Why Disney World’s Star Wars Land Is Not Changing.

Disney just made the bombshell announcement that they’re finally “unlocking” the timeline of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge to include original trilogy characters, classic era storytelling, John Williams’ iconic scores, and more…at Disneyland.
Unsurprisingly, this has many Walt Disney World fans wondering when the changes will come to the version of the land (known colloquially among fans as Batuu East) at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. It’s a move we’ve seen several times now with changes to Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, as Imagineering and Lucasfilm most definitely have not been “fair to Florida” with Star Wars stuff.
Fortunately, we have answers! Well, not so much answers as explanations. And also, not satisfying ones. (Don’t say we didn’t warn you!) But we did attend a virtual briefing earlier this week that featured a panel with Walt Disney Imagineering and Lucasfilm creative executives. During that, leadership further outlined these sweeping changes, offering additional context and answers to questions–including what’s up with Walt Disney World’s Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge…
In case you missed it, or don’t want to sift through all of the other articles for news pertaining to Disneyland, here’s a rundown of the key changes coming to Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge in California starting April 29, 2026:
- Rolling back the timeline and bring new storylines to life on Batuu, spanning multiple eras of the planet’s rich history. These updates will make the Galactic Civil War and New Republic, as well as the Age of the Resistance and First Order, part of the story in Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge.
- Introducing Darth Vader, Han Solo, Leia Organa and Luke Skywalker as permanent inhabitants of Batuu, in addition to existing characters (albeit in their own ‘regions’ of the land to preserve thematic integrity to the greatest extent possible).
- The addition of beloved scores from legendary composer John Williams, pulling themes from the first six films.
- Updates to buildings and shops throughout the land, including the installation of new props and graphics to better reflect a broader history of Batuu with the new storylines.
Again, none of this is happening at Walt Disney World (for now). The only upcoming change that’s been announced is the Mandalorian and Baby Yoda Mission for Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run, which debuts on May 22, 2026 (same date the movie is released).
It’s been a while since we’ve heard any updates on that attraction overlay, ride reimagining or whatever it’s considered, so maybe we’re due another update on that. And maybe along with that update, Walt Disney World will make its own announcement about additions. But don’t count on it.
During our briefing roundtable with Imagineers and Lucasfilm, those reps specifically said the above changes are only coming to Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at Disneyland. Spokespeople for Disneyland likewise confirmed the same.
When asked the obvious question (why?!), Imagineers and Lucasfilm explained that Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge was always envisioned as a “platform for storytelling” that could be a framework for projecting a variety of different and upcoming stories. That this felt like a wonderful time to focus on the classic era, especially with the Mandalorian movie coming out and the upcoming 50th anniversary of Star Wars.
They further explained that having the two coasts operate on different timelines would allow visitors to each coast to experience different points in time in the history of Batuu. That, essentially, it would encourage guests to visit both Walt Disney World and Disneyland, and reward those who do.
Doug Chiang, Senior Vice President and Executive Design Director, Lucasfilm added this:
“With the expansion of the Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge timeline at Disneyland to include classic characters from other Star Wars eras, fans will have a unique opportunity to live the Star Wars experience in an even bigger way. Every new detail, no matter how small, will be meticulously recreated to ensure an authentic experience. From iconic heroes and villains to droids and aliens, this next phase offers an unparalleled opportunity to immerse yourself in the Star Wars saga. I’ve had the tremendous pleasure of working side by side with the amazing Imagineering team, and I’m continually impressed by their passion for immersive storytelling—a passion that parallels our films.”
As far as an official answer goes, that’s pretty much it. See? I warned you that it wouldn’t be satisfying. That’s the full extent of what Disney and Lucasfilm have had to say on the changes at Disneyland vs. Walt Disney World. Fortunately, we can speculate a bit further.
From my perspective, there are a few possible reasons why no changes are being made to Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at Walt Disney World…
First, there’s the face value one that Imagineering and Lucasfilm want different experiences on each coast. If this were 5 years ago, at a time when Disney was cloning everything under the Bright Suns, my reaction to that would be “hahahahaha.”
In the time since, there has actually been a much more concerted effort to have unique experiences on each coast. Disney (finally) recognizes that there are many bi-coastal fans, to the point that everything announced at the last D23 was unique for each.
They aren’t even cloning Pandora to reduce the otherwise astronomical development costs on that. And if Lion King does end up coming to Walt Disney World, it probably won’t be the same log flume as in Paris. (Now that is a new extreme–not cloning international attractions domestically.)
