The galaxy far, far away has entered the Monopoly board, which is probably terrible news for family peace, credit balances, and anyone who trusts a Sith Lord with property.
Monopoly: Star Wars Heroes vs. Villains is out now and can be ordered here. bringing a new Star Wars twist to the classic board game.
And yes, that means the galaxy has found yet another way to turn friendship into a negotiation crisis.
This version of Monopoly takes the familiar property-trading formula and throws it into a heroes-versus-villains setup, with players choosing sides, building teams, and battling for control of the board with iconic Star Wars characters.
So if normal Monopoly was not already dangerous enough, this one adds lightsabers, Force powers, and the possibility that Darth Vader now has opinions about rent.
Star Wars Meets Monopoly, Because Apparently the Galaxy Needed More Conflict
The idea is simple: classic Monopoly, but with a Star Wars team-based twist.
Instead of just moving around the board, buying spaces, collecting money, and quietly becoming the problem at the table, players can build teams of heroes and villains and use character powers to change the flow of the game.
That is the part that makes this more than just another themed board.
A good Star Wars Monopoly version needs to do more than replace streets with planets and call it a day. Heroes vs. Villains at least sounds like it understands that Star Wars works best when personalities clash, alliances get messy, and someone absolutely refuses to make a fair trade.
Very authentic, honestly.
A Small Star Wars Release, But a Fun One
This is obviously not trying to compete with big 2026 Star Wars game releases like Star Wars: Zero Company or Star Wars: Galactic Racer.
It is Monopoly.
With Star Wars characters.
That is the whole pitch.
But Star Wars has always worked surprisingly well when it gets dropped into strange formats. LEGO games, mobile squad builders, racing games, pinball tables, card games, and board game adaptations all have their place in the wider galaxy. You can see just how wide that range gets in our complete list of all Star Wars games ever made.
For anyone who wants to pick it up, Monopoly: Star Wars Heroes vs. Villains can be ordered here.
Just be warned.
The real villain is not always Vader, Maul, or Palpatine.
Sometimes it is the person across the table who refuses to trade the one space you need, smiles politely, and says, “That will cost you extra.”







