Hasbro brought two new Star Wars figures to the CCXP México 2026 panel — the 6-inch Black Series Imperial Remnant Warlord (with a Polar MSE-6 Mouse Droid) and the 3.75-inch Vintage Collection Devon Izara from Maul: Shadow Lord. Two figures, two scales, two of the biggest Star Wars stories of 2026. The Warlord is a Target US exclusive at $27.99, pre-orders going live April 30th at 1PM ET, shipping Summer 2026. Devon Izara is standard retail at $19.99, available Fall 2026 with pre-order details still to come. This is Hasbro’s clearest signal yet that 2026 is being built around two pillars: the Mandalorian & Grogu film tie-in line and the Maul: Shadow Lord animated series line. Both reveals fit that thesis exactly.
The Imperial Remnant Warlord — Lord Janu
The 6-inch figure is being marketed as “Imperial Remnant Warlord,” but anyone who watched The Mandalorian season 3 knows exactly who this is. This is Lord Janu, the Imperial warlord played by Jonny Coyne, returning as the central antagonist of The Mandalorian & Grogu — the May 22, 2026 theatrical film that’s the first Star Wars movie since The Rise of Skywalker. Coyne originated the role in season 3, and the film is bringing him back as the warlord Mando is hired by Sigourney Weaver’s Colonel Ward to track down. The Hutts have offered to help the New Republic locate Janu in exchange for the rescue of Rotta the Hutt. That’s the whole plot engine of the film. And Hasbro is releasing his action figure two months before the movie premieres.
The “Imperial Remnant Warlord” naming is interesting on its own. Hasbro is doing the same generic-character-name dance that’s been a feature of the Mandalorian line since 2019 — Imperial Remnant Stormtrooper, Imperial Remnant Snowtrooper, Imperial Remnant AT-AT Driver, Imperial Remnant AT-RT Driver. The Warlord falls into that same naming convention, presumably for licensing or character-spoiler reasons. Collectors will know him as Lord Janu. Hasbro is calling him by his job description.
The Polar Mouse Droid
The accessory pack-in is the part that should make any film tribute collector pay close attention. The Warlord doesn’t ship with just a blaster — he comes with an MSE-6 series repair droid in a polar/snow deco. That’s the standard Imperial mouse droid you’ve seen scuttling around Star Destroyer corridors since 1977, but in a white snow-base paint application that matches the snowbound Imperial Remnant base seen in the first 17 minutes of the film footage shown at CinemaCon.
The mouse droid pack-in does two things at once. It gives film tribute collectors a scene-specific accessory for the snow base sequence — the same sequence where Mando infiltrates the facility and Grogu lifts a mouse droid mid-air with the Force and dismantles it. And it bumps the value proposition of a Target-exclusive figure at $27.99, which is a $5 premium over standard Black Series retail. You’re paying for the droid. The droid is the reason this exists as a Target exclusive rather than a regular wave release.
The Soft Goods Coat & Photoreal
Hasbro’s product description calls out two specific construction features: a soft goods coat, and photoreal paint technology on the head sculpt. Soft goods on Black Series figures is generally a marker that Hasbro thinks the figure deserves the extra production cost — it shows up on Imperial Officer figures, Jedi figures with robes, and the higher-tier deluxe releases. Combined with photoreal, Hasbro is positioning this as a premium-deco figure rather than a budget repaint. The window box packaging with mural side panel art is the same packaging language as the rest of the post-2024 Black Series line.
Pre-Order Window — Target Exclusive, April 30th
The Target exclusive part of this is the part that matters most logistically. Pre-orders go live April 30th at 1PM ET — that’s a single window, single retailer, US-only. UK and EU collectors who want this figure will be looking at international shipping or aftermarket pricing from day one. Target exclusives in the Black Series line have a recent history of selling out their pre-order window quickly and then becoming difficult to source — recent examples include the Mandalorian armorer figures and several of the Ahsoka exclusives. If you want the Imperial Remnant Warlord at retail, the window opens April 30th and you should be ready.
The Vintage Collection — Devon Izara
The second reveal is on the 3.75-inch side. Devon Izara at $19.99 retail, available Fall 2026, on a vintage Kenner-style cardback with a unique VC number. This is Maul: Shadow Lord’s breakout original character getting Vintage Collection treatment less than four months after the show premiered on Disney+.
For anyone who hasn’t been watching: Maul: Shadow Lord is the Dave Filoni-created animated series that premiered April 6th, 2026 on Disney+, with Sam Witwer reprising his decade-plus voice role as Maul. The show takes place a few short years after Order 66 — the Wookieepedia consensus puts it around 17 BBY — and follows Maul on Janix as he tries to rebuild his criminal syndicate and find a new apprentice. That apprentice is Devon Izara.
