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10 Near-Perfect Star Wars Comics No Fan Should Miss

Sofia Martinez — Culture & Entertainment Editor
By Sofia Martinez · Culture & Entertainment Editor
· 8 min read

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By

Hannah Diffey

Published May 4, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT

Hannah is a senior writer and self-publisher for the anime section at ScreenRant. There, she focuses on writing news, features, and list-style articles about all things anime and manga. She works as a freelance writer in the entertainment industry, focusing on video games, anime, and literature.**

Her published works can be found on ScreenRant, FinanceBuzz, She Reads, and She Writes.

 

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For a franchise built on blockbuster action and fantasy, Star Wars**_ has quietly produced some of its best storytelling in comics. Across Marvel and Dark Horse, the galaxy far, far away has become a testing ground for sharper character work, riskier ideas, and stories the films simply never had room to tell. At their best, these books do not just expand the canon or Legends, they deepen it.

The ten comics below represent Star Wars at its most consistently excellent. Some reframe iconic characters like Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker. Others dive deep into overlooked corners of the lore and worldbuilding, from Imperial guards to bounty hunters. Taken together, they form a near-perfect reading list for fans who want Star Wars at its boldest, strangest, and most emotionally rewarding.

1

Darth Vader (2015)

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Kieron Gillen’s Darth Vader_ ran for 25 issues between 2015 and 2016 and remains the gold standard for Vader-led Star Wars comics. Set directly after A New Hope, it follows Vader in the aftermath of the Death Star’s destruction as he investigates the pilot who destroyed it and maneuvers around Palpatine’s growing distrust. That setup turns a seemingly impossible premise into one of Star Wars’ smartest political thrillers.

The run succeeds because it solves the main Vader problem: he is not naturally built to carry a story alone. Gillen fixes that by surrounding him with unforgettable supporting players, especially Doctor Aphra, BT-1, and Triple-Zero. Their chaotic energy gives Vader room to operate as an imposing center of gravity, while the book explores his ambition, bitterness, and quiet obsession with the son he does not yet fully understand.

2

Star Wars (2015)

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Marvel’s flagship Star Wars_ launched in 2015 with Jason Aaron and John Cassaday and quickly became the backbone of the new canon publishing line. Set between A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back, the series filled in a major gap in the original trilogy and gave Luke, Leia, and Han room to breathe as evolving characters rather than big icons frozen between films.

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Aaron’s early arcs, especially “Skywalker Strikes_” and “The Journals of Ben Kenobi,” are among the strongest mainstream Star Wars comics ever published. Luke’s insecurity and impulsiveness are given real weight, Leia’s strategic brilliance gets sharper focus, and Han’s swagger is constantly tested. Later arcs under Kieron Gillen shift into a more war-driven tone, but the series remains remarkably consistent through 75 issues.

3

Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith

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Charles Soule and Giuseppe Camuncoli’s 25-issue Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith_ begins seconds after Revenge of the Sith ends. That timing is the book’s greatest strength. Rather than treating Vader as the finished icon in black armor, Soule shows him as newly broken, physically shattered, emotionally unstable, and still dangerously close to the man he used to be.

Watching Vader transform from humiliated apprentice into Palpatine’s unstoppable enforcer gives the run its power. Major arcs like “The Burning Seas,” the Jocasta Nu confrontation, and “Fortress Vader” make excellent use of prequel and Clone Wars lore. Camuncoli’s art is consistently exceptional, and the series delivers one of the most complete portraits of Vader ever published.

4

Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic

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John Jackson Miller’s Knights of the Old Republic_ comic ran for 50 issues from 2006 to 2010 and stands alongside the original video game as one of the era’s defining_ Star Wars_ stories. Set roughly 4,000 years before the films, it follows Padawan Zayne Carrick after he is framed for murder by his own Jedi Masters and forced into exile.

That premise gives the series immediate momentum, but what makes it special is its cast. Zayne is not a prodigy or chosen one. He is awkward, decent, and constantly outmatched, which makes him unusually human by Star Wars standards. Combined with sharp worldbuilding, strong humor, and excellent art from Brian Ching and others, it becomes one of Legends’ most complete long-form adventures.

