Wicket W. Warrick — Star Wars The Black Series #ROTJ 11
The Black Series Wicket W. Warrick — Phase 4 ROTJ Collection #11, 2023. The Ewok hero of Endor with 6 accessories: cowl, spear, bow, arrow, and two clubs. 13 joints. The only Black Series Wicket.
Overview
Wicket W. Warrick at #ROTJ 11 is the Phase 4 ROTJ Collection’s most complete single-figure achievement, and we mean that in a very specific sense: six accessories on a figure with 13 joints, at $24.99 standard retail. The cowl. The spear. The bow. An arrow. Two different clubs. Hasbro gave the most famous Ewok in the franchise a full arsenal, and the result is the kind of figure that makes you realise the ROTJ Collection has been building toward something genuinely ambitious.
This is Wicket W. Warrick, the Ewok who found Princess Leia in the Endor forest, who brought her back to Bright Tree Village, who played a central role in the ground battle that decided the fate of the galaxy. He has six accessories to prove it.
Who Wicket Is — And Why He Earned Eleven Slots In
The ROTJ Collection’s structure is now clear in retrospect. Figures #01-#05 established the Rebel Alliance side of the battle: the fleet command (Ackbar), the Ewok warrior (Teebo), and the three Endor heroes (Leia, Luke, Han). Figures #06-#10 covered the Jabba’s Palace wing and filled out the ensemble: Boba Fett, Lando, Bib Fortuna, Leia Ewok Village, Chewbacca. And then, at #11, Wicket arrives — the Ewok character with the most individual screen time in ROTJ, the one who functions as the bridge between Leia and the tribe, the one whose specific relationship with Leia is the emotional foundation of the entire Ewok alliance.
Wicket isn’t placed at #11 by accident. He comes after Teebo (#02) because the ROTJ Collection is establishing the Ewok representation across two separate named individuals rather than offering one Ewok figure and considering the species covered. Teebo is the warrior-shaman. Wicket is the specific personality — the curious, brave, slightly impulsive individual who pokes a sleeping Leia with his spear and initiates the most consequential first contact in the Battle of Endor.
Six Accessories: A Breakdown
We want to go through the six accessories individually because the specificity of the loadout is one of the most interesting things about this figure.
The cowl is Wicket’s defining piece of headgear — the brown hood that he wears throughout his ROTJ appearance, the garment that makes him immediately recognisable as a specific individual Ewok rather than a generic member of the tribe. The hood is the equivalent of Teebo’s animal skull headdress: the specific piece that marks this Ewok as named.
The spear is the weapon he uses in his first scene — the implement that wakes Leia up and initiates their meeting. In the context of the whole film, it’s a relatively minor prop. In the context of Wicket’s specific character, it’s the first thing he ever does on screen, which makes it essential.
The bow is his combat weapon for the Battle of Endor — the Ewok archery tradition deployed against Imperial Stormtroopers with considerably more effectiveness than the Empire anticipated. The bow communicates Wicket as a warrior as well as a companion.
The arrow pairs with the bow as a display element, enabling the specific bow-drawn pose that communicates active combat rather than carried weapon.
The two different clubs are the melee weapons of the Ewok ground fighter — and the specific choice to include two different clubs rather than one is the detail that reveals how seriously Hasbro took the accessory specification for this figure. Two clubs means two different display configurations, two different weapon styles, the specific variety of an Ewok who carries more than one tool for different situations.
Six accessories for a $24.99 figure. Teebo at #ROTJ 02 had six accessories for $19.99. The ROTJ Collection’s Ewok figures are consistently the most accessory-complete purchases in the range, and we think that reflects a specific production philosophy: these are the characters who need props to communicate who they are, and Hasbro invested accordingly.
The 13-Joint Count in Context
Thirteen joints is one of the lower counts in the ROTJ Collection — lower than Bib Fortuna’s 19, lower than the Endor heroes’ various articulation schemes, lower than Ackbar’s 17 even accounting for the movable mouth. This reflects the Ewok form factor: the small size, the dense fur construction, and the limited natural range of movement in the Ewok design all work against a high joint count.
