Need a drink after waiting to get into Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge? Oga’s Cantina will open at 8 a.m. with stiff alien cocktails
The savviest intergalactic travelers will want to resist the natural instinct to head straight for the Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run attraction and instead make their way to Oga’s Cantina.
After waiting in line to park, board the tram, enter Disneyland and get into Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge the last thing you might be thinking about and the one thing may need the most is an ice cold alien cocktail at Oga’s Cantina.
Fortunately, the wretched hive of scum and villainy opens at 8 a.m. most mornings and will be serving stiff alcoholic cocktails paired with a bit of breakfast in the Anaheim theme park. You can even bring the kids into the all-ages bar that will be serving Blue Milk and cookies suitable for the young padawans.
Galaxy’s Edge visitors will need a free reservation to enter the new 14-acre Star Wars land from May 31 to June 23. Disneyland will enforce a 4-hour time limit on visits to Galaxy’s Edge during that initial “soft opening” period. Many eager fans snapped up 8 a.m. to Noon reservation windows on their assigned dates.
Beginning June 24, visitors will need to acquire a “boarding pass” via the Disneyland app or kiosks in the park to get into a virtual queue to access Galaxy’s Edge. Early birds will be able to head right into the new Star Wars land starting at 8 a.m.
Those 8 a.m. start times mean a lot of Star Wars fans over the first few months will be wandering into Galaxy’s Edge in the early morning hours. The savviest intergalactic travelers will want to resist the natural instinct to head straight for the Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run attraction and instead make their way to Oga’s Cantina.
Oga’s Cantina only has six snowboard-shaped tables, six booth seats and a standing room-only U-shaped bar. And Disneyland won’t take reservations for Oga’s. Which means the wait time to get into the intimate interstellar cocktail bar could stretch to an hour or more throughout the day.
While you might not typically imbibe at 8 a.m., you will be on Star Wars standard time while visiting Galaxy’s Edge. And it’s 5 o’clock somewhere in the galaxy far, far away. So why not drop into Oga’s and experience the highly anticipated cantina when the crowds will likely be lighter?
Oga’s will serve a pair of alcoholic “potations” cocktails before noon:
Bloody Rancor : A Bloody Mary made with vodka and Chile liqueur and garnished with a bone-shaped meringue cookie.
Spiran Caf : Peruvian organic coffee spiked with rum and served with orange marmalade, vanilla whipped cream and citrus zest
Oga’s morning menu will include:
Mustafarian Lava Roll : Described as a “sweet galactic delight”
Rising Moons Overnight Oats : Breakfast oats served with yogurt, dragon fruit and seasonal fruit
Non-alcoholic “potations” served at Oga’s in the morning will include:
Blue Bantha Milk and Cookies : The “Star Wars” land’s signature Blue Milk, a non-dairy rice- and coconut-based chilled milk. A Rice Krispie treat cookie with Bantha horn icing is served on top of the glass.
Black Spire Brew : Cold brew coffee with Caribbean spices, honey and passion fruit
Moogan Tea : Unsweetened iced tea and chocolate milk with vanilla and cinnamon
Tarine Tea : Unsweetened iced tea with peach, huckleberry and mint
Later in the day, Oga’s will also serve a selection of beers, wines and cider plus a full selection of alcoholic and non-alcoholic “potations” cocktails. The cantina will also have a small food menu.
The Mustafarian Lava Roll and Rising Moons Overnight Oats will also be on the breakfast menu at the Docking Bay 7 Food and Cargo. The Galaxy’s Edge quick-service restaurant will also offer a Bright Suns Morning breakfast featuring three-cheese eggs, pork sausage and purple potato hash served with a mini Mustafarian lava roll.
The drinks and foods in Oga’s Cantina take their inspiration from Star Wars beasts and planets. Some beverages have shown up in “Star Wars” movies, books and comics.
Luke Skywalker killed a Rancor beast in “Return of the Jedi.” Blue Milk comes from the spiral horned, wooly Bantha.
Spiran Caf shows up in the “Star Wars Rebels” animated television series. The volcanic planet of Mustafar appears in “Revenge of the Sith.” Moogan Tea and Tarine Tea are mentioned in “Star Wars” novels.
