After years of storylines across novels, comics, and TV, Star Wars: The High Republic – The Finale #1 arrives not with a bang, but with a quiet exhale. This one-shot comic, written by Cavan Scott and illustrated by Marika Cresta and Jim Campbell, serves as a competent farewell to this era of Star Wars. While the story offers emotional closure, it also steps back from delivering the kind of sweeping, climactic beats readers might expect from the culmination of such a vast initiative. Rather, this feels more like an intimate gathering of friends unsure whether they’ll ever see each other again.
Plot wise, this is set just after the fall of Marchion Ro and the defeat of the Nihil, and finds the Jedi regrouping in the uneasy quiet that follows a galaxy-shaking war. Keeve Trennis, now a seasoned Knight, is at a crossroads. She’s offered a seat on the Jedi Council but remains haunted by the choices made during the conflict and uncertain about her place in the Order’s future. As Jedi from across the initiative convene on Dalna to celebrate survival and honor sacrifice, old friends and key characters from the run reunite. Keeve and her former Master, Sskeer, share an emotional final conversation that anchors the book’s themes of growth, legacy, and loss.

Marvel
Cavan Scott leans into quiet character drama rather than spectacle, giving us a script full of reflection, grief, and earned grace notes. His writing respects the weight of these characters’ experiences, even if it forgoes high-stakes thrills. Marika Cresta’s artwork is suited for this emotive epilogue, as he conveys subtle shifts in expression and body language that carry the story’s emotional weight. Jim Campbell’s colors are also nice, which helps make the dreamlike garden interiors really pop. While the layouts are clean and cinematic, readers expecting epic action may find the pace subdued.

Marvel
As a single issue, this offers a tender (if somewhat muted) conclusion to The High Republic. It favors tears over triumph, remembrance over revelation. As a farewell issue, it succeeds in wrapping up character arcs and themes, but it stops short of delivering any major revelations or momentum for the future. With no clear direction for these characters beyond this point, I can’t help but feel a sense of uncertainty, but as a standalone conclusion, it will likely satisfy anyone who has been following this era of Star Wars comics.



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