Star Wars Black Series Nevarro Streets
The volcanic world of Nevarro — the Mandalorian covert's base, hub for the Bounty Hunter's Guild, later a growing New Republic town. The second largest scene in the Black Series, drawing figures from the full run of The Mandalorian and into The Mandalorian and Grogu. Complete display guide with character breakdowns and building advice.
The Nevarro Streets display is the second largest in the Black Series — drawing figures from the full run of The Mandalorian through The Book of Boba Fett and into the 2026 The Mandalorian and Grogu releases. Nevarro is the gravitational centre of the Mandalorian sub-line: the volcanic world where Din Djarin’s story begins, where the Bounty Hunter’s Guild operates, where Moff Gideon’s Imperial remnant maintains a garrison, and where a small New Republic outpost slowly takes shape across three seasons of storytelling.
The Scene in Star Wars
Nevarro is a lava world — volcanic terrain, hardscrabble settlements, the kind of planet that exists at the edge of what the New Republic pays attention to. In season one it’s primarily the Guild’s territory: Greef Karga’s operation, the cantina, the covert beneath the city. The Imperial remnant presence is what it is in the outer territories — a garrison, a client, the infrastructure of control without the full weight of the Empire behind it.
The series uses Nevarro’s geography deliberately across three seasons. The lava fields are the action environment — the chase sequences, the ambushes, the Guild confrontations. The city is the political environment — where deals are made, where Greef Karga operates, where the balance of power between the Guild, the Imperial remnant, and the Mandalorian covert plays out. By season three, Nevarro has become something genuinely new: a growing town with a school, a population, a claim on New Republic recognition. The arc from dangerous frontier world to civic community is one of The Mandalorian’s most quietly sustained storylines.
Din Djarin’s relationship with Nevarro mirrors his relationship with belonging. He returns to it repeatedly because it’s the closest thing to a home base the series gives him — the place where his people were, where his connections are, where the consequences of his choices tend to collect.
The Mandalorian Sub-Line
The Mandalorian sub-line is the most extensive single-series production in the Black Series, and most of it is tagged to this display. Din Djarin alone has been produced in more configurations than almost any other character in the line — the original Red Line release, the Beskar Armor version, the Carbonized exclusive, the Credit Collection, multiple Target Deluxe sets, the Morak configuration, the Mines of Mandalore version, and the Pagodon release. Each represents a different point in the character’s arc and a different production era.
For display purposes, the most recent mainline release is the standard recommendation. The Mines of Mandalore configuration from 2024 represents Din at his most narratively complete — post-Redemption, post-alliance, operating with a full sense of his place within the Mandalorian people. For collectors who want the specific season one aesthetic, the Beskar Armor release covers that visual identity precisely.
The Grogu releases — the Credit Collection Child, the standalone Grogu, the IG-12 Deluxe, and the various two-packs — track the character’s evolution from a mysterious foundling to an active participant in Din’s operations. The IG-12 Deluxe is the most display-specific: the modified IG-series droid that Grogu uses as a sort of mech suit is one of the more inventive character developments in the series and produces a figure that is immediately distinctive on a shelf.
Greef Karga and the Guild
Greef Karga’s arc across The Mandalorian is one of the series’ better character developments — from Guild Agent to uneasy ally to Magistrate of a growing New Republic town. His three Black Series figures trace that arc: the initial Red Line release, the Credit Collection version, and the Magistrate Greef Karga figure that reflects his civic role in season three.
The Magistrate configuration is the most interesting display choice for collectors who want to tell the complete Nevarro story — the Guild operative turned town administrator is a genuinely surprising character trajectory, and the figure’s more formal costume communicates that shift.
Moff Gideon’s Garrison
The Imperial presence on Nevarro is covered by the Imperial Remnant sub-group: the Imperial Stormtrooper (Mandalorian), the Remnant Stormtrooper, the Incinerator Trooper, the Artillery Stormtrooper, and Moff Gideon in three configurations. These figures connect the Nevarro Streets display to the Imperial Remnant Defense scene, and the two displays work together to tell the complete story of the remnant’s operations.
The 2026 Mandalorian and Grogu releases expand the Imperial Remnant presence significantly — the Remnant AT-AT Driver, the Imperial Remnant AT-RT Driver, and the Imperial Remnant Stormtrooper variants bring new visual variety to the display’s Imperial side and signal that the feature film will deploy the remnant’s military assets at a scale the series never quite reached.
The Wider Mandalorian Cast
The Nevarro display’s depth comes from its supporting cast — the characters who populate the world around Din Djarin and give Nevarro its social texture.