The cold brew takes its name from the Black Spire Outpost village on the Star Wars planet of Batuu, the setting for the new themed land debuting at Disneyland on May 31.
How Disney Imagineers hand-build petrified tree spires in Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge
Disney Imagineers have designed, built, sculpted and painted the rockwork spires over the past three years in the 14-acre Star Wars themed land taking shape at the Anaheim theme park.
The 135-foot-tall spires that form the distinctive backdrop of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at Disneyland were each painstakingly created by artisans from hand-crafted rock work designed to evoke the fossilized look and feel of a petrified forest.
Disney Imagineers have designed, built, sculpted and painted the rockwork spires over the past three years in the 14-acre Star Wars themed land taking shape at the Anaheim theme park.
A towering black spire at the center of a remote outer rim spaceport lends its name to the Black Spire Outpost village, the setting for the new Galaxy’s Edge lands coming to Disneyland and Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida.
Imagineers wanted to create a historic, exotic and iconic look for the new land that felt instantly recognizable as Star Wars yet still relatable, familiar and approachable on a human and emotional level.
“What is that graphic symbol that says this is Star Wars?” Lucasfilm vice president and creative director Doug Chiang asked. “For us, it was the spires.”
The Galaxy’s Edge spires were inspired by the Petrified Forest National Park in northeastern Arizona near the New Mexico border. Imagineers exaggerated the scale of the petrified trees and turned the frozen forest into a planet-wide ecosystem.
“When you do that what happens is that you’re creating something that’s very fresh that is easily identifiable as Star Wars,” Chiang said. “It also makes it very real.”
Why is the Black Spire blacker than all the rest?
“There is a mystery to it and we kind of like that idea that there is no answer to it,” Walt Disney Imagineering managing story editor Margaret Kerrison said. “There is something unusual about it. There’s talk and whispers among the locals about why that thing is blacker than all the rest.”
A team of artisans were working on the Black Spire during a recent tour of the Galaxy’s Edge construction site at Disneyland. Scaffolding surrounded the spire, ringing the soaring artificial tree like a steel exoskeleton. Paint crews worked their way from the top to the bottom of the Black Spire, adding details to make the towering rockwork seem more realistic.
“This is one of the last spires that were finishing up within the land,” Imagineering executive creative director Chris Beatty said. “We’re getting to see the end of the process.”
The final step will be to plant a living tree at the base of the faux ossified fossil — juxtaposing life and death.
“There’s sort of a little bit of a moment of rebirth that’s happening in this land that’s sort of dead,” Beatty said. “The trees have been forgotten about. This one’s starting to regrow.”
The design process for the 13-story spires begins with a hand-made scale model that fits atop a desk.
“We start with these small little models that we do out of clay,” Beatty said. “Then we move to foam and we build them a little bit bigger. We finally go to a fairly substantial size model that is maybe 18 inches in height.”
The 1/100th scale model is then imported into a computer software program.
“We scan that model,” Beatty said. “When we’re done, we digitize it and take it full scale into the 3D world”.
The 3D model generates a computer-formulated design that breaks the spire into bent rebar “chips.”
“That model is cut into little six-foot by six-foot squares,” Beatty said. “Our rebar is bent off of that model.”
The jigsaw puzzle-like rebar squares are then welded to a steel superstructure that forms the raw shape of the sky-scraping spires. Artisans carve the rockwork by hand and painters bring the spires to life with highlights and shadowing.
“There is no real roadmap,” Beatty said. “This truly is an incredible experience.”
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge debuts on May 31 at Disneyland and Aug. 29 at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
How Disney Imagineers made droid tracks in the Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge walkways
The droid tracks help enrich the backstory of the new Star Wars land and create a history for the remote intergalactic spaceport.
One of the most memorable days over the past three years at the Disneyland construction site of the new Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge themed land involved a construction worker riding on a droid skateboard that left R2-D2 “footprints” in the freshly poured cement.
“I’ll set the scene for you,” Walt Disney Imagineering art director Kirstin Makela said. “We’re on a construction site. There’s lots of people around. There’s some people pouring concrete. They’re all dirty. They’re getting all their tools and they’re stamping. Then all of a sudden one of them just jumps on this little trolley and someone else pulls them through the concrete and they leave little droid tracks.”
