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Star Wars Black Series Acolyte Conflict

The High Republic era of The Acolyte — Jedi Masters investigating a mysterious Sith threat a century before The Phantom Menace. The Black Series' first dedicated High Republic display, covering all figures from the 2024 Disney+ series. Complete scene guide with building advice and all figures.

The Acolyte Conflict is the Black Series’ first dedicated High Republic display. Every figure in this scene comes from the 2024 Disney+ series The Acolyte — a self-contained set that covers one of the most thematically unusual corners of Star Wars storytelling Hasbro has translated into plastic. This is not the Rebellion versus the Empire. This is the Jedi Order at its height, confronting something it would rather not acknowledge.

The Scene in Star Wars

The Acolyte is set approximately 100 years before The Phantom Menace — deep in the High Republic era, when the Jedi Order is at its most powerful and most confident. The series asks what happens when the Jedi, at the peak of their institutional authority, encounter a Sith threat that their own history and self-image have made them incapable of properly seeing.

The answer the series gives is uncomfortable. The Jedi in The Acolyte are not corrupt, not evil, not cartoonishly compromised — but they are institutional, and institutions protect themselves. The conflict that unfolds around Osha and Mae, twins born on a Witch planet with a traumatic past, involves a Sith who operates not through armies but through the Jedi’s own blind spots. Qimir — The Stranger — is the series’ most compelling creation: a Sith who understands the Jedi better than they understand themselves.

The series is also notable for what it adds to the High Republic visual vocabulary. Jedi robes of this era are more varied than the standardised look of the Prequel Trilogy — individual Masters have distinct aesthetics that reflect their personalities. Vernestra Rwoh’s lightwhip is the most visually striking weapon the Black Series has produced in this era. Kelnacca’s status as a Wookiee Jedi in full isolation on a forest planet is the kind of detail that rewards engagement with the wider High Republic storytelling.

The Acolyte was cancelled after one season, leaving its story incomplete. That makes this figure set something specific: a record of a chapter that won’t have a sequel. The display is complete in itself.

Building This Display

The Acolyte Conflict is one of the few Black Series scene displays where you can own every figure without hunting exclusives or searching secondary markets. The entire set came from a single sub-line in 2024-2025, all at standard retail or Hasbro Pulse. That accessibility is unusual for a scene of this depth.

The natural anchor for the display is the opposition at the heart of the series: Osha Aniseya and The Stranger (Qimir). Osha is the character the series follows most closely — the former Jedi Padawan who left the Order after the traumatic events on her home planet, then finds herself pulled back into the conflict she thought she’d left behind. Qimir is the series’ Sith antagonist, operating without the title, without the army, without the apparatus the Prequel Trilogy associated with the dark side. He’s dangerous in a quieter, more personal way.

Jedi Master Sol is the third figure worth prioritising — the most significant Jedi character in the series, Osha’s former Master, and the figure whose actions drive the moral complexity of the plot. The relationship between Sol and Osha is the series’ emotional core.

From there the display fills out naturally. The Council-level Jedi — Vernestra Rwoh and her lightwhip, the formidable Master Indara whose opening scene establishes the series’ tone immediately — add authority and visual variety. Kelnacca, the Wookiee Jedi Deluxe release, is a genuine centrepiece figure: a 6-inch Wookiee in Jedi robes is visually distinctive in a way few Black Series figures are.

Bazil — the small, lizard-like Jedi Order Tracker — is the display’s most distinctive supporting figure. As a non-humanoid figure with significant size difference from the rest of the set, he adds visual texture and is the kind of figure the Black Series doesn’t produce often enough.

The High Republic Context

The Acolyte exists within the broader High Republic publishing initiative — a multi-year project across novels, comics, and now screen media set in this earlier era of Star Wars history. If you’ve read the High Republic novels, the Acolyte Conflict display connects directly to that material: Vernestra Rwoh has a significant presence in the publishing line, and the High Republic’s visual language and institutional character carry across media.

If you haven’t engaged with the wider High Republic material, the display still works as a standalone record of the series. But it’s worth knowing that these characters exist within a richer published context than most Black Series scene displays — there’s more story here if you want it.

A Complete Set

Unlike most Black Series scene displays — which continue to grow as Hasbro produces new figures tied to ongoing or beloved properties — the Acolyte Conflict is effectively closed. The series was cancelled. Hasbro is unlikely to produce significant additional figures from a single-season show without a confirmed continuation.

That completeness is actually an argument for the display. You can own every figure from this scene, arrange them on a shelf, and know the set is finished. There’s no waiting for a key character who hasn’t been produced yet, no gaps in the lineup. The Acolyte Conflict display is achievable in a way that the Death Star Corridors or the Clone Wars battles never will be.

All Figures for This Display

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


Part of Star Wars The Black Series | Scenes. Related: Duel of the Fates | Clone Wars Battles | Collector Guide | Photo Real Guide.