A lone Mandalorian bounty hunter looms in the foreground, his beskar armor swallowing the last dying light of a sun long set. The deep, bruised shades of crimson and violet stain the horizon, casting jagged edges around his imposing silhouette. His helmet—featureless, expressionless—reflects nothing, a cold void where a face should be. No warmth lingers in the air. Mist coils around his legs like spectral hands, devouring the ground beneath him, as if the planet itself seeks to reclaim him. His gloved fingers rest lightly on the worn grip of his blaster, the weapon hanging heavy at his side, waiting. The weight of unseen violence presses against the silence, coiled and patient. Above him, blotting out the sky, a colossal Star Destroyer looms in the darkness—old, battle- scarred, and terrifying in its sheer presence. Its hull is pitted with the scars of a thousand battles, yet it drifts in eerie silence, its massive silhouette devouring the faint starlight. The ship’s underbelly bristles with turrets, their lifeless muzzles aimed downward like the gaze of a slumbering giant. Faint, cold lights pulse along its surface, the only sign that something inside still breathes. The Mandalorian does not shift, does not breathe—he simply exists, a relentless force of fate standing between survival and the abyss. And above him, the war machine waits, a silent god hanging in the void