The man-made droid tracks will be easy enough to find in the Black Spire Outpost village on the Star Wars planet of Batuu, the setting for the new 14-acre themed land coming to the Anaheim theme park.
Just look for the Droid Depot shop near the Frontierland entrance to Galaxy’s Edge. There will be a bunch of audio-animatronic astromechs lined up in front of the build-your-own droid workshop.
“It’s kind of reminiscent of the droids in ‘Episode IV’ outside the sandcrawler that were for sale,” Imagineering executive creative director Chris Beatty. “These will look like droids that are for sale. You can come up and get your picture with them.”
If you look down, you’ll spot the distinctive droid tracks right away. Follow them around the corner into an intimate courtyard covered by a sail-like canopy. The droid “footprints” will take you to a little animated scene behind the workshop where a red R5 and a yellow R2 are undergoing some maintenance.
“It’s just going to be stacked with droid pieces and parts,” Beatty said. “There are two animated droids back there. They will be getting an oil bath. They’re getting a little bit of refurbishment.”
Inside the shop, droid fans can build their own R- or BB-unit while surrounded by props and animated show elements lining the walls and hanging from the ceiling.
Imagineering plans to have remote-controlled droids roaming the streets of Black Spire Outpost. Disneyland has tested a free-roaming droid named J4KE — or Jake — that interacted with theme park visitors.
Imagineering worked closely with Lucasfilm on the development and creation of the many different droids that populate Galaxy’s Edge.
“We built all the droids from the Star Wars films.” said Eric Baker, Imagineering creative director for props and set dressing. “We were fortunate enough to borrow the actual molds from Lucasfilm that were used in the films.”
Imagineers took rubbings from the wheels of the 1977-era R2-D2 to create the set of three droid wheels used to create the droid “footprints” in Galaxy’s Edge.
The droid trolley used during construction consisted of a triangular piece of plywood with three ridged R2 wheels mounted on the bottom in a tricycle formation. A rope was attached to one corner of the construction trolley.
The droid tracks running through the land help enrich the backstory of Black Spire Outpost and create a history for the ancient Star Wars spaceport, Beatty said.
“It’s all about the story,” Beatty said. “And when you build a story it gives the place life.”
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge debuts on May 31 at Disneyland and Aug. 29 at Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida.
J'avais pas trop regardé jusqu'à maintenant les vidéos sur le nouveau land , quelques photos tout au plus. Si franchement cela à l'air sublime , bien immersif, c'est l'hôtel star wars que je trouve super , le fait de se croire dans l'espace, perso j'adore.
An Instagram-worthy one-eyed Star Wars creature lurks in a Galaxy’s Edge drinking fountain at Disneyland
A hairy one-eyed space squid suddenly appears when Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge visitors get a drink of water.
Thirsty interstellar travelers visiting Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge will be shocked when they see a hairy one-eyed space squid pop up in the murky water of a glass cistern tank feeding a Disneyland drinking fountain.
The audio-animatronic Dianoga will “live” in the pipes of the drinking fountain and nearby bathroom in the Black Spire Outpost village on the Star Wars planet of Batuu, the setting for the new 14-acre themed lands coming to the Anaheim theme park and Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida.
“The sewer system contains a Dianoga to handle the sewer challenges that this outpost would have,” Walt Disney Imagineering executive creative director Chris Beatty said.
The animatronic Dianoga created by the Imagineering team will be triggered when thirsty Galaxy’s Edge visitors push the button on the drinking fountain. Expect the Instagrammable moment to be an instant sensation on social media when Galaxy’s Edge debuts at Disneyland. Savvy gamers may be able to activate the drinking fountain Dianoga using the Galaxy’s Edge Data Pad tools in the Play Disney Parks app.
“We’ve had a lot of fun as a team having those little, fun Easter egg moments or surprises,” Beatty said. “There’s moments like that just hidden throughout the entire land.”
