sherlock Scan: The Skywalker Saga gives him the ability to analyze purple bricks to determine which one to shoot and cause the most damage.

    Poe Dameron 

Playable Appearances: The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Josh Cowdery (The Skywalker Saga)

A member of the Resistance and "one heck of a pilot", Poe was trying to find a lead to Luke Skywalker in the hopes of stopping the First Order, only to run across Finn and set in motion a chain of events that he could never have imagined.


  • Ace Pilot: He's among the best pilots on the Resistance, having pulled off several dangerous flight missions that would have killed any lesser pilot.
  • Badass Normal: He never displays the slightest hint of Force-sensitivity or any other superhuman abilities, but him being an Ace Pilot and pretty good with a blaster means he does a good job fighting the First Order regardless.
  • Even the Guys Want Him: A First Order stormtrooper in The Skywalker Saga even observes that he's "ruggedly handsome".
  • Malicious Misnaming: As in The Last Jedi, he calls Hux "General Hugs" if they're active together.
  • Translator Buddy: Can understand astromechs thanks to his friendship with BB-8.

    BB-8 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_bb8.png

Playable Appearances: The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A BB unit and best friend of Poe Dameron, who after being sent away with the map to Luke and having chance encounters with Finn and Rey, is indirectly responsible for most of the sequel trilogy plot happening.


  • Rolling Attack: By holding down the attack button, BB enters an invulnerable charge that knocks down and damages any Mooks in his path.
  • Shock and Awe: One of BB-8's abilities is extending a wire to power sockets so he can charge them up

    Finn/FN-2187 

Playable Appearances: The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Arif S. Kinchen (The Skywalker Saga)

A former Stormtrooper for the First Order, after seeing what such a position truly entails on the front lines, he takes the capture of Poe Dameron as his best opportunity to permanently resign and escape, hopefully far away from the Order. But once he comes across Rey and realizes there are people worth protecting, he officially joins the Resistance and does what he can to help fight.


  • Adaptational Badass: Even though Nines is even stronger than canon, Finn kicks his ass this time. On Exegol, he also gets a serious fight against BB-9E and a massive turret.
  • Adapted Out: The Skywalker Saga leaves out the whole subplot about his possible Force powers.
  • Badass Normal: He's not a skilled Force-user, he doesn't know he has the Force until the very final fight, he's not an Ace Pilot, heck, before being drafted into Kylo Ren's guard he used to be a janitor, but despite not being special in any way, he manages to do very well fighting against the First Order, and although he's outmatched, he holds his own very admirably against Kylo Ren using a Lightsaber.
  • Helmets Are Hardly Heroic: While already disliking the evil of the First Order while wearing his helmet, once he officially defects to the heroes he removes the helmet and never puts it back on, leaving his face constantly exposed.
  • Laser Blade: Holds the distinction of being one of the few non-Force users to use a Lightsaber.
  • Never Heard That One Before: Has apparently gotten pretty bored of First Order people calling him a traitor.
    Finn: I get it, you don't like me. Can we get on with what we're doing?
  • Stuff Blowing Up: Stormtrooper Finn has access to silver destroying grenades.
  • Token Enemy Minority: Due to the fact he's a Defector from Decadence of the First Order, he's the only story-unlocked and frequently playable character that can use enemy-specific abilities, such as Stormtrooper mask readers and First Order panels.

    Rey Skywalker 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_rey_skywalker.png

Playable Appearances: The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Helen Sadler (The Skywalker Saga)

A young woman from the planet Jakku, possessing dreams of one day leaving the desert planet, her stumbling upon BB-8 and Finn snowballs into her being thrust into the wider galaxy, and with it learning there's more to herself than she could ever believe.


  • Action Girl: Right from the start, she's very capable of fighting various enemies with grace and skill, and she only gets even more badass after realizing her Force potential.
  • Adaptational Nice Girl: Her hostile first meeting with Finn is significantly toned down to her just being moderately suspicious of him.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: Dark Rey very much embraces the "Palpatine's granddaughter" role.
    Dark Rey: I'm evil now! Hiss!
  • Deadpan Snarker: Tends to be quite a bit more sarcastic than in the source material, particularly when Kylo Ren is involved.
  • Discard and Draw: Her "Starkiller Base" minifig no longer has a blaster, only having Luke's lightsaber (but no Force abilities).
  • Empowered Badass Normal: She was already a very capable Action Girl without access to the Force, but when she finally unlocks it she becomes quite capable of facing strong opponents like Kylo Ren.
  • Evil Is Hammy: Dark Rey really enjoys her role as Empress Palpatine.
  • Evil Sounds Deep: Spoofed. Dark Rey is clearly just Rey lowering her voice to sound "dark".
  • Friendly Enemy: Despite supposedly being evil, Empress Rey is exactly the same towards Finn as she was when good.
  • It Runs in the Family: After being informed that she's Palpatine's granddaughter, she performs his plastic Force Lightning gag.
  • Translator Buddy: She can understand droidspeak.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: The Skywalker Saga gives her this kind of relationship with Kylo, though it's more of a one-sided thing with Rey finding him annoying while he just wants to hang out.
  • What You Are in the Dark: Jedi Rey is clearly tempted to use the Khyber bricks she finds, but then decides it's best to hand them over to the Resistance.

    Kylo Ren/Ben Solo 

Playable Appearances: The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Matthew Wood (The Skywalker Saga)

Formerly Ben Solo, after receiving visions of his grandfather Darth Vader and getting "guidance" from Snoke, he went against his family and followed the path of the Dark Side, trying his best to succeed the legacy of his blood by aiding the First Order.


  • Accidental Murder: In The Last Jedi, Kylo hesitated during the attack on Home One and it was his wingmen who took the shot. Here, he's struggling with his shirt and accidentally hits the weapons controls.
  • Adaptational Comic Relief: The games really play up the "manchild" part of Psychopathic Manchild, with everything that upsets him, no matter how little, making him throw tantrums, and he has other childish attributes like pettily claiming Glad I Thought of It to his minions' ideas.
  • Apologizes a Lot: As Ben Solo in The Skywalker Saga, a lot of his lines are him apologizing for the whole "trying to take over the galaxy and committing a lot of murder" thing.
  • Cool and Unusual Punishment: Instead of smashing up the chair Rey had been restrained in, he's glomped by a still mind-tricked FN-2184. Kylo responds by tying him to the chair and... honking a trumpet in his face.
  • Dreadful Musician: According to Finn during The Skywalker Saga, Kylo's a pretty awful singer.
  • Et Tu, Brute?: The Skywalker Saga gives him a moment during the final fight where he's upset that when the Knights of Ren finally chose to do something it's to try and kill him. And after he made them friendship bracelets, too!
  • Fanboy: Have him near Vader, and he starts geeking out.
  • Friendly Enemy: If he and Episode VII Han are active at the same time, Kylo forgets he's supposed to hate the guy.
    Kylo Ren: Hi, dad... leave me alone!
  • Green-Eyed Monster: Grumbles during the fight with the Praetorian Guard that they got to wear helmets.
  • Insult Backfire: Rey in her Starkiller Base outfit will venomously call him a monster. Kylo will just nonchalantly say he is and ask if they can get on with what they're doing.
  • Kick the Dog: Han fixes Kylo's Lightsaber when it malfunctions, and he isn't stabbed for his troubles like in the original film. Unfortunately, Kylo's response is just as brutal: noticing that Han accidentally cut a hole around himself while fixing the saber, Kylo stomps it out and sends Han to his doom.
  • Laser Blade: His cross-guard Lightsaber looks pretty cool and blocks other sabers well, but it's a bit Awesome, but Impractical due to the energy-imbalance making it short out and shift frequently, though thankfully this never happens when playing as him.
  • Never My Fault: In order to get to Snoke, he rewires a door system. This results in a domino effect of setting a nearby kitchen ablaze, which he blames Rey for.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: He's supporting a dictatorial regime and engages in wanton cruelty to the galaxy populace, but the way he does so is like a superpowered bully, and he's prone to throwing violent, destructive tantrums when angry.
  • Reformed, but Not Tamed: As Ben Solo, he's on the side of good, but his idle animation still has him being very twitchy.
  • Stalker Shrine: As shown in The Force Awakens, his bedroom is covered wall-to-wall in Darth Vader merchandise.
  • Tantrum Throwing: When left idle in The Skywalker Saga, he goes into sudden strops, throwing his Darth Vader plushie around.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: The Skywalker Saga gives him this kind of relationship with Rey, though it's more of a one-sided thing with Rey finding him annoying while he just wants to hang out.
  • Walking Shirtless Scene: His shirtless appearance is available as an alternate costume in The Skywalker Saga. Rey is frequently exasperated by his constant shirtlessness.
    Rey: Why does this keep happening? Don't you own a shirt?
    Shirtless Kylo: The breeze, it's... liberating.


Light Side

Jedi Order

    Qui-Gon Jinn 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lego_quigon_7228.jpg

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Tom Kane (The Skywalker Saga)

Jedi Master and trainer of Obi-Wan Kenobi. He is a very unconventional Jedi Master and, being deeply attuned with the Living Force, often goes on side trips to help weaker and seemingly useless life forms. He and his apprentice were dispatched to negotiate the terms of the Trade Federation's blockade on the planet Naboo...


  • Adaptational Early Appearance: In the ending cutscene of The Force Awakens's adaptation of The Battle of Endor, Qui-Gon is among the force ghosts that participate in the Ewok celebration, 16 years before the prequel trilogy invented his character.
  • Secret Character: Is a minikit in The Clone Wars.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Manages to convey this despite being a mute LEGO figure, usually due to Obi-Wan's overeagerness or clumsiness.

    Mace Windu 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_photoicons_macewindu.png

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Terrence C. Carson (The Skywalker Saga)

A member of the Jedi Council, Mace Windu was a human Jedi who took part in many battles during the Clone Wars. He was killed by Anakin Skywalker in defense of Chancellor Palpatine just before Order 66.


  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: His Revenge of the Sith outfit in The Video Game.
  • Downloadable Content: He is part of the Jedi DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Kick the Dog: If he and Episode III Anakin are playable at the same time, Anakin will beg Mace to make him a master. Mace pretends to consider it before refusing Anakin again.
  • Killed Offscreen: Since Anakin's Face–Heel Turn is condensed down to just seeing him bow before Palpatine in a hologram, Mace Windu's entire death scene is cut out. Averted in The Skywalker Saga, where it is shown.
  • Laser Blade: Wields a purple lightsaber.
  • Palette Swap: He's got one version wearing a dark grey Jedi robe, and one wearing a classic tan one. That's the only difference between the two.
  • Sacrificial Lion: He is the first major Jedi to die, leading to the events of the Great Jedi Purge.
  • Scary Black Man: Of the heroic variety.
  • Secret Character: A minikit in the DS version of The Original Trilogy.

    Yoda 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lsw_profileicons_yoda.png
Click here to see his Complete Saga appearance

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Tom Kane (The Skywalker Saga)

An ancient Jedi Master of an as-of-yet unnamed species, Yoda is among the wisest and most powerful Jedi on the Council and a powerful General during the Clone Wars. After Order 66, he goes into hiding on the Dagobah System, only to be found years later by a young Luke Skywalker.


  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: His Ghost form in The Original Trilogy.
  • Balance Buff: Starting from The Clone Wars, he moves just as fast as every other Jedi even when holding his cane, turning him into a Lightning Bruiser. He also gained the ability to use crawl hatches, which he inexplicably couldn't do in earlier games despite already being a tiny-fig.
  • Cool Chair: In the first game he has a hover chair for quick movement. This is removed in the sequels.
  • The Gadfly: Enjoys tormenting Luke about those sacred Jedi texts.
  • Killed Offscreen: Luke's return to Dagobah in Return of the Jedi and Yoda's death are cut out of the second game entirely, so the next time you see Yoda after leaving Dagobah in The Empire Strikes Back is his ghost at the end of the game. Averted in The Skywalker Saga, which shows his passing.
  • Laser Blade: He wields a green-bladed lightsaber.
  • Master Swordsman: As always, he is a very skilled Jedi.
  • Mighty Glacier: Of the Glacier Waif sort in The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga, with him being an absolute juggernaut when fighting, but when walking he's ridiculously slow due to losing his speedy hover chair from The Video Game. He fully abandons this in later games, becoming a Lightning Bruiser that runs reasonably fast while being just as powerful.
  • Our Ghosts Are Different: His Ghost variant is Nigh-Invulnerable due to permanent Intangibility, yet can still slaughter enemies with his lightsaber.
  • Pint-Sized Powerhouse: He's the same size as the children minifigs, allowing him to use crawl hatches, but unlike every other tiny-fig he's a skilled and powerful fighter that can leap around the battlefield to slaughter enemies.
  • Ret-Canon: He is redesigned in The Clone Wars to match his appearance from the show it's based on.
  • Secret Character: Is one of the carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens.
  • Strange Minds Think Alike: He shares Anakin's dislike of sand, and says as much when talking to Rey.

    Luminara Unduli 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A Mirialan Jedi Master who accompanied Mace Windu to Geonosis to rescue Master Kenobi and his allies. She became a General of the Republic Army during the Clone Wars.


    Ki-Adi-Mundi 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Silas Carson (The Skywalker Saga)

A Cerean Jedi Master who became a General in the Clone Wars. He was killed on Mygeeto when Order 66 was issued.


  • Downloadable Content: He is part of the Jedi DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • My Brain Is Big: Like all Cereans. The Video Game and The Clone Wars represents this by him having his head-piece look twice as long, and The Force Awakens gives him a head accessory that makes his head movie-accurate.
  • Open Mouth, Insert Foot: In Skywalker Saga, when he's playable at the same time as Chewie he'll ask about the Droid attack on the Wookies, only to realize there's a Wookie standing right there, who's not amused.

    Kit Fisto 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Phil LaMarr (The Skywalker Saga)

A Nautolan Jedi who joined Mace Windu on the rescue mission to Geonosis. He was a General in the Clone Wars before being killed by Palpatine just before Order 66.


  • Cool Starship: His Delta-7B in The Clone Wars.
  • Downloadable Content: He is part of the Jedi DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Ret-Canon: Redesigned in The Clone Wars and The Force Awakens, since he got an official, physical Minifigure in the interim.
  • Skewed Priorities: He's more confused by being called a dog (whatever that is) than he is concerned that Jango Fett is trying to kill him.

    Shaak Ti 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A Togruta Jedi who accompanied Mace Windu to Geonosis. She was a General in the Clone Wars and was among the Jedi to survive the Battle of Geonosis.


    Aayla Secura 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A Twi'Lek Jedi who served in the Clone Wars. She was killed by her clone soldiers on Felucia.


  • Adapted Out: She was missing from the story in The Video Game, and is only playable via free play in The Complete Saga.
  • Downloadable Content: She is part of the Jedi DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Dual Wielding: Strangely averted in The Complete Saga. She used her familiar style in The Clone Wars, however, despite not having done so in the TV show.
  • The Voiceless: In The Skywalker Saga.

    Plo Koon 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A Kel Dor Jedi, Plo Koon served in the Clone Wars before being killed by his clone troopers over Cato Neimoidia.


    Barriss Offee 

Playable Appearances:The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

The Padawan of Jedi Master Luminara Unduli. She is selfless, and entirely willing to risk her life for the mission at hand.


  • Adapted Out: Unlike her master Luminara, who at least had enough of a role in "Jedi Battle" level of the original game to be unlockable, Barriss had such a minor role in the movies that she was completely left out, not even getting a random unlockable.
  • Ascended Extra: Alongside getting a decently prominent role in The Clone Wars, she regains her lesser role, becomes playable and stars in a side mission in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Best Friend: Of Ashoka, like canon.
  • Call-Forward: While the Skywalker Saga doesn't touch on the events of The Clone Wars, Barriss' profile does mention her fall, and accordingly some of her dialogue shows she doesn't trust the Jedi Council anymore.
  • Quest Giver: Asking the player's help in subduing a bunch of rogue clones running around Kamino.
  • Seen It All: On facing a Woolamander clone armed with flamethrowers, she remarks she finally has seen everything.

