By: J. Korr, HoloNet Archives Published: Reclamation Day, 42 ABY
5 out of 5 bent mop handles. Build it. Break it. Dawn again.
"Dawnhold" is that moment between exhaustion and clarity. It is the purgatory of Star Wars . Dawnhold: LEGO Star Wars II was pulled from shelves when LucasArts realized it contained no recognizable characters except for a background cameo of Willrow Hood (the guy with the ice cream maker on Cloud City). Today, a sealed copy sells for 40,000 credits on the black market. dawnhold LEGO Star Wars II
But those who have played it say it’s the truest LEGO game ever made. Because in the end, all Star Wars is just plastic. And all plastic eventually needs to be swept up.
The objective? "Console Him."
The level takes place in a grey void. There are no walls, no enemies, only a single LEGO Obi-Wan Kenobi floating in the lotus position, stuck in a T-pose. He doesn’t move. He doesn’t attack. He just slowly rotates.
Before The Skywalker Saga and its sprawling open worlds, before The Complete Saga ironed out the glitches, there was a strange, purple-hued cartridge that sat on the shelves for exactly six weeks in the autumn of 2006. Its name was Dawnhold: LEGO Star Wars II . Break it
If you find an original copy today, don’t clean the dust off the contacts. The dust is part of the mystery. While the first LEGO Star Wars faithfully (and hilariously) retold the Prequel Trilogy, the official LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy gave us the classic adventures of Luke, Leia, and Han. But Dawnhold was different. It wasn't a sequel to the gameplay—it was a parallel construct .