Cassian Andor (Season 2) — Star Wars The Black Series #AND 10
The Black Series Cassian Andor — Phase 4 Andor Mural Collection #10, October 2024. The season-two configuration with two blasters, removable plastic jacket, and outstanding head sculpt. Mainline non-exclusive release. MSRP $24.99.
Overview
Cassian Andor at #AND 10 is the Andor Mural Collection’s season-two figure — the version of Cassian at the more matured rebel-leader configuration that the show’s second season builds him toward, before the bridge into Rogue One. Released October 2024 as a single-boxed mainline release. Non-exclusive. MSRP $24.99 (the standard Mural Collection mainline pricing). Three accessories: two different blasters and a removable plastic jacket. 16-joint Phase 4 articulation. The figure that captures Diego Luna’s Cassian at the show’s later-arc configuration, with the dual-weapon loadout that distinguishes the rebel-leader version from the earlier season-one releases.
The Season Two Configuration
The figure depicts Cassian at his season-two configuration — different from the season-one Aldhani Mission cover identity (the #AND 01 Walmart-exclusive figure), different from the season-one standard rebel operative configuration (the #AND 08A mainline figure), and different from the post-Andor Rogue One operations configuration (the various Rogue One-wave releases). The packaging text confirms this: “Cassian Andor continues he journey that will shape him into a leader of the Rebellion. As political tensions grow, he is forced to rise to the occasion and take a stand for everything he believes in.”
The “leader of the Rebellion” framing positions this figure specifically as season-two-arc Cassian — the character who is no longer the new-recruit rebel of season one, who has accepted his role in the broader rebellion structure, and who is preparing for the operations that will eventually lead him to Rogue One. The costume design reflects this character development: more practical, more operative-equipped, less Coruscant-civilian-passing than the earlier configurations.
For collectors who care about Cassian’s character arc being represented across multiple Black Series releases, the #AND 10 fills the season-two slot in the chronological progression: Aldhani cover (#AND 01) → season-one civilian operative (#AND 08A) → season-two rebel leader (#AND 10) → Rogue One mission operations (separate Rogue One-wave figures). Four configurations across four Cassian releases, each capturing the character at a meaningfully different point in his arc.
The Three-Accessory Loadout
Three accessories: two blasters (different designs) and a removable plastic jacket. The two-blaster loadout is the figure’s most distinctive feature — most Cassian Andor figures ship with a single blaster, and the dual-weapon configuration on the #AND 10 reflects the season-two character’s more militarised role. The two blasters are visually distinct from each other, supporting display configurations where Cassian carries both weapons simultaneously (the season-two combat-ready operative look) or selects one weapon for a specific scene reference.
Both blasters fit well into the holster (one at a time, since the figure has one holster), and Cassian Andor can hold them well in both hands. The right hand was given an index finger which stands out slightly so it can be placed onto the weapon’s triggers — the same engineering detail that distinguishes the Luthen Rael figure (#AND 06) and signals Hasbro’s commitment to firing-stance-realistic posing on the late-Mural-Collection releases.
For collectors evaluating accessory-per-dollar value: three accessories at $24.99 mainline pricing is appropriate for a non-exclusive release. The dual-blaster loadout is more generous than the single-weapon loadout that affects most Cassian Andor figures across the line, and the additional weapon variety supports more display configurations from a single figure.
The Removable Jacket Problem
The jacket is removable but with the same caveat that affects every other Andor Mural Collection figure with a removable coat: the sleeves are sculpted and painted onto the figure’s arms, so taking the jacket off doesn’t fundamentally change the figure’s appearance. This is the third Mural Collection figure (after Luthen Rael at #AND 06 and Cassian #AND 08A) where Hasbro has applied the removable-coat-with-sculpted-sleeves design pattern, and the limitation is consistent across all three.
For collectors who hoped the season-two Cassian would offer cleaner swap-out flexibility — Cassian in jacket for cold-weather scenes, Cassian without jacket for warmer-environment scenes — the design is more limited than the “removable jacket” description suggests. The jacket removes; the visual transformation does not happen. The body and back of the jacket come off, but the arms still appear to be wearing the sculpted-and-painted sleeves underneath.
The pattern is structurally consistent across the Andor Mural Collection’s coat-equipped figures, which suggests it is a deliberate Hasbro design choice rather than a per-figure oversight. The cost-saving rationale (avoiding additional underneath-the-coat sculpting and paint application) is presumably what drives the decision. For collectors who treat the jacket as a permanent display element, the design works exactly as intended. For collectors who hoped for true swap-out flexibility, the pattern is the figure’s most defensible negative.
The Outstanding Head Sculpt
Even though the figure’s sculpt looks outstanding overall, especially the head sculpt looks great. Hasbro applied the photo-real print application to capture Diego Luna’s season-two Andor likeness with the sharp definition that the earlier Cassian releases (#AND 01 and #AND 08A) also carry. The face reads correctly under display lighting and the photo-real print catches the light at the right level of definition.
The season-two Cassian face has a slightly different reading from the earlier configurations — the character is meant to look more matured, more weighted-down by the rebellion’s accumulated cost, more like the person Rogue One audiences will eventually meet. The figure’s head sculpt captures this maturation cleanly. For collectors building chronological Cassian displays, the three figures (Aldhani, season-one standard, season-two #AND 10) together create a meaningful character-progression readout.