    Yaddle 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Another member of Yoda’s species and another member of the High Council.


  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to find and fight a Krayt Dragon on Tatooine.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In Legends, she died while saving Anakin from a bomb (see Jedi Quest: The Shadow Trap for more information). Her ultimate fate in canon wasn't known at the time ( Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi later confirmed that she was killed by Dooku during Qui-Gon Jinn's funeral), the game takes advantage of this by having her as a quest giver.
  • Strange-Syntax Speaker: Not quite as often as Yoda, but occasionally speaks like this this, she does.

    Yarael Poof 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A Quermian that was a member of the Jedi High Council.


  • Bizarre Alien Biology: Quermians have two brains, something he'll comment upon if he's stumped by a puzzle.
  • Cassandra Truth: None of the Kaminoans will believe him when he says he's not one of them, just assuming he's trying to get out of work.
  • Large Ham: He is rather theatrical in how he speaks, both as a side quest giver and as a playable character.
  • Mythology Gag: The premise of his personal side quest has him being mistaken for a Kaminoan scientist and being forced to take his place while said scientist is taking his place in the Jedi Temple. Yarael Poof was cut from Episode II because he looked very similar to the Kaminoans, both of them being tall and thin aliens with long necks.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In Canon and Legends, he died between Episodes I and II (see Star Wars: Zam Wesell for more info). In The Skywalker Saga, he is a quest giver on Kamino.
  • Take This Job and Shove It: Is initially quite enthused at the idea of giving his Kamninoan "supervisor" a tongue-lashing before he leaves, until he realizes this isn't a very Jedi attitude to have.

    Jocasta Nu 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

The head archivist of the Jedi Order, and former member of the High Council.


  • Never Mess with Granny: An elderly human woman who was once a member of the Jedi Council, and every bit as capable a fighter as the rest.
  • Quest Giver: Solicits a bounty hunter to track down whoever stole a bunch of holocrons from the archives.

Galactic Republic

    Jar Jar Binks 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jar_jar_9044.png

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Phil LaMarr (The Skywalker Saga)

A Gungan from Naboo, he joined the Jedi heroes after owing his life to Qui-Gon for saving him from the Battle Droids. He was a major figure in the Battle of Naboo, and eventually became a Gungan general and ambassador for Naboo.


  • Adaptational Badass: Thanks to gameplay alterations, Jar-Jar is a far more capable fighter in the Battle of Naboo than the films, where he was unarmed (though with good reason) and most of his kills were accidents.
  • Adaptational Intelligence: In The Skywalker Saga he is significantly snarkier and slightly smarter than any other appearance he's had in any media.
    Jar Jar: [While riding a Booma] This seems safe. Not.
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: His "Bombad" outfit in the handheld version of The Clone Wars.
  • Butt-Monkey: He typically gets put through the wringer in scenes where he appears in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Cool Boat: The Bongo he uses to take Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan to Theed. It is one of the many playable minikit vehicles in The Original Trilogy.
  • Crutch Character: He's the only super-jump character in the original game that doesn't need to be bought, so you'll be seeing a lot of him in Free Play early on. Once you can afford General Grievous or the Magnaguard, though, there's no reason not to use one of them over Jar Jar.
  • Downloadable Content: He is part of the Prequel Trilogy DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • The Ditz: In a world full of them, he still takes the gold. For example, he's introduced stopping to sniff some flowers as an MTT rolls toward him.
  • Double Jump: His special ability. His entire schtick is that he can jump higher than Jedi.
  • Literal-Minded: In The Skywalker Saga, he calls Palpatine "The Senate" after hearing the infamous line from Palpatine.
  • Nerf: Jar Jar is playable in the second game, but since the double jump feature is removed, he's entirely useless.
  • Once Done, Never Forgotten: While the incident isn't shown, his trying to sample some food in Mos Espa gets a Gungan ambassador into trouble in The Skywalker Saga. Seems no-one ever paid that store owner her wupi-wupi, and she's still tetchy about it...
  • Palette Swap: On the Game Boy Advance, an nameless blue Gungan with all of Jar Jar's abilities was playable through cheat code only.
  • Took a Level in Badass: His appearance in The Clone Wars marks the first time he can actually fight in the console games, he acquires Super Not-Drowning Skills as DLC for The Force Awakens, and in The Skywalker Saga he gains the ability to throw boomas at enemies.

    Captain Tarpals 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

Leader of the security forces of Otoh Gunga. He joined the Gungan Army in the Battle of Naboo.


  • Adapted Out: He is not featured in The Video Game, and is added back in for The Complete Saga.
  • Double Jump: Like Jar Jar, it's his special ability.
  • Palette Swap: Inverted. Except for a spear and shield for combat, he is physically identical to Jar Jar. In fact, all of the generic Gungans are identical to Captain Tarpals.

    Boss Nass 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: BRIAN BLESSED (The Skywalker Saga)

Leader of the Gungans, he has a dislike for the humans of Naboo, and an even greater dislike for Jar Jar Binks. That all gets pushed aside however when he joins with the humans to fend off the Trade Federation and places Jar Jar in command of his army.


  • Adaptational Badass: He's a noncombatant in the original films. In The Skywalker Saga, he can not only fight with his fists (like all playable characters), but he's a Hero class class character who has access to a Grappling-Hook Pistol and fights with a boomer lobber as a ranged weapon.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: Maybe. In The Phantom Menace, he gives Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan the bongo and tells them ominously the quickest way to Theed is going through Naboo's core. Here, Jar-Jar points out how ludicrously lethal this is, and figures Boss Nass is just out to kill them. Whether he actually is or not is uncorroborated.
  • Joke Character: He can't do anything besides run, jump, and pull levers in The Complete Saga. Not the case in The Skywalker Saga however, as he's a now Hero class character in that game.
  • Promoted to Playable: He only appeared in cutscenes in The Video Game. In The Complete Saga, he's fully playable.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to find and recover a bunch of Gungan ambassadors who've gone astray.

    Captain Panaka 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Captain of the Naboo Royal Guard, he is tasked with protecting the queen.


  • Demoted to Extra: Barely a presence in the Skywalker Saga version of Episode 1.
  • Quest Giver: Sends the player to take out a few rogue Battle Droids running around Theed.
  • The Quiet One: Unlike most other unique characters, Panaka has no vocal responses to taking damage or other events.
  • The Stoic: He rarely shows his emotions.

    Royal Guard 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Complete Saga

The protectors of Theed Palace, they appear frequently on Naboo, as well as a few other places.


  • Cool Starship: The N-1s and Republic Shuttles they're seen piloting in the game. Both are playable as minikits in The Original Trilogy.
  • Palette Swap: Of young Anakin in the Game Boy version.
  • Perpetual Smiler: By virtue of using the generic LEGO minifigure face.

    R4-P17 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

An astromech who accompanied Obi-Wan on several missions and plugged into his various starfighters.


  • Adaptational Badass: In both The Video Game and The Skywalker Saga, she is given more to do like going with Obi-Wan to meet the Kaminoans and Jango, in comparison with the original film where she simply stayed with the ship.
  • I'm Standing Right Here: When Lama-Su makes his comment about clones being superior to droids, R4 lets off a series of annoyed bleeps.
  • Palette Swap: Her design is just a repaint Of R2-D2.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In most of the the series' adaptations of Revenge of the Sith, her death by the buzz droids is omitted. In the GBA version of The Video Game, she goes along with Obi-Wan when searching for General Grievous.
  • The Stool Pigeon: Locked up in two separate locations in The Skywalker Saga for blabbing solutions to puzzles.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Since the games leave out R4's death by Buzz Droids, she just disappears once Obi-Wan and Anakin land in Dooku's flagship. The GBA version averts this, as she survives her death scene and goes along with Obi-Wan when searching for General Grievous.

    Wookiee Warrior 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Complete Saga

A tribal Race native to the planet Kashyyyk, these large furry warriors allied themselves with the Republic during the Clone Wars, before finding themselves allied with the Rebel Alliance against the Empire that subjugated them.


  • Awesome Backpack: Amusingly enough, the extra that lets Chewie carry a C-3PO backpack around also applies to these guys. This means that in the "Defense of Kashyyyk" mission as seen in The Complete Saga, there can be up to 5 Wookiees carrying around dismembered protocol droids all in the same place.
  • Cool Boat: One that can propel itself over land, too. The Wookiee Catamaran is a playable minikit in The Original Trilogy.

    Bail Organa 

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

Senator for Alderaan, he is well-liked and a staunch ally of the Jedi. He is also the adoptive father of Anakin and Padmé 's daughter Leia. He perished when Alderaan was destroyed.


  • Adapted Out: It took the good Senator two-and-a-half games to appear, despite his role in Revenge of the Sith.
  • Ascended Extra: After being left out of The Video Game and The Complete Saga, and getting a gameplay-irrelevant unlockable appearance in The Clone Wars, he regains his story relevance and becomes playable in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Mechanically Unusual Fighter: While he is classed as a Hero character in The Skywalker Saga, he's notably the only character in the class to not have a ranged weapon, despite having a blaster for personal defense in canon (which is rather unusual considering that other politicians that were made Hero characters, such as Boss Nass and Mon Mothma, do have a ranged weapon despite no indication of them having done so in canon).

    Captain Typho 

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Jay Laga'aia (The Skywalker Saga)

Padmé Amidala's loyal head of security. He lost his eye in the Battle of Naboo.


  • Adapted Out: Despite having a decently notable role in Attack of the Clones, he's absent from The Video Game and The Complete Saga, taking until The Clone Wars to first appear.
  • Ascended Extra: After being a no-show for the original games, he gets a small role in The Clone Wars before regaining some of his movie relevance in The Skywalker Saga. He even gets an additional role accompanying Yoda to his fight with Palpatine.
  • Badass Normal: No Force powers, but he manages to help fight against the Emperor and walks away from it.
  • Demoted to Extra: All but one of his scenes in Attack of the Clones are removed, so he only shows up at the very beginning.
  • Eyepatch of Power: As a result of losing his eye in background material.

Clone Army

    Clone Troopers 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Dee Bradley Baker (The Skywalker Saga)

Created by Kaminoan scientists using Jango Fett as a template, this army was commissioned by Darth Tyranus, but ended up in the hands of the Galactic Republic. They served the Jedi loyally until Order 66 was issued, when they turned on them. Some of the survivors of the Clone Wars became Imperial Stormtroopers later.


  • And Your Reward Is Clothes:
    • In addition to the Attack of the Clones variant, the original game also has their "Pilot"note , "Swamp", "Walker", and "Disguised" forms from Revenge of the Sith for purchase.
    • The Clone Wars brings back the original and Pilot outfits, along with the new "Workout Troopers", "Senate Commandos", and "Senate Commando Captains". The Galactic Marines, Stealth Troopers, Jet Troopers, and Clone Snowtroopers are also available on the handheld versions.
  • BFG: A "Heavy Weapons Trooper" was added in The Clone Wars, which was identical to the regular trooper, except for the large rocket launcher he's packing.
  • Canon Foreigner: Their disguised formsnote  were only in deleted scenes of Revenge of the Sith. On a less serious note, the Workout Troopers.
  • Cool Bike: The BARC Speeder in The Clone Wars.
  • Cool Starship:
    • The ARC-170 and V-Wing, which appear in and Minikit form in The Original Trilogy. The Former was upgraded to a full vehicle in The Complete Saga, and returned along with a full-sized version of the latter in The Clone Wars. Numerous Republic Star Destroyers and frigates litter space levels as well.
    • The Clone Wars also adds an earlier version of the Y-Wings, the brand-new V-19 Torrents, and experimental stealth fighters used by Republic forces.
  • Dropship:
    • The LAAT/i is playable in Original Trilogy as a minikit.
    • The Complete Saga and The Clone Wars add the real deal.
    • In The Clone Wars it's joined by it's larger cousin, the LAAT/c, along with Eta-Class Jedi Shuttles, Nu-Class Attack Shuttles, Medical Frigates, and Republic Cruisers.
  • Face–Heel Turn: Come Order 66 (and not 67) they turn on the Jedi en masse.
  • Fighting Clown: They may be wearing nothing but speedos and helmets, but the workout troopers are no less effective than their brethren.
  • Powered Armor: Somehow got their hands on a familiar-looking set before the assault on Queen Karina the Great's lair, but Obi-Wan wouldn't let them use it. It's unlockable anyway.
  • Ret-Canon: Redesigned in The Clone Wars to match their TV appearances.
  • Spider Tank: The AT-TEs they drive, which are playable in minikit form in The Original Trilogy.
  • Tank Goodness: The RX-200 in The Clone Wars.
  • Walking Tank:
    • The AT-RTs were only enemies in the original game, but in The Complete Saga, you can now commandeer them from the clones driving them.
    • The AT-RTs returnnote  along with the new AT-PT in The Clone Wars.

    Commander Cody 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Dee Bradley Baker (The Skywalker Saga)

A commander of the clone army under General Obi-Wan Kenobi. Cody helped fight General Grievous, before turning on his Jedi leader after Order 66... in the films, that is. In The Video Game, he dies heroically fighting Grievous.


Rebel Alliance

    Rebel Trooper 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

The forces of the Rebel Alliance. They fight to end the tyranny of the Emperor. Like their Stormtrooper counterparts, they come in a variety of forms for different jobs and environments.


  • Cool Bike: A rebel on a bike is a playable vehicle in the GBA version.
  • Cool Starship: The X-Wings and Y-Wings, which are playable as regular and minikit vehicles. Numerous command ships and frigates appear in the game as well.
  • Palette Swap: The basis for Captain Antilles and the Rebel friend.
  • Red Shirt: In the first game's Bonus Level.
  • Secret Character:
    • The Rebel Trooper is purchasable after the Bonus Level in The Video Game.
    • The "Rebel Engineer" is playable in a few levels of The Original Trilogy with the Extra Toggle cheat.
    • An Endor variation (Dubbed "Rebel Commando"), of all things, appears in The Clone Wars as a minikit.
    • The Endor Rebel Commando returns as a carbonite brick in The Force Awakens.

    Captain Raymus Antilles 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Tim Beckmann (The Skywalker Saga)

A Rebel Captain serving aboard Princess Leia's Corellian Corvette, the Tantive IV. He dies at Darth Vader's hands.


  • Adaptation Expansion: He plays a more active role in C-3PO and R2-D2's escape in this version.
  • Badass Normal: He was able to fight his way through the assault on the Tantive IV, and successfully helps R2-D2 and C-3PO locate an escape pod. It takes Darth Vader himself to finally capture and execute him.
  • BFG: His gun in The Skywalker Saga is larger than the typical ones.
  • One-Steve Limit: Despite similar surnames, he's not related to Wedge Antilles
  • Palette Swap: Of the rebel trooper. The texture on his torso is the only major change.
  • Sacrificial Lion: The first named casualty in A New Hope, and it's mostly to display Darth Vader's Force-Choke ability.
  • Secret Character:
    • He reappears in The Clone Wars as a minikit.
    • He's a carbonite block in The Force Awakens.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: He isn't choked to death in The Skywalker Saga and Darth Vader just harmlessly drops him after holding him upside-down.

    Rebel Friend 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

A red-clad rebel trooper who aids C-3PO and R2-D2 in their escape.


