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Star Wars Black Series Cassian Andor

Every Star Wars Black Series Cassian Andor figure — Rogue One film configurations and four Andor series releases covering the radicalization arc. Display guide for the Battle of Scarif, the Aldhani heist, Ferrix, and season two.

Cassian Andor has the most varied Black Series figure range of any Rogue One or Andor character — a range split across two distinct eras that represent genuinely different versions of the same person. The Rogue One Cassian is the hardened Rebellion intelligence officer at Scarif, the man who has already made all the compromises. The Andor series Cassian is the years of backstory that explain how he got there — a radicalization arc told over two seasons that the Black Series has covered with unusual configuration depth for a streaming series.

Cassian Andor in Star Wars

Cassian is human — a Festian whose early life was shaped by the Separatist occupation of his homeworld and whose adult life has been entirely devoted to the Rebellion at enormous personal cost. By the time Rogue One introduces him, he’s already done things he can’t undo: assassinations, betrayals, the kind of intelligence work that the Alliance officially doesn’t acknowledge. He’s not an idealist. He’s a professional who believes in the cause enough to keep paying the price it asks.

Andor is the five years before that — Cassian as a petty criminal on Ferrix who stumbles into a Rebellion he didn’t choose and is gradually remade by it. The series’ political intelligence is what distinguishes it from most Disney+ Star Wars: it takes seriously the question of how ordinary people become revolutionaries, what the Empire’s surveillance and occupation looks like from the inside, and what resistance actually costs in terms of specific lives and specific choices. The Aldhani heist arc, the Narkina 5 prison arc, and the Ferrix uprising are the three narrative pillars that transform the character into the person who can lead Rogue One’s mission to Scarif.

Diego Luna’s performance across the series is considered among the finest in Star Wars television — a character study that the format of a streaming series allows with a patience that film can’t match. The Black Series’ investment in multiple Andor configurations reflects the series’ cultural standing among fans who take the storytelling seriously.

The Rogue One Figures

The Captain Cassian Andor (Eadu) from the 2016 Red Line is the original Black Series treatment — the film launch figure at pre-Photo Real production quality. The Eadu mission configuration captures his Rogue One appearance before the Scarif climax. As a 2016 figure it carries the limitations of the era but established the character in the line.

The Galaxy Collection Rogue One Captain Cassian Andor is the definitive film version — Photo Real Diego Luna likeness at current production standards, the specific costume of the Rogue One main cast. For the Battle of Scarif display, this is the correct figure. The original Eadu release has been superseded for display purposes and there’s no reason to choose it over the Galaxy Collection version.

The Andor Series Figures

The Andor sub-line has given Cassian more configurations than most protagonists in the Disney+ era — four releases covering two seasons and several distinct story contexts.

Cassian Andor (Aldhani Mission) is the Walmart exclusive season one heist configuration — the specific gear of the Imperial payroll raid on Aldhani, the operation that marks Cassian’s first full commitment to the Rebellion. The Aldhani heist is the series’ first season centrepiece: a meticulous, tense, team-based operation whose execution and aftermath reshape everyone involved. As the most dramatically significant single arc of season one, the Aldhani Mission figure is the most scene-specific Andor release in the line.

Cassian Andor (Ferrix) is the standard season one configuration — the home island aesthetic, the character before the full radicalization. For collectors building the Ferrix Uprising display, this is the correct figure: Cassian in the environment where he started, returned for the uprising that closes the first season.

The season two standard and the Sienar Test Pilot cover Cassian’s second season arc — the latter being the undercover identity Cassian assumes for the orbital weapons factory sequences, one of the more specific disguise configurations the sub-line has produced. For collectors following the series through its full run, both season two figures extend the display beyond what season one alone can represent.

Rogue One or Andor — The Core Decision

The Rogue One Cassian and the Andor series Cassian look different, are costumed differently, and represent different points in the same character’s life. They’re not interchangeable display choices. The Rogue One figure belongs in the Battle of Scarif and the Rogue One ensemble display. The Andor figures belong in the Ferrix, Aldhani, and series-specific displays.

Most collectors who care about Cassian as a character eventually want both the Rogue One Galaxy Collection version and at least one Andor configuration. The Aldhani Mission is the recommended single Andor purchase for its dramatic significance; the standard Ferrix release is the accessible complement.

The Andor Series and the Black Series

Andor is the Black Series’ most thoroughly covered streaming series in terms of configuration depth relative to episode count. The sub-line’s investment in four distinct Cassian configurations — across two seasons, multiple story arcs, and several specific disguise and mission contexts — reflects both the series’ critical standing and the collector demand from an audience that engages with the show’s political storytelling as serious Star Wars.

The Sienar Test Pilot disguise in particular is the kind of release that signals genuine production commitment: a figure built around a specific undercover identity from a single arc of a second season, produced for collectors who know exactly which scene it references. That’s not a mainstream commercial decision. It’s a statement that the Andor sub-line is serving the series’ most engaged audience.

For collectors who haven’t watched Andor and are deciding whether the figures are worth the investment: the series is the most narratively substantial Star Wars production of the Disney era, and the figures serve displays that tell a different kind of Star Wars story than the battle scenes and duel configurations that dominate the rest of the line.

All Cassian Andor Figures in the Black Series

Check off the figures you own with the Black Series Checklist.


Part of Star Wars The Black Series | Characters. Related: Human | Battle of Scarif | Aldhani Heist | Ferrix Uprising | K-2SO.