At the same time, Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge is different than all of that. While they didn’t state as much during the briefing, these changes are an implicit admission that the original vision for Batuu didn’t resonate with guests as expected. These changes are happening in response to guest feedback, and I promise you that it’s not as if first-timers in Florida love the sequel trilogy whereas Californians do not. The motivations to make changes are similar on both coasts.
Second, there’s the simple reality that Disneyland has seen many more characters in Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge than Walt Disney World. They got Mandalorian and Baby Yoda first. Following that, Boba Fett, Fennec Shand, Sabine Wren, and Ahsoka have all appeared at Disneyland.
Then there are the BDX “Duckling Droids” that made their first appearance a couple of years ago during Season of the Force at Disneyland, long before being brought to DHS. There’s also the “Shadows of Memory: A Skywalker Saga” projections show, the Baird droid, and other little things I might be forgetting.
The bottom line is that there have been a multitude of little ways Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge has been plussed in California already, even before this. I’m often reminded of this when returning to Walt Disney World after spending time at Disneyland. The vibe is already quite different.
This isn’t really an explanation, though. More a statement of fact, past history, and perception of present atmosphere.
As for the why of the preferential treatment for Batuu West, there have been a lot of excuses/explanations for this over the years. It started with Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser imposing stringent story rules at Walt Disney World, which was a convenient villain in explaining why Disneyland was getting the good stuff. But the practice has continued long after Starcruiser was shuttered, and I’m slightly skeptical that a bunch of offices in space are dictating anything.
Along with that, Walt Disney World leadership is notoriously-averse to limited time entertainment and characters, even when funded by the studio or streaming marketing budgets. There are several reasons for this, some of which actually are reasonable.
It’s our understanding that this explains Mandalorian and Baby Yoda not coming to Walt Disney World until long after they were huge hits at Disneyland. At that point their success was too big for Orlando leadership to ignore, and even then, it was a hard-fought struggle. This is likewise why the less-popular Disney+ characters since have not come, except for limited engagements when DVC is footing the bill.
The tried and true “Walt Disney World is cheap!” excuse is a fun one, but frankly, I don’t think it applies here. For one thing, none of this is limited-time and it almost certainly isn’t coming from a streaming or studio marketing budget. These are permanent timeline changes, the cost of which will presumably pay for themselves over time.
A more plausible explanation is that the Imagineering and Lucasfilm teams that are continuing to develop new creative concepts for Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge are California-based. Even as Imagineering establishes a larger presence in Florida, everything we’ve heard about Star Wars stuff has always been spearheaded by California teams.
It’s easier for them to test characters or have the appropriate support technical staff for the BDX Droids, for example, at Disneyland. It’s a short drive rather than a cross-country flight. The WDI teams who are passionate about Star Wars can come down to Anaheim to tinker with stuff, and they often do.
There’s also the matter of casting. Han Solo, Leia Organa, and Luke Skywalker are all face characters. For the relaunch of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, Disney and Lucasfilm likely want dead ringers for those characters. And although the gap is not what it once was, it’s easier to cast in Southern California. That’s just a practical reality of the two locations.
In my view, this proximity to the park point is likely a contributing factor. I also would never rule out Walt Disney World being cheap, but they do seem to be getting away from that, so I don’t think that’s the likely explanation. That brings us to the last point, which we view as the biggest reason…
Disneyland really needs something for Summer 2026 to drive attendance. Disney’s Hollywood Studios does not.
Honestly, I think it’s as simple as that. Too often as Disney fans, we think about what makes sense from a storytelling or thematic perspective. As we should! But really, decisions so often come down to what’s needed where to drive attendance and hit targets.
Disneyland is in the waning days of the 70th Anniversary, which kind of feels like it’s already become played out (at least from the perspective of driving attendance–I’ve enjoyed the event). This is also likely why we’re seeing incredibly aggressive ticket deals for Californians–the best in roughly a decade!
By contrast, Summer 2026 is jam-packed for Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Here’s a rundown:
- The Walt Disney Studio Lot (reimagined Animation Courtyard)
- “Disney Jr. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Live!” (rad dance party from DCA)
- “The Magic of Disney Animation” (reimagined fan-favorite experience from the 1990s)
- Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Starring the Muppets
- Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run feat. Mandalorian & Baby Yoda
This is on top of “The Little Mermaid – A Musical Adventure” and “Disney Villains: Unfairly Ever After,” which are still new to most Walt Disney World guests since they’re roughly a year old.
