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LEGO Imperial Pilot Minifigures: TIE, AT-AT, AT-ST and Shuttle Pilot Guide

“How many Imperial Pilot LEGO minifigures are there?” “Are the TIE Pilot and the AT-AT Driver different characters?” “Which set has the all-black pilot?”
If you’re a collector, you’ve probably run into questions like these. Here’s a single guide that pulls it all together.

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 organizes the minifigures that fall under the LEGO Star Wars “Imperial Pilot” category, split into five subtypes. It’s set up so you can take in each subtype’s telltale points, representative sw numbers, and example sets at a glance.

The short version: Imperial Pilot minifigures break down into five lineages, “TIE Fighter Pilot / TIE Bomber Pilot / AT-AT Driver / AT-ST Driver / Imperial Shuttle Pilot,” and once you include generational differences, the total variant count reaches more than 20.

Who Is the Imperial Pilot?

The Imperial Pilot is a blanket term for the role category of those who operate the Galactic Empire’s aerial and armored vehicles. It isn’t a name for a single character; it includes all of the operators subdivided by craft, such as the TIE fighter, TIE bomber, AT-AT, AT-ST, and Imperial shuttle.

In the films, they’re regular military personnel belonging to a separate chain of command from Stormtroopers, set up to handle specialized equipment and armored vehicles. In the LEGO minifigure world, too, the names are split into “TIE Pilot,” “AT-AT Driver,” “AT-ST Driver,” and “Imperial Shuttle Pilot,” each recreated with a different torso print and helmet sculpt.

Imperial Pilots Sort Into Five Subtypes: Variant List

LEGO Imperial Pilot minifigures are easiest to tell apart along three axes: “torso color / print,” “helmet shape,” and “craft operated.” The table below shows each subtype’s telltale points and representative sw numbers.

SubtypeRepresentative sw No.Telltale PointExample Sets
TIE Fighter Pilotsw0035, sw0035b, sw0264, sw0268, etc.An all-black black variant with a Stormtrooper-style helmet. Breathing-apparatus print on the chest. Helmet precision and the presence of arm/leg printing vary by era#7146 TIE Fighter, #75095 TIE Fighter (UCS)
TIE Fighter Pilot, female versionsw1260The torso is the same lineage, but with a nougat (skin-tone) print on the head. A new variant of the 2023 generation#75348 Mandalorian Fang Fighter vs. TIE Interceptor
TIE Bomber Pilotsw0035 (early on shared with the TIE Fighter Pilot), etc.Nearly identical to the TIE Fighter Pilot. Identified by being in a TIE bomber set#4479 TIE Bomber, #75347 TIE Bomber
AT-AT Driversw0262, etc.A light bluish gray torso with a red Imperial crest print on the chest. The helmet is the Stormtrooper Type 2 shape#8129 AT-AT Walker, #8084 Snowtrooper Battle Pack
AT-ST Driver / Pilotsw0093, etc.A dark gray torso with a plain black helmet. Operated in the Endor forest battle#7657 AT-ST
Imperial Shuttle Pilotsw0802, etc.A black uniform with a black cap / flight cap headgear. Dressed in an Imperial-officer style#75221 Imperial Landing Craft
Figrou

A note from Figrou, this is. A single character, “Imperial Pilot” is not; a collective name for the operators of each craft, it is. So the “TIE Pilot” and the “AT-AT Driver,” as separate things treat them you must.

How to Tell the TIE Pilot and the AT-AT Driver Apart

The TIE Fighter Pilot is all-black at its base. The chest breathing-apparatus print is distinctive, and the helmet is black too. The AT-AT Driver, on the other hand, has a light bluish gray torso with a red Imperial crest print, so the color scheme alone makes it obvious. The fun part is that, lined up, they have completely different silhouettes even though they’re on the same side.

Generational Differences in the Helmet Mold

The TIE Fighter Pilot helmet switched to a new mold in 2010’s #8087 TIE Defender, greatly improving on-screen accuracy over the earlier Stormtrooper-reused type. From 2013 the helmet surface went fully printed, from 2014 leg printing was added, and from the 2015 UCS #75095 onward, arm printing was added as well. “Which generation of TIE Pilot is it” is a topic collectors often discuss.

Example LEGO Star Wars Sets That Include the Imperial Pilot

Imperial Pilots have been included continuously across many sets in the LEGO Star Wars series. This article lists representative sets by subtype. It isn’t an exhaustive complete list; use it as a “starting-point set” reference for seeing each subtype in person.

