LEGO Star Wars 2014 product boxes shown together for a Supermarket Together custom products mod.

This Supermarket Together Mod Turns LEGO Star Wars Into Shelf Stock

Most Star Wars mods understand the obvious fantasy.

Lightsabers. Blasters. Clones. Sith. Space battles. Darth Vader arriving to ruin everyone’s workday.

This one understands a far stranger truth:

Someone has to stock the shelves.

A new Supermarket Together mod called Lego Star Wars 2014 – Custom Products adds 16 LEGO Star Wars sets from 2014 into the co-op supermarket management game. Created by AriZume, the mod turns classic LEGO Star Wars boxes into actual store products players can sell, price, arrange, and presumably panic about when customers start treating an Imperial Star Destroyer like an impulse purchase.

That is not the usual Star Wars gaming fantasy.

It might be funnier.

Store shelves stocked with LEGO Star Wars sets
A wall of LEGO Star Wars sets neatly displayed in a retail store. Brightly labeled prices make it easy to browse different models.

LEGO Star Wars, but Make It Retail

The mod includes a very specific wave of 2014 LEGO Star Wars products, ranging from smaller battle packs to bigger vehicles and ships.

Among the included sets are Death Star Troopers, Kashyyyk Troopers, Utapau Troopers, General Grievous’ Wheel Bike, Droid Gunship, AT-AP, AT-AT, Imperial Star Destroyer, and MTT.

So yes, your supermarket can now stock enough Clone Wars and Imperial-era plastic to make any toy aisle look dangerously expensive.

The best part is how weirdly grounded it is. According to the mod page, the products use real-world box dimensions and original MSRP pricing, with prices multiplied by two for the game. That means this is not just “here are some Star Wars boxes.” It is Star Wars retail logistics.

The Force is strong with inventory management.

LEGO Star Wars sets on retail store shelves
A retail display filled with LEGO Star Wars sets at various prices. The shelves showcase multiple spaceship-themed kits against a brick wall backdrop.

The Odd Corner of Star Wars Modding

This is exactly the kind of mod that makes the complete history of Star Wars games feel wider than just official releases.

Star Wars does not only live in big budget action games, tactical Clone Wars projects, MMOs, and mobile squads. It also lives in weird little community creations where someone decides that Supermarket Together needs LEGO Star Wars shelf stock from 2014.

And honestly, why not?

Star Wars has always been part movie, part toy aisle, part collector obsession, and part “how much shelf space do I have left before this becomes a domestic issue?”

This mod simply makes that literal.

Store shelf displaying LEGO Star Wars sets
LEGO Star Wars sets neatly arranged on retail shelves. Multiple price points make it easy to find the perfect build.

How to Get It Working

The mod requires BepInEx and Custom Products before installation. Once installed, the LEGO Star Wars products appear in the store, ready to be sold like any other supermarket item.

It is fan-made, unofficial, and not affiliated with LEGO or Lucasfilm.

But as a tiny piece of Star Wars gaming weirdness, it absolutely works.

Because sometimes the galaxy does not need another Jedi.

Sometimes it needs someone to decide where the AT-AT boxes go.

LEGO Star Wars sets on retail display shelf
LEGO Star Wars sets neatly displayed with budget-friendly prices. A brick wall backdrop adds a modern retail vibe.

Author

  • Woman in Jedi cosplay holding blue lightsaber

    NovaraSkuara is a dedicated Star Wars fan, console-focused gamer, and active cosplayer with years of firsthand experience in gaming, costume culture, and fan communities. From family gaming sessions to convention appearances in detailed Old Republic-inspired cosplay, she brings practical knowledge, personal insight, and a genuine connection to the Star Wars universe in everything she writes.

Novara Skuara

NovaraSkuara is a dedicated Star Wars fan, console-focused gamer, and active cosplayer with years of firsthand experience in gaming, costume culture, and fan communities. From family gaming sessions to convention appearances in detailed Old Republic-inspired cosplay, she brings practical knowledge, personal insight, and a genuine connection to the Star Wars universe in everything she writes.