  • 100% Heroism Rating: His description in The Skywalker Saga describes him as a great example of how a Rebel Trooper should be like and a very nice guy.
  • Adapted Out: He is no longer a story character in The Skywalker Saga, though considering he was a Canon Foreigner to begin with, this makes sense.
  • Anti-Frustration Features: He exists to replace Leia after she is kidnapped midway through the "Secret Plans" level, so that the one playing as her in two-player co-op is not forced to be a droid.
  • The Bus Came Back: After a much too long absence, he returns in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Canon Foreigner: There are no red-clad Rebel Troopers in the actual films.
  • The Cameo: While he's not part of the story in The Skywalker Saga, he makes a cameo in "Boarding Party" in a secret part of the ship.
  • The Generic Guy: He has no unique personalities or traits to speak of.
  • Mauve Shirt: He's essentially just one of the normal Rebel Troopers with a red shirt, but he gets to be one of the "main" characters for a brief time.
  • One-Shot Character: He appears for half a chapter in The Original Trilogy and is never seen again. Subverted upon his return in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Palette Swap: His red shirt is the only difference between him and regular Rebel Troopers. Even in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Shout-Out: Possibly one to the redshirts.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: He's absent from the "Secret Plans" ending cutscene and we don't see his ultimate fate. It probably wasn't pretty though, given that the Imperials took over the Tantive IV.

    Lando Calrissian 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Billy Dee Williams (The Skywalker Saga)

The leader of Cloud City on Bespin. He originally (if unwillingly) worked for Vader, and helped him track down Han Solo, but eventually turned to the Rebel Alliance, and aided them through the Battle of Endor.


  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: His Skiff Guard uniform in The Original Trilogy.
  • Badass Cape: A standard part of his outfits is a billowing cape that provides a cool image, and he's very defensive about them, even refusing to give one to Vader.
  • Dressing as the Enemy: His Skiff Guard attire used to infiltrate Jabba's ranks.
  • Secret Character: A minikit in The Clone Wars.
  • Sherlock Scan: Skywalker Saga makes him a Scoundrel character, able to scan purple bricks and destroy them.

    Admiral Ackbar 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Tom Kane (The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga)

A Mon Calamari admiral in the rebel alliance. He has a propensity to point out traps.


  • Character Catchphrase: His voiced appearances in The Force Awakens and The Skywalker Saga give him a high propensity for stating "it's a trap" when it looks like he might be walking into a dangerous situation.
    Ackbar: IT'S A TRAP! ... sorry, force of habit.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Shows up in The Skywalker Saga version of A New Hope, helping Leia on the Tantive IV, two movies early.
  • Killed Mid-Sentence: Tries to say "it's a trap" one last time before his canon death in The Last Jedi happens during The Skywalker Saga.
  • Pungeon Master: Most of his quotes when playable in The Skywalker Saga are puns on sealife.
  • Secret Character: A minikit in The Clone Wars.
  • Super Not-Drowning Skills: In The Force Awakens, he has the ability to wade through water-filled spots to either find objects or resurface from another spot. He's also the only character that can do so, at least in the base game, with DLC adding Kit Fisto and Jar-Jar Binks as characters that can also swim.

    Garven "Red Leader" Dries 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

The leader of the Rebel's Red Squadron during the attack on the first Death Star.


  • Quest Giver: Found on Yavin 4 asking the player to deal with some nearby Imperial troops.
  • The Voiceless: When playable, he doesn't say a word.

    Wedge Antilles 

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A Rebel Pilot who took part in many important battles and ended up surviving the Galactic Civil War. He was friends with Luke Skywalker and his team.


  • Adapted Out: Despite his survivalist skills, he took until The Clone Wars to be playable. His cameo appearance at the end of Rise of Skywalker is excised.
  • Ascended Extra: He went from missing in both The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga, to a minikit-earned Secret Character in The Clone Wars, to a first-level unlock in The Force Awakens, until he finally got a proper story-relevant and playable role in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Dude, Where's My Reward?: The Skywalker Saga shows him trying to get a medal through the background of the last scene of A New Hope. He doesn't succeed.
  • Implausible Deniability: If asked to interact with a puzzle he can't solve, he'll claim he isn't even there.
  • Manchild: He's a little more childish in The Skywalker Saga. When playable, he introduces himself making whooshing noises.
  • Secret Character: A minikit in The Clone Wars.

    Biggs Darklighter 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A pilot in Red Squadron who flew in the Battle of the Death Star.


  • Adapted Out: His mention by Luke in A New Hope and his scenes with Luke on Yavin 4 are left out.
  • Badass in Distress: During his quest, comes under attack from Imperial troops and needs to be rescued.
  • Never Say "Die": His bio card mentions he was at the Death Star battle, but very specifically avoids mentioning what became of him.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to help him deliver supplies while he gets the Empire off his back.

    Jett Porkins 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Another pilot in Red Squadron.


  • Adapted Out: His death is left out of The Skywalker Saga.
  • Large Ham: He has a very over-the-top attitude to things.
  • Third-Person Person: Occasionally speaks like this, such as when grabbing goodies.
    Porkins: Porkins never turns down free stuff!

    Theron Nett 

'Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A pilot in Red Squadron, under the callsign Red Eleven.


  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to deliver some supplies to the Rebels for him. Definitely not because he's passing the buck.
  • The Voiceless: Voiced in his questline, but silent when playable.

    General Riekan 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A general in the Rebel Alliance by the time of the Battle of Hoth.


  • Adaptation Expansion: Due to gameplay mechanics, he accompanies Han's search for Luke.
  • Pun: Cracks one on Leia hanging up on Han. Han's pretty irritated by it.

    K-3PO 

A protocol droid working in the Rebel Alliance.


  • Palette Swap: Identical to Threepio, but in white.
  • We Can Rebuild Him: Smashed up in the Imperial attack on Echo Base, a quest restores him... but not quite effectively.

    Mon Mothma 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A Senator for the Galactic Republic who became one of the leaders of the Rebel Alliance.


  • Adaptational Badass: In the canon, Mon's not one for fighting. Due to gameplay mechanics, her depiction here has her just as capable in a fight as any other character.
  • Drama Queen: She overdramatically declares the base on Yavin 4 is under attack, before admitting it's just wildlife and she probably shouldn't have said it that way.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Makes an appearance in A New Hope, two movies before she first appears.
  • Not So Above It All: Admits to being impressed by the methods the criminals on Yavin 4 used, even if they are trying to do it to her and her people.
  • Outscare the Enemy: During Dries' quest, Yellow Leader shows up to help, claiming he was inspired to do the right thing. Red Leader figures out Mon Mothma put the fear of her into him, which he admits.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to get rid of some hostile local wildlife around the rebel base.

    Nien Numb 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

  • Bilingual Bonus: As in the films, he speaks in Haya, though the subtitles will show what he's saying as well.
  • Old Soldier: Noted in his bio to be one of the few Rebel members still fighting in the Resistance.
  • Quest Giver: Asks for help delivering supplies to other Rebels.

The Resistance

    Temmin "Snap" Wexley 
Another pilot in the Resistance's Black Squadron.
  • Delegation Relay: Apparently he was assigned to fix up the Jedi obstacle course on Aljan Kloss, but instead passed it off to Wrobie Tryce, despite that not being her job.
  • In-Series Nickname: "Snap". On spawning he tries to claim it's because of what he does to his enemies, before admitting this isn't true (in canon, it's because he snaps his fingers when nervous, which he obviously can't do as a Lego figure).
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Killed in Rise of Skywalker, but the game just has him spectacularly crash on a Final Order Star Destroyer, dazed but unharmed.

    Kaydel Connix 
A young member of the Resistance.
  • Awesome Mccool Name: Tries claiming on spawning that her middle name of "Ko" stands for "Knock Out", but then admits it isn't.
  • The Ditz: Mildly. She did write down clues so she'd remember what she'd written down... but she can't figure them out either.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to find a map she's left lying around somewhere on D'Qar.
  • Rank Up: By Episode IX she's gotten a boost to lieutenant.

    Ello Asty 
A pilot in the Resistance.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Doesn't get shot down in the assault on Starkiller Base.
  • Waxing Lyrical: Since his name is a Shout-Out to the Beastie Boys album Hello Nasty, the game runs with it, have Ello speak in nothing but lyrics from their songs. Even his profile gets in on it.
    Ello: I got the skills that pay the bills!
    Ello: I won't let you sabotage this Resistance!

    Rose Tico 
An engineer who Finn forms a partnership with following the evacuation of D'Qar.
  • Kick the Dog: Unlike the movies, she doesn't zap Finn, she just evacuates his pod full of stuff, which is then immediately blasted by the First Order.

    C'ai Threnali 
Another Abednedo serving in the Resistance alongside Poe Dameron.
  • Demoted to Extra: He's a Mauveshirt in the films proper, but his scenes in The Last Jedi are removed, and he doesn't even get any lines.

    Tallie Lintra 

A Resistance A-Wing pilot.


  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: The game skips Kylo Ren bombing the Raddus hanger boy, so she doesn't die, but instead just disappears from the plot entirely.
  • The Voiceless: Despite being voiced in the storyline, playable Tallie doesn't say a word.

    Vice Admiral Holdo 
  • Adaptational Badass: Film Holdo never does any fighting on screen. Gameplay mechanics mean she's as capable of fighting as anyone, with a gun or fists.
  • Character Exaggeration: Not her as such, but her hair. Cutscenes draw extra attention to it by making it sparkly, and giving Holdo two identical backers with green and orange hair.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: In a game that tends to avoid killing any character, Holdo still gets to perform the Holdo Maneuver.
  • Out of Focus: Most of her part in the plot of The Last Jedi is excised.

    General D'Arcy 
  • Adaptational Badass: Film D'Arcy stays strictly off the frontlines in support roles. Here, she's playable in fights.
  • Battle Couple: With her wife, Wrobie Tryce, if they're both active.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Her solution to the Vulptex going missing is to howl repeatedly to try and lure them out.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to track down where the Vulpexes have gotten to on Crait.

    Klaud 
A Trodatome mechanic in the Resistance
  • Mundane Utility: Seeks to use the lightning on Exegol, which is almost certainly Force-charged by the Dark Side, to power a generator (even if it does come with the little side-effect of an aura of general desirability that makes criminals wants it for themselves). The device the generator powers? An arcade game.
  • Non-Action Guy: Partly because he's a mechanic, but also just because of biology. He doesn't have arms to throw a punch.
  • Non-Standard Character Design: As a Trodatome, he's not a minifig like most other characters. Also because of this, he's classified as an Extra class character.
  • Quest Giver: Sends the player to Exegol to get power for his device.
  • The Unintelligible: As a Trodatome, he doesn't speak Basic, instead going by Trodatome, requiring a translator droid.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: While Klaud is a brilliant inventor, his energy-gathering device does suffer from a operator incompatibility problem; it needs hands, which he don't got.
  • You No Take Candle: Even with a droid translating his speech, it's still pretty grammatically garbled.

    Beaumont Kin 
A historian with the Resistance by the time the Final Order appears.
  • Actor Allusion: Beaumont wants a second breakfast. Later on, he remarks he's put "meat back on the menu".
  • I Just Want to Be Badass: His spawning dialogue has him eagerly leaping at the chance for action, and in fights exclaims his hope he'll coin the "Beaumont Maneuver" with his actions.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to look into an ancient Jedi riddle leading to some, as the inscription says, "goodies".
  • Skewed Priorities: He petitioned General Leia to institute second breakfast as Resistance policy. When she refused, he and his buddy decided to use the Tantive IV's engines to cook their meal in secret.

    Wrobie Tyce 

A pilot in the Resistance's Cobalt Squadron, married to General D'Arcy.


  • Ace Pilot: Another Resistance X-Wing pilot.
  • Happily Married: To D'Arcy, which she'll mention on gathering collectibles.

    R2-KT 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A galactically-beloved astromech droid who served the Galactic Republic, and then later the Resistance.
  • Ascended Extra: From background cameo in The Force Awakens to a quest giver and playable character.
  • Character Shilling: Played for laughs; the Resistance fighters she saves on Takodana gush about how awesome she is, and how doomed they'd have been if she hadn't come along.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player character to assist her in saving some Resistance fighters who got into trouble outside Maz's castle.
  • Red Baron: Katie is known as "The Droid With a Heart of Gold".

    R5-2JE 

An exasperated astromech working as the droid boss on Aljan Kloss.


  • Everyone Has Standards: Apologizes to the player character afterwards for having caused them to be subject to another astromech's long, rambling, badly edited fanfic in the process of finding them.
  • Palette Swap: Almost but not entirely identical to R5-D4.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to round up the other astromechs, who're slacking off.
  • Surrounded by Idiots: Twojay's attitude toward the other droids, though given the personalities on display, it's pretty justified.

Other Heroes

    Wicket 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

An Ewok who aids the heroes during the Battle of Endor.
  • BFG: As a Scavenger character, he can use the Breaker Blaster.
  • The Cameo: In the DS version of LEGO Indiana Jones.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Appears on the Tantiv IV in The Skywalker Saga, several years before the war supposedly reached his homeworld.

    Ewoks 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

Small, furry, bear-like creatures native to the Forest Moon of Endor that helped the Rebels defend their homeworld.


  • Bamboo Technology: As Scavenger characters, they build their Scavenger equipment out of wood and fronds. Paploo manages to build a working podracer out of the same.
  • Demoted to Extra: In the console versions of The Clone Wars.
  • Fantastic Racism: They're not wild about outsiders. Logray holds the Rebels as entirely responsible for the Imperial presence on the moon, and plans on making them perform numerous inane tasks as a penance.
  • Fetch Quest: Paploo asks the player to go to other planets and fetch parts for his pod.
  • I'm a Humanitarian: A side-quest on the Forest Moon requires saving some rebels caught in their net.
  • Quest Giver: Chirpa, Logray, Teebo and Paploo all hand out quests to the player character.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: One of the Ewok got shot by a Stormtrooper and later found dead. In The Skywalker Saga, the say Ewok is found dazed but unharmed.
  • Tempting Fate: After his podracer is assembled, Paploo says they just need to deliver it to Tatooine, and surely nothing can happen to them on the way there, right?

    Boolio 

A spy who helps pass on information to the Resistance.



Dark Side

Separatists

    Battle Droids 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Matthew Wood (The Skywalker Saga)

The dim-witted soldiers of the Trade Federation and Confederacy, Battle Droids are programmed to hunt down Jedi and clone troopers alike. They oppose our heroes frequently until they are put out of commission following the rise of the Empire.


  • Adaptational Comic Relief: The Battle Droids of Episode 1 have the goofier, less menacing voices of their Clone Wars and Revenge of the Sith versions, and are about as correspondingly threatening.
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: Its "Security" and "Geonosis" variants in the original.
  • Butt-Monkey: In addition to being standard Mooks, they are consistently getting the crap beaten out of them in cutscenes.
  • Character Catchphrase: No adaptation of these droids is complete without them often spouting their classic "Roger, roger!" phrase. Even in the games using Speaking Simlish, they occasionally say it in cutscenes, while Commander Droids say it every time they call in back-up.
  • Cool Bike: The STAP hoversled.
  • Cool Starship: The Tri-Fighters in The Complete Saga, which return in The Clone Wars alongside the new Hyena Bombers and the Halo.
  • Dirty Coward: Even boss Battle Droids try to run and hide from the player.
  • Downloadable Content: The Commander variant is part of the Droids DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Drop Ship: The CIS Drop ships they pilot. They are playable as minikits in The Original Trilogy, and became full-fledged vehicles in The Clone Wars.
  • The Ditz: An entire army of them.
  • Elite Mooks: The Commander variant takes two hits to kill instead of just one like the others. Also, the enemy version is a Mook Maker and the playable version lets you make other droids tag along with you as allies.
  • For the Evulz: A bunch on Utapau are on a rampage for what they admit is absolutely no reason, smashing up a shop to find something to retroactively justify it.
  • Palette Swap: All of them use the exact same model and animations, only difference being color differences and that some have a "backpack" attached.
  • Screw the War, We're Partying: A bunch of them can be found on Mustafar in The Skywalker Saga having a massive dance party in their break room, with no plan on stopping any time soon. One of them is a little concerned about the lightsaber sounds it heard earlier though.
  • Secret Character: Only playable in the Game Boy version via cheat code. A version riding a STAP is playable in the same way.
  • Spider Tank: The aptly-named Homing Spider Droid appeared in the original game, but made its first playable appearance in The Clone Wars, alongside the new Dwarf Spider Droid.
  • Stompy Mooks: They clank lightly as they walk around.
  • Tank Goodness: The AATs, Super Tanks, and Hailfire droids have always been a part of the series. They have their first real impact on gameplay, and are first drivable in The Clone Wars.
  • Zero-Effort Boss: OOM-14, the boss character for the Invisible Hand, hides behind a forcefield. Once it's deactivated, he'll go down in one hit.

