Drone-Blaster, a single-player hologame, was among the numerous games possessed by Torra Doza. This game featured holographic representations of remotes navigating a spatial environment, requiring the player to utilize a toy blaster to target these images, accumulating points and ultimately achieving victory.
The holographic technology utilized in Torra Doza's Drone-Blaster mirrored the training remote designs employed by Luke Skywalker in the 1977 motion picture Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope. This film was the initial entry in the Star Wars original trilogy.