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LEGO Battle Droid: All 6 Minifigure Subtypes Explained (B1 / B2 Super / Pilot / Security / Commander / Rocket)

“How many LEGO Battle Droid minifigures are there?” “What’s the difference between the B1 and the B2 Super Battle Droid?” “What do the blue and red color variants mean?”
If you’re a collector, you’ve probably run into these questions at least once. Here’s everything sorted out in one place.

Figrou
Figrou

Hello there! Figrou, I am — your guide, hmm. Figbase, a reference site it is, where which sets the LEGO minifigures come in, and how to tell the variants apart, across the board mapped out they are. Wherever your curiosity leads, begin there you should.

This article lays out how to tell apart every subtype of the LEGO Battle Droid minifigure, along with a representative set for each, all in a single reference table.

Here’s the short answer: LEGO Battle Droids can be broadly grouped into six subtypes: B1 (standard infantry), B2 Super, Pilot (blue), Security (red), Commander (yellow), and Rocket (back booster). Counting arm-part and torso-print differences, the total variant count tops 20.

What Are Battle Droids?

The Battle Droids are the main combat-robot ranks of the Trade Federation / Confederacy of Independent Systems (CIS), appearing in Star Wars Episodes I through III. As the Separatist infantry of the Clone Wars, they’re the iconic enemy that faces the Galactic Republic’s army (the Clone Troopers).

The standard B1 Battle Droid is a slim humanoid, memorable for its distinctive nasal voice and its catchphrase “Roger, roger.” On top of that, there are sub-variants like the more heavily armored B2 Super Battle Droid, the pilot type for operating aircraft, the security type for guard duty, and the commander type. LEGO has made minifigures of pretty much all of them.

LEGO Battle Droids Sorted Into 6 Subtypes: Identification Guide

You tell LEGO Battle Droid subtypes apart along three axes: “torso color / print,” “arm-part shape,” and “body size.” The table below shows the identification points and a representative sw number for each subtype.

SubtypeRepresentative sw NumberHow to IdentifyExample Main Sets
B1 Battle Droid (standard infantry / tan)sw0001b, sw0001c, sw0001d, sw0467, and many moreSlim tan body. No torso print (standard type). Derived variants come from different combinations of “bent arm” and “straight arm” partsMany Clone Wars infantry sets
Battle Droid Pilot (blue markings)sw0065, sw0095, sw0095a, sw0300, sw0360, sw1338A blue pilot emblem print on the chest. Body color comes in tan or blue variantsDroid starfighter sets
Security Battle Droid (red markings)sw0096Dark red torso print. The color coding for checkpoint and guard dutyPrison / tank sets
Battle Droid Commander (yellow markings)sw0415, sw0482Yellow/orange torso print. The color coding for commandersLate Clone Wars infantry sets
Rocket Battle Droid (with rocket booster)sw0227, sw0228A special version that can mount rocket-booster parts on its back#7670 Hailfire Droid and others
B2 Super Battle Droid (heavily armed type)sw0092, sw0230A sturdy build with the armor sculpted as one piece. Metallic finishes like Pearl Dark Gray and Pearl Light Gray. The arms are curved dedicated parts#75021 Republic Gunship, AT-AP, Droid Gunship, and many more

Telling B1 and B2 Apart

The standard B1 Battle Droid has a slim body on par with minifigure scale, made up of three parts: head, torso, and legs. The B2 Super Battle Droid, by contrast, uses a dedicated body part with integrated armor (a single large part from the neck down), giving it a clearly bulkier silhouette. Put them side by side and the difference is obvious at a glance.

What the Color Markings (Blue / Red / Yellow) Mean

The B1-based color markings represent the roles assigned in the films. Blue is the pilot (operating droid starfighters and the like), red is security (guard and checkpoint duty), and yellow is the commander. LEGO offers torso-print variants that match this color coding.

Representative LEGO Star Wars Sets That Include Battle Droids

Battle Droids have been included continuously in dozens of sets across the LEGO Star Wars line. This article lists representative sets by subtype. Rather than an exhaustive complete list, use these as “starting-point sets” for seeing each subtype in person.

