Skip to content
Why we put our discount codes where you can see them — and why we don't ask for your email.
We're going to keep this short.
When we started SaberMasters in 2020, we didn't have a business plan. We had a lifelong obsession with Star Wars and a growing pile of broken sabers in the corner of the garage — every cheap one we bought snapped on the first real duel, and every expensive one was a $400 collector piece meant to sit behind glass. There was nothing in the middle. Nothing for the kid in us who actually wanted to swing the thing.
So we built one. Just one. The Ultimate Lightsaber.
Five years and 50,000+ orders later, we're still building the same one. We've made it better twice — you're looking at version 3.0 now — but we still only sell one saber. We've turned down offers to "expand the lineup." We don't want to.
What we do want is to make sure that the thing standing between someone and their first real saber isn't the price.
Here are the two discount codes running on our site for this campaign:
That's it. Either one works. You don't have to sign up. You don't have to give us your email. You don't have to spin a wheel or "prove you're a real fan."
You're already here. That's enough.
We've watched what other brands do, and we made a decision not to do that.
We don't run flash sales that aren't really sales. We don't pretend next week's price was the price all along. We don't email you fourteen times a month with a new reason to buy.
We make one saber. We sell it at a fair price. And while this campaign is up, we don't want price to be the thing that stops anyone who wants one — the dad on a tight month, the high school kid saving up, the parent putting it under the tree, the cosplayer building a kit — from actually getting one.
If you've been waiting for "the right time" to pick one up: there isn't one. There's just now. With $25 or $40 off.
If you do end up with one — whether it's your first, your fourth, or a second for someone you love — use it.
Bring it outside. Hand the spare to a kid at a family reunion. Wear it at a con. Take a photo. Tag us if you feel like it (we read everything).
A saber on a shelf is just a saber. The thing it actually does — the way it pulls people in, the way it turns a normal Tuesday into something a little more — only happens when someone's holding it.
That's the whole point.
Both codes are live for the current For The Fans campaign. No email required. No conditions. Just for being here.