    Droideka/Destroyer Droid 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

Small but effective combat droids that make up for their slow walking speed with the ability to roll up unto a wheel for quick transport. Rounding out their arsenal is a personal force field and twin blasters. They were decommissioned with the rest of the droid army after the Clone Wars.


  • Elite Mooks: Some of the deadliest enemies in the game.
  • Guns Akimbo: Their twin blasters.
  • Heavily Armored Mook: Blaster bolts simply deflect off their shields, forcing you to take a lightsaber to them, and even then it takes a whopping 10 hits to destroy their shields and three more to kill the Droideka. Fortunately the Ground Pound attack and a well-timed combo can short out their shields instantly.
  • Kung Fu-Proof Mook: Their shields are completely immune to blaster fire (except from other Droidekas). The orange-shielded versions in The Clone Wars take this further by being immune to both lightsabers and explosives as well, meaning you need to either throw nearby heavy objects at them, crush them with a rockslide, or Force Push them into bottomless pits.
  • Mechanically Unusual Fighter: The Droideka was a minikit for "Droid Factory" in The Video Game. Even though all of the other minikits are vehicles, it wasn't too bad. But when The Original Trilogy made minikits playable, the droideka stayed at its normal size compared to all of the other, vehicle-sized minikits. The upside to this is that minikit-Droideka can still use the "Self Destruct" extra, which is very useful in a level full of breakable objects where the objective is to earn 1,000,000 studs in a limited amount of time.
  • Mundane Utility: Their Nigh-Invulnerable status, especially in The Clone Wars where they're invincible while moving, would make them good characters for breezing through free-play before you can unlock the Ghost characters or Invulnerability cheat, but the most useful thing about them is the fact their ability to roll around quickly makes traversing long stretches of ground a breeze, since every other character can't move any faster than a brisk jog. It especially helps with speeding up traversing the massive Hub Level for The Clone Wars.
  • No-Sell: While already impervious to blaster fire while shielded in the original games, when they returned in The Clone Wars they acquired an interesting coding quirk where they are Nigh-Invulnerable to harm while rolling around, not even being damaged by lightsabers. Given the fact they're completely incapable of attacking while moving, and in fact lost the ability to instantly stop and shoot in exchange for the in-motion invulnerability, this is an understandable quirk to give them.
  • Ret-Canon: They were redesigned in The Clone Wars to better match their appearance from the series it's based on.
  • Secret Character: Only playable in the Game Boy version via cheat code.

    Darth Maul 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Sam Witwer (The Skywalker Saga)

Darth Sidious' first apprentice in the films, Darth Maul is a Zabrak Sith shrouded in mystery. He stealthily hunts the Jedi throughout The Phantom Menace, until revealing himself just in time to kill Qui-Gon. However, he is defeated by Obi-Wan soon afterward. He is presumed dead ... for now.


  • Big "NO!": After being sliced in half by Obi-Wan, he shouts this as he falls down the pit.
  • Cool Starship: His Sith Infiltrator, which is a playable minikit in The Original Trilogy.
  • Defiant to the End: Even being reduced to a head isn't enough to stop him from trying to kill Obi-Wan.
  • Giant Space Flea from Nowhere: Appears in the final level of The Phantom Menace with no prior warning. The Game Boy version at least include the scene of him hunting Qui-Gon in the desert, but his expository scene with Palpatine still isn't shown.
  • "Get Back Here!" Boss: In his boss level, he often leaps away from the playable characters.
  • Half the Man He Used to Be: Thanks to Obi-Wan. Yet his legs remain active.
  • Hero Killer: He killed Qui-Gon Jinn, who is a heroic Jedi Master.
  • Just You and Me and My GUARDS!: In the boss fight in The Video Game, The Complete Saga and Skywalker Saga, he has battle droids with him. Some of those are commanders who call in more droids.
    • Source Music: In Skywalker Saga, these same droids are the ones performing "Duel of the Fates".
  • Knight of Cerebus: The first character to kill off a major hero.
  • Red and Black and Evil All Over: A Sith who has a red face covered in black markings.
  • Not Quite Dead: In Skywalker Saga, it is Qui-Gon Jinn who slices Darth Maul in half, only for him to quickly crawl out of the chute he drops into and kill Qui-Gon as he and Obi-Wan celebrate. When Obi-Wan decapitates him, he comes back again as a severed head before Obi-Wan kicks him down the chute for good.
  • Secret Character:
    • He's a minikit in The Clone Wars.
    • He's a carbonite block in The Force Awakens.

    Geonosian 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars The Skywalker Saga

A barbaric, insectoid race native to the deserts of Geonosis. They openly aid the Separatists during the Clone Wars


  • Everything's Deader with Zombies: The "Zombie" variant in The Clone Wars.
  • My Species Doth Protest Too Much: One Geonosian in The Skywalker Saga tries to break free from his fellow Geonosians and move to Naboo to live an intellectual life.
  • Palette Swap: In the original game, Geonosians will randomly appear with either a regular blaster or their unique sonic blasters, denoted by the red or green studs at the end of their weapons. Both variants are functionally identical.
  • Secret Character: Only playable via code on the Game Boy.
  • Sonic Stunner: Some Geonosians use Sonic Blasters, indicated by the green stud on their blasters.
  • The Unintelligible: They speak Geonosian. Unless the active player character understands it, they can't be spoken to.

    Super Battle Droids 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Matthew Wood (The Skywalker Saga)

Built Just before the Clone Wars, the B2 series of Battle Droids were bigger, tougher, and stronger than their skeletal-looking cousins. They would be seen frequently during the clone wars before being shut down with the rest of the droid army after the rise of the Empire.


  • BFG: The "Heavy Weapon" variant from The Clone Wars has a rocket launcher on it's arm in place of a blaster.
  • Canon Foreigner: The Golden Models.
  • Downloadable Content: They are part of the Droids DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Evil Sounds Deep: They have a much deeper voice than their precursor models, and are used for much less comedy.
  • Heavily Armored Mook: In that they can take three hits rather than just one like regular Battle Droids.
  • Helpful Mook: In Grievous chapter 1 of The Clone Wars, you can optionally construct Gold Super Battle Droids that will follow you and attack enemies for you, as well as one you are required to build (outside Free Play) to clear a gold obstacle that it can destroy with rapid fire.
  • Regenerating Health: As a playable character, the Golden models have this.
  • Ret-Canon: They are repainted from powder blue to a more movie-and-TV-accurate grey in The Clone Wars.
  • Secret Character: Only playable via code on the GBA version of The Video Game.
  • Shout-Out: They'll occasionally call organic lifeforms "meatbags".
  • Stompy Mooks: In The Skywalker Saga, they have a much louder footstep than the B1s.
  • Stuff Blowing Up: In the Skywalker Saga, they are Extra class characters but still have the Enemy class ability to throw thermal detonators.

    Count Dooku/Darth Tyranus 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Corey Burton (The Skywalker Saga)

A Sith Lord and a leader of the Confederacy of Independent Systems, he was once a student of Master Yoda and a teacher of Qui-Gon Jinn. After cutting off Anakin's hand at the Battle of Geonosis, he manages to evade the Republic throughout the Clone Wars, only to meet his fate at the hands of a vengeful Anakin on board The Invisible Hand.


  • Deadpan Snarker: If he spawns around Episode III Anakin, he gets some very dry wit at his expense.
  • Death Glare: Due to his eyes in The Video Game and The Complete Saga.
  • Evil Eyebrows: His eyebrows are super prominent and is the evil apprentice of Darth Sidious himself.
  • Evil Sounds Deep: The Skywalker Saga has Corey Burton once again providing his best Christopher Lee impersonation for Dooku.
  • Gory Discretion Shot: His death in the game is shown from his POV. The DS version of The Complete Saga does show his head flying off, though.
  • Master Swordsman: In the first game he was the only character who could injure others despite blocking.
  • Off with His Head!: How he meets his end thanks to Anakin.
  • Ret-Canon: He was redesigned in The Clone Wars to better match his appearance from the series it's based on.
  • Secret Character: He is one of the carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens.
  • Skewed Priorities: Decides to take a shower after fleeing from the Geonosis Arena. If he hadn't, he'd have been able to get away before Anakin and Obi-Wan caught up with him.
  • Solar Sail: His escape ship from Attack of the Clones. It's a playable minikit in Original Trilogy.
  • Translator Buddy: He can understand the Genosians, as well as the Acolytes of the Sith.

    Grievous' Bodyguards/MagnaGuards 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

These elite Battle droids follow Grievous around and act as his bodyguards. Able to survive dismemberment and still keep fighting, they prove formidable enemies of the Jedi.


  • Badass Crew: They accompany Grievous and are armed with electro-staffs.
  • Cool Starship: Their specialized starfighters appear in The Clone Wars.
  • Elite Mooks: Stronger than the battle droids, and their electro-staffs act like lightsabers, allowing them to block direct attacks.
  • Heavily Armored Mook: In addition to their Kung Fu-Proof Mook status, in every game they take at least four saber hits to destroy. Just as weak to explosives as other droids, though.
  • In a Single Bound: They can only jump once, but their one jump is as high as Jar Jar's double jump.
  • Kung Fu-Proof Mook: They're always immune to blaster fire due to wielding lightsaber-like stun sticks, while in The Clone Wars they're the only droid type completely impervious to Force Push with their heads still on (even Droideka can be moved around harmlessly while shielded).
  • Off with His Head!: When down to one hit point in the original games. Humorously enough, picking up health while playing as one causes it to spontaneously grow a new head. In The Clone Wars chopping off their head is required to hurt them with lightsabers or Force Push.
  • Ret-Canon: They were redesigned for The Clone Wars to better match their appearance from the show it's based on.

    General Grievous 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Matthew Wood (The Skywalker Saga)

A former Kaleesh General, Grievous was injured badly in a shuttle accident secretly caused by his allies Dooku, Poggle, and San Hill. The few parts of Grievous' body that were salvageable were put inside a cyborg body. The warlord was put in charge of much of the CIS army. Despite not being force-sensitive, he is trained in lightsaber combat, and is adept at quad-wield sabers with his four arms.


  • An Arm and a Leg: Loses each of his arms one by one during his boss fight in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Awesome, but Impractical: Quad-wielding lightsabers is pretty awesome, but Grievous' attack animations are so long that the novelty quickly wears off.
  • Cool Starship:
    • The Soulless One is a playable vehicle in The Clone Wars.
    • His flagship, the Invisible Hand, makes up one half of The Clone Wars' Hub Level and is the backdrop for several missions.
  • Double Jump: He can do this even without Force powers. In fact, his jump is higher than that of the Jedi, making him ideal for grabbing otherwise out-of-reach collectibles.
  • Downloadable Content: He is part of the Droids DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Dual Wielding: Quad wielding with four lightsabers.
  • Four-Star Badass: General of the droid armies.
  • Hero Killer: Since the original game's mechanics require two characters around at any one time, he fights Obi-Wan and Commander Cody, the fight ending when he casually slices Cody.
  • Just You and Me and My GUARDS!: Unlike his movie counterpart, he calls in a group of Super Battle Droids to fight during the GBA version of The Video Game.
  • Off with His Head!:
    • Since his original death couldn't really be depicted when made with LEGO, Obi-Wan instead just shoots his head off with Cody's discarded gun.
    • In Skywalker Saga, he actually gets decapitated before being killed by Obi-Wan using Cody's blaster.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Skywalker Saga plays up his fondness for gathering lightsabers, and his interaction with Dooku makes him more like someone who just really wants to show off their hobby, while Dooku testily suggests he use those swords on their enemies.
  • Ret-Canon: He was redesigned for The Clone Wars in order to better match his appearance from the show the game is based on.
  • Social Media Before Reason: The Skywalker Saga makes him a selfie addict, and it's this that allow Anakin and Obi-Wan to find him.

    Vulture Droid 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

Spider-like droids that can transform into starfighters for space combat. They were used during the blockade of Naboo and continued use by the CIS throughout the Clone Wars.


    Nute Gunray 

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Silas Carson (The Skywalker Saga)


  • Adapted Out: Despite his importance, particularly in Episode I, Nute took two-and-a-half games to finally appear.
  • Ascended Extra: After only appearing in The Clone Wars, his plot involving the Trade Federation is properly included in The Skywalker Saga
  • Cool Starship: The Neimoidian Shuttle is unlocked with him.
  • Dartboard of Hate: Uses Queen Amidala's picture as one.
  • Demoted to Extra: As with all non-Palpatine villains, his role in The Skywalker Saga is greatly reduced.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In The Skywalker Saga’s depiction of the mission to Mustafar, it is implied that Anakin gave him a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown but left him alive.

    Rune Haako 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: (The Skywalker Saga)


  • Adapted Out: Despite his importance, particularly in Episode I, Rune took two-and-a-half games to finally appear, and two more him to become plot-relevant and playable.
  • Ascended Extra: After only appearing in The Clone Wars as an NPC, his plot involving the Trade Federation is properly included in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Promoted to Playable: While he is shown alongside Nute in The Clone Wars, he's only an NPC, with it taking until The Skywalker Saga for him to become properly playable.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In The Skywalker Saga’s depiction of the mission to Mustafar, it is implied that Anakin gave him and the rest of the Separatists a No-Holds-Barred Beatdown but left them alive.

    Poggle the Lesser 

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga


  • Adaptational Nice Guy: In The Skywalker Saga he offers Young Boba an ice cream cone after his father's death, something the character's canon version would never even pretend to do... which might also be averted if what Dooku suspects is true.
  • Adapted Out: Finally appears in The Clone Wars after not being present in the original game or its update, though a generic Geonosian seems to take his place in the cutscenes for the "Jedi Battle" level.
  • Ascended Extra: While he's actually more relevant in The Clone Wars, he still finally gets back his story scenes and becomes unlockable in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Cool Starship: The Geonosian Starfighter is unlocked with him.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In The Skywalker Saga’s depiction of the mission to Mustafar, it is implied that he got a traumatic beating from Anakin instead of losing his head from the Dark Jedi’s lightsaber.

Galactic Empire

    Stormtroopers/Other Imperial Forces 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/heraimisgettingbetter.jpeg

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Sam Fink (The Skywalker Saga)

The brunt of the Imperial Forces, these bumbling soldiers can be found everywhere the Empire controls. They come in a wide variety of forms built for different jobs and environments. Their overall designs and roles would later be adopted by the First Order for the brunt of their own forces.