This might not seem like a super formidable slate. In fact, if we’re going back to things that debuted a year or so ago, Disneyland probably has more than Disney’s Hollywood Studios. But demographics do differ, and Disneyland still leans more heavily on locals to pick up the slack. Keep in mind, Pandora – World of Avatar, which opened in 2017, is still new to a large percentage of visitors to Walt Disney World.
Accordingly, the simplest and most straightforward explanation is that Disneyland needs something this summer to entice guests to visit, whereas Walt Disney World does not. Disneyland is playing this Star Wars timeline card now; Walt Disney World will hold it until it makes sense.
My guess is that these changes will come to Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge at Walt Disney World sometime in the first half of 2027. This is the timing that makes the most sense for timeline relaxation.
Walt Disney World doesn’t have anything (that we know about yet) in the first half of next year. Tropical Americas is unlikely until the second half of 2027, and Monstropolis won’t open until 2028. That leaves Summer 2027 as the ‘sweet spot’ when Walt Disney World will want/need to drive crowds, while not being overshadowed by the monstrous new additions on the horizon every year that follows.
If we wanted to really put an optimistic spin on this, my additional speculation or wishful thinking would be that Walt Disney World is waiting to make more ambitious and consequential changes all in one fell swoop. In Why Star Wars Land Finally Breaking the Rules is Great, But More Changes Are Needed, we discuss some of the possibilities, which partially revolve around recycling assets and ideas from the failed Starcruiser.
While this is my hope and should not be misconstrued as a rumor, it does make sense. Disneyland can get away with making smaller changes to drive incremental visitation among locals and diehard Star Wars fans. Even though “unlocking” the timeline should be hugely positive, what’s been announced still mostly isn’t going to get people to plan cross-country trips to Walt Disney World. A more marketable suite of changes and additions would be needed.
Walt Disney World could announce something bigger, bolder and better that would accomplish exactly that in Summer 2027. This might be “cope” (as the kids say) for the “be fair to Florida” crew, but we have started to see Walt Disney World outshine Disneyland on some of these type of enhancements in the last year-plus. Just not yet with anything Star Wars-related. Maybe that’ll change soon with an announcement at the 2026 D23 Expo–either way, we’ll keep you posted!
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YOUR THOUGHTS
Do you like having different entry points into the timeline of Batuu at WDW vs. DLR? Do you think Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge should break its own rules at Walt Disney World or stick to the fixed timeline and story? Would you like to hear John Williams’ music in the land? What about encountering Darth Vader and other original trilogy characters? Think Galaxy’s Edge should focus on fun, canon, or a mix of both? Do you agree or disagree with our assessment? Any questions? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!











This is another example of Disney execs being clueless. Why would you not want your most popular characters to be the main attraction at your most popular park?? They’re going to “reward” people who visit both coasts? Really? So families forking over $1000s of dollars to plan a vacation, now receive the reward of spending even more $$$ to fly around the country a 2nd time. The incompetence is truly mind-boggling. You could have different planets, with different experiences. Rides featuring all of the unique characters and storylines. They really dropped the ball on this.
Translation, if it works in California then we’ll make the effort in Florida.
This makes no sense. Original Trilogy was the only thing Star Wars fans wanted. The Sequel Trilogy is a dud. I can understand if they wanted to use Disneyland as a trial balloon, but eventually, Disney World needs to get its own version that can be unique in its own way. The identical Sequel Trilogy Galaxy’s Edge just doesn’t work. Rey and Kylo is a huh? No one cares about their adventures except for a few crazy fans who wanted them to kiss and have a passionate relationship and got a weird awkward scene on Rise of Skywalker Palpatine. A Farce Awakens.
Who made you the official Star Wars fans spokesperson?
Well to be fair, seeing Phasma speaking in French didn’t help her image at all!
A lot of people are leaving California for the “greener pastures” Florida etc. so like Tim says, “makes no sense”. Besides WDW is Disney’s bread and butter property. Sorry to be so negative. Enjoy your content.
This explanation makes perfect sense to me. It’s always funny how fans (and that also applies to professional sports), acknowledge that they fan a professional enterprise, but then get upset when these behave consistent with that. So, yes – Occam’s Razor – this makes sense.
I actually appreciate having completely different attractions at different parks. Even if I won’t ever make it to most parks, it’s something to aspire to. As carbon copies, that would never cross my mind. But I had to laugh how they are selling this as a positive. And also completely glossing over the inconsistency of why it was done and how.
