FuturLab is taking PowerWash Simulator 2 to a galaxy far, far away this summer with a paid Star Wars Pack DLC made in partnership with Lucasfilm Games. It’s set during the original Star Wars trilogy and sends players to scrub down iconic locations and vehicles—including Hoth, Tatooine’s Lars Homestead, and even the bridge of a Super Star Destroyer. For a series built on the oddly hypnotic satisfaction of turning grime into gleam, this is the kind of crossover that feels both ridiculous and completely inevitable—and it might be the biggest “I can’t believe this is real” collab the franchise has landed yet.
What’s in the Star Wars Pack DLC (So Far)
The headline hook is clear: six new cleaning jobs pulled from the Original Trilogy era—specifically spanning the events of A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi. FuturLab has confirmed three of those jobs outright, and they’re exactly the kind of fan-servicey, detail-rich playgrounds that PowerWash thrives on:
- Tatooine – Lars Homestead (yes, that moisture farm)
- Hoth – Rebel Alliance base (Echo Base) in the ice fields
- Super Star Destroyer – Bridge (the Empire’s command-center grime problem is apparently severe)
On top of those, the DLC will also have you cleaning Star Wars ships, with X-wings specifically called out. The reveal materials also strongly suggest more spacecraft-focused work is coming, but the remaining locations haven’t been formally named yet.
What makes this pack feel like more than a simple skin swap is the framing: you’re not “a person with a power washer” awkwardly dropped into Star Wars. You’re a droid, and the whole thing leans into that fantasy.
You Play as P0-W2, a Cleaning Droid With Custom Gear
In the Star Wars Pack, you take on the role of P0-W2, described as a Class Five cleaning/labor droid. FuturLab is also giving the DLC its own bespoke kit: a custom power washer designed specifically for this crossover, plus a new character skin and cleaning tool tied to the pack.
The Steam description goes hard on the tone, too—suggesting your “average assignment” escalates into being pulled into the conflict, first doing the Empire’s dirty work, then “clearing the way for the Rebel Alliance.” It’s not yet clear how story-driven that is in practice (PowerWash has historically been more about vibe and light narrative flavor than cutscene-heavy campaigns), but the implication is that each job may have contextual dressing beyond “here’s a big thing, clean it.”
And yes, the DLC is designed for both single-player and multiplayer, matching the base game’s co-op-friendly DNA. If you’ve ever wanted to turn a Star Wars hangar into a group therapy session where four friends quietly erase filth for 45 minutes, this is your moment.
Release Window, Price, and Platforms
The PowerWash Simulator 2: Star Wars Pack launches in summer 2026. There’s no specific date yet.
Pricing has been confirmed at:
- $9.99
- £7.99
- €9.99
Platforms confirmed for the DLC include:
- PlayStation 5
- Xbox Series X|S
- Nintendo Switch 2
- Windows PC
And for anyone keeping track of where PowerWash Simulator 2 itself is playable right now: it’s already available on PC (including Steam, Epic Games Store, and Microsoft Store), PS5 (with PS5 Pro support noted), Xbox Series X|S, and Nintendo Switch 2.
Why This Crossover Actually Makes Perfect Sense
PowerWash crossovers work when they give you surfaces that are instantly recognizable and packed with nooks, greebles, panels, and “what is that thing?” sci-fi texture. Star Wars is basically the holy grail of that design language. The franchise’s lived-in aesthetic—sand-blasted Tatooine tech, frost-caked Hoth infrastructure, oily hangar grime, Imperial sterility—was built for the exact kind of slow, methodical detail-cleaning that PowerWash players obsess over.
It also helps that FuturLab isn’t pretending the water logistics make sense. The whole concept is inherently absurd (you’re power washing a moisture farm on a desert planet; you’re hosing down military hardware mid-war), and the marketing copy leans into that playful contradiction. That’s PowerWash at its best: taking something serious-looking and turning it into a zen comedy of labor.
From a broader perspective, this is also a sign of how aggressively Star Wars game collaborations are ramping up. Lucasfilm Games has been increasingly willing to plug Star Wars into established live-service ecosystems and popular “comfort games,” and PowerWash is a particularly smart fit: it’s non-violent, widely accessible, and built around a loop that’s easy to expand with new themed jobs.
What Remains Unknown
Even with the announcement, there are still a few big questions hanging in the air:
- The other three jobs: six are confirmed, but only three locations/jobs have been officially revealed so far.
- Exact release date: it’s still just summer 2026, with no day-and-month.
- How narrative-heavy it is: the Empire-to-Rebellion setup might be flavor text, or it might hint at more structured mission context.
- The full feature list: beyond the custom washer, skin/tool, and co-op support, unique mechanics (if any) haven’t been detailed.
If FuturLab sticks the landing on environmental detail—and Star Wars practically guarantees there’ll be plenty to obsess over—this could be the rare crossover DLC that doesn’t just feel like a novelty. It could be a genuinely top-tier set of jobs for PowerWash Simulator 2, and a perfect excuse to lose another weekend to the cleanest kind of escapism.



