Luke Skywalker, Leia Organa and an elite crew of Rebel heroes are lost in the farthest reaches of No-Space after a mission gone wrong. A desperate maneuver is their only chance to find a way home - but what will it cost them?
Rated T
OverallThis was a solid issue that does a solid job of giving us more story about the Kezarat Fuel Tankers and what happened to them. I really liked the wall art telling the story of how a Jedi helped the Kezarat in their fight against the Nihil. And I also enjoyed Luke's response to Blythe's young son. Read Full Review
Genolet delivers some great art in the issue. The visuals are fun and thrilling with some great visual moments of tension. Read Full Review
Star Wars #31 lets you accompany Luke, Leia, Lando, Chewie, Lobot, and their friend Amilyn Holdo as they meet their Kezarat rescuers and learn the dilemmas they face. Poor in rapid-fire action, this slow-paced story is rich in world-building and character development. There's an undeniable appeal to a series about people who genuinely care about each other, want to see the best in themselves and others, and work together to achieve a common goal. Charles Soule's Star Wars series has quickly become one of my favorites. Perhaps it could become one of yours as well? Read Full Review
The fact that this arc probably does not have a huge impact on the overall saga is completely forgivable considering how unique it is. This will certainly have a very interesting conclusion. Read Full Review
The book reads well enough and there's some good detail in there for how the colony comes together to make it engaging for those that want to dig in more. And, as usual, the artwork looks good and captures the look pretty well though those droids just bother me with how they look. Read Full Review
The book succeeds at keeping our attention, even if we aren't treated to anything particularly compelling, though by merely keeping the momentum of the mysterious arc moving forward, it can be considered a relative success. Read Full Review
This was a pretty bad issue. The style of the artwork seems a bit amateurish. Luke can't be a Jedi without a book? Huh? And Lando is questioning his personality? Never. This whole No-Space thing isn't working for me at all. Plus Han is still encased in carbonite, which continually sticks in the back of my mind throughout this entire series.