


Despite the minimal on-screen presence, the LEGO set held one of most expensive slots in the Rogue One wave.Īs has been illustrated here, no screen time is too little for a LEGO Star Wars set. The less generous reading, discounting the shots during which the ship is too blurry to be distinguishable, drops the total to 12 seconds. In the Brick Fanatics Star Wars Viewing Room, after having watched the battle sequence multiple times with stopwatch in hand, is that the TIE Striker appears for a total of 32 seconds. While present at the battle of Scarif and visible momentarily throughout the in-atmosphere portions of the battle, it is hard to distinguish this vehicle from other craft, including regular TIE Fighters. If a fan decided to divide the cost of a set by its screen time, then 75154 TIE Striker from Rogue One: A Star Wars Story may very well come out as most expensive. At least it gives the ship a play feature… Then additionally, the shuttle’s fuselage contained a table for transforming Anakin into Vader which did not happen until Anakin was returned from Mustafar to the medical facility where the operation took place. First it includes an odd hybrid Anakin Skywalker minifigure that clearly shows his burnt Jedi robes and mutilated flesh, but has him in the Darth Vader helmet which was clearly depicted as the last piece of his armour to be set in place (as the recent 75183 Darth Vader Transformation expertly achieves). 8096 could also make the ‘sets with most inaccuracies’ list. Clocking in with a mere 13 seconds, Palpatine’s mode of transport is one of the most forgettable LEGO Star Wars crafts on this list. Introduced in 2005, this set was notable not only for being a flying wooden boat but for being the first chance to own Luminara Unduli in minifigure form.īriefly seen flying over the hellscape of Mustafar in Revenge of the Sith, this may be one of the hardest ships to even remember having been in the film when the LEGO Group released it in 2010. After that, the Brick Fanatics Super Timer tracks it appearing for an additional 9 seconds if one adds up all the split seconds it is visible during the battle, for a grand total of 19 seconds. There is a long sweeping show which features it that lasts for approximately 10 seconds.

Tracking exactly where this vehicle shows up in the chaotic battle is challenging. It is here that we find our first obscure model that has only had one version of it produced, so far, most likely due to not having a lot of application outside the Wookiee home planet. Seeing Chewbacca’s home planet in all its glory was a delight to those of us who grew up with Timothy Zahn’s novels and had long pictured the planet in our imaginations. The Battle of Kashyyyk is one of the better – of the many good – action sequences in Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. Be on the lookout for another chance to snag one right before 2030… The first version of this craft was released in 2003 before being followed up in 2015. A common theme with these all-too-brief glimpses is that, if a version of the craft was released early on in the LEGO Star Wars theme, an updated version gets produced about 10-15 years later. Never is more than 30% of the ship visible, but if one adds up all the moments where some portion of it is on screen the total rises to just over a minute. However, the engine of Luke’s Skyhopper as well as a portion of its fuselage can be seen in the background as a set piece throughout the entire scene. This is the only time the entire craft is visible on screen. During the scene where Luke first encounters Leia’s message in A New Hope while cleaning up the droids he briefly holds a model of this craft which is visible for about 3 seconds.

This craft’s screentime is somewhat subjective.
