A Galaxy Far, Far Away Is Getting Very Clean This Summer
PowerWash Simulator 2 is heading into Star Wars territory with a newly announced Star Wars DLC, due out sometime this summer on all existing platforms. Instead of your usual anonymous cleaner, you play as P0‑W2, a Class Five cleaning droid who quietly witnesses the events of the original trilogy while blasting away grime. The pack is positioned as a proper Star Wars game crossover, not just a cosmetic tie‑in, and arrives shortly after the game’s first Adventure Time collaboration. FuturLab describes it as a set of dedicated scenarios built around iconic ships, bases and droids from A New Hope through Return of the Jedi. For Malaysian players who already treat PowerWash Simulator 2 as a chill, after‑work ritual, this DLC looks like an easy excuse to return to that familiar white‑noise power washer—only this time, it’s humming aboard Rebel cruisers and Imperial capital ships.

From Tatooine Homesteads to Hoth’s Echo Base: How the Campaign Is Structured
The Star Wars DLC works as a compact campaign or level pack inside PowerWash Simulator 2, built around six bespoke scenarios rather than a reskin of existing maps. FuturLab promises a journey “from the sandstorms of Tatooine to the ice fields of Hoth, with a smattering of stops along the Outer Rim,” giving fans a clear tour of original trilogy locations. Confirmed highlights include the Lars Homestead on Tatooine and the Rebels’ Echo Base on Hoth, both recreated as full, grime-caked environments instead of simple background art. At least one Imperial Star Destroyer and one Rebel cruiser are also implied, suggesting a mix of tight interior corridors and large exterior hull sections to scrub down. Co-op support carries over, so you can tackle these missions solo or with a friend, making it ideal for a relaxed Star Wars night in.

Iconic Ships, Bases and Droids You’ll Be Power-Washing
The appeal of this Star Wars DLC is very specific: you’re not swinging a lightsaber, you’re degreasing the things everyone else uses. Confirmed objectives include polishing X‑Wings and cleaning a Star Destroyer bridge, alongside tidying up Rebel hangars and sandblasted farm buildings on Tatooine. The campaign frames P0‑W2 and its fellow labour droids as the unsung maintenance crew keeping the war effort running while heroes and villains duel nearby. That means expect to spray down engines choked with asteroid dust, slime trails that suspiciously resemble Jabba’s palace mess, and Outer Rim corridors that look one blaster fight away from a safety violation. Fans can mentally connect each object to famous scenes—like pre-battle X‑Wing line‑ups or the frozen corridors of Echo Base—while enjoying the oddly satisfying work of restoring them to a spotless, movie-poster sheen.
Why Cosy Cleaning Works for Stressed Malaysian Star Wars Fans
PowerWash Simulator 2 has been praised as “blissfully engaging” and “charmingly ludicrous” precisely because its loop is low pressure: point, spray, listen to the white noise and watch dirt disappear. For Malaysian Star Wars fans juggling long commutes, studies or late shifts, that cosy, slow-burn gameplay offers a break from sweaty ranked matches or complex RPGs. The Star Wars DLC builds on that by letting you immerse yourself in the universe without needing twitch reflexes or encyclopedic lore knowledge. You can share the controller with family, or hop into online co-op for a chill mamak-night session, cleaning Echo Base while chatting about the latest shows. If you enjoyed the first game’s DLCs, this feels like a step up: bigger, more cinematic environments that still respect the series’ chill pacing and satisfying, detail-driven cleaning mechanics.
A Strong Crossover Fit – And What to Expect at Launch in Malaysia
FuturLab has already shown it can handle quirky crossovers with its recent Adventure Time pack, but Star Wars feels particularly well-suited to PowerWash Simulator 2’s obsession with tiny details. The original trilogy locations are full of textured metal, sand-scoured machinery and grimy industrial spaces that naturally reward careful cleaning passes. Licensed packs like this may not remain available forever, so fans keen on the Star Wars DLC may want to grab it once a firm release date is announced. The base game is currently available on PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S and Nintendo Switch 2, and the Star Wars pack is set to arrive on all of them this summer. Whether you’re a casual Malaysian gamer looking for something relaxing, or a hardcore Star Wars fan curious about a different kind of galaxy tour, this crossover looks surprisingly logical—and very satisfying.