Fans of the original 1977 “Star Wars” movie will remember the squid-like Dianoga creature that nearly drowned Luke Skywalker in the murky water inside the Death Star garbage compactor
The 30-foot-long creepy yet cute garbage squid from the movie had seven suckered tentacles and a periscope-like eyestalk.
The Galaxy’s Edge Dianoga will appear to dwell in the pipes connected to the drinking fountain and the nearby restroom. The sewage monster will emerge from the murky water in a cistern seemingly feeding the fountain.
“An animatronic figure of the Dianoga pops up, looks around and goes back down,” Beatty said. “You hear it going through the pipes and into the bathroom.”
Once the Dianoga vanishes, visitors will hear the sounds of the sewage squid squirming through the plumbing. The suspect water in the cistern will only appear to feed the drinking fountain.
“It’s very industrial and the pipes are really rusty,” Beatty said of the animated drinking fountain. “There’s these large cylindrical forms and there’s glass in it. It looks like it’s almost an old cistern tank. The water that’s in the tank is a little suspect, but our drinking fountains are connected to it.”
This isn’t some baby Dianoga living in the Galaxy’s Edge subterranean pipes. It’s a full-size hairy eyestalk just like the one seen in the first “Star Wars” film.
“It’s not like we scaled that thing down,” Beatty said
A second Dianoga lives in a glowing glass aquarium in Dok-Ondar’s Den of Antiquities. The shadowy black market shop in Galaxy’s Edge will be filled with taxidermied extraterrestrials, the skeletal remains of winged space creatures, a 12-foot-tall stuffed wooly Wampa and other souvenir spoils collected from throughout the Star Wars galaxy.
The puppeted trash monster in the movie was made from latex over foam. The blinking one-eyed puppet memorably popped its head out of the garbage-strewn water of the Death Star compactor and looked from side to side. The robotic echoing sounds of the Dianoga in the film were inspired by the moans of “The Exorcist” demon, according to starwars.com.
Dianoga hail from the swampy Star Wars planet of Vodran. The female Dianoga in the movie even had a name: Omi. After she was captured and brought to the Death Star, Omi was banished to the trash compactor when she killed a couple of stormtroopers, according to starwars.com.
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge debuts on May 31 at Disneyland and Aug. 29 at Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida.
Building Batuu: Explore Black Spire Outpost with Your Star Wars: Datapad through the Play Disney Parks App
When visiting Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, travelers will be able to interact with the land in a way unlike anything they’ve seen before in a Disney park, and will be able to play on their Star Wars: Datapad for a landwide interactive experience through the Play Disney Parks mobile app. Through the app, visitors will be able to turn their mobile device into their own Datapad and within it will find several tools at their disposal to use while exploring the planet Batuu, and may even uncover some surprises!
Use the “hacking” feature to interact with certain door panels or droids to see their memories, or open your “scanning” tool to peek inside of cargo crates you may spot while walking around. The handy “translation” tool will help you understand Aurebesh (the written language of the Star Wars galaxy) signs throughout Black Spire Outpost, and you can even tap into and decrypt signals from antennas or communications devices and listen to secret messages with the “tuning” feature.
Throughout Black Spire Outpost, the First Order is trying to install surveillance devices in door panels to spy on the Resistance. Use your Datapad to join in “Outpost Control,” a landwide game, and choose to support either side as they vie for a hold on the land. Winners may even find themselves rewarded with galactic credits for their efforts.
Your Star Wars adventure continues when you make your way to get in line at Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run. While getting ready to board the most famous ship in the galaxy, you can even take on a job for Hondo Ohnaka, the pirate turned “legitimate” businessman operating Ohnaka Transport Solutions out of Black Spire Outpost. Reroute misplaced cargo, learn how to keep your cover under pressure and prep the Falcon for your flight in this in-queue game!
Be sure to download the Play Disney Parks app from the Apple App Store or Google Play Store before your visit to check out these exciting features and experiences, available when Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge opens at the Disneyland Resort on May 31, 2019, and at Walt Disney World Resort on August 29, 2019! And don’t forget there’s more to explore across both resorts with the Play Disney Parks app. From in-queue games and Disney trivia, to specially curated Apple Music* playlists and playful ride achievements, there is fun for all to enjoy together.