Set No.Set NameYearSubtype IncludedAppears InNotes
#7146TIE Fighter2001TIE Fighter Pilot (sw0035 early type)Episodes IV-VIOne of the earliest sets to include an Imperial Pilot minifigure
#4479TIE Bomber2003TIE Fighter Pilot (sw0035)Episode VA staple bomber-type TIE set
#7657AT-ST2007AT-ST Driver (sw0093)Episode VIIncludes the plain-helmet AT-ST driver
#8129AT-AT Walker2010AT-AT Driver (sw0262)Episode VThe four-legged vehicle of the Hoth battle. Comes with multiple AT-AT drivers
#8084Snowtrooper Battle Pack2010AT-AT Driver (sw0262), etc.Episode VBattle-pack format makes the AT-AT Driver easy to get
#75095TIE Fighter (UCS)2015TIE Fighter Pilot (arm-print generation)Episode IVA large UCS (Ultimate Collector Series) TIE fighter
#75221Imperial Landing Craft2018Imperial Shuttle Pilot (sw0802)Episodes IV-VIA representative example with an Imperial shuttle pilot included
#75347TIE Bomber2023TIE Pilot (latest generation)Episode VA revived TIE bomber set
#75348Mandalorian Fang Fighter vs. TIE Interceptor2023TIE Fighter Pilot (sw1260, female version)The MandalorianDebut set for the female TIE pilot
#75382TIE Interceptor (UCS)2024TIE Fighter Pilot (latest UCS generation)Episode VIThe latest 2024 UCS. Arm-print spec

Beyond these, Imperial Pilots are included continuously in mid- to large-size AT-AT, AT-ST, and TIE sets and in battle packs. If you “just want to grab one TIE Pilot,” the currently easy-to-find #75347 TIE Bomber or a recent TIE set is a good pick.

First, Latest, Rarest, Cheapest: Buying an Imperial Pilot Minifigure

  • First appearance: in 2001, sw0035 (Brown Head) included in #7146 TIE Fighter is the earliest. A generation close to the first year of LEGO Star Wars
  • Latest: 2024’s #75382 TIE Interceptor (UCS) includes the latest-generation arm-print TIE Pilot. The 2023 sw1260 (female version) is also a relatively new development
  • Rarest: UCS-exclusive pilots and convention-exclusive versions included in older sets. Production-number figures aren’t confirmed by a primary source, so we won’t assign a clear ranking
  • Cheapest: the AT-AT Driver included in battle-pack format (e.g., #8084 Snowtrooper Battle Pack) tends to have a low cost per figure. Since launch MSRPs differ by set, we’ll refrain from a cross-comparison

If you collect Imperial Pilots in the order “one TIE type, then AT-AT Driver, then AT-ST Driver, then Imperial Shuttle Pilot,” you can cover the Galactic Empire’s operator category. You end up with all the operators of the major armored and aerial vehicles that appear in the films.

Related Minifigures to Collect Alongside the Imperial Pilot

Figrou

Lining them up with minifigures from the same Imperial side, the world it really brings out. Every figure in the list below, a co-star that pairs well with the Imperial Pilot, it is.

  • Stormtrooper: Imperial infantry. The Empire’s main soldier, same as the pilot types
  • Snowtrooper: cold-weather infantry of the Hoth battle. Often appears together with the AT-AT Driver
  • Darth Vader: the Galactic Empire’s top enforcer. There are scenes where he pilots a TIE Advanced himself
  • Imperial Officer: a different role from the pilot, but co-stars as a commander aboard ships and at bases
  • Emperor Palpatine: the Galactic Empire’s supreme leader. There are scenes where he appears with a shuttle pilot
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FAQ: Imperial Pilot Minifigures

Q. How many Imperial Pilot LEGO minifigures are there?

There are broadly five subtype lineages (TIE Fighter Pilot / TIE Bomber Pilot / AT-AT Driver / AT-ST Driver / Imperial Shuttle Pilot). Once you include generational differences, head-color differences, and helmet-mold differences within each subtype, the total variant count reaches more than 20.

Q. How are the TIE Pilot and the AT-AT Driver different?

It’s not just the craft they operate; their looks differ clearly too. The TIE Pilot is all-black plus a breathing-apparatus print. The AT-AT Driver has a light bluish gray torso with a red Imperial crest print, and the helmet is the Stormtrooper Type 2 shape. Line them up and you can tell at a glance.

Q. When did the TIE Pilot helmet become a new type?

2010’s #8087 TIE Defender was the debut of the new helmet mold. Before that, the Stormtrooper type was reused, so on-screen accuracy improved greatly from the 2010 generation onward. After that, helmet surfaces went fully printed in 2013, leg printing was added in 2014, and arm printing was added in the 2015 UCS generation.

Q. Which set has the AT-ST Driver?

The representative one is #7657 AT-ST (2007). It includes the plain-helmet sw0093. Since the AT-ST itself is renewed continuously, the AT-ST Driver is re-included as a separate variant in later sets too.

Q. Which set has the female TIE Pilot?

2023’s #75348 Mandalorian Fang Fighter vs. TIE Interceptor is the debut set for sw1260 (the female TIE Pilot). The torso is the same lineage as the conventional TIE Pilot, but the head is a female-character sculpt with a nougat (skin-tone) print.

Sources and References