These aren’t nostalgia pieces—they are time capsules of a specific era when Star Wars was a mystery you had to chase through books, comics, and the back pages of Star Wars Insider . Part 3.2 is a shrine to that scavenger-hunt feeling. Here’s a confession: not every figure in Part 3.2 is high-end. Some have limited articulation. Some have “soft goods” that look like doll clothes. One has a lightsaber that’s permanently bent.
But for now? Pour a glass of spotchka (or coffee). Dim the lights. Walk the shelves of Kileko’s Collection 3.2. Notice the odd alien in the corner. Ask yourself: Who is that?
That’s the point.
If Part 3.1 was about restoring order and celebrating the tentpoles (Skywalkers, Solos, Kenobis), It’s the shelf that makes other collectors lean in, squint, and ask, “Wait—is that from the Droids cartoon? Is that a Power of the Force 2-pack nobody remembers?”
Part 3.2 is the “character actor” shelf. And every great film needs character actors. Part 3.2 ends with a promise: the figures are placed, but the scenes are not yet set. Next up is 3.3 – The Weathering & Worldbuilding , where I break out the acrylic washes, the LED strips, and the 3D-printed moisture vaporators. Kileko-s Star Wars Collection 3.0 - Part 3.2 - ...
But Part 3.2? That’s where the real Kileko shows up.
Welcome to the side quests. Welcome to the oddballs, the EU deep lore, and the figures that have no business having this much articulation. One rule I’ve adopted for Collection 3.0: If a character has less than 3 seconds of screen time but has an action figure, they get a spotlight. These aren’t nostalgia pieces—they are time capsules of
— Kileko Keeping the outer rim of the display shelf weird