If you are planning to visit Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at the Disneyland Resort between May 31 (opening day) and June 23, 2019, a reservation and theme park admission are required. After June 23, 2019, reservations will not be required for visits to Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at Disneyland park. Theme parks, Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge and experiences are subject to capacity.
Les journées réservées aux cast members ont débutées hier avec ce rassemblement des habitants de Batuu !
Certains jours jusqu'au 27 mai, les cast members de Disneyland Resort et un invité de leur choix peuvent découvrir Star Wars : Galaxy's Edge.
Téléphones portables et appareils photographiques étant interdits, nous pouvons remercier Josh D'Amaro, président de Disneyland Resort, pour ce cliché !
Crédit photographique : Instagram de Josh D'Amaro (Président de Disneyland Resort).
Disneyland hopes fans will want to play in Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge
The park's $1 billion venture aims to tap into generations of Star Wars fans.
In just a few days, Disneyland will open its new portal to a galaxy far, far away. Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge opens to advance reservation holders and resort hotel guests on May 31, with a second opening for all Disneyland ticket holders on June 24.
Disneyland invited me to walk through the land a couple of weeks ago, just after Disney’s Imagineers turned the land over to the park’s operations team. Those Imagineers created a new world for the land, a planet called Batuu that is home to the Black Spire Outpost, a smugglers’ haven where fans will find the Millennium Falcon as well as restaurants, shops, abundant photo opportunities … and Disneyland’s first public bar.
My favorite sight? It surprised me. What is Luke Skywalker’s X-34 landspeeder doing parked just outside Black Spire Outpost’s central plaza? Is this where Luke’s ride ended up after he sold it on Tatooine to help pay for his ill-fated trip to Alderaan on the Millennium Falcon?
What really got me about seeing this Star Wars icon was that it appeared to be floating, just like in the original “Star Wars” movie. I’ve got a strong suspicion how Disney’s designers achieved this optical illusion, but I don’t really care how they did it. I just love that, for a moment, they made me feel like a 9-year-old boy again, marveling at a universe where someone’s beat-up junker could hover a foot above the ground.
Just before my tour of Galaxy’s Edge, Disneyland let me watch one of its preview shows for cast members over at Disney California Adventure, where the resort revealed more details about the land to its employees. Before the presentation, one wall of the theater showed photos of the Kenner Star Wars toys that dominated my birthday and Christmas wish lists in the late 1970s and early ’80s.
Every image revived a memory — from those cheesy little plastic sticks that you could pull from Darth Vader and Obi-Wan’s arms to pretend they were lightsabers to that glorious Millennium Falcon play set that I never could afford. But I did manage to save enough allowance and chore money to buy Luke’s landspeeder.
No, it didn’t really hover. It ran on thin, hidden wheels, mounted with springs to make the toy bounce a bit like it was floating as you pushed it along. But I loved that toy, as I loved every one of the 12 original action figures I dutifully collected, along with the many more figures, play sets and plastic blasters that came out over the next few years.
So when I saw that landspeeder in Galaxy’s Edge — full size and “really” hovering this time — it was play time in my mind all over again. On Batuu, I can play Star Wars again. I can join the Resistance or the First Order, or fall in with the smugglers trying to evade both. I can get a drink in the cantina, buy a droid and finally get the chance to fly that Millennium Falcon that never showed up under my family’s Christmas tree.
Disney has spent more than a billion dollars designing and building Galaxy’s Edge with the new hope that thousands of other fans would be willing to spend a lot of money to feel the way that I did looking at that landspeeder. Will it work? We are about to find out.
Robert Niles (TPI) pour The Orange County Register - 21 mai 2019.
Les 1ers retours sur l'attraction du Faucon viennent de tomber. Ca a l'air très positif. Le petit point noir souligné est que les taches à accomplir sont assez prenantes et on peut sortir du ride un peu frustré d'avoir passé du temps à appuyer sur les boutons au détriment de vraiment faire attention à tout ce qui se passe et aux détails. Pour contrer ce problème, il y aurait la possibilité de pousser un bouton "pilotage automatique" pour pouvoir profiter du ride sans avoir en permanence les yeux fixés sur les commandes.
