Shoppers wandering through Merchant Row and Smuggler’s Alley in the new Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge themed land coming to Disneyland this summer will be able to haggle with an animatronic shopkeeper over prices and buy Blue Milk from a Bantha farmer.

The new details about the retail shops and restaurants planned for the highly-anticipated 14-acre land emerged from a behind-the-scenes report published by Barron’s.

Barron’s reporter Jack Hough toured the construction site behind Frontierland and Fantasyland where 600 workers were putting the finishing touches on the new land which could open “perhaps by early June.” The in-depth story was filled with words like “hypothetical,” “possible” and “likely” that suggested the new land remains a highly fluid work in progress.

From a storytelling standpoint, the new themed land will be set in the Black Spire Outpost on the remote planet of Batuu, located on the outer rim of the Star Wars galaxy.

Walt Disney Imagineering, the creative arm of the company, is striving to make all of the story-specific merchandise and food in the Galaxy’s Edge street markets look and feel like they belong in the Star Wars universe rather than a Disney gift shop or restaurant.

A droid shop in the Galaxy’s Edge marketplace will sell interactive droids that will be able to discern between friend and foe. The customizable droids can be programmed to be afraid of storm troopers they encounter in the land and recognize other droids purchased by friends and family members, according to Barron’s. Well-heeled shoppers with galactic credit to burn will be able to buy a full-size R2-D2 at the shop.

Another shop selling one-of-a-kind treasures from across the Star Wars galaxy will be run by a collector and trader named Dok-Ondar. The alien creature known as an Ithorian has eyes that bulge from the side of his hammerhead and a mouth in his curved neck.

An audio-animatronic version of Dok-Ondar sitting in a booth inside the shop will negotiate with visitors over the price of merchandise, according to Barron’s. Imagineers have said that if the price is right, Dok-Ondar will be willing to trade anything from his collection.

Star Wars fans sites have speculated that trading or exchanging goods with Dok-Ondar could unlock new storytelling elements in Galaxy’s Edge.

Throughout Galaxy’s Edge, shops will downplay packaging and corporate logos to help make the merchandise blend in with the Star Wars surroundings, Barron’s reported. Plush dolls of familiar Star Wars characters may look different than fans remember, with their appearances based on early sketches from Lucasfilm concept art. An elaborate backstory would explain the discrepancies as the work of local Batuu artisans who have never met or seen the characters but only know them by reputation.

Food and drink sold in Galaxy’s Edge will also be themed to be “in universe” and support the storytelling present throughout the land.

Marketplace vendors will sell meat roasted under a repurposed pod-racing engine and Bantha farmers will offer non-dairy Blue Milk made famous in the “Star Wars” movies, according to Barron’s. In the Star Wars universe, Blue Milk comes from beastly Banthas that look like woolly elephants with curved tusks.

To maximize capacity and shorten visits, most customers patronizing Oga’s Cantina will stand around the bar rather than sit at the handful of booths in the restaurant, according to Barron’s. Drinks will appear to flow through a tangle of tubes flowing from the ceiling into glass vessels behind the bar. One possible cocktail: Fuzzy Tauntuan, which pays tribute to the snow lizards from the planet Hoth in the “Empire Strikes Back.”

Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge opens in summer 2019 at Disneyland in Anaheim and late fall 2019 at Disney’s Hollywood Studios near Orlando, Florida.