Who Devon Izara Is
Devon Izara is a Twi’lek Jedi Padawan voiced by Gideon Adlon. She survived Order 66 alongside her Master Eeko-Dio Daki (Dennis Haysbert), and the two of them have been hiding on Janix as beggars when Maul finds her. The series describes her as “disillusioned” — she’s a teenager dealing with the collapse of the Jedi Order and Daki’s strategy of survival-by-begging, and she’s frustrated enough to steal fruit from a street vendor in episode 1, which is what gets her arrested and into Maul’s path.
Maul sees her as “the weapon which can help us destroy all those who have betrayed me, including Darth Sidious.” That’s the show’s central tension. The pitch Maul makes to Devon is the same pitch he made to Ahsoka in the Clone Wars finale and to Ezra in Rebels — join me, we have the same enemies, the Jedi indoctrinated you, I can show you a path to power they didn’t teach. Both Ahsoka and Ezra refused. Devon is being positioned as the apprentice who might not.
The Blue Lightsaber + Unlit Hilt
The Vintage Collection figure ships with two specific accessories: a blue-bladed lightsaber and an unlit hilt. That accessory pairing matters for display. The blue blade is Devon’s active weapon — it’s the lightsaber she defends herself with in the show, the visual signal that she is, for now, still a Jedi. The unlit hilt lets you display her with the saber clipped to her belt. Two accessories, two display states, the whole arc of the character in plastic form: armed Jedi, hidden Jedi.
Whether Devon stays a blue-saber Jedi by the end of season 1 is the open question of the series — the show has already been renewed for season 2, and there’s a substantial fan theory community building the case that Devon is going to become Darth Talon. If that turns out to be where her arc lands, this Vintage Collection figure is the snapshot of who she was before the fall.
Two Figures, Two Stories, One Strategy
The CCXP México panel is giving collectors a clean look at how Hasbro is structuring 2026. Mandalorian & Grogu is the theatrical event. Maul: Shadow Lord is the streaming event. The Black Series line is being built around the film. The Vintage Collection line is being built around the animated series. That’s not a coincidence — it’s a deliberate split that lets Hasbro release figures across both scales without character overlap, and lets collectors who only collect one scale still get coverage of one of the two big 2026 stories.
You can see it in the existing Amazon listings already on the GalacticFigures page: the 6-inch Mandalorian & Grogu tribute line includes Imperial Remnant Stormtrooper, Imperial Remnant Snowtrooper, Imperial Remnant AT-AT Driver, Imperial Remnant AT-RT Driver, Colonel Ward, and the deluxe Mandalorian & Grogu set. The Vintage Collection has the same characters in 3.75-inch — plus the Maul: Shadow Lord line, which has Maul, the Eleventh Brother, Rook Kast, Marrok, and now Devon Izara. The lines are talking to each other but they’re not stepping on each other.
What’s Missing — And What Comes Next
The CCXP México panel revealed two figures. It did not reveal the Vintage Collection version of the Imperial Remnant Warlord, and it did not reveal the Black Series version of Devon Izara. Both of those almost certainly exist or are coming — Hasbro’s pattern with major film and series releases has been near-complete cross-line coverage of major characters. Expect both to surface at SDCC 2026, the Hasbro Pulse Premium Vendor Showcase, or one of the late-summer reveal events.
The other thing not in the CCXP México reveal: any Black Series Maul: Shadow Lord figure beyond what’s already been announced. Master Eeko-Dio Daki is the most obvious candidate for a Black Series release — Dennis Haysbert is a recognizable enough actor and the character is significant enough to the show — and a Daki figure would pair naturally with a Devon Izara Black Series release whenever that arrives.
Pre-Order Logistics & Pricing
For anyone planning to chase the Imperial Remnant Warlord at retail: Target exclusive, US only, $27.99, pre-orders opening April 30th at 1PM Eastern, shipping Summer 2026. The Polar Mouse Droid pack-in is the value-add and the visual hook. International collectors should expect to pay a markup either through forwarders or aftermarket.
For Devon Izara: standard Vintage Collection retail at $19.99, available Fall 2026, pre-order details still to come. No specific retailer exclusivity has been announced. The blue lightsaber and unlit hilt accessory pairing is the standout specification. If you collect TVC and you’ve been watching Maul: Shadow Lord, this is the Padawan figure to put on the shelf next to Maul, the Eleventh Brother, Marrok, and Rook Kast — completing the central character roster of the series in 3.75-inch scale.
Two reveals, two scales, two flagship Star Wars properties of 2026. The CCXP México panel was small but it told you exactly what Hasbro’s plan is.