Set NumberSet NameRelease YearSubtype IncludedAppears InNotes
#7115Gungan Patrol2000B1 (earliest)Episode IAn example of one of the earliest sets to include the Battle Droid
#75021Republic Gunship2013B2 Super (sw0092) and othersStar Wars: The Clone WarsThe Republic gunship. A prime example of a set with multiple B2 droids
#75091Flash Speeder2015B1 (sw0467) and othersEpisode INaboo speeder / includes multiple B1 droids
#75092Naboo Starfighter2015B1 + PilotEpisode IA prime example of a set with the pilot-type Battle Droid
#75058MTT2014Many B1Episode IRecreates the scene where masses of B1 droids are “packed and transported”
#75233Droid Gunship2019B1 + B2 + PilotStar Wars: The Clone WarsA prime set for mixed Battle Droid deployment
#75041Vulture Droid2014B1 PilotStar Wars: The Clone WarsA small craft for solo pilot-type deployment
#75080AAT2015B1 + PilotStar Wars: The Clone WarsArmored transport. Includes various droids
Figrou
Figrou

To stock up on B1s by the dozen if you wish, #75058 MTT the go-to it is. The scene where the droids are stored and transported in the films, recreate it this set does. A bunch at once you get, so great the value is. Mmm.

Beyond these, Battle Droids are continuously included in the Clone Wars and Episode I / II / III sets that come out each year. If you want to gather multiple B1s, #75058 MTT is still the representative set that includes them in overwhelming numbers.

First Release, Latest, Rarest, Cheapest: Buying the Battle Droid Minifigure

  • First release: 1999, the first-year LEGO Star Wars Episode I sets (#7155 Trade Federation AAT and others)
  • Latest: recent Clone Wars sets continue to add new variants like the sw1338 B1 Pilot (2023-2024 generation)
  • Rarest: figures included in limited sets (San Diego Comic-Con exclusives, Star Wars Celebration exclusives, and the like). We don’t assign a definitive ranking, but these are the rare slots
  • Cheapest: Battle Droids are often included in large numbers per set, so as single minifigures they tend toward a relatively low price band. Launch reference prices differ by set, so we hold off on cross-comparison

From a collecting standpoint, the real appeal is amassing Battle Droids in bulk. Choosing sets that include several to a dozen-plus per box (MTT, Droid Gunship, Republic Gunship, and so on) lets you grow your army efficiently.

Related Minifigures to Collect Alongside Battle Droids

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Figrou

A Battle Droid army as the “enemy side” if you are building, line them up with Republic-side Clone Troopers or CIS commander characters, you should. A Clone Wars diorama, together in an instant it pulls.

  • Clone Troopers (all generations): Republic army infantry. The faction that faces the Battle Droid army
  • General Grievous: the supreme commander of the Separatist forces, positioned as the overall commander of the Battle Droid army
  • Count Dooku: the political leader of the Separatists
  • Nute Gunray: Viceroy of the Trade Federation. The character behind the droid army’s deployment in Episode I
  • Droideka (Destroyer Droid): a spherical droid distinct from the Battle Droids. Often included alongside them in many sets
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Frequently Asked Questions: Battle Droid Minifigure FAQ

Q. How many LEGO Battle Droid minifigures are there?

A. There are broadly six subtypes (B1 / B2 Super / Pilot / Security / Commander / Rocket). Counting the different arm-part combinations and the small torso-print differences within each subtype, the total variant count tops 20.

Q. What’s the difference between B1 and B2?

A. The B1 has a slim body at normal minifigure scale. The B2 Super Battle Droid is a large droid using a dedicated body part with integrated armor, giving it a clearly bulkier silhouette. Put them side by side and you’ll know at a glance.

Q. What’s the difference between the blue, red, and yellow Battle Droids?

A. They represent the role assignments in the films. Blue is the pilot (operating droid starfighters and the like), red is security (guard and checkpoint duty), and yellow is the commander. Only the torso-print color differs; the body itself is the same B1 base.

Q. Which set is most efficient for gathering Battle Droids in bulk?

A. By droid count per piece count, mid-to-large sets like #75058 MTT, #75021 Republic Gunship, and #75233 Droid Gunship are the standouts. The MTT recreates the scene where droids are “stored and transported” in the films, and it efficiently includes multiple B1 droids.

Q. Which set has the Rocket Battle Droid?

A. The Rocket Battle Droid (sw0227 / sw0228), which mounts rocket-booster parts on its back, was included in Clone Wars sets like #7670 Hailfire Droid. Since it isn’t a general-infantry subtype, the number of sets it appears in is limited.

Sources and References