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Reva (Third Sister) — Star Wars The Black Series #OWK 03

The Black Series Reva (Third Sister) — Phase 4 Obi-Wan Kenobi Mural Collection #03, 2022. The Inquisitor with the most accessory variety in the line: double-bladed lightsaber that breaks into two single sabers, four removable red blades. MSRP $24.99.

Overview

Reva at #OWK 03 is the Mural Collection’s most accessory-rich figure and the Disney+ series’ most arc-driven antagonist — the Third Sister whose entire character moves from Vader-loyal Inquisitor in Episode 1 to Order 66 survivor seeking revenge by Episode 5 to the woman who chooses not to kill a child by Episode 6. Released July 2022, single-boxed, non-exclusive, MSRP $24.99. The figure ships with a double-bladed red lightsaber that splits into two single-bladed sabers, with four removable blades total — the highest-utility weapon configuration of any Phase 4 figure. Soft-goods cape (non-removable). Outstanding head sculpt. The figure that proves Hasbro can do the lightsaber-modular thing properly when they commit to it.

The Accessory Configuration: Why This Figure Matters

Most Black Series figures ship with one or two accessories. Reva ships with seven items configured as one weapon system: a double-bladed lightsaber hilt with two removable red blades, plus two single-bladed lightsaber hilts with their own two removable red blades. Together, these components let the collector display Reva in five different weapon configurations: full double-bladed saber, half double-bladed saber (one blade ignited, one removed), the double-bladed hilt non-ignited and clipped to the belt, the two single sabers held in both hands, or one single saber drawn with the other clipped to the belt. The half-circle hilt has a peg that plugs firmly into a hole on the belt’s right hip, so the unused configuration always has a place to go.

This is the configuration the Disney+ series depicts — Reva uses the saber as a double-blade in Episode 1, splits it for the duel sequences, and clips the unignited hilt to her belt during dialogue scenes. The figure captures every state. For a 2022 Black Series release at standard MSRP, this is the most generous accessory loadout in the Mural Collection and arguably in the entire Phase 4 lineup.

The Soft Plastic Shoulder Trick

A specific design detail worth flagging: both shoulder bells on the figure are sculpted from a softer plastic than the rest of the body. The reason is articulation range — softer-plastic shoulder bells let the arms raise above 90 degrees, which is the angle required for the two-handed double-bladed lightsaber poses and the over-the-head striking poses the show depicts. Hard-plastic shoulder bells would have capped the figure’s arm range at the standard Black Series ceiling and would have made the dynamic Inquisitor poses impossible.

This is the kind of small engineering choice that distinguishes a figure designed for display from a figure designed to ship. Hasbro committed to making Reva poseable in the configurations the show requires, and the soft-plastic shoulder trick is how they got there. The figure stands well even in dynamic poses, which is the test the engineering needs to pass.

The Loose-Hand Trade-Off

The single complaint about the accessory configuration: all three weapons fit only loosely into Reva’s hands. The hilts do not lock into the grip the way some Phase 4 figures’ weapons do. For static display this is not an issue — the saber sits in the hand fine — but for action poses with the figure mid-swing, the hilt can slip if the figure is jostled. This is a minor manufacturing trade-off and not a deal-breaker, but collectors who pose-and-shoot rather than pose-and-leave should be aware that the loose grip exists.

The Cape Decision

The soft-goods cape is not removable. Hasbro sculpted Reva with the cape integrated into the figure’s design, not as a detachable accessory. This is the right decision: the Inquisitor uniform reads as a single piece, and a removable cape would have created the bulky-stitched-collar problem that plagues many Phase 4 soft-goods releases. The cape fits well onto the figure without feeling bulky. There are no other removable parts on the outfit — the chest piece, the belt, the shoulder pieces are all fixed. What you see in the box is what the figure is.

The Character Arc the Series Built

Reva is the Disney+ series’ most ambitious character. Episode 1 introduces her as a ruthlessly ambitious Inquisitor willing to commit civilian massacres to find Obi-Wan and impress Vader. By Episode 3 she has demonstrated competence and cruelty in equal measure. By Episode 5 the series reveals she is an Order 66 survivor — a youngling who watched Vader kill her friends, who infiltrated the Empire specifically to get close enough to Vader to kill him, and whose entire arc has been a long-game revenge plot. By Episode 6 she has the chance to kill young Luke Skywalker as part of completing her revenge against Vader, and she chooses not to. The arc is the show’s most complete character journey.