What the 13-joint scheme does achieve is the essential Wicket poses. The ball-jointed shoulders enable the bow-raised combat stance. The upper body joint enables the slight forward crouch that characterises Wicket’s cautious-curious posture when he’s investigating something. The neck joints enable the head tilts that communicate his specific personality — the inquisitive Ewok angle that says he’s assessing a situation he’s never encountered before.
The wrists are noted as “hardly movable” in the production documentation, which is a practical consequence of the small scale. At 6-inch Ewok dimensions, some articulation points simply don’t have the range of motion their joint count suggests. This is not a complaint — it’s an accurate description of a figure that manages its physical constraints well.
The Wicket and Leia Display
Wicket alongside Leia Ewok Village (#ROTJ 09) is the ROTJ Collection’s most specific two-figure relationship display. These two figures represent the first contact that made the entire Endor alliance possible: Wicket finding Leia in the forest, Leia earning the Ewoks’ trust, the relationship that brought the tribe into the Rebellion’s cause. Without Wicket and Leia, there is no Ewok alliance. Without the Ewok alliance, there is no Battle of Endor. Without the Battle of Endor, the Empire wins.
That chain of consequence runs through two figures available right now in Phase 4 plastic. The display is obvious and we strongly recommend building it.
Wicket and Teebo Together
Teebo (#ROTJ 02) and Wicket (#ROTJ 11) together are the ROTJ Collection’s Ewok pair — the warrior-shaman and the scout-companion, the two named Ewoks who received individual Phase 4 production investment. The Phase 4 ROTJ Collection has given the Ewoks two deeply considered figures with a combined twelve accessories, and we think the display of those two figures alongside Leia Ewok Village creates the Bright Tree Village context that the entire Endor ground battle emerges from.
Three figures. One scene. The alliance that ends the Empire.
The Single-Boxed Release
The image slug confirms Wicket-SingleBoxed — Wicket was previously available in a multi-pack configuration before the standalone 2023 release made him individually accessible at standard retail. The single-boxed availability at $24.99 makes him one of the ROTJ Collection’s most straightforward purchases.
Why the ROTJ Collection’s Ewok Investment Is Right
There is a persistent strain of Ewok scepticism in the Star Wars collector community — the view that the Ewoks are the franchise’s most embarrassing element and that figures of them represent a lower tier of production priority. We disagree with this, strongly, and the ROTJ Collection’s treatment of the Ewoks is the best argument for our position.
Teebo at #ROTJ 02 with six accessories. Wicket at #ROTJ 11 with six accessories. Both at the standard price point. Both with individual names, individual designs, individual accessory loadouts that communicate who they specifically are. This is not a collection that treats the Ewoks as an embarrassment to be minimised. It treats them as what they actually are in the film: essential, characterful, and worth the production investment.
The Battle of Endor does not happen without the Ewoks. The ROTJ Collection knows this. The figures reflect it.
Secondary Market
Above-retail secondary market prices. Single-boxed 2023 standard retail. Verify all six accessories on secondary market purchases — at this scale, smaller accessories like the arrow and the clubs are the most likely to be separated from loose figures. No production variants documented.
Our Verdict
Wicket W. Warrick at #ROTJ 11 is the figure that completes the ROTJ Collection’s Ewok representation and, in doing so, completes the Bright Tree Village alliance that makes the Battle of Endor’s outcome possible. Six accessories, 13 joints, $24.99 standard retail. The cowl, the spear, the bow, the arrow, the two clubs: everything Wicket carries in the film, everything he needs for the display. Buy him. Put him next to Teebo and Leia Ewok Village. That’s the display the ROTJ Collection has been building toward since slot #02.
Part of Star Wars The Black Series | Phase 4 ROTJ Collection. Related: Teebo P4-ROTJ-02 | Princess Leia Ewok Village P4-ROTJ-09 | Return of the Jedi.