When Doug Chiang openly admits that “only George truly knows what Star Wars design is,” and adds “I do my best, but I don’t always get it 100 per cent right,” he’s not issuing a humble shrug — he’s stating a core creative principle. Read his words here That philosophy is quietly, but profoundly, shaping how Star Wars looks today: from TV to games to new films. Because when you accept that there is no perfect template — only spirit, evolution, and reinterpretation — you give yourself permission to adapt, innovate, and keep a decades-old galaxy alive. The Weight of Legacy: Why Recreating “Classic Star Wars” Is a Trap A. The Original Aesthetic Was Implied, Not Codified George Lucas defined Star Wars design through practical sets, costumes, and visual practicality — before reference artbooks, prequel CGI uniforms, or decades of expanded lore. That original aesthetic was organic: lived-in, functional, and…