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Star Wars Black Series Ezra Bridger

Every Star Wars Black Series Ezra Bridger figure — animated Rebels Padawan, live-action Ahsoka series return, and the Peridea configuration. The Ghost crew's Jedi across four figures spanning animation to live-action.

Ezra Bridger’s Black Series figure range spans the same animated-to-live-action transition that defines the broader Rebels character collecting story — four figures covering the Lothal street orphan, the trained Jedi Padawan, and the person who spent years in an unknown galaxy before coming back. The animated figures capture the specific Filoni aesthetic of Rebels; the live-action figures capture Eman Esfandi’s portrayal in Ahsoka. They’re the same character at different points in a story that the animated series began and the Disney+ era is continuing.

Ezra Bridger in Star Wars

Ezra is human — a Lothal street orphan whose Force sensitivity brought him into contact with the Ghost crew and whose Jedi training under Kanan Jarrus turned him from a survival-focused loner into one of the early Rebellion’s most significant figures. His arc across Rebels is the coming-of-age story at its most explicit: the boy who couldn’t trust anyone, learning to trust his crew, his master, and eventually the wider cause enough to sacrifice himself for it.

The sacrifice that closes Rebels — Ezra calling the purrgil to Lothal and going with them, taking Thrawn out of the known galaxy at the cost of his own return — is the series’ defining character moment. It’s not a death, but it’s a disappearance that everyone treats as one for years. The question the Ahsoka series is built around is not whether Ezra survived — that’s established — but what he became during his years in Peridea, and whether the people who loved him can reach him across a galaxy they didn’t know existed.

His relationship with Kanan Jarrus is the emotional foundation of Rebels — the master-student bond that the series traces from its first episode through Kanan’s death, and that shapes everything Ezra does in the series’ final two seasons. His relationship with Sabine Wren — complicated, evolving, the specific dynamic of two people who fight together well and understand each other’s damage — is what drives her search for him in Ahsoka. The series is, among other things, a story about what you owe the people who chose you before you chose yourself.

His Peridea years have changed him in ways the Ahsoka series was only beginning to explore at the end of its first season. The character who returns is quieter, more settled, less driven by the reactive energy that powered his Rebels arc — a person who spent years surviving in an alien environment with no support structure except the Noti who sheltered him. The Peridea Ezra figure captures that specific changed quality.

The Animated Figures

The Red Line Phase 3 Ezra from 2019 is the original Black Series treatment — the Rebels animated design at pre-Galaxy Collection production quality. The Fan Channel Rebels sub-line Ezra from 2020 is the improved animated version, produced as part of the systematic Ghost crew coverage that gave each member a dedicated sub-line release. For the Duel With Ahsoka and Ghost crew displays, the Fan Channel figure is the recommended animated Ezra — the same animated face printing approach but at better production quality than the original Red Line.

The animated aesthetic is specific to Rebels’ visual design — the slightly stylised proportions, the face printing tuned to the Filoni CGI approach rather than photography. For animated display alongside Hera, Sabine, Zeb, and Kanan, this is the correct figure.

The Live-Action Figures

The Ezra Bridger (Lothal) from the Ahsoka sub-line is the live-action debut — Eman Esfandi’s Photo Real likeness in the costume of his initial Ahsoka appearances, the Lothal configuration before the journey to Peridea. This is the figure for collectors building the Ahsoka series display — the live-action Ezra whose return is the series’ inciting narrative.

The Ezra Bridger (Peridea) covers his second-half appearance in the alternate galaxy — the changed configuration from his years of survival there, the specific look of the character in the Peridea sequences. For the Peridea Ruins display, this is the era-accurate choice.

The animated and live-action figures are not interchangeable for display purposes. An animated Rebels Ezra next to a Photo Real Ahsoka Ezra creates the same aesthetic clash that mixing animated and live-action figures always does. Each format belongs with figures from its own production context.

The Complete Arc Display

The four Ezra figures together create one of the more complete character arc displays in the Rebels cast — the Red Line original for the line’s early commitment to the character, the sub-line animated version for the proper Rebels display, the Lothal live-action for the return, and the Peridea version for where he’s been. From street orphan to Ghost crew Padawan to survivor to returning Jedi, the arc is visible across the figures.

From street orphan to Ghost crew Padawan to survivor to returning Jedi, the arc is visible across the figures. Paired with the Sabine Wren figures — the person who chose to search for him, whose Ahsoka arc is defined by what she owes him — the two characters’ combined figure range tells the Rebels story from its beginning through its live-action continuation more completely than any individual character page can. That’s the specific display argument for building both simultaneously rather than sequentially. The Ghost crew is a found family whose story extends across animation and live-action, and the figure range rewards collectors who engage with both rather than treating the animated and live-action eras as separate collections.

All Ezra Bridger 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 | Duel With Ahsoka | Peridea Ruins | Sabine Wren | Grand Admiral Thrawn.