ineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineedit
<deep breath>
ineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineeditineedit



CBS has had a death grip on the IP for so long. You couldn’t even put the theme tune online without a DMCA.
Lego also doesn’t like to have any sort of ambiguity with sets. Things are distinct.
I can 100% see executives seeing Star Trek and Star Wars as too similar. Or there being some clause in the Star Wars contract about it.