5

Star Wars: Crimson Empire

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Crimson Empire_ is one of the best examples of Star Wars taking a background detail and building something unforgettable around it. Written by Mike Richardson and Randy Stradley with art by Paul Gulacy, the 1997 series follows Kir Kanos, the last surviving member of Palpatine’s Royal Guard, after the Emperor’s death in_ Return of the Jedi_.

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Kanos could have been little more than a cool design in red armor. Instead, Crimson Empire_ turns him into one of Legends’ most compelling antiheroes. His code, grief, and need for vengeance drive a brutal revenge story that feels far harsher than most_ Star Wars_ books. It is violent, political, and deeply personal in ways the films rarely dared.

6

Star Wars: Dark Empire Trilogy

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Tom Veitch and Cam Kennedy’s Dark Empire_ began in 1991 and became one of the most influential post-Return of the Jedi Star Wars stories ever published. Set six years after the fall of the Empire, it presents a fragile New Republic facing a terrifying truth: Palpatine has returned through clone bodies and is ready to reclaim the galaxy.

That premise remains controversial, but Dark Empire is impossible to ignore. Long before sequel-era debates, it introduced ideas that would echo through decades of Star Wars storytelling, from cloned Emperors to corrupted heroes and ancient Sith superweapons. Its surreal art, apocalyptic scale, and operatic tone make it one of the strangest major Star Wars comics, and one of the most important.

7

Star Wars: Bounty Hunters

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Launched in March 2020 by Ethan Sacks, Star Wars: Bounty Hunters_ finally gave the galaxy’s deadliest freelancers the spotlight they always deserved. Set between The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, the series begins with Beilert Valance and quickly expands into a dense underworld epic involving Boba Fett, Bossk, Dengar, and half the criminal ecosystem in the galaxy.

The genius of the series is that it treats bounty hunters as more than action figures with cool helmets. Valance becomes one of modern Star Wars’ strongest tragic leads, and the book builds genuine tension out of shifting alliances, betrayals, and syndicate politics. For fans who always wanted more from the hunters seen on Vader’s Executor, this is essential reading.

8

Star Wars: Purge

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John Ostrander and Doug Wheatley’s Star Wars: Purge_ is a one-shot, but it hits harder than many full miniseries. Released in 2005, it takes place shortly after Revenge of the Sith and follows Darth Vader as he hunts a surviving pocket of Jedi who have regrouped on Kessel in the immediate aftermath of Order 66.

What makes Purge so effective is its simplicity. It strips away the grand lore and presents Vader as raw terror who is newly armored, emotionally unstable, and terrifyingly efficient. Ostrander wastes no space, and Wheatley’s grim, heavy visuals reinforce the hopelessness of the Jedi’s situation. It is short, brutal, and one of the cleanest examples of Vader as horror villain.

9

The Star Wars

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In 2013, Dark Horse published The Star Wars_, an eight-issue adaptation of George Lucas’ original rough-draft screenplay, written by J.W. Rinzler and illustrated by Mike Mayhew. It is not just a curiosity piece. It is a fascinating alternate-universe version of Star Wars, where familiar names and ideas appear in wildly different forms.

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Luke Skywalker is an older general, Han Solo is a massive alien, and Jedi-Bendu are warrior-monks in a far stranger galaxy than the one audiences eventually got in 1977. The book works because it is more than behind-the-scenes trivia. It is a fully realized “what if” version of Star Wars_ history, and one of the most revealing experiments the franchise has ever published.

10

Star Wars Infinities

_ Star Wars Infinities A New Hope Main Cover

Published from 2001 to 2004, Star Wars Infinities_ delivered 12 issues of pure alternate-history fun, split into three four-issue arcs reimagining the original trilogy. Each miniseries begins with one changed event in A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back, or Return of the Jedi, then follows the butterfly effect into radically different outcomes.

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The concept is simple, but the execution is what makes it memorable. These stories do not merely remix famous scenes. They push Star Wars_ into speculative fiction, asking how fragile the saga’s biggest victories really were. For fans who love Marvel’s What If…?, Infinities is one of the most entertaining and inventive Star Wars** comic experiments ever printed.