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May 2025
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The Artist Who Made These "Where's The Wookie?" Puzzles Is Clearly A Sith Lord

by N/A, 9 years ago | 2 min read

And you thought "Where's Waldo" was infuriating...

art Drawing Movies artist photos star wars Cult Films Non-Premium

Artist Ulises Farinas just partnered with Ergmont Publishing to create an intensely difficult search-and-find book called, "Where's the Wookiee?" and it's driving people mad. Let's see if the same is true for you. Can you find Chewie?

Our guess is probably not.

Give up? Here's where he's hiding.

Literally like trying to find a needle in a haystack.

And it only gets harder. Try finding him in this one.

If you have anything throwable nearby, now may be a good time to put it out of reach.

Tired yet? Here he was all along.

How did you not see him?? It's not like every character is the same three shades of brown or anything.

You thought those were impossible? Just try and spot Chewie in this Mos Eisley clusterf*ck.


By now, you're probably not even looking for him. And we don't blame you. In any case, here he is.

Ergmont Publishing says, "Chewie, as he is more commonly known, has a sizeable bounty on his head. Can you find this furry criminal before other accomplished bounty hunters beat you to it? A uniquely illustrated search and find format, perfect for Star Wars fans young and old!"

What they fail to mention is that it's damn near impossible to do in a reasonable amount of time and will likely leave you mentally unstable.

Done ripping your hair out yet?
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Don't worry, we'll give you a minute.

If you enjoyed being quietly tortured by Farinas' drawings as much as we did, we've got good news...

There are dozens of other infuriatingly confounding maps in "Where's the Wookiee?" that you can stare at for hours on end.

Who knows, maybe it'll be easier looking at the book three inches from your face instead of a computer or phone screen. Probably not though. Either way, you can get it here.

As for the evil mastermind himself, Farinas didn't have the easiest go at making the insanely complex drawings either.

With each piece taking two weeks, Ulises said, β€œIt was insane, depressing, rewarding, lonely and enjoyable all at the same time. I spilled ink on one right as I finished and I began crying.”

Yup, "insane," "depressing" and "lonely"...pretty much hit the nail on the head there.

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