PowerWash Simulator 2 gets a Star Wars DLC — clean the Millennium Falcon for $10

By: Anton Kratiuk | today, 18:14
PowerWash Simulator 2 gets a Star Wars DLC — clean the Millennium Falcon for $10

If you've ever wanted to pressure-wash the Millennium Falcon, that's now a $9.99 purchase. PowerWash Simulator 2's Star Wars Pack launches July 16, 2026 on PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch 2, and PC — developed in collaboration with Lucasfilm Games. It's the latest in a string of licensed crossovers for the series, following Warhammer 40K, Tomb Raider, SpongeBob, and Back to the Future.

The droid doing the dirty work

You play as P0-W2, a Class Five cleaning droid who somehow ends up scrubbing for both the Empire and the Rebel Alliance. Six levels span the original trilogy's greatest hits: the Lars Homestead and Mos Eisley Cantina on Tatooine, the frozen battlefields of Hoth, the Death Star, and yes, the Millennium Falcon after the Battle of Endor. Vehicles on the roster include an Imperial Star Destroyer, an X-Wing, and an AT-AT — all rendered in the series' signature close-up, satisfying-to-clean detail.

Mission briefings arrive as in-character messages from Han Solo, Luke Skywalker, Owen Lars, and others. The pack also bundles ten new achievements and cosmetic skins for P0-W2 and your cleaning gear.

What you get and what it costs

The Star Wars Pack is priced at $9.99 in the US and £7.99 in the UK, per the official announcement. Xbox Game Pass subscribers can access the base game without an extra charge, but the DLC is a separate purchase on all platforms.

Alongside the paid content, Update 1.3 drops a free level called the Caldeira Chronicles — a bowling alley in Pin-City — available to all players on the same date.

The bigger picture

Brighton-based FuturLab is self-publishing PowerWash Simulator 2 after its Square Enix partnership wrapped up in June 2026. The Lucasfilm Games deal fits a clear pattern: high-recognition IP attached to a low-barrier game. At $10, the Star Wars Pack is aimed squarely at players who might not normally touch a simulator but will absolutely clean a Wookiee-adjacent spacecraft. The DLC's story framing — a neutral cleaning droid caught between galactic factions — keeps the tone light and the premise self-aware.