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KIA
The global collectibles market entered 2025 worth well over $300 billion, with forecasts climbing toward $480.75 billion by 2033. Licensed merchandise, meanwhile, remains a vast commercial machine in its own right, estimated at $351.2 billion in 2026. That is the scale now sitting behind fandom. On May the Fourth, Star Wars makes the shift especially visible, because this is no longer a market led only by toys, popcorn buckets and mass retail churn. It is increasingly being shaped by a more exacting buyer: one interested in scarcity, design, provenance and objects with enough confidence to live beautifully in the world.
1980 UK Quad poster for The Empire Strikes Back Estimated at £10,000–£20,000, the 1980 UK Quad for The Empire Strikes Back captures the sharper end of the Star Wars collector market, where rarity, design and provenance now carry as much weight as fandom.
Propstore.com
The cleanest proof point is already on the block. Propstore’s current sale includes a 1980 UK Quad poster for The Empire Strikes Back estimated at £10,000 - £20,000, an object that places Star Wars firmly in the territory of serious graphic culture and wall power rather than routine memorabilia. The broader auction tells the same story, with a 1991 Soviet-release three-panel poster estimated at £2,500 - £5,000, plus screen-used pieces such as a Stormtrooper helmet from The Rise of Skywalker and a Resistance bomb prop from The Last Jedi, each estimated at £2,000 - £4,000.
Citizen Star Wars Mandalorian and Grogu watch Citizen’s Mandalorian and Grogu watch brings a more accessible kind of polish to the category, folding Star Wars into a well-made everyday timepiece rather than treating it as novelty.
Citizen
1. The 1980 UK Quad for The Empire Strikes Back might be the smartest object in circulation this week because it has all the things this market rewards: rarity, scale, graphic authority and a direct line back to the trilogy’s most tonally decisive chapter. Scarcity is sharpened by the survival of untrimmed examples, with trimmed versions historically used for London Underground display.
2. The Kia EV9 offers a very 2026 answer to luxury fandom. Through Kia’s digital store, official Star Wars Display Themes now let compatible vehicles transform the instrument cluster and infotainment environment with franchise-led visuals. Kia announced late 2025 that its Disney partnership would culminate in a Star Wars rollout, with up to 30 themes available by the end of 2026.
3. When horology goes galactic - the grail tier sits in watchmaking. At the summit of this market sit the Kross Studio Star Wars tourbillons, which did the hard work of proving that Star Wars could be translated into serious watchmaking rather than simply licensed onto it. The original Death Star Tourbillon launched at $150,000 in 2021 in an edition of 10, while later Kross releases such as the Boba Fett Collector Set were priced at $120,000. They now belong to the grail tier of the category, with secondary-market asking prices for the Death Star watch still sitting in the mid-$100,000s.
A fresh take comes from Citizen’s Star Wars Mandalorian and Grogu Inspired Watch, which folds the franchise into a far more accessible but still considered proposition. At approx $400, it uses Citizen’s Eco-Drive movement and builds the reference through the Mudhorn signet, Mandalorian helmet cues and Grogu detailing.
Regal Robot Millennium Falcon cockpit desk chair Regal Robot’s Millennium Falcon cockpit chair turns one of cinema’s most recognisable interiors into a surprisingly handsome office seat, giving the owner a quieter, more private kind of fandom.
Regal Robot
4. Regal Robot’s Millennium Falcon Cockpit Rolling Desk Chair, listed at $1,499, brings Star Wars into the home with far more polish than the category usually permits. Inspired by the Falcon’s pilot seat, it combines textured brown faux leather, warm microsuede and a rolling office base in a way that still reads, at first glance, as a handsome executive chair. That is the charm of it. To anyone else, it is simply a strong piece of office furniture. To the owner, it carries a far more private pleasure, the small, daily thrill of sitting down to work while quietly tipping the hat to one of cinema’s most beloved cockpits.
Propstore’s own retrospective on 2025 described it as a landmark year for Star Wars, with Darth Vader’s screen-matched lightsaber from The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi selling for $3.6 million, Chewbacca’s photo-matched bowcaster achieving $768,600, and Luke Skywalker’s screen-matched Medal of Yavin reaching $378,000. This is where the market stops behaving like fandom and starts behaving more like art, archive and cultural asset.
There remains strong appetite for larger-format objects too, but the test is always the same: the piece has to justify the space it takes. The oversized item that works is never merely “big.” It has to feel architecturally comfortable, materially credible and scarce enough to avoid looking like a prop warehouse spill. This is the territory where the right object becomes part cinema history, part interior statement.
May 4th is a date that still carries the familiar Star Wars fan ritual, but the market around it has grown up too, and some fans with the cash to spend, are also looking for design, scarcity and story-telling.
As a pop-culture memorabilia collector too, I always want my treasures to protect my purchase value and to appreciate. I recommend:
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