  • Adaptational Dumbass: They're much more idiotic and comic relief than in canon.
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: The Beach Trooper, Sandtrooper, TIE Pilot, Death Star Trooper, Imperial Officers, and Snowtroopers in The Original Trilogy. The Scout Troopers are also available on handhelds.
  • Bowdlerize: In The Original Trilogy, the beach troopers wear nothing but a blue thong and a helmet. In The Complete Saga, they wear longer blue shorts and a life jacket. However, the DS version of the game gives them back their original design.
  • Canon Foreigner: The Beach Troopers are exclusive to the game.
  • Canon Immigrant: The Shadow Troopers are from the Expanded Universe.
  • Cool Bike: Enemies in the console version; fully playable vehicles on the GBA.
  • Cool Starship: The TIE Fighters, Interceptors, Bombers, and the Imperial Shuttles, all of which are both regular vehicles and minikits. The Star Destroyers as well, which are also minikits.
  • Fighting Clown: The beach troopers, in the hands of a player.
  • Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: The Trope Namer, although they can actually hit you on occasion.
  • Mook Carryover: Due to how the Stormtrooper outfit isn't unique, it was quite simple for the design and name to transfer from the Empire to the First Order, helped by how the Order intentionally emulates the Empire.
  • Secret Character:
    • The Stormtrooper is unlocked through the Bonus Level in the original.
    • In the console versions of The Original Trilogy, the Scout Troopers are only available through the "Extra Toggle" extra. The Imperial Engineer, and AT-TE drivers are also playable this way.
    • Both the classic Stormtroopers and the new "Dark Troopers" are available as minikits in The Clone Wars. The TIE Pilot is on handhelds.
  • Took a Level in Dumbass: Compared to their Clone Trooper predecessors, who were goofy, but not as cripplingly incompetent as the Stormtroopers.
  • Walking Tank: The AT-STs and AT-ATs, which appear as enemies and are also playable as minikits on consoles. The AT-ST is a fully-playable vehicle on the DS.
  • Vile Villain, Laughable Lackey: While the Emperor is a serious villain, and Darth Vader is humorous but competent, the Stormtroopers are barely effective and take the bulk of the game's slapstick. Even as playable characters they aren't safe, as their dive maneuver is just them flopping on the ground awkwardly.

    Imperial Spy 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga

A Kubaz who tipped off the Empire to two strange droids in Mos Eisley.


  • Adaptation Expansion: He appears literally once in A New Hope. Here, he gets an entire boss fight.
  • Adapted Out: He does not appear at all in The Skywalker Saga.
  • "Get Back Here!" Boss: He has no offensive ability, so the fight against him involves chasing him down while being attacked by an endlessly respawning pack of Stormtroopers.
  • Joke Character: The Spy has no real use beyond passing Imperial checkpoints, which can already be done by a number of other playable characters.
  • No Name Given: His name is Garindan in the Expanded Universe.

    Grand Moff Tarkin 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

A high-ranking official in the Imperial Army. Tarkin was personally responsible for the destruction of Alderaan. He got his comeuppance though, as he was in the original Death Star when it exploded.


  • Adaptational Jerkass: In The Original Trilogy, as well as in canon, he used the Death Star to blow up Alderaan with Leia watching, all out of spite. Unlike in canon, he outright points and laughs at Leia, as if he were a schoolyard bully.
  • Big Bad: Of A New Hope.
  • Demoted to Extra: Left out of the Skywalker Saga version of Episode 4 entirely, being only unlocked as a playable character for completing a Challenge Mission and having no fully-voiced dialogue.
  • Evil Is Petty: In The Original Trilogy, he points and laughs at Leia after her home planet is destroyed
  • Evil Laugh: He laughs in satisfaction after destroying Leia's home planet right in front of her eyes.
  • Kick the Dog: He uses the Death Star to destroy Leia's home planet just to spite her. He then points and laughs at her.
  • Oh, Crap!: In The Original Trilogy, he reacts in horror when he realises the Death Star is moments away from exploding.
  • Secret Character: You unlock him in The Clone Wars by having the entire galaxy under CIS control.
  • Vile Villain, Saccharine Show: Aside from pointing and laughing at Leia after her home planet is destroyed and his Oh, Crap! expressions in his final moments, Tarkin is a very serious and despicable villain.

    Imperial Guard 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

The Emperor's personal bodyguards who protect him in his chamber.


  • Adaptational Badass: Since Vader turns on the Emperor earlier, the Imperial Guard provide the enemies for Luke's fight with the Emperor.
  • Elite Mooks: They're some of the toughest enemies in the series, capable of tanking four hits, and they always come in pairs.
  • Red and Black and Evil All Over: They work for the Emperor, wear red robes with black visors, and they wield black spears; the latter was due to the game's release in the 2000s before their weapons were redesigned.
  • Secret Character:
    • A minikit in The Clone Wars.
    • One of the Carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens.
  • Stone Wall: The only mook that can take four hits before going down (not counting the droideka's shields.) Fortunately, Force Choking them with Darth Vader will bring them down in a flash.

    R2-Q5 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

An astromech droid assigned to the second Death Star. Perished in the explosion.


  • Adaptational Heroism: He's strictly an Imperial droid in Canon. In The Skywalker Saga, he not only survives the destruction of the Death Star II, he makes a Heel–Face Turn and joins the Resistance.
  • Ascended Extra: Went from GBA-exclusive in The Original Trilogy to playable in all versions for The Complete Saga and The Skywalker Saga.
  • Heel–Face Turn: From serving aboard the Death Star II to aiding the Resistance 20 years later.
  • Mean Boss: His message to the slacking Resistance worker includes outright verbal abuse and a few anatomically impossible threats.
  • Palette Swap: Same mold and overall design as R2-D2 with just a different coloration, like all other astromechs.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: While R2-Q5 in the originals was presumably destroyed along with the Death Star II, in The Skywalker Saga he shows up fine and dandy by the time of The Force Awakens, serving the Resistance in their base on D'Qar.

    Dian Jir 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

An officer onboard the Death Star.


  • Loony Fan: He's just a little too enthusiastic about that Death Star, even staging a play about it.

Jabba's Crime Ring

    Jabba the Hutt 

Playable Appearances: The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Kevin Michael Richardson (The Skywalker Saga)

An infamous crime lord that operates out of Tatooine. Following the carbonization and bounty collection of Han Solo, Luke and crew come across him and are forced to fend for their lives.
  • Acrofatic: Downplayed as a playable character in The Skywalker Saga: While he's still a Mighty Glacier and can only single-jump (and is unable to grab onto grapple points, but still an improvement over not being able to jump at all), he's a lot more mobile than you'd expect an obese legless slug to be. He can now sprint, move just as fast as, and as combo-capable as the bipeds.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: In free roam mode, he does apologise to Leia for enslaving her.
    Leia: You make me sick
    Jabba the Hutt:I am both ashamed and embarrassed of my actions. Please accept my apologies.
  • Dies Differently in Adaptation: In The Skywalker Saga, instead of Leia choking him, he just stuck in one of the windows of his sail barge. It's not quite clear if that kills him, but moments later the barge blows up, which almost certainly would have.
  • Fat Bastard: He's one of the biggest, fattest, and most bloated characters in the franchise, with his personality and sense of morality being just as ugly and disgusting, especially his lusting over the girls he makes slaves.
  • Promoted to Playable: After spending over a decade being a non-playable Arc Villain, he finally gets a playable bigfig in the "Jabba's Palace Character pack" DLC for The Force Awakens, and later becomes a base-game unlock in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Mighty Glacier: He has a pretty good amount of Stout Strength, but as basically a sapient giant slug, he slithers across the ground really slowly and can't jump in The Force Awakens. He does become significantly more mobile in The Skywalker Saga, even if it's not as much as other characters.
  • Stout Strength: His immense girth isn't all fat, with him having enough strength to hit enemies hard and break down cracked walls.

    Gamorrean Guards 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Brutish, pig-like creatures from Gamorr. Jabba the Hutt enjoys contracting them as security.


  • Brutish Character, Brutish Weapon: Representing their status as Dumb Muscle, their weapons of choice are big heavy warhammers and axes, which they are quite good at blocking lightsaber slashes with.
  • Dumb Muscle: They're all very strong and capable of causing serious damage with their hammers, but their brains are severely lacking, so to prove their worth they let their strength do the talking, caring nothing about who they serve.

    Skiff/Palace Guards 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga

In addition to Gamorreans, Jabba also contracts Human and Nikto security forces as backup.
  • Mooks: Not much to say about these characters besides them serving as guards for Jabba.

    Bib Fortuna 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Edward Dogliani (The Skywalker Saga)

A male Twi'lek who serves as Jabba's right hand.

    Salacious Crumb 
A little Kowakian monkey-lizard who serves as Jabba's court jester.

    Rancor 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Large carnivores native to Dathomir, found all across the galaxy. Jabba used one in his palace to dispose of troublemakers.
  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: Huge and tall.
  • Composite Character: The Rancor in Return of the Jedi is called Panteesa, while The Bad Batch has the titular team catch a Rancor implied to be the same one, only it's called Muchi. Malakilli's profile says that he named the Rancor Panteesa Muchi.
  • Mighty Glacier: It may be invulnerable to damage, but it's also very slow.
  • Puzzle Boss: The Rancor is one of the only bosses in the series that can't be harmed directly. Like Luke did in the movies, you have to use the arena itself to bring the beast down. Averted with its depiction in The Skywalker Saga, where it's fought the same as any other boss fight; hitting them until the health bar runs out.
  • Promoted to Playable: Becomes a fully-unlockable mega-fig starting from The Force Awakens.
  • Secret Character:
    • Available after purchasing every other character in the GBA version of The Original Trilogy
    • Only playable in The Complete Saga through the "Extra Toggle" power brick.

    Malakilli 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Jabba's beastmasters.


  • Hidden Depths: Capable of starting a moderately successful restauraunt in Mos Eisley.
  • Joke Character: One of the "extra" characters, so he has no special abilities.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to help him with his vegetarian restaurant by fetching vegetables for him to grow.
  • Resignations Not Accepted: A bounty is put out on him after Jabba's barge goes up. When found, he innocently claims he just assumed what with the explosions and everything that Jabba was dead.
  • You No Take Candle: Fluctuates in and out of it.

    Sy Snootles 

A singer in Jabba's court.


  • Always Second Best: Rejected by the Canto Bight casino not just because she's awful, but because they already have a professional opera singer in Ubulla Mulborro.
  • Dreadful Musician: Not just tone-deaf, but oblivious to the screams of people she's "auditioning" for who don't want her singing at them. Her quest also requires the player to use the Force to make people dance to her singing, because they won't come near her otherwise.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty: Unlike in cannon. Turns out Mamma the Hutt is very unhappy about what happened with Ziro, and sends the player character to find Sy. ... then it turns out her punishment isn't, as one might've expected, painful death. It's being made Mama's court jester. And Mama taking a 90-10 split of her pay.
  • Too Dumb to Live: After already having upset the grand-mother of Hutts, rather than laying low Sy tries to keep making a name for herself on Coruscant. Then after having been captured she tries to get another job behind Mama's back.
  • Trash Talk: Lousy musician, but not bad on smack-talk to the player character when she's running away from them.

    Greeata Jendowanian 

A Rodian dancer in Jabba's palace.


  • Quest Giver: With Jabba's absence, she tries getting a job at a Coruscant nightclub, and asks the player to find the manager, who's not there.

    EV-9D9 

Jabba's main torture droid.


  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to find another of Jabba's droids who's run off.
  • Torture Technician: Her job, which she enjoys doing. She makes it clear to MD-8 she's going to do something extremely unpleasant to him, once she thinks it up.

The First Order

    Supreme Leader Snoke 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A puppet leader installed to act as the master of the First Order. Little is known about what he did or how he rose to power, but he's ultimately a figurehead for the organization.
  • Half the Man He Used to Be: Like the film, how he meets his end, courtesy of Kylo Ren.
  • Late-Arrival Spoiler: The fact he's a clone is a minor reveal in the beginning of Rise of Skywalker, but it's a quest here.
  • Mechanically Unusual Fighter: He's notably the only playable Force user in the game to not wield a lightsaber for his melee attacks.
  • Promoted to Playable: Due to never exhibiting any skills or abilities in the first movie of the trilogy, Snoke wasn't playable in The Force Awakens. Since The Skywalker Saga adapts The Last Jedi where he does show his skills and abilities, there's enough to base on for making him fully playable and unlockable.
  • Shock and Awe: Instead of using a lightsaber like the other Force users in The Skywalker Saga, Snoke's attacks are built around using the Force, including Force Lightning.
  • The Unfought: Snoke is never fought in the story mode, being taken out in the cutscene before the fight against the Praetorian Guard. That being said, one mission on Exegol does involve fighting defective clones of him.
  • Undignified Death: His death is already pretty ignominious in The Last Jedi as is, but Skywalker Saga goes a little extra by having Kylo Ren slice his throne in half as well, causing the back to fall on Snoke's corpse.

    Captain Phasma 

Playable Appearances: The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Leader of the Stormtrooper Regiment of the First Order, she's pretty much Kylo's right-hand woman when it comes to enacting Snoke's edicts of galactic control.
  • Adaptation Personality Change: Canon Phasma is a Dirty Coward who's only sided with the First Order for her own convinience, and will backstab and betray anyone to ensure her own survival. Game Phasma... is still a coward, but her loyalty to the First Order is genuine.
  • Adaptational Badass: In canon she was okay at directing her troops but went down rather easily after being cornered by the heroes, while in both games featuring her she not only puts up a decently challenging boss fight, but her playable appearances in side missions have her being both a capable fighter and skilled leader. The Skywalker Saga in general takes this even further by making her completely blaster-proof, both in her boss fight and as a playable character.
  • Dirty Coward: Despite being an Adaptational Badass, Phasma is still a coward; in her boss fights in both The Force Awakens and The Skywalker Saga, she spends the entire battle attacking from an out-of-reach perch, requiring alternative methods to attack her instead of hitting her directly. Furthermore, in The Skywalker Saga she flees to another tower after one of her health bars is emptied, as opposed to giving Finn a direct fight like in The Last Jedi.
  • The Dreaded: The rogue Stormtroopers on Kef Bir are still utterly terrified of her, to the extent any reflective surfaces bring on panic attacks.
  • Flaw Exploitation: Her micro-managing. Finn and Han utilize it to capture her so they can lower Starkiller Base's defenses.
  • Gatling Good: Her personal weapon in The Force Awakens is a rapid-fire laser-rifle that demolishes both enemies and gold objects with ease.
  • Hoist by Their Own Petard: One of the methods Finn and Rose use to defeat her is releasing a TIE Fighter which is trying to flee the Supremacy. Phasma shoots at it, causing it to crash into her.
  • Immune to Bullets: Phasma's chrome armor deflects blaster fire, both as a boss and a playable character.
  • Iron Butt Monkey: She goes through a lot of comical slapstick thanks to Finn.
  • Only Sane Man: Unlike her superior Kylo, who's a Psychopathic Manchild, and her subordinates, who are humorously incompetent, she's the only member of the main First Order conquering force that has her head on straight (literally), trying to keep everybody else on-task for completing Snoke's orders.
  • Stompy Mooks: Thanks to her armor being made of chromium, she stomps wherever she walks.

    General Hux 
One of the two generals of the First Order, Hux created Starkiller Base, a powerful weapon made out of a planet that can obliterate an entire galaxy.
  • Adapted Out: He doesn't consider shooting an unconscious Kylo Ren here, instead choosing to just put out the fires in Snoke's throne room.
  • Adaptational Heroism: The game removes the "I don't care if you win or lose." line during his reveal as The Mole, making him more heroic than he was in the canon.
  • Blatant Lies: His attempt at claiming he was overpowered by Finn and Poe is even more transparently false here since Pryde was there when it happened, and Hux is claiming as such while Pryde's looking at a recording of him giving information to Boolio.
  • Butt-Monkey: Even in Lego, Hux is still a heck of a joke. Kylo Ren openly disrespects him, Poe taunts him, and Snoke considers him an idiot only worth distracting with shiny things.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Instead of being shot to death by General Pryde, The Skywalker Saga has him shot in the face with a plunger gun.

