The underground is alive on Batuu.
There’s a version of Batuu most people never see—the one that lives between alleyways, back rooms, and late nights that stretch longer than they should. Not staged. Not scripted. Just noise, energy, and something real.
The Kyberpunks exist in that space. A Star Wars cover band with a sound that feels pulled straight out of the galaxy’s fringe, they bring grit, humor, and pure momentum to every performance. Dan, Jude, and their droid B3-4T don’t just play songs—they build moments. The kind that feel a little chaotic, a little unpolished, and completely alive.
Those with a sharp eye will discover that hidden in the noise are in-universe references for those who know where to look.
This piece was created as a tribute to that energy. Designed to echo the raw language of photocopied punk flyers, it captures the feeling of discovering something unexpected on Batuu—a show you didn’t plan to see, but won’t forget. Not a scene from a story, but a fragment of a living world.
Hidden Details & In-Universe References
Look closer, and the poster starts to feel like something you’d actually find on Batuu (minus the Aurebesh).
Scattered throughout the design are subtle nods to the wider Star Wars music scene—names you might recognize if you’ve spent time in the galaxy’s louder corners. DJ-R3X makes an appearance (now spinning tracks at Oga’s Cantina), alongside references to Ashe Javi & DD-EC, The Agasar, and other in-universe acts tied to Batuu’s underground sound.
Even the fine print gets in on the joke, with a small twist on a familiar warning—“No Disintegrations”—reworked into a tongue-in-cheek reference to one of the Kyberpunks’ own tracks.
None of it is front and center.
But for those who know, it’s all there.