Star Wars Screen Entertainment



Star Wars Screen Entertainment was a product of LucasArts Entertainment Company released on 1994.

It was a CD-ROM including different A New Hope-thematic options to use as screen savers, including:


 * Blueprints: Blueprints of ships including details, plus indications of where is each of its parts (e.g. hyperdrive in Millennium Falcon).
 * Cantina: A static photo of the Mos Eisley Cantina, then the system chooses one of the characters in the cantina and explains his or her story.
 * Character biographies: Similar with the main characters in A New Hope.
 * Darth Vader: The message "The Dark Lord of the Sith approaches" followed by a static close-up of Darth Vader, adding voice and/or breathing.
 * Death Star Trench: An animation of the trench, at high speed. Users can choose if they want only an X-Wing, only a TIE fighter, or both (in this case, the X-Wing will be chasing the TIE).
 * Hyperspace: A semi-static picture of the Millennium Falcon cockpit, with moving stars outside. Suddenly, Han Solo moves his arm and the stars become lines as if entering the hyperspace. After a while, Han moves again and the lines become stars. Chewbacca periodically howls.
 * Imperial Clock: The "clock" used by Grand Moff Tarkin while reaching Yavin 4, adding a real 24- or 12-hour digital clock.
 * Jawas: Small Jawas, droids, banthas, womp rats and Tusken Raiders move through the screen. The Jawas sometimes "open" the screen to see if there's anything of value after it. Tusken raiders "scare" the Jawas, who stop doing whatever they were doing to run away.
 * Lightsaber Duel: Similar to Jawas, it features small Darth Vader attacking small Obi-Wan Kenobi.
 * Poster Art: It features different posters from A New Hope.
 * Rebel Clock: Similar to Imperial clock, with Dodonna's vision of the Battle of Yavin. It is analogical. The "Death Star" marks minutes, Yavin 4 marks hours, Death Star might be over Yavin.
 * Scrolling Text: Text to the infinity like when beginning a movie. User can customize text (write own text).
 * Space Battles: As seen from some window in a cruiser, small dots move against each other and shoot beams. Also, Mon Calamari cruisers, Nebulon-B frigates and Star Destroyers drift slowly across the screen.
 * Storyboards: Real storyboards from the movie, including the script.

Some of the information on the biographies became out-of-date after the release of the 1997 re-release and the prequels.

The Screen Entertainment does not include any game allowing interactivity. However, the user might customize some aspects of the screen savers (Number of stars, speed, etc.)

The icon to execute the program was an icon of R2-D2, which was also used in the Jawas option.

The screen saver was available for Windows operating system 3.0 or over as well as for Macintosh system 7.0 and above. It was released in CD-ROM and 3.5" diskette formats.

Behind the scenes
In the Jawas and Lightsaber Duel Options the images are from the video game Super Star Wars.