    Captain Peavy 
The captain of the Finalizer and subordinate to General Hux.
  • Saying Too Much: Initially refuses to say why he's contracting the player, before telling them everything anyway.
  • Sitcom Archnemesis: With an unnamed other captain in the First Order. He arranges a scheme involving a bounty hunter to set a load of mynocks on the guy's face.
  • Troll: His plot not only involves getting as slimy a bunch of mynocks as possible, he disguises it as a present to his rival from the guy's mother. He also clearly doesn't care that anyone else gets slimed in the process.

    Allegiant General Pryde 
The other general of the First Order. Pryde is in charge of the Steadfast, the flagship of the fleet.

    FN-2199/"Nines" 
A riot baton wielding Stormtrooper who once considered Finn a friend. He doesn’t take his betrayal very well.
  • Battle Baton: The only thing distinguishing Nines from his fellow troopers is his anti-riot baton.
  • Elite Mook: Technically just a common Stormtrooper, he is far tougher than most and has his own boss battle.
  • The Voiceless: When playable.
  • Weapon Twirling: While free-roaming, he spins his baton around as he runs.

    Praetorian Guards 
Eight elite warriors who protect Snoke at all times. After his death, they attempt to avenge him by fighting Rey and Kylo Ren.
  • Ludicrous Gibs: One of the challenges for their fight is knocking one into a pit, where they get shredded, as in The Last Jedi- though you can trick them into jumping in themselves.
  • Wolfpack Boss: They fight Rey and Ren as a group, getting whittled down one by one.

    Sovereign Protectors 
Four warriors who guard the clone of Palpatine on Exegol. They battle Rey in the final confrontation.
  • Adaptational Badass: Slightly; in the film, their fight against Rey is a complete Curb-Stomp Battle. Here... it's still a Curb-Stomp, but they do manage to last slightly longer.
  • Wolfpack Boss: Same as the Praetorian Guards, they fight Rey as one.

    The Knights of Ren 
Kylo Ren's personal lieutenants, each carrying a different weapon. In the final confrontation, they go against their former master.
  • Adaptational Badass: Again, like the Sovereign Protectors, they put up slightly more of a fight than they manage in the movie, for all the good it does them.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: One of the challenges for their fight is Ben taking them all out without dying once.
  • The Dividual: Never seen operating apart in the story, and while they do have different names and equipment, they don't really do anything to distinguish themselves otherwise.
  • The Voiceless: As in the movies, they never say a word, though the playable versions do grunt sometimes.
  • Wolfpack Boss: Same as the Praetorian Guards, they fight Ben Solo as one.

    Sith Eternal Cultists 
The members of the Sith Eternal, who reside in the Sith Fortress on the planet Exegol.
  • Affably Evil: Sure, they're evil cultists worshiping the Sith and Palpatine in particular as a living god, but once you understand what they're saying, they're actually quite polite.
  • In the Hood: Their features are hidden by a hooded robe, and a facemask underneath that.
  • Laughing Mad: One cultist asks the player to assist them with bleeding a khyber crystal. Afterwards, he starts giggling an awful lot more than he should.
  • Loony Fan: One of them is quite obsessive about Sidious, and tasks the player with fetching items of his from across the galaxy.
  • Mad Scientist: They're the ones maintaining the clone vats on Exegol, and one got a bright idea of messing around with the Snoke clones, letting several defective ones lose.
  • Muggle: Why they don't do more. For all they worship the Sith, they have no Force powers whatsoever.
  • Quest Giver: Being as they are the only people on Exegol, they're the ones giving out quests.
  • The Unintelligible: Without a protocol droid or a Dark Sider, they're completely unintelligible.
  • Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe: Even with the translation, their dialogue comes out as this. Some more butcherede than others.

    Sith Troopers 
The troops of the Sith Eternal.
  • Blood Knight: The ones in the story are clearly enjoying the fact they're in a fight.
  • Elite Mooks: They're slightly stronger, health-wise, than the First Order's Stormtroopers.
  • Jet Pack: The jetpack variants of course wear them.
  • Laughably Evil: The ones Finn and co. fight in the storyline are slightly goofy, even commenting on how they finally get to do something. Less so the playable version.
  • Palette Swap: Appearance-wise, they're Stormtroopers with red armor.
  • Red and Black and Evil All Over: Theoretically, with their armor being deep red instead of the stark white of Stormtroopers. They're a little concerned that despite their supposedly intimidating appearance, the Resistance aren't afraid.
  • Tempting Fate: One random trooper hopes they're in more than just one fight. In the last level of the game, which ends with the Final Order being eradicated.
  • The Voiceless: Averted, with the rank-n-file ones, who do speak (just not very much), but played straight with the Jettroopers, who never say a word.

    BB-9E 
A First-Order BB unit.
  • Adaptational Badass: In The Last Jedi, the most BB-9E does to antagonize the heroes is alert the Supremacy crew to their presence on the ship. In The Skywalker Saga, he shows up as the Final Boss of Finn's part of the Episode IX finale.
  • Ascended Extra: BB-9E was originally a background character with no major story role, now in The Skywalker Saga essentially fills the role of Final Boss of Finn's half of the Episode IX finale.
  • Final Boss: With the final fight against Palpatine being a quick time event, it essentially fills this role for the Sequel Trilogy.
  • Giant Space Flea from Nowhere: Just randomly shows up to attack BB-8, Finn, Janna and Rose. Finn has no idea what's even going on.
  • Killer Rabbit: It looks as cute as BB-8 but uses the astromech droid's technical skills against you.

Bounty Hunters

    Jango Fett 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Dee Bradley Baker (The Skywalker Saga)

A Mandalorian Bounty Hunter contracted by a man named Tyranus to be the template for a clone army. Production of the army succeeds before the Jedi Council is made aware and sends Obi-Wan to investigate. After chasing Obi-Wan to Geonosis, he loses his life at the hand of Mace Windu.


  • Adapted Out: In the GBA version of The Video Game, although he is playable as a reward for beating all three episodes, none of his scenes from Attack of the Clones are featured.
  • Alas, Poor Yorick: Boba holding up his helmet after Jango is decapitated in The Video Game. Though his head wasn't in the helmet at the time
  • Awesome, but Impractical: He dual-wields blasters, which means he can get two shots in on a single target and he's the only non-Astromech character who can hover thanks to his jetpack (and he can even jump just before doing it.) However, while he's great for exploration, the fact that he always fires both blasters at once extends his attack animation and leaves him wide open to take hits (when one of the advantages to blaster characters is quickfiring to stay mobile,) and most enemies are One Hit Point Wonders anyway, making his son Boba Fett (who wields a large single-shot gun instead) the better version of him in the Complete Saga.
  • Badass and Child Duo: In his first boss fight, with Boba.
  • Badass Normal: He isn't force sensitive, yet he was able to hold his own against Obi-Wan in Kamino.
  • Cool Starship: The Slave 1. It's only playable with Jango's purple paint job in The Clone Wars, however, as it instead uses Boba's paint job in The Original Trilogy and The Force Awakens.
  • Death by Irony: In The Skywalker Saga, he ends up getting crushed by a Republic gunship, which was piloted by his own clones.
  • Downloadable Content: He is part of the Prequel Trilogy DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Dual Wielding: Uses two pistols.
  • "Get Back Here!" Boss: In his first boss fight in The Video Game, Jango will stop attacking and start fleeing from the player when down to one heart of health.
  • Humiliation Conga: Suffer one in Skywalker Saga version of Battle in Geonosis.
  • Off with His Head!: His final fate, via the blade of Mace's lightsaber.
  • Ret-Canon: Slightly redesigned in The Clone Wars to better match the clone troopers.
  • Screams Like a Little Girl: When he gets run over by the Reek.
  • Secret Character:
    • A minikit on the DS version of The Original Trilogy.
    • Returns as a minikit on all versions of The Clone Wars.
  • Stuff Blowing Up: He waylays Obi-Wan's pursuit by planting a lot of bombs in his way. The playable Jango also has the ability to blow up silver LEGO bricks, which would be inherited by his son Boba.
  • There's No Kill like Overkill: Instead of having his head chopped off, Jango gets trampled repeatedly before being crushed by a Republic gunship in the Skywalker Saga’s version of events.
  • Took a Level in Badass: In the second game, he gets grenades like all other bounty hunters.

    Boba Fett 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Daniel Logan (The Skywalker Saga)

An "unaltered" clone given to Jango in exchange for his compliance in the cloning process, to be raised as his son. After his father's death, he took his father's equipment and followed in his footsteps as a bounty hunter. During the Galactic Civil War, he was contracted to find Han Solo.


  • Adapted Out: He makes no appearance in the GBA version of The Video Game
  • Assist Character: The first boss fight against Jango has Boba providing a stream of cover fire from the Slave 1. Fortunately, Obi-Wan is also assisted by R4, who can draw his attention away by activating turrets around the arena.
  • Badass Normal: Very badass and competent after he grows up.
  • Joke Character: His child version does nothing, outside of crawling through vents. Anywhere else, he's functionally useless.
  • Cool Starship: The Slave-1 he inherited from his father. It is playable in both regular and minikit forms in The Original Trilogynote .
  • Ret-Canon: Gets a slightly updated look along with his dad in The Clone Wars.
  • Secret Character:
    • A minikit in The Clone Wars.
    • Is one of the carbonite blocks in The Force Awakens.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Only appears as a scared young boy in the original game. The mean green bounty hunter we all know and love takes over in the second.
  • Translator Buddy: He can understand Gree.
  • We Used to Be Friends: Aura Sing's profile in The Skywalker Saga mentions their shared history from The Clone Wars, and how she betrayed him.

    Greedo 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A cocky Rodian bounty hunter sent to eliminate Han Solo. He failed. He may or may not have shot first.


  • Bounty Hunter: He's hired to collect bounties by Jaba The Hutt.
  • Secret Character: A minikit in The Clone Wars.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In The Skywalker Saga, Greedo and Han rather confoundingly just agree to stop shooting at each other, and he walks off.
  • The Voiceless: In The Skywalker Saga, since his conversation with Han is removed. The most he has is a defeated sigh.

    Bossk 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A particularly nasty Trandoshan bounty hunter who was hired by Darth Vader to hunt Han Solo. Though, his species being eternal enemies of the Wookiees, Bossk is more interested in his friend Chewbacca...


  • Adapted Out: Not in the console versions of The Clone Wars.
  • Cloud Cuckoolander: He has a very odd fixation with bouncing on trampolines.
  • "Get Back Here!" Boss: Of a sort, in his boss fight. Bossk spends it bouncing around the area, and can only be damaged when he stops.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to deliver a bunch of trampolines to Mustafar for him.
  • Secret Character: A minikit on the DS version of The Original Trilogy.
  • Sssssnake Talk: Tendsss to ssstrech out on 's' sounds, and the occasional 'c'.
  • Third-Person Person: Occasionally uses it, but not as much as Zuckuss.

    IG-88 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

An upgrade to the existing IG-series (See "IG-86" below), IG-88 was instilled with sentience, and became a ruthless, emotionless bounty hunter. He was hired by Darth Vader to hunt Han Solo.


  • Adaptational Nice Guy: In Canon and Legends, he's a very mean bounty hunter who never let go of his bounty. In the game, he's actually willing to leave Malakilli alone after found out that Jabba is dead.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: He might be a bounty hunter, but if the person that hired him is no longer around, than there no point for him to do his job. He also willing to let go of his target if this happened.
  • Master of Unlocking: Can open protocol droid, astromech droid and bounty hunter switches in the games.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to help him track down Malakilli for Jabba, being unaware of Jabba's enhanced dead-ness.
  • Secret Character: A minikit in the DS version of The Original Trilogy.
  • "Shaggy Dog" Story: He was originally hired by Jabba to track down Malakili, only to learn that by the time he's caught up to Malakili, Jabba has long since been killed, thus nullifying the job.
  • Stuff Blowing Up: As a Bounty Hunter, IG can destroy silver pieces in The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga. Skywalker Saga replaces this with the Bounty Hunter ability to destroy gold bricks.

    Dengar 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

After losing a swoop race to Han Solo, Dengar was left horribly scarred and had to be rebuilt with cybernetics. He was hired to hunt his enemy by Darth Vader.


  • The Cameo: Can be seen on the security cameras of the Death Star's detention level in "Best Leia'd Plans".
  • Cybernetics Eat Your Soul: Has almost no emotion left due to his heavy cyberization. This is mended in the Expanded Universe, though it never comes up here.
  • Cyborg: Rebuilt with cybernetics as told in Legends.
  • Secret Character: A minikit on the DS version of The Original Trilogy.
  • The Voiceless: In The Skywalker Saga.

    4-LOM 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

A protocol droid who's faulty programming allowed him to reason his way into thievery, and later into bounty hunting. He was contracted by Lord Vader to hunt Han Solo.


  • Adaptational Jerkass: Both Canon and Legends versions of his breakup with Zuckuss are result of him getting destroyed and then rebuilt, but having his personality altered in some way (Legends had him go through a Death of Personality and no longer remember Zuckuss, while Canon had him reprogrammed to kill Zuckuss before eventually having that undone). In Zuckuss's side mission in The Skywalker Saga, 4-LOM betrays Zuckuss with complete agency and no hint of reprogramming.
  • Gameplay and Story Integration: Because of his backstory as a rogue protocol droid, 4-LOM is able to translate all alien languages in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Gameplay and Story Segregation: Because gameplay mechanics in The Skywalker Saga classify him as a Bounty Hunter, he is unable to access Protocol Droid terminals despite being a protocol droid himself (and the Gameplay and Story Integration of being able to translate all alien languages).
  • Master of Unlocking: Can open protocol droid, astromech droid and bounty hunter switches in most games.
  • Secret Character: A minikit on the DS version of The Original Trilogy.

    Zuckuss 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Skywalker Saga

4-LOM's partner, a Gand bounty hunter with an uncanny ability to search out hidden targets. He assists 4-LOM on his hunt for Han Solo.


  • Adapted Out: Absent in the console version of the game.
  • Promoted to Playable: After being only playable on handheld versions of The Original Trilogy while otherwise being a non-playable part of 4-LOM's backstory for over a decade, he's finally fully playable in all versions of The Skywalker Saga.
  • Quest Giver: Asks for help finding his ship after he crashed it and can't remember where.
  • Secret Character: A minikit on the DS version of The Original Trilogy.
  • Third-Person Person: In The Skywalker Saga, he refers to himself in third-person, a reference to how Gands speak in both the Canon and Legends Expanded Universe.

    Zam Wesell 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Leeanna Walsman (The Skywalker Saga)

A shape-shifting bounty hunter hired to eliminate Padmé Amidala, Zam was hunted by Obi-Wan and Anakin through the streets of Coruscant. When they found her, Jango Fett killed her to keep her from speaking.


  • Adapted Out: The Video Game leaves Zam and her role in the plot out entirely.
  • Bounty Hunter: Her occupation.
  • Cool Car: Her airspeeder is playable in both vehicle and minikit forms.
  • Downloadable Content: She is part of the Prequel Trilogy DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Jango's toxic dart doesn't kill her, as she's seen cautiously opening one eye while Obi-Wan's not looking.
  • Voluntary Shapeshifting: Strangely not touched upon in this version of the story.
  • With Catlike Tread: In The Skywalker Saga, rather than send a droid as part of her attempt to kill Padmé she instead punches through her window to drop the kouhuns. Fortunately for her, Padmé remains asleep anyway. Likewise, instead of trying to silently poison her, the kouhuns try to drop an anvil on her.

    Aurra Sing 

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A Palliduvan who is one of the most dangerous bounty hunters in the Galaxy.