The figure is the Reva of Episodes 1–4 — the Inquisitor at the height of her competent-and-cruel phase, before the revelation reframes everything she has done. That is the right configuration to capture in plastic, because the Inquisitor uniform is the costume the character spends the most screen time in and the costume that does the most narrative work. Display her with the saber double-bladed for the hunting-Obi-Wan scenes. Display her with the saber split for the duel sequences. Display her with the saber clipped to the belt for the conversation-with-Vader scenes.

Sculpt and Paint

The head sculpt is outstanding. Hasbro captured Moses Ingram’s likeness cleanly — the cheekbones, the brow shape, the specific facial expression the character holds through most of the series. The paint application on the head is sharp, with clean eye paint and skin tone that reads correctly under display lighting. The lightsaber hilts were painted well with silver highlights that catch the light during display. The body sculpt is the standard Phase 4 adult-female tooling but proportioned correctly for the character.

The colour tone on the Inquisitor uniform reads as the correct Disney+ series black-grey, with the small detail elements painted cleanly. There is no battle damage or weathering, which is correct for the Episode 1–4 configuration the figure depicts — Reva does not get visibly damaged until later in the series, and a clean uniform is the right baseline.

Articulation

18 joints. Ball-jointed top neck, ball-jointed lower neck, ball-joint where the neck connects to the body (giving Reva a tilt-and-look range that most Black Series figures don’t have), ball-jointed shoulders, ball-jointed elbows, ball-jointed wrists, ball-jointed upper body, ball-jointed hips, swivel thighs, ball-jointed knees, ball-jointed ankles. The neck articulation is the standout — the three-point neck setup gives the figure a much wider range of head positions than the standard Black Series two-joint neck, which matters for displaying the character mid-conversation or mid-strike.

The Mural Collection Position

Reva sits between Darth Vader (#OWK 02) and the Fifth Brother (#OWK 04) in the boxed mural display — the Inquisitor sandwiched between the master she serves and the colleague she will eventually betray. Loose, she displays well alongside both: with Vader for the command-structure scenes, with the Fifth Brother for the Inquisitor-team scenes, and alone for the revenge-arc display.

For collectors building only the Inquisitor segment of the Mural Collection — Vader, Reva, Fifth Brother, the eventual Grand Inquisitor — Reva is the centrepiece because she is the character the show develops most. For collectors building the full mural, she is the figure with the most posing flexibility and therefore the figure that anchors the dynamic-pose shelf.

Secondary Market

Single-boxed, non-exclusive, wide retail release in July 2022. Available at or below MSRP on the secondary market. Verify all four removable lightsaber blades are included — the small parts are easy to lose and a Reva with missing blades cannot do the configurations the figure was designed for. The double-bladed hilt and both single hilts should all be present. No production variants documented.

Our Verdict

Reva at #OWK 03 is the best-engineered figure of the Obi-Wan Kenobi Mural Collection and one of the best-engineered figures in the entire Phase 4 lineup. The modular lightsaber system, the three-point neck articulation, the soft-plastic shoulder bells, the outstanding head sculpt — every design decision Hasbro made on this figure was the correct one. The only complaints are the loose hand grip and the non-removable cape, and neither is significant enough to undermine the figure.

Buy this figure if you are completing the Mural Collection, if you collect Inquisitors, if the Disney+ series mattered to you, or if you want the best example of how Hasbro can engineer a Black Series figure when they commit to the work. Reva is the figure that proves the line can do better than its baseline. The character with the best arc in the show, captured at the moment her arc was most complete on screen. Buy her.


Part of Star Wars The Black Series | Phase 4 Obi-Wan Kenobi Mural Collection. Related: Darth Vader (Obi-Wan Kenobi) P4-OWK-02 | Fifth Brother (Inquisitor) P4-OWK-04 | Obi-Wan Kenobi Wandering Jedi P4-OWK-01.