As a fan, I don’t care so much for timeline or original characters, as long as there is some (as in more than essentially nothing) live action in GE WDW. And if face characters are difficult, there are plenty of costumed options from any timeline. I only saw Mando/Grogu once in HS. While this is one of my favorite characters, they were immediately mobbed to such an extent that it wasn’t enjoyable anymore. If there was more happening all day, one may actually get immersed in the sacred timeline and setting. Instead of the rare spectacles that these moments are today.
I agree that it would be cool to have different experiences SWGE on each coast, if there were a concerted effort to actually make them unique and differentiated.
This is more along the lines of a quick fix to boost attendance at Disneyland while maintaining the (cheaper) status quo at Walt Disney World, and then offering an ex post facto excuse for the change at one and not the other. That’s why this comes across as (IMO) lame.
Now, if Walt Disney World’s 2027 (or whenever) announcement for its own soft reboot of SWGE ends up being materially different from this so as to offer a unique experience, then I will be impressed. And that’ll be true even if it includes Darth Vader (because any change made is almost certainly going to include Vader) and there’s other minor overlap.
Like I said, I’ve been impressed by the purposeful move to do fewer clones between the two coasts. But this isn’t that. At least, not yet.
I think it’s because wdw is cheap, the villains show is a perfect example of that. The costuming in that show looks like they. Are from the defunct party city, I think they lost a lot of creativity in the costuming area that they have not replaced
I think the management at Disney World are mostly MBA’s who look at how they can get the maximum from their customers wallets, with minimal outlay. Its an experiment in enshitification to see how many cuts they can make before it has enough impact on guest numbers. So far they are winning. Magic express, extra evening hours, fastpass, free/discounted magicbands with resort stay, merch shipping to your room etc.
Feels true
Feels true
This kind of applies to all aspects of WDW vs Land. I’m not sure it’s them being “cheap”, could just be an outcome of having a much larger space and logistically many more obstacles to overcome. The old quote of Disneyland being a theme park and WDW being a city kind of speaks to this.
A difference between Disneyland and WDW is that Disneyland is in the entertainment capital of the world. Movie and pop culture journalists, influencers, celebrities, and film-makers of every type are clustered there. The failure of SWGE as an entertainment product is more painful and humiliating in that market. There’s more critical analysis of Disney’s decisions at an entertainment-industry level on the West coast. In Orlando, it’s the theme park fan capital of the world. But this is a lot about executives, careers, stock price, corporate reputation, credibility in the entertainment industry, reigniting Star Wars brand confidence in Hollywood.
I was hoping for an excuse for not bringing over OT characters over yet that wouldn’t also be an excuse to never bring over the current DL-only characters that Tom mentioned. (I just think 2027 makes too much sense for an OT Hollywood Studios premiere for a lot of reasons, regardless of what they’re saying now.)
I personally love that they will now be different…it seems to be the direction the company has been going lately by avoiding clones. That last D23 it seemed every resort around the world was getting something unique. Better for the fans for sure.
Dude!!! Seriously? You’ve got bigger problems than Batu background music. That bounty hunter is clearly checking out your wife.
My advice? Draw first and let Lucas straighten it out later.
she’s not concerned because Megatron is about to bite right through his boot,..
As someone who visits both coasts occasionally (and prefers DLR as I’m a park person, not a resort person), I love all of the differentiation between the FL/CA parks. Cloned attractions do not make me happy (even different queue experiences, like with MMRR, are appreciated). So this is great news from my perspective.
And if any or all of The Mandalorian & Grogu (2026), Star Wars: Starfighter (2027), or Star Wars: New Jedi Order (2027) films are smash hits, WDW will have “kept its powder dry” to potentially lean into those characters/stories/musical scores a little more (which align more closely with the Batuu timeline). Or, if those aren’t as successful, WDW can file follow DLR’s lead on the OG characters/music with the benefit of having some of the operational and thematic kinks worked out. Honestly I think this was a good plan by Disney, as well as being self-serving in giving fans everywhere a special reason to visit Disneyland.
Also, for those East Coasters dead set against visiting DLR, I would suggest you give it a try sometime. It’s pretty awesome and worth the flight.
I had the same first thought as David – why did they never even fix the cannons at WDW? That’s a pretty major detraction from the second half of RotR. I don’t buy the explanation of “different experiences at both coasts” when the East Coast is pretty clearly getting the inferior treatment, not just different treatment.
