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expiredMauiCat posted Oct 01, 2025 05:57 PM
expiredMauiCat posted Oct 01, 2025 05:57 PM

STAR WARS The Black Series Sabine Wren Force FX Elite Electronic Lightsaber

+ Free Shipping

$96

$279

65% off
Amazon
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Deal Details
Amazon has STAR WARS The Black Series Sabine Wren Force FX Elite Electronic Lightsaber with Advanced LED and Sound Effects for $95.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member MauiCat for finding this deal.

About this item:
  • Combining advanced LEDs and entertainment-inspired sound effects, the Sabine Wren Force FX Elite Lightsaber is the most realistic Force FX Lightsaber yet
  • This roleplay item features design, deco, and scale based on Sabine Wren's Lightsaber featured in Star Wars: Ahsoka
  • Use the switch and button on the hilt to activate entertainment-inspired sound effects, progressive ignition, battle clash effect, wall-cutting effect, blaster deflect, duel effect, and battle sequence mode
  • Proudly display this electronic Lightsaber on the included stand, with or without the removable blade. Use the included barrel plug when the blade is not in use

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Our research indicates that this deal is $153.99 less (62% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $249.98 at the time of this posting.
  • About this store:

Original Post

Written by MauiCat
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has STAR WARS The Black Series Sabine Wren Force FX Elite Electronic Lightsaber with Advanced LED and Sound Effects for $95.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member MauiCat for finding this deal.

About this item:
  • Combining advanced LEDs and entertainment-inspired sound effects, the Sabine Wren Force FX Elite Lightsaber is the most realistic Force FX Lightsaber yet
  • This roleplay item features design, deco, and scale based on Sabine Wren's Lightsaber featured in Star Wars: Ahsoka
  • Use the switch and button on the hilt to activate entertainment-inspired sound effects, progressive ignition, battle clash effect, wall-cutting effect, blaster deflect, duel effect, and battle sequence mode
  • Proudly display this electronic Lightsaber on the included stand, with or without the removable blade. Use the included barrel plug when the blade is not in use

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • Our research indicates that this deal is $153.99 less (62% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $249.98 at the time of this posting.
  • About this store:

Original Post

Written by MauiCat

Community Voting

Deal Score
+24
Good Deal
Visit Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: STAR WARS The Black Series Sabine Wren Force FX Elite Electronic Lightsaber with Advanced LED and Sound Effects, Ages 14 and Up

Deal History 

Sale Price
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Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 1/19/2026, 01:31 PM
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Amazon$169.98

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Top Comments

VaultTec
2011 Posts
195 Reputation
Just be aware this is a fake lightsaber, it doesn't even have a real Kyber crystal in it!

10 Comments

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Oct 01, 2025 09:42 PM
348 Posts
Joined Nov 2017

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Pro
Oct 01, 2025 10:00 PM
3,012 Posts
Joined May 2011
Guy767
Pro
Oct 01, 2025 10:00 PM
3,012 Posts
Quote from stillen_i30 :
Use tangible scanner and 3D print and install led light and save a bunch
What about the collectability factor? Maybe in 20 years or so, this could actually be worth some money. Sounds ridiculous, I know, but I remember seeing NES games like Krion Conquest and Mighty Final Fight in the clearance bin for $10-15 brand new many moons ago. Oh, if only I had a cheap basterd time machine, I'd be rich laugh out loud

Also, your comment suggest there's not a single piece of metal in this thing despite its premium price and appearance. If that's true, paying $250 originally must have stung a bit and felt a little emasculating...
2
Oct 01, 2025 10:01 PM
1,723 Posts
Joined Dec 2013
ryand7651Oct 01, 2025 10:01 PM
1,723 Posts
just build your own at Home Depot and create the sounds with our mouth. "Peeeeewsh! voov voov!
1
3
Oct 01, 2025 10:22 PM
2,011 Posts
Joined Jan 2023
VaultTecOct 01, 2025 10:22 PM
2,011 Posts
Quote from Guy767 :
Quote from stillen_i30 :
Use tangible scanner and 3D print and install led light and save a bunch
What about the collectability factor? Maybe in 20 years or so, this could actually be worth some money. Sounds ridiculous, I know, but I remember seeing NES games like Krion Conquest and Mighty Final Fight in the clearance bin for $10-15 brand new many moons ago. Oh, if only I had a cheap basterd time machine, I'd be rich

Also, your comment suggest there's not a single piece of metal in this thing despite its premium price and appearance. If that's true, paying $250 originally must have stung a bit and felt a little emasculating...
pretty bad review https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mdqtw2RUOLI . Also if you watch the video the back of the handle is a soft rubber so will likely turn sticky and mushy after 2 or 3 years so probably not very collectable!
1
Oct 01, 2025 10:23 PM
2,011 Posts
Joined Jan 2023
VaultTecOct 01, 2025 10:23 PM
2,011 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank VaultTec

Just be aware this is a fake lightsaber, it doesn't even have a real Kyber crystal in it!
3
4
Oct 01, 2025 11:14 PM
2,124 Posts
Joined Jun 2007
ilovecanadaOct 01, 2025 11:14 PM
2,124 Posts
Just swing it harder.
Oct 02, 2025 02:00 AM
2,080 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
ADHDER7799Oct 02, 2025 02:00 AM
2,080 Posts
Pew pweeuh

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Oct 02, 2025 02:47 AM
111 Posts
Joined Dec 2017
ZibranHOct 02, 2025 02:47 AM
111 Posts
Quote from Guy767 :
What about the collectability factor? Maybe in 20 years or so, this could actually be worth some money. Sounds ridiculous, I know, but I remember seeing NES games like Krion Conquest and Mighty Final Fight in the clearance bin for $10-15 brand new many moons ago. Oh, if only I had a cheap basterd time machine, I'd be rich laugh out loud

Also, your comment suggest there's not a single piece of metal in this thing despite its premium price and appearance. If that's true, paying $250 originally must have stung a bit and felt a little emasculating...
Both of you speak as if you've gazed upon the object once from afar and then built your entire saga of assumptions on rumor and half-memory. That ends now.