Un des retours sur WDWNT : https://wdwnt.com/2019/05/review-millennium-falcon-smugglers-run-at-star-wars-galaxys-edge-in-disneyland/
Le plan du parc a été mis à jour :
Bob sera heureux à la lecture de ce tweet
Citation :
Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge merchandise prices are out of this world: $200 lightsabers, $100 droids
Better start saving now for that trip to Black Spire Outpost village on the Star Wars planet of Batuu.
That trip to Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge is going to put a big dent in your wallet — and no Disneyland won’t take galactic credits, you’re going to have to bring your credit card or cold, hard cash.
Prices for some of the costliest merchandise in Galaxy’s Edge are starting to surface on social media as Disneyland cast members begin touring the new Star Wars land ahead of the May 31 grand opening to the public.
Better start saving now for that trip to Black Spire Outpost village on the Star Wars planet of Batuu, the setting for the new 14-acre themed lands coming to Disneyland and Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
A sampling of the out of this world prices for some of the biggest ticket merchandise available in Galaxy’s Edge:
$199.99 for the build-your-own lightsaber experience at the Savi’s Workshop — Handbuilt Lightsabers shop (comes with a carrying case)
$99.99 for the build-your-own droid experience at the Droid Depot shop (comes with a carrying box)
$149.99 for the DJ R-3X — the former Star Tours pilot Rex turned cantina DJ — remote-controlled toy that talks, rolls and wirelessly plays music from your smartphone at Droid Depot
$59.99 for the C-3PO toy that cries “What’s going on?” when you rip his head off at Droid Depot
$42 for an Endor collectible souvenir mug at Oga’s Cantina
$32 for a Porg collectible souvenir mug you can get with a Cliff Dweller cocktail at Oga’s Cantina
Pour le coup on a pas de quoi se plaindre. Par contre j’espère pas qu’il en profiteront pour appliquer le même tarif au WDS dans le demi misérable Land qu’on aura.
La cérémonie officielle d'inauguration de Star Wars : Galaxy's Edge aura lieu le mercredi 29 mai à 20h20 heure du Pacifique (soit à 5h20 le jeudi 30 mai à Paris et Bruxelles).
Elle sera retransmise en direct grâce au support de AT&T.
Pour le coup on a pas de quoi se plaindre. Par contre j’espère pas qu’il en profiteront pour appliquer le même tarif au WDS dans le demi misérable Land qu’on aura.
Croisons les doigts pour que Disney revoit son plan à la hausse pour les Wds ,il y a la place pour .Et comme ,c’est pas pour demain de nouveaux PC et concertation public peuvent arriver d’ici la .
Lait bleu ou vert à 7,99$. Plus cher que la Butterbeer qui était à 6,99$ à mon dernier séjour (qui ne vaut vraiment pas ce prix). Ça fait cher pour des boissons véganes à saveur de fruits. Les sabres à 200$ ont l'air cheap. Il paraît qu'ils sont en métal mais on dirait du plastique. Je pense qu'à ma visite la seule dépense que je ferai ce sera pour manger, et un cocktail à la cantina s'il n'y a pas trop d'attente.
Au tour de WDW Magic de poster son compte-rendu et avis sur Star Wars : Galaxy's Edge : https://www.wdwmagic.com/attractions/star-wars-land/news/23may2019-early-reviews-for-star-wars-galaxys-edge.htm
Clairement, le Faucon Millenium est décrit comme un E ticket ride. Après, les défauts qu'on soupçonnait liés à l'interactivité sont bien présents mais il y a visiblement moyen de se mettre en position automatique
Oui, j'ai du mal à comprendre ce que ça signifie dans ce cas précis. M'enfin si le son est spatialisé comme au Puy du Fou, c'est juste extra ! C'est bien qu'on se rende compte que l'audio est tout aussi important que le visuel dans l'immersion.
Oui c'est un son spatialisé. Bon ok c'est pas vraiment du Datmos (Les enceintes au plafond sans plafond, c'est compliqué ), mais c'est surement une alternative encore plus poussé qu'une "simple" spatialisation.
[Disneyland Park] Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge (31 mai 2019)