Kuiil, the Ugnaught vaporator farmer who becomes an unlikely ally, brings both the series’ first sense of community and its most affecting early loss. The Client, Werner Herzog’s Imperial holdout nursing a failing operation with Imperial credits and stormtroopers, is the season one antagonist whose understated menace sets the tone for the series’ approach to villainy. Cobb Vanth — the Tatooine marshal who has been wearing Mandalorian armour without the training or tradition — is a character whose single appearance generates an entire philosophical sub-argument about what Mandalorian identity requires.
The Ahsoka Tano Mandalorian-era figures — the Credit Collection release and the Corvus configuration — are tagged here as part of her Mandalorian appearance, which bridges her Clone Wars and Ahsoka series arcs.
Building This Display
The Nevarro Streets display is large enough that most collectors approach it as an ongoing build rather than a one-time acquisition. The natural starting core is Din Djarin in a current configuration, Grogu, Greef Karga, and the Armorer — the four characters most central to the Nevarro story across all three seasons. From there the display expands into whichever aspects of the Mandalorian world interest you most: the Guild side, the Imperial remnant, the Mandalorian faction, the New Republic presence.
For army building within this scene, the Remnant Stormtrooper and the various Imperial Stormtrooper variants are the primary targets — the worn, post-Empire aesthetic that distinguishes Mandalorian-era Imperials from their Original Trilogy predecessors.
All Figures for This Display
86 figures
- Cara Dune
- Cara Dune
- IG-11
- Moff Gideon
- Offworld Jawa
- Offworld Jawa (First Edition)
- The Mandalorian
- The Mandalorian (Carbonized)
- The Mandalorian (First Edition)
- Cara Dune
- Din Djarin and The Child (Deluxe)
- Greef Karga
- Greef Karga
- Imperial Stormtrooper (Mandalorian)
- Kuiil
- Mandalorian (Beskar Armor)
- Remnant Stormtrooper
- Speeder Bike Scout Trooper and The Child
- The Armorer
- The Armorer (Deluxe)
- The Child / Grogu
- The Mandalorian
- Ahsoka Tano
- Bo-Katan Kryze
- Boba Fett
- Dark Trooper
- Fennec Shand
- Greef Karga
- IG-11
- Incinerator Trooper
- Koska Reeves
- Kuiil
- Kuiil
- Moff Gideon
- Paz Vizsla (Deluxe)
- Q9-0 (ZERO)
- The Mandalorian & Grogu (Maldo Kreis - Deluxe)
- The Mandalorian and Grogu (Arvala-7 - Deluxe)
- Ahsoka Tano (Corvus)
- Artillery Stormtrooper
- Boba Fett (Tython - Jedi Ruins - Deluxe)
- Boba Fett (Tython)
- Cobb Vanth (Deluxe)
- Death Watch Mandalorian
- Migs Mayfeld (Morak)
- The Client
- The Mandalorian (Archive)
- The Mandalorian, Ahsoka Tano & Grogu 3-Pack
- Ahsoka Tano (Archive)
- Axe Woves
- Bo-Katan Kryze (Archive)
- Dark Trooper (Deluxe)
- Din Djarin (Morak)
- Grogu
- HK-87
- Luke Skywalker (Imperial Light Cruiser)
- Magistrate Greef Karga
- Mandalorian Fleet Commander
- Migs Mayfeld
- New Republic Security Droid
- R2-D2 (The Mandalorian)
- The Mandalorian (Glavis Ringworld)
- IG-12 & Grogu (Deluxe)
- Imperial Armored Commando
- Imperial Stormtrooper (Archive)
- Mandalorian Nite Owl
- Mandalorian Privateer
- Mandalorian Shriek-Hawk
- Paz Vizsla
- R4-6D0
- R5-D4 (Mandalorian)
- The Mandalorian (Mines of Mandalore)
- Imperial Praetorian Guard
- Moff Gideon (Dark Trooper Armor)
- Colonel Ward
- Colonel Ward (First Edition)
- Imperial Remnant AT-RT Driver
- Imperial Remnant AT-RT Driver (First Edition)
- Imperial Remnant Stormtrooper
- Imperial Remnant Stormtrooper (Brown Leg)
- Imperial Remnant Stormtrooper (First Edition)
- Remnant AT-AT Driver
- Remnant AT-AT Driver (First Edition)
- The Mandalorian (Pagodon)
- The Mandalorian & Grogu (Deluxe)
- The Mandalorian & Grogu (First Edition - Deluxe)
Check off the figures you own with the Black Series Checklist.
Part of Star Wars The Black Series | Scenes. Related: Mandalorian Covert | Imperial Remnant Defense | Army Builders | Collector Guide.