We went in June and they WERE working and I was shocked. i hadn’t seen them operational since I did my college program and the ride just opened. We just got back from a trip at the end of December and they weren’t working again 🙁
Yeah, there is nothing (almost) ‘east’ about Florida except for simple geography. Florida is so, so much different from anything even related the ‘east coast’ that it cannot logically be associated therewith. Hell, Florida is even different from The South. It’s its own area. Having lived there twice and living and working all over the country, FL is FL and that’s it. It should be referred to as Batuu and Batuu West, if anything, like VA and W Va…
Miami, Tampa and Orlando are the East Coast, Jacksonville is Duuuval, and the rest of Florida is the South. This is the way.
(In all seriousness, I agree that Florida is a different beast. My point was more than it’s multiple different beasts, as the major metro areas are very different from the rest of the state, and even one another.)
Can’t argue with you there, Tom. Most states are like that. I really like San Antonio because though it’s the 7th largest city it doesn’t feel that way at all. Except for the crappy urban drivers…
Ugh. Does Disney not realize that many of us who live on the East Coast do not care about and have no intention to ever visit Disneyland? Disneyland is not, and will never be, on our bucket list. It’s time for Disney to show Disney World the same love Disney shows Disneyland.
I meant to add “[I]t’s not like Disney has no competition in Central Florida!”
You’re missing out if you’re a Disney fan. It’s like saying you have the Great Smoky Mountains and Atlantic City and the Brooklyn Bridge on the East Coast, so why would you care about Yosemite, Las Vegas, or the Golden Gate Bridge?
I say this as someone who lives much closer to WDW than to Disneyland.
If you’re a die hard Disney fan, you’re really limiting your life experience with this approach. Each resort has so many unique and incredible offerings.
Unless the main things you love about Walt Disney World are Epcot, Animal Kingdom, and all of the other stuff outside of Magic Kingdom and DHS, you’re only hurting yourself by not checking out the other parks.
Waiting for all the good stuff to come to you is a fools errand, and would be no matter where you were located.
Just as people accustomed to Disneyland could get a lot out of Epcot and Animal Kingdom, so too could you get a lot out of Disneyland-and every other Disney destination around the globe. I’ve been to all of them and I’m a richer fan for having made the journey.
Pete and Trent, I agree that it’s a totally different experience going right or left. Locations, the atmosphere, everything. Been far too long since I went westerly to see the little park! But I’m looking at going much, much farther west to see a park or two I’ve never been to! Hopefully no Gojira attacks while there though…
Will, DLP was awesome! Well, except for the food which was odd, being in France. It was like a caricature of bad carnival fare to us. But the park is incredible. The level of detail, the arguably better, longer rides in several cases, etc. It was March and a bit too chilly when we were there. Next time, summer! Hotel and park tickets were like $85 a day for us, at the Cars-themed hotel.
You are really missing out on a magical experience with this attitude. DL is special in a unique way.
Does California perhaps have MORE live performers willing to work for low pay, in hopes they make it as a Hollywood star someday, as compared with Florida? If California has a much deeper bench of willing applicants, perhaps that’s part of the reason the “vibe” is so different at the swampy outpost MUCH further away from Coruscant, I mean Anaheim.
During the Christmas Day Parade moments set at the Millennium Falcon, I couldn’t help but think that was the only time I’d seen human performers at that stage-like area. When I was there in person at WDW the “immersive” atmosphere was rather lonely.
The cannons still aren’t fixed on ROTR at Disney World. Whomp.
Honestly not sure whether to file that one under “WDW is cheap” or “WDW is resistant to even brief refurbishments, especially on monetized attractions, unless absolutely necessary.” Both tried and true genres.
I lean towards the former on this one, especially since they fixed it during overnights at DLR.
Based on the logic of incentivizing guests to visit both WDW and Disneyland, surely WDW will get a different story, theme, and ride for Indiana Jones, yes? BWAHAHAHAHA!
It absolutely is.
This is perhaps a better example than Pandora, as the track layout would make for an easy 1:1 clone.
As someone that lives on the east coast of the real world, I sincerely hope Disney doesn’t believe their own story about how plussing only one version of Galaxy’s Edge isn’t a slight, just an incentive to fly cross country to Disneyland. I agree it’s probably just an easy “lever” to flip down the road when Walt Disney World needs something new to promote, but I think it’s another unforced error that drives the story that once again Florida is being left out of something new.