
Seoul staged a Star Wars-themed 2,000-drone light show at Jamsil Hangang Park on May 5, turning the Han River skyline into one of the city’s biggest family-friendly tech spectacles of the spring.
Why not May 4th? May 5 is Children’s Day in South Korea, which gave the event a built-in audience of parents and kids, while the Star Wars theme added instant visual recognition. City and tourism listings had flagged this Jamsil edition in advance as a special collaboration with The Walt Disney Company Korea, with the main show scheduled for 8:30 p.m. local time.
The scale: Seoul Metropolitan Government’s 2026 Hangang Drone Light Show season runs from April 10 to June 5 across Yeouido, Ttukseom, and Jamsil Hangang Parks, but the May 5 program stood out as the 2,000-drone centerpiece. That is a huge visual density, because larger fleets can draw cleaner outlines and more legible animated scenes in the sky.
Images circulating from the event show drone formations tied to a Star Wars-themed night program, including figures identified as Din Djarin and Grogu. The available imagery confirms the event went ahead as promoted and met enthisiastic crowds.
There is also a broader technology angle here. Drone light shows are becoming a useful public-event format because they are programmable, repeatable, and easier to adapt to recognizable characters or city branding than traditional fireworks. In a show like this, software coordinates thousands of aircraft into preplanned formations, effectively turning the sky into a low-resolution animated display.
Seoul has been positioning the Hangang Drone Light Show as a recurring night-tourism attraction rather than a one-off stunt. The first-half 2026 schedule includes five dates — April 10, April 25, May 5, May 16, and June 5 — and the city previously said the 2025 series attracted approximately 280,000 visitors, according to the Seoul Metropolitan Government.
This is a clear example of how cities can use synchronized drone fleets to build public spectacles that are social-media friendly, family-oriented, and technically impressive without feeling exclusive.
2000 Drones Turn Seoul Into a Star Wars Sky Show
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