  • Adapted Out: Due to only getting a small background cameo in The Phantom Menace, she was left out and never unlockable in the original games, taking until The Clone Wars to get a prominent role.
  • Ascended Extra: Went from a no-show in the first games, to being a prominent member of Cad Bane's gang in The Clone Wars, before eventually regaining her movie relevance and becoming unlockable in The Skywalker Saga
  • Cold Sniper: Dangerous and uses a long sniper rifle.
  • It's All About Me: Her profile even states how she cares only about herself.
  • Leave No Survivors: Her standard operating policy, as she explains when she spawns.
  • Poor Communication Kills: Turns on Bossk because she thought he was trying to stifle her out of shared payment. He'd actually said "bouncy fun", and she somehow heard it as "bounty hunt". (Though later developments strongly suggest he was trying to cheat her.)
  • Smoke Out: When found on Theed, she immediately throws down a smoke bomb and starts running.

    Bazine Netal 
A mercenary operating out of Takodana Castle in the time of the New Republic.
  • Evil Laugh: Does one on spawning.
  • Nightmare Fetishist: As unpleasant as the lava flea situation is, she's also in awe of it at the same time.
  • Pungeon Master: Admits it's one of her favourite things in life, cracking very terrible puns.
  • Quest Giver: Asks for help dealing with some giant lava fleas which have gotten into the basement of Takodana Castle.

Other Villains

    Tusken Raiders 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Nomadic people living in the deserts of Tatooine. They are fiercely protective and often walk in single file to hide their numbers.


  • Promoted to Playable: On all console versions of The Original Trilogy, from their GBA-exclusive appearance in The Video Game.
  • Secret Character: A minikit in The Clone Wars.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: The ones who abducted Shmi just get sliced to pieces, which doesn't actually kill them, then run for it.

    Sebulba 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

A nasty dug who happens to be the reigning champion of the Mos Espa podrace. Has a long-standing enmity with his closest competitor, a young Anakin Skywalker.


  • Cool Car: His racer, which is playable in both full-size and minikit forms.note 
  • Demoted to Extra: The condensed adaptation of Skywalker Saga means most of his scenes establishing his rivalry with Anakin are excised.
  • Promoted to Playable: After only being playable through his racer in the original games, The Skywalker Saga finally allows the player to use him as a proper minifig.

    Probe Droid 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga

The Arakyd series Viper models are used for many different types of recon and come armed with light weaponry for defense.


  • Grappling-Hook Pistol: A variation. They use their own tow cables to divert the bombs being pulled by Rebel snowspeeders.
  • Promoted to Playable: Originally playable on the DS version of The Original Trilogy, they joined the console roster in The Clone Wars.

    Wampa 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A large abominable-snowman-like creature native to Hoth. One captured Luke Skywalker shortly before the Battle of Hoth.


  • An Arm and a Leg: In the original games it lost an arm to Luke's lightsaber when he escaped, just like in the movie. This gets a Mythology Gag in The Skywalker Saga where a much friendlier wampa has a fear of getting his limbs cut off by the Rebels.
  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: It's comparable in size to the massive rancor, and when either played as or seen in a level it exemplifies being a tough and dangerous monster.
  • Cowardly Lion: The one in The Skywalker Saga wound up inside the Hoth Base, hoping to scare some puny humans, only to find himself trapped and utterly terrified at the thought of losing his limbs to the vicious Rebels. He has to ask the player character to escort him, a giant furry monster, to safety.
  • Mighty Glacier: It is invincible and breaks whatever it walks into, but it's painfully slow to maneuver.
  • Promoted to Playable: Is a fully unlockable mega-fig in The Force Awakens.
  • Secret Character: Only available through "Extra Toggle" in The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga.
  • Throw the Dog a Bone: After getting stuck in the Rebel base on Hoth, he's finally able to escape and winds up in a farm on Kef Bir, which he's pretty happy with, regarding occasionally getting sheared as a worthwhile trade-off for not losing any limbs.

Unaffiliated Characters

    TC-14 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

A silver Protocol droid in service to the Trade Federation.


  • Adaptation Expansion: In her original game appearances, she aids Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon in their escape from the Saak'ak. Averted in Skywalker Saga, where she just runs off like she did in the movie.
  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: She disappears entirely after helping Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon escape.
  • Palette Swap: Is basically a silver C-3PO in both appearance and function.
  • Skewed Priorities: Refused to abandon the Saak'ak in the face of total destruction. After hearing the explanation she admits her reasoning would have gotten her destroyed.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: The Skywalker Saga reveals she survived the Battle of Naboo, getting shoved in an escape pod before Anakin blew the Trade Federation's ship up and wound up on Naboo with no memory.
  • The Voiceless: Playable TC-14.

    Gonk Droid 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

The EG-6 droid, while ungainly, is an integral part of starships, as it is essentially a walking battery with a huge energy capacity. Other than that, it doesn't do anything.


  • Ascended Meme: Alongside getting Breakout Character status, Traveller's Tales noted its Memetic Badassinvoked reputation among fans and ran with it, mainly through the Super Gonk extra in both The Complete Saga and The Skywalker Saga, which turns it from a slowly plodding Stone Wall to a fast, jumpy case of The Juggernaut.
  • Breakout Character: It started out as just a regular Joke Character in the first game, but following it gaining an explosive level of popularity among fans, Traveller's Tales deliberately made sure to include it in every following game, had one model be story-relevant in the "Phantom Limb" DLC for The Force Awakens, and then created an entire elaborate questline revolving around the droid type in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Canon Foreigner: Gonkatine, a Red and Black and Evil All Over variant of the Gonk series with delusions of becoming as big a villain as Palpatine, was specifically created for The Skywalker Saga to tie together a questline representing the droid type's Breakout Character status.
  • Joke Character: In the early games it couldn't do anything besides walk around really slowly. It's also invincible, but enemies don't fire on it anyway, so it doesn't matter.
  • Lethal Joke Character: ...unless you have the "Super Gonk" extra in The Complete Saga, which doubles its speed and gives it a high jump, and the "Self Destruct" extra, which, like all droids, gives it the ability to turn into an Action Bomb. Taken further in The Skywalker Saga, where not only can regular Gonk Droid inherently headbutt enemies, Super Gonk turns it into a genuine Lightning Bruiser.
  • Mighty Glacier: It gaining the ability to headbutt enemies starting from The Force Awakens combined with retaining its Nigh-Invulnerable status means it's a near case of The Juggernaut, but it still only moves at a ridiculously slow pace, with its running speed barely matching the casual walking speed of most other characters. This is rectified with Super Gonk active in The Skywalker Saga, with the summonable Gonk Droid having massively boosted speed to make it a Lightning Bruiser.
  • Nigh-Invulnerable: Always completely impervious to damage, both as a playable character and an NPC.
  • Pokémon Speak: As always for the franchise, whether other characters are Speaking Simlish or actually talking, the only sounds made by the Gonk Droids are varying intonations of "gonk".
  • Running Gag: Despite its utter uselessness, it appears in every game as a playable character.
  • Shock and Awe: Being walking batteries, in The Force Awakens they share BB-8's ability to charge electrical sockets, while still being useless for anything else.
  • Took a Level in Badass: After being a Joke Character for several years, starting from The Force Awakens it gained the ability to headbutt enemies, with that game also providing electric socket charging while The Skywalker Saga re-introducing Super Gonk means it can turn into a Lightning Bruiser.
  • Use Your Head: After all previous games had it normally unable to attack enemies/destroy objects, The Force Awakens gives it the ability to smack things with its Waddling Head-like body.

    PK Droid 

Playable Appearances: The Video Game, The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga

Small worker droids that can be found in many Trade Federation and CIS installations.


  • Joke Character: They don't do anything besides walk around, though they are much faster than the Gonk Droids.

    Repair droid 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy

Appears only in the GBA version. They are bought off of Jawas and aid the player for a short time.


    Jawa 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Small scavengers on the deserts of Tatooine with a penchant for shiny or interesting objects. A few sell C-3PO and R2-D2 to Luke.


  • Joke Character: As playable characters, their blaster can't damage enemies and only stuns droids. The only real use they have is for crawling through vents, but there are other, more effective characters who can do that.
  • Promoted to Playable: In The Original Trilogy.
  • Sequel Non-Entity: The Clone Wars marks the first time Jawas have been absent from the console version since The Video Game.
  • Theme Naming: The ones in the Skywalker Saga all have names beginning with "j".
  • Took a Level in Badass: In The Skywalker Saga, their ion blasters are just as lethal against organic enemies as droids. They are also only one of three (four with DLC) Scavenger class characters in the game with a blaster as their ranged weapon.

    Bith 

Playable Appearances:The Original Trilogy, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A peaceful species native to Clak'dor VII. A band led by a specific Bith named Figrin D'an played in the Mos Eisley Cantina once.


  • Ascended Extra: Figrin D'an, the originally nameless leader of the Mos Eisley Bith band, acts as the specific representative for the whole species in The Skywalker Saga, unlike past games where he was treated like all the other Biths.
  • Promoted to Playable: After only being background characters in the original games, The Force Awakens is the first game where they're fully unlockable for playing on all consoles.
  • Quest Giver: D'an asks the player to recover some instruments for his band.
  • Secret Character:
    • Exclusively playable on the DS version of The Original Trilogy, though the console version lets you build them in the character creator.
    • Get a Carbonite Brick unlockable in The Force Awakens on all consoles.

    Wuher 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy

Owns the Mos Eisley Cantina. Naturally, he's seen a lot of interesting things.


  • Secret Character: He is playable exclusively on the DS version of The Original Trilogy, though the console version lets you make him in the character creator.

    Doctor Evazan 

One of the scoundrel that visit the Mos Eisley Cantina and a friend of Ponda Baba. Tries to attack Luke for no reason other than hate.


    Ponda Baba 

One of the scoundrel that visit the Mos Eisley Cantina and a friend of Doctor Evazan. Tries to attack Luke for no reason other than hate only to meet end at the hands of Obi-Wan Kenobi.


  • Quest Giver: Following up from getting a new arm, decides to road test it by starting a bar brawl.
  • Sherlock Scan: As a Scoundrel character, he can analyze purple bricks and see where to shoot.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: He survive his death with only one hand remain, and his (and Evazan's) quest involved finding him a new hand.

    MSE- 6 Mouse Droid 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Service and messenger droids employed in large facilities.


  • Fragile Speedster: These things are absurdly fast when running around, have a super-tiny hitbox, and their tiny size makes them immune to auto-targeting and ranged lock-on, which combined make trying to hit them whenever its necessary for a sidequest or Minikit objective extremely frustrating. As a trade-off, though, enemy Mouse Droids are a One-Hit-Point Wonder, so you only need one good hit to break them.
  • Joke Character: Cannot attack in most of their appearances.
  • Promoted to Playable: After only being properly playable in the GBA version of The Original Trilogy, it's fully unlockable on all consoles for The Clone Wars.
  • Secret Character: On consoles, you could only play as one in The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga with the "Extra Toggle" extra.
  • Took a Level in Badass: They became able to ram enemies and use crawl catches in The Force Awakens.

    Ugnaught 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

Small humanoids known for a good work ethic, they work as miners throughout the galaxy. Some found their way to Cloud City.


  • Joke Character: They're functionally identical to the Jawas, meaning their weapon does nothing but stun droids and their only use is crawling through vents.
  • The Unintelligible: They speak in grunts and squawks, requiring a translator droid to understand what they're saying.

    Lobot 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga

A pirate who was forced into a contract to become a cyborg, Lobot is connected to Cloud City's central computer and serves as an aide and administrator.


    Bespin Guard 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga

The volunteer security forces of Cloud City.


  • Cool Starship: Their Cloud Cars, which are minikits in The Original Trilogy.
  • La Résistance: Some of them try to fight the Imperial occupation of Cloud City.

    Skeleton 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga

A walking pile of bones with the ability to rip off its left arm and club stormtroopers with it.


  • Canon Foreigner: Well, there are skeletons in the Star Wars universe, but they tend to not walk around assaulting people.
  • Dem Bones: By definition, yes.
  • Detachment Combat: It beats up enemies using its own disembodied arm as a club!
  • Secret Character: Only available when using "Extra Toggle" in The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga

    Tatooine Droids 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga

A group of droids the Jawas were selling alongside the ones the Imperials were looking for. They include 1) A WED Treadwell; 2) A droid of unknown model; 3) An Asp droid; and 4) An R1-series Astromech droid.


  • Adapted Out: Zigzagged. The Skywalker Saga didn't show the latter three at all, while the Treadwell can only be seen in the AOTC cutscene introducing the Lars family.
  • Improbable Weapon User: Not that a blaster is "unusual", per se, but would you really expect these guys to be carrying them?
  • Secret Character: Only available when using "Extra Toggle" in The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga

    Womp Rat 

Playable Appearances: The Original Trilogy, The Complete Saga

Scavenging rodents native to Tatooine. They're only a couple of meters long at most.


  • Joke Character: They're incapable of doing anything other than running.
  • Secret Character: Only available when using "Extra Toggle" in The Original Trilogy and The Complete Saga

    Dexter Jettster 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

A Besalisk from Ojom, Dexter runs a quaint diner on Coruscant, which happens to be involved with a good amount of illegitimate business on the planet. As such, he knows more about things going on in the galaxy than most. Obi-Wan visits him to ask about a dart found on the body of Zam Wesell.


  • Joke Character: Despite his four arms, he can't do anything besides jump, run, and pull levers.
  • Promoted to Playable: In The Complete Saga, which is odd, considering that, unlike the first game, the hub world isn't his diner, which means that the players will see him a lot less overall.
  • Quest Giver: Sends the player to catch two customers who tried to pull a dine-and-dash on him with their food.

    Lama Su 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga, The Skywalker Saga

A Kaminoian geneticist, Lama Su works at the facility in which the Clone Army is being bred.


  • Composite Character: Since The Skywalker Saga removes Taun We, Lama Su takes her role in introducing Obi-Wan to Jango Fett.
  • Joke Character: He has no special abilities and cannot fight.

    Taun We 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga

Another Kaminoan geneticist.


    Indiana Jones 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga

Dr. Henry Jones Jr., a professor of archaeology at Barnett College, finds himself in many strange adventures from time to time. Now, he appears to have found his way into the Star Wars universe. More information on Indy can be found here.

He reappeared in The Clone Wars alongside his father, through an unplayable cameo.


    Buzz Droid 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga

The Pistoeka sabotage droid is deployed for precise impairment of vehicles in space. It was used by the CIS during the Clone Wars.


  • Joke Character: They're the only vehicle that exclusively uses a melee weapon to attack. It isn't very effective, due to having to get up close to other vehicles to damage them.
  • Secret Character: Only playable through "Extra Toggle" in The Complete Saga, not just as a playable character but a playable vehicle, which also makes it the only secret vehicle in the game.

    Training Remote 

Playable Appearances: The Complete Saga

Small droid used to train Jedi. Their light blasters act like normal blasters when deflected by lightsabers, but are otherwise harmless.


  • Joke Character: The one character in the series that can't do anything. Aside from the Gonk Droid.

    R5-D4 

An unlucky astromech droid.


  • Adapted Out: The game removed the part where he blow his own motivator to convince Luke and Owen to purchase R2 instead of him.
  • Moveset Clone: As an astromech droid, he has all the abilities of R2 or BB-8.
  • N-Word Privileges: Encountered on Salacious Crumb's quest cracking droid jokes, which he says he can tell as an astromech.
  • Quest Giver: Two, on Dagobah. First, finding somewhere suitable for him to live, then building him a new home from nearby resources.

    E-3PO 

A protocol droid who works at Cloud City.