The Paint Critique
The figure’s most defensible negative is the lack of paint application that could bring some of the details out more. This is a very clean looking figure, and details like the additional ammunition on the belt for example were left unpainted. The clean paint application means small sculpted details — ammunition pouches, equipment loops, belt-mounted gear — read as undifferentiated mass-coloured plastic rather than as individually-painted screen-accurate equipment.
This is the same recurring critique that affects most of the Mural Collection’s late releases (Wandering Jedi, Jabiim Obi-Wan, Bix Caleen, Luthen Rael, Vel Sartha, Vader Duel’s End). Hasbro consistently undershoots on paint application detail despite the figures’ high-quality sculpting. A more aggressive paint pass — picking out the small details with appropriate metallic and contrast colours — would have transformed the figure’s display reading substantially. As shipped, the figure is well-sculpted but under-painted.
For collectors who notice when sculpted details aren’t paint-differentiated, this is a meaningful frustration. For collectors who display figures at standard shelf distance where small unpainted details aren’t immediately visible, the issue is less critical. Either way, the figure is good rather than great — which is the assessment detailed reviewers have applied to it: “this new version of Cassian Andor is good, it’s not great, but it’s good and worth adding to the collection.”
Articulation
16 joints. Ball-jointed top neck, ball-jointed lower neck, butterfly-jointed shoulders, swivel-hinged shoulders, swivel-hinged elbows, swivel-hinged wrists, ball-jointed waist, barbell-jointed hip, swivel-hinged knees, rocker ankles. The articulation count is on the lower end of the Phase 4 baseline — most late-2023 and 2024 releases ship with 18-19 joints — and reflects a slightly different joint philosophy than the earlier Cassian releases.
Specifically, the #AND 10 uses swivel-hinged shoulders/elbows/wrists rather than the ball-jointed configuration that the earlier #AND 08A figure uses. This is a meaningful articulation difference — swivel-hinged joints offer slightly less range of motion than ball joints, but they provide more secure pose-holding in dynamic configurations. For the more militarised season-two Cassian who is meant to hold combat poses cleanly, the swivel-hinged choice is appropriate engineering. For collectors who prefer the maximum range of motion that ball joints offer, the configuration is a step backward from the earlier releases.
The figure stands well on display, and the one photographed by detailed reviewers had stiff joints — supporting the dynamic-pose holding that the figure’s combat-ready configuration is designed for.
The Mural Collection Position
Cassian (#AND 10) sits on the Rebels-aligned side of the boxed Andor mural display alongside Bix Caleen, Luthen Rael, Mon Mothma, Vel Sartha, and the other Cassian releases. For loose display, the figure works best in chronological-arc configurations alongside the earlier Cassian releases — Aldhani Mission (#AND 01) → standard mainline (#AND 08A) → season two (#AND 10) → eventual Rogue One transitions — to create the full character-arc readout. The figure also works alongside the season-two-specific Andor characters (the eventual K-2SO Andor figure at #AND 11, the various other late-collection releases) for the season-two ensemble display.
For collectors who want the most current Cassian Andor figure available — the closest representation to the character at the bridge into Rogue One — the #AND 10 is the right purchase. For collectors building only one Cassian Andor figure, the choice between #AND 08A (more flexible standard configuration) and #AND 10 (more militarised season-two configuration) depends on which arc point matters more to the collector.
Secondary Market
Single-boxed mainline release, non-exclusive, October 2024. Available at or near MSRP on the secondary market with broad retail availability through 2024 and into 2025. The mainline distribution and the standard $24.99 MSRP keep the figure accessible. Verify both blasters and the removable jacket are included. No production variants documented.
Our Verdict
Cassian Andor at #AND 10 is the right figure for what it is: a season-two-configuration Cassian with the Diego Luna photo-real likeness, the dual-blaster loadout that supports militarised combat displays, the removable jacket (with the standard sculpted-sleeves limitation), and the 16-joint articulation supporting dynamic pose-holding. The mainline distribution makes the figure accessible. The build quality is solid with stiff joints supporting display stability.
The clean paint application that leaves small details unpainted is the figure’s biggest defensible negative. The swivel-hinged shoulder/elbow/wrist configuration offers slightly less range of motion than ball joints. The removable-jacket-with-sculpted-sleeves design is the consistent Mural Collection limitation that affects all the coat-equipped figures. The figure is good, not great. None of these are deal-breakers.
Buy this figure if you are completing the Andor Mural Collection, if you collect Cassian across configurations and want the season-two militarised version, if you build chronological-arc displays of Diego Luna’s Cassian performance, or if you appreciate the dual-blaster loadout’s display flexibility. The $24.99 MSRP is fair for the head sculpt and the three-accessory loadout, and the mainline distribution makes the figure easy to acquire.
The season-two Cassian. The figure with the dual blasters. The Cassian who is becoming the rebel leader Rogue One audiences will eventually meet. Buy him. Display him alongside the earlier Cassian releases for the full chronological-arc readout. The Andor Mural Collection’s season-two Cassian earns the position by being the best representation of Diego Luna’s later-arc performance available at the 6-inch scale.
Part of Star Wars The Black Series | Phase 4 Andor Mural Collection. Related: Cassian Andor P4-AND-08A | Cassian Andor (Aldhani Mission) P4-AND-01 | Vel Sartha P4-AND-08B.