First, to stillen_i30—"3D scan and print"? A child's toy tactic. You cannot replicate the density, the finish, or the engineering with some plastic extrusion experiment and a strip of dollar-store LEDs. What you create may resemble the artifact, but it will never embody it. It's the difference between a paper crown and Odin's helm. One looks similar, but only one carries weight.

And to Guy767—collectability? You invoke NES games as if lightning strikes in every dusty bargain bin. Nostalgia markets are fickle winds, not strategies. Unlike your $10 cartridges, this piece was born with intent, design, and purpose—premium materials, thoughtful architecture, and a brand legacy backing it. It isn't some clearance-rack gamble waiting for luck; it's a deliberately crafted item that has already commanded respect at $250 and will only draw more as authentic examples vanish into the hands of those who actually care.

As for the absurd idea that there's no metal—laughable. If you think a piece of this caliber is just hollow plastic, then you haven't held it, weighed it, or understood it. The reinforcement, the internal mounts, the trim—metal where it matters, weight where it counts. That's why it doesn't feel like a toy when you grasp it; that's why people paid, proudly, without flinching. The sting you imagine? That's just the echo of your own regret for not having one.

So let us be clear: scanning, printing, and half-baked theorizing is for those content to cosplay ownership. True collectors don't mimic artifacts—they seize them, preserve them, and wield them like a title deed of culture and craftsmanship.

In short: your cheap fixes and speculative daydreams are whispers. The real item is thunder.
1
1
Pro
Oct 02, 2025 02:59 AM
3,012 Posts
Joined May 2011
Guy767
Pro
Oct 02, 2025 02:59 AM
3,012 Posts
Quote from ZibranH :
Both of you speak as if you've gazed upon the object once from afar and then built your entire saga of assumptions on rumor and half-memory. That ends now.

First, to stillen_i30—"3D scan and print"? A child's toy tactic. You cannot replicate the density, the finish, or the engineering with some plastic extrusion experiment and a strip of dollar-store LEDs. What you create may resemble the artifact, but it will never embody it. It's the difference between a paper crown and Odin's helm. One looks similar, but only one carries weight.

And to Guy767—collectability? You invoke NES games as if lightning strikes in every dusty bargain bin. Nostalgia markets are fickle winds, not strategies. Unlike your $10 cartridges, this piece was born with intent, design, and purpose—premium materials, thoughtful architecture, and a brand legacy backing it. It isn't some clearance-rack gamble waiting for luck; it's a deliberately crafted item that has already commanded respect at $250 and will only draw more as authentic examples vanish into the hands of those who actually care.

As for the absurd idea that there's no metal—laughable. If you think a piece of this caliber is just hollow plastic, then you haven't held it, weighed it, or understood it. The reinforcement, the internal mounts, the trim—metal where it matters, weight where it counts. That's why it doesn't feel like a toy when you grasp it; that's why people paid, proudly, without flinching. The sting you imagine? That's just the echo of your own regret for not having one.

So let us be clear: scanning, printing, and half-baked theorizing is for those content to cosplay ownership. True collectors don't mimic artifacts—they seize them, preserve them, and wield them like a title deed of culture and craftsmanship.

In short: your cheap fixes and speculative daydreams are whispers. The real item is thunder.
You sound like a man that needs Pasta in his life. I pray that His Noodly Appendage will touch you soon...
Oct 02, 2025 03:45 AM
884 Posts
Joined Jun 2010
SpacecaseOct 02, 2025 03:45 AM
884 Posts
Quote from ZibranH :
Both of you speak as if you've gazed upon the object once from afar and then built your entire saga of assumptions on rumor and half-memory. That ends now.First, to stillen_i30—"3D scan and print"? A child's toy tactic. You cannot replicate the density, the finish, or the engineering with some plastic extrusion experiment and a strip of dollar-store LEDs. What you create may resemble the artifact, but it will never embody it. It's the difference between a paper crown and Odin's helm. One looks similar, but only one carries weight.And to Guy767—collectability? You invoke NES games as if lightning strikes in every dusty bargain bin. Nostalgia markets are fickle winds, not strategies. Unlike your $10 cartridges, this piece was born with intent, design, and purpose—premium materials, thoughtful architecture, and a brand legacy backing it. It isn't some clearance-rack gamble waiting for luck; it's a deliberately crafted item that has already commanded respect at $250 and will only draw more as authentic examples vanish into the hands of those who actually care.As for the absurd idea that there's no metal—laughable. If you think a piece of this caliber is just hollow plastic, then you haven't held it, weighed it, or understood it. The reinforcement, the internal mounts, the trim—metal where it matters, weight where it counts. That's why it doesn't feel like a toy when you grasp it; that's why people paid, proudly, without flinching. The sting you imagine? That's just the echo of your own regret for not having one.So let us be clear: scanning, printing, and half-baked theorizing is for those content to cosplay ownership. True collectors don't mimic artifacts—they seize them, preserve them, and wield them like a title deed of culture and craftsmanship.In short: your cheap fixes and speculative daydreams are whispers. The real item is thunder.
Hello Mr C. GPT

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