  • Insufferable Genius: E is equipped with a special Techspan module which gives him an inflated sense of his own importance.
  • Jerkass: Has a rather snobbish personality and has a rather coarse reception with C-3PO.
  • Palette Swap: As with every other protocol droid, he's just the same as C-3PO gameplay-wise, just in silver.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to find a worthy challenge for his intellect.
  • The Voiceless: When playable, he doesn't speak.

    Mister Bones 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Matthew Wood

A Battle Droid repurposed by "Snap" Wexley


    Bala-Tik 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

The head of the Guavian Security Soldiers


  • Affably Evil: Provided you are not Han Solo, and therefore have not defaulted on a loan, or aren't a member of Kanjiklub, he's actually pretty pleasant.
  • Sherlock Scan: As a Scoundrel character, he can perform one of these on purple bricks.
  • Sitcom Arch-Nemesis: The Guavian rivalry with Kanjiklub is played as one of these.
  • Violent Glaswegian: Has a Scottish accent and, while not as villainous as in the movies, is still the head of a ruthless crime gang.

    Tasu-Leech 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Leader of Kanjiklub.
  • Bad Boss: Pulls a You Have Failed Me on all his minions after Bala-Tik and his goons grabbed his hidden treasure. Which leads to...
  • Didn't Think This Through: It was only after killing all his minions that he suddenly realized he had a massive staffing problem.
  • Quest Giver: Sends the player character across the Galaxy to find some suitably tough guys to refill the ranks of Kanjiklub.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: In the films, his survival was left uncertain, beyond being on a ship filled with hungry Rathtars, but supplemental material confirms that, yeah, they got him. Here, he's fine and dandy.
  • The Voiceless: When playable.

    Maz Kanata 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga


  • Adaptational Wimp: Lacks the Force powers of her canon counterpart, instead relying solely on her blaster.
  • BFG: Wields a blaster which is disproportionate to her size, making it look much bigger.
  • Collector of the Strange: She collects various things, and claims she has her castle just to store the sheer amount of stuff she's gathered over the years.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to solve a riddle about some stones just outside her castle.
  • Sherlock Scan: Like all smuggler characters, she's capable of scanning purple items to determine which one to shoot.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: Claims she is incapable of using regular handles due to having tiny hands. Her hands are the same size as anyone else's.

    Sidon Inthano 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Also known as the Crimson Corsair, a famous pirate in the New Republic era.


  • Optional Boss: Fought at the end of a questline involving tracking a defective droid seller across the Galaxy. He's the guy's backup. By which we mean the one who does all the fighting.
  • The Voiceless: When playable.

    ME-8D9 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

An ancient protocol droid who operates in Maz's castle on Takodana.
  • Bouncer: Sees it as her job to evict suspicious customers.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to help turf out unwanted presences in Maz's castle.
  • The Voiceless: Despite being voiced as a quest giving character, when playable she doesn't say a word.

    Roy the Mustafarian 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A Mustafarian who is definitely not up to anything subversive and who definitely doesn't require assistance.


  • Aliens of London: Like all the Mustafarians in the game, he speaks with a Scouser accent.
  • Canon Foreigner: He's an entirely unique character to the games.
  • Et Tu, Brute?: The Battle Droids are actually hurt to learn he's trying to supply the Republic and get away from them.
    Battle Droid: Why, Roy? I thought we were friends!
  • No, You: Does this when he thinks the player character (who never says a word) is getting suspicious about him saying anything.
  • Quest Giver: First, gathering some obsidian for totally non-suspicious reasons, then getting him off planet when those reasons come back to bite him.
  • Suspiciously Specific Denial: He's bad at hiding what he's up to, as it all comes out like this.

    Mama the Hutt 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Angelique Perrin

The mother of Ziro the Hutt and grandmother of Jabba. She now seeks to avenge her son's death.


    Roger 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by: Matthew Wood

A pessimistic reprogrammed Battle Droid.


  • Didn't Want an Adventure: Complains on spawning in about being brought into another adventure.
  • Non-Action Guy: He's got no fighting abilities, which is why he's put in the "other" character category. He can sort of flail if the attack button is pressed, and that's it.
  • Verbal Tic Name: Why he's called "Roger".

    Wandering Wookiee 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by:

A Wookie who likes to travel across the galaxy.


  • Troll: When found on Hoth, mentions he likes pretending to be a Wampa to scare people.
  • Vague Age: Wookies live longer lifespans than most. Some of his dialogue suggests he's young for a Wookie, such as dismissing talks about trade disputes as "boring stuff for adults".
  • Walking the Earth: Or Galaxy, in his case.

    H1-NT 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

Voiced by:

A jaded Protocol Droid who gave (almost) helpful advice to travelers across the Galaxy.


    Ody Mandrell 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A competitor in the Boontha Eve race.


  • Bad Boss: The reason his Pit Droids ran off is because he wouldn't pay them. The player has to bribe them with their own money to get them to go back, but the sums are mercifully quite small.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to recover three of his droids who've run off.

    Mawhonic 

Playable Appearances: The Skywalker Saga

A Gree competitor in the Boontha Eve race.


  • Angry Fist-Shake: His appearance in the first game has him shaking a claw-hand at Sebulba in the middle of the race.
  • Promoted to Playable: A cutscene-only character in the first game, a quest giving character in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to fetch some new parts for his pod.
  • Translator Buddy: As a Gree, he can translate for Gree who don't speak Basic.
  • Verbal Tic: Tends to say "see" at the end of his sentences, see? But he doesn't always do it, see?

    R2-B1 

An astromech droid in the Naboo royal court.


  • Fantastic Racism: His attempt to find a human he's delivering a message to is hindered by the fact all humans look alike to him.
  • Moveset Clone: Like all other astromech droids in The Skywalker Saga, he plays exactly the same as R2-D2.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to find a Naboo Royal Guard for him.
  • Suspect Is Hatless: Has no other clues for where to find his target beyond a hologram of what he looks like. In fact, the player has to look outside the area the game suggests to find him.

    Grummgar 

A collector of rare and exotic animals who spends his time in Maz's castle.


  • Epic Fail: He wakes up the Mustafarian lava eel alright. It promptly beans him with a gob of lava, rendering him unconscious while the player has to fight it.
  • Let Us Never Speak of This Again: Agrees to assist the player character in exchange for their never mentioning his humiliation at the hands of the lava eel.
  • Non-Standard Character Design: One of the very few playable bigfigs in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player character to find information about a sufficiently rare and dangerous animal he can capture.
  • Sitcom Archnemesis: With another hunter of exotic animals. A contact at Maz's is reluctant to hand out information because the fight between them is getting too ridiculous.

    The Master Codebreaker 

A supposed expert at codebreaking Finn and Rose tried to approach on Canto Bight.


  • Gameplay and Story Segregation: An ace shot and a brilliant codebreaker... not that the player will ever see this, since as an Extra character he doesn't even come with a blaster, nor can he access terminals.
  • Good Old Fisticuffs: His only method of fighting.

    Ubulla Mulborro 

An opera singer on Canto Bight.


  • All the Other Reindeer: Many of Canto Bight's casino goers look down on her for working her way up. But they still vastly prefer her to Sy Snootles.
  • Ascended Extra: From a brief joke character in The Last Jedi to playable character and giver of quests.
  • Multi-Armed and Dangerous: She has four arms, and since she's an Extra character this means she fights using them to punch her enemies.
  • Not Hyperbole: On acquiring a collectible, she says that the player shouldn't have. Then she clarifies they really shouldn't have; her boudoir's overflowing with the things already.
  • Quest Giver: Asks the player to get some cough medicine for her before her show's on.

Characters Originating From LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars

These are characters not featured in any of the movie trilogies but have prominent roles in the Star Wars: The Clone Wars animated series. Some of them are featured in DLC for later games, but most of them are only playable in this game.

    Jedi Order 

Ahsoka Tano

Playable Appearances:The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga (DLC)

A Togruta Padawan assigned to Anakin Skywalker during the Clone Wars, much to his chagrin.
  • Adapted Out: Her voice-only cameo in Rise of Skywalker is removed in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Downloadable Content: She is part of the Rebels DLC Pack in The Force Awakens and The Mandalorian Season 2 Pack in The Skywalker Saga.
  • Hot-Blooded: Much like her master.

Nahdar Vebb

A Mon Calamari Jedi who trained under Kit Fisto. He assisted in the Attack on General Grievous' lair on Vassek.

Adi Gallia

A Tholothian born on Corellia, she is a member of the Jedi Council and a master diplomat and politician.

Eeth Koth

A Zabrak Jedi Master who grew up in the slums of Nar Shaddaa. He did not let the rough experiences ruin his life, however, and has rose to be a respected Jedi.

    Galactic Republic 

Admiral Yularen

A decorated Navy and Intelligence officer, Wullf Yularen was placed in command of the Open-Circle Fleet, with the ''Resolute'' as his flagship. He worked with the Jedi, notably Obi-Wan, Anakin, and Ashoka, many times.

Queen Neeyutnee

The successor to Queen Jamilla, and twice removed from Queen Amidala, she served during the Clone Wars.

Senator Kharrus

A well-liked Gran senator from Kinyen, he negotiated with the pirates that kidnapped Count Dooku.

Sionver Boll

A scientist tasked by the Republic with making a bomb that would eliminate battle droids while leaving organic creatures unharmed.

Onaconda Farr

Rodian Senator, he seeks redemption for his past due to his friendship with senator Amidala.

Senator Philo

A Gran senator who was present when Cad Bane and his team attacked the Senate building.

    Clone Army 

Lieutenant Thire

A clone trooper that aided Yoda on a mission to Rugosa.

Rys

Another clone who accompanied Yoda to Rugosa.

Jek

The heavy-weapons specialist of Yoda's team on Rugosa.
  • Palette Swap: An inversion. He is identical to the regular Heavy Weapons Clone Trooper.

Captain Rex

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga (DLC)

Captain of the famed 501st Legion under Anakin Skywalker. Captain Rex was a loyal soldier, but not above questioning orders he disagrees with.
  • Continuity Nod: Doesn't appear in the regular version of The Skywalker Saga, but gets a name drop in the Clone Trooper's bio.
  • Downloadable Content: He is part of the Clone Wars DLC Pack in The Force Awakens.
  • Guns Akimbo: Dual wields twin blaster pistols.

Waxer

A fierce but compassionate member of Ghost Company.

Boil

Another member of Ghost company. He is more eager and cynical than some of his contemporaries.

Commander Ponds

A clone commander who mainly served as a tactical advisor, but took command of Lightning Squadron during the Liberation of Ryloth.

Commander Stone

A commander who found himself under the tenuous command of General Jar Jar Binks during the mission to rescue Generals Kenobi and Skywalker.

Commander Bly

A clone commander who served frequently under General Aayla Secura during the Clone Wars.

Commander Fil

A clone who accompanied Kit Fist and Nahdar Vebb to Vassek to fight General Grievous.

Hevy

A member of Domino Squad stationed on the Rishi Moon when it was attacked by the droid army.

Echo

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Skywalker Saga (DLC)

The most intelligent of Domino Squad, he too was stationed on the Rishi Moon during the attack.

Fives

Earning his nickname due to his serial number, CT-27-5555, he was another member of Domino Squad on the Rishi Moon during the attack.

    Confederacy of Independent Systems 

Asajj Ventress

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga (DLC)

A Nightsister native to Dathomir, she was sold into slavery and became a Padawan. But when her master was killed, she turned to the Dark Side. She now aids Count Dooku in leading the Separatist Army.

Wat Tambor

The Skakoan Leader of the Techno Union

Lok Durd

A Neimoidian who led the attack on Maridun with his custom tank, "The Defoliator."

Dr. Nuvo Vindi

A Faust scientist from Adana, Vindi was obsessed with re-releasing the presumed-extinct "Blue Shadow Virus" into the wild.

Whorm Loathsom

A Kerkoiden General who led the successful capture on the planet Christophsis.

Savage Opress

Playable Appearances: The Clone Wars, The Force Awakens, The Skywalker Saga (DLC)


    Bounty Hunters 

Cad Bane

Commonly referred to as "the best since Jango lost his head", Bane is a male Duros bounty hunter who was contracted by Darth Sidious several times during the Clone Wars.

Robonino

A Patrolian bounty hunter with a penchant for sabotage and explosives, Robonino is often called in for less direct assignments. Don't let that fool you though, he's more than ready to handle a gunfight.

Shahan Alama

A Weequay former pirate who was kicked out for being too wild and unruly, Shahan turned to a life as a bounty hunter.

HELIOS-3D

An IG-86 assassin droid belonging to the Black Sun who has accompanied Cad Bane on at least one mission.

IG-86

The IG-86 sentinel series was created by Holowan Laboratories as bodyguards, but found their way to less-legal uses. A few have accompanied Cad Bane on at least one mission.

    Other Characters 

King Katuunko

A handheld-exclusive character, he is the king of the Toydarians.

Wag Too

A Lurmen native to Maridun, Wag aided the Jedi when his homeworld was attacked by the CIS.

Tub

Another Lurmen who aided the Jedi in the attack on Maridun.

R3-S6

An astromech droid assigned to Anakin Skywalker's team when R2-D2 was captured. As it would happen, he was planted there by General Grievous to gather information and lead the Jedi into a trap.

Thi-Sen

The leader of a tribal group of Talz on Orto Plutonia. Opposed the Pantoran Assembly.

Chi Cho

Leader of the Pantoran Assembly on Orto Plutonia. Opposed Thi-Sen and his men.

Riyo Chuchi

A female Pantoran who sought peace between the Pantorans and Talz.

Commando Droids

The BX-Series was designed as an improvement over the standard B1-series. With more powerful weapons and brain modules, they could even wear enemy armor and pass for them at security checkpoints. Several were present during the attack on ishi Moon, and one assisted Cad Bane during his attack on the Senate Building.

Neimoidian

Obsessed with money and power, these natives of Cato Neimoidia are a less-than-physically-imposing genetic cousin of the Duros. They commonly sided with the CIS during the Clone Wars.

Gha Nachkt

A Trandoshan scavenger who sold supplies to both sides of the war.

LEP Servant Droid

Designed as childcare providers, certain "accidents" led to them being redesigned as general servants. They cropped up a lot in the Senate building on Coruscant.

Hondo Ohnaka

A famous Weequay pirate from Florrum, he leads a notorious gang in piracy, spice trade, kidnapping, and extortion.
  • Cool Starship: The Pirate Saucer is unlocked with him.
  • Noble Demon: He does possess a slight sense of honor. Though, due to his lack of screentime, this is never demonstrated.

Pirate Ruffian

A member of Ohnaka's gang.

Tee Wat Kaa

The father of Wag Too. He refuses to aid the Republic, as he feels they are just as responsible for the war as the Separatists.

Turk Falso

Ohnaka's second-in-command. He is a pathological liar who feels himself superior to his leader.

Lurmen Villager

Peaceful, lemur-like creatures native to Maridun.

TX-20

A T-series Tactical Droid, the TX-20 serves a similar purpose to OOM-Series Battle Droid Commanders, acting as leaders and overseers. They are often rude and impatient, considering themselves superior to other droids.
  • Butt-Monkey: If you see one, expect to have to cut it's head off and use it to open a door.

R6-H5

Kit Fisto's loyal astromech droid. He ride's around in Kit's starfighter frequently.
  • Continuity Snarl: He doesn't look like the established R6-series in Star Wars lore, which didn't go into production until the Galactic Civil War anyway.

Luxury Droid

Designed to have a human-like appearance, the BD-3000 are employed in a variety of positions by the wealthy.

Starkiller

When he was young, Galen Marek witnessed Darth Vader kill his father. The Sith then took him on as an apprentice and trained him for the day he could help Darth Vader defeat the Emperor.

Top