The Power Of The Force Endor Attack

5/23/2026

Released by Hasbro in 1997 as part of the Star Wars: The Power of the Force toy line, the Endor Attack Playset gave collectors a small but fun slice of the forest moon from Star Wars: Episode VI Return Of The Jedi. The set originally retailed for $14.99 and came in the green Power of the Force packaging from the era.

Endor Attack

Packaging

The Endor Attack Playset was released in the green Star Wars: The Power of the Force packaging, which was the standard look for Hasbro’s Star Wars line in 1997. The box showcased the bunker environment, the included Ewok-style battle accessories, and the play features built into the set.

Endor Attack

Inside the box, collectors received the Endor bunker, a tree stump, and a catapult. No action figures were included with this release, and there were no stickers to apply, which made the setup process very straightforward.

Endor Attack

Assembly

Assembly took about 15 minutes and was easy to complete with the included instruction sheet. The main bunker required putting together the side walls, roof, side panels, and the two sets of double doors.

Endor Attack

The tree stump and catapult came fully assembled, so once the bunker was put together, the playset was ready for display. For a toy from the late 1990s, the setup was simple, quick, and child-friendly.

The Playset

The Endor Attack Playset included several built-in action features. The tree stump has a lever on the back, which can be pulled and released to knock over an action figure placed in front of it. The catapult can launch the included boulder, adding another simple but fun play feature to the set.

Endor Attack

The bunker itself features two sets of double doors, giving it four opening door panels in total. These doors can be opened or closed, which helps recreate the Endor bunker setting from Return Of The Jedi.

Endor Attack

Endor Attack

One of the nicer aspects of the set is that the bunker, tree stump, and catapult are all separate pieces. That gives collectors some flexibility when displaying it. The pieces can be arranged together as one scene, spread out across a shelf, or placed on different levels in a larger Endor display.

Catapult Reuse

A fun little Easter egg is the catapult, which was reused from Hasbro/Kenner’s 1995 Dragonheart figure of Hewe. That earlier release included the same catapult and boulder, making this Endor accessory a clever bit of tooling reuse.

Endor Attack

Displayability

When displayed with the bulkier Power of the Force 2 figures from the era, the bunker can look a little undersized, but it still works well enough as a background piece. By modern standards, especially when compared to Hasbro’s Star Wars: The Vintage Collection Endor Bunker Playset from 2023, this older version is clearly less accurate and not as well scaled.

Endor Attack

That said, the 1997 Endor Attack Playset still has charm. It represents a fun period in Hasbro’s Star Wars line, it displays decently with classic Power of the Force figures, and it is often still affordable on the secondary market. For collectors who enjoy the late 1990s era of Star Wars toys, this is a simple but nostalgic Endor display piece that still gets the job done.

Endor Attack

Endor Attack

Packaging Text:
On the forest moon of Endor, the Imperial generator shield protects the Empire's second Death Star. Can the Rebels infiltrate the bunker and turn off the shield in time or will the Imperial forces defeat them?

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