Guests shouldn’t worry about this, says Doug Chiang, Lucasfilm vice president and executive creative director.
“Galaxy’s Edge is supposed to be set after Episode 8, before 9, but we’re also making it so that it’s very common so that it can fit within the whole Star Wars universe,” Chiang says. “We wanted to deliberately keep it very ambiguous.”
"We knew that this was going to be a flexible stage for future storytelling, so what you see on opening day might not necessarily be what you’ll see in the near future," says Margaret Kerrison, Managing Story Editor for Walt Disney Imagineering. "So we have a lot of new stories coming in from Star Wars, with new films opening and new animated series and new books, all kinds of multimedia storytelling - all of that is going to be incorporated into our land."
“Trowbridge's remark that the evolution of Galaxy’s Edge isn’t over makes sense, since there’s much from the Star Wars universe that Disney can use. For example, the movie franchise istelf has new characters and storylines to tap into, and
all the new Star Wars TV series launching on Disney's new streaming service, Disney+, will provide even more content for Imagineers to use.”
“The events that happen here in Black Spire Outpost are true in the world of "Star Wars." They're not isolated from the rest of "Star Wars" storytelling. The things that happen here are true throughout this entire kind of canon of "Star Wars" storytelling”
“This trading port is really a stepping off point for all kinds of new stories and we have so many stories we want to tell. That's one of the great things about "Star Wars," there will never be an end to the number of "Star Wars" stories that we can tell.”
...should I go on?