Star Wars: Visions Season 3 is gearing up to bring fans something they've been quietly hoping for: the return of three standout stories from the very first volume. This time around, the animated anthology is heading back to where it all began, delivering sequels to The Duel, The Village Bride, and The Ninth Jedi. And while Visions has always been about creative freedom and artistic reinterpretation, this new season feels like something more, a conversation between past and present, between what once moved us and what still can.
What makes Visions so different, and why that matters
From the start, Star Wars: Visions carved out a space of its own. It’s not here to fill plot holes in canon or connect trilogies with tidy explanations. It’s here to ask: what does Star Wars look like through someone else’s eyes? Each episode in the anthology is a self-contained story, shaped by the cultural lens and artistic style of the animation studio behind it. Most of those voices have come from Japan, and it shows, in the best way. Samurai codes, spirits of nature, mechas, and poetry all find their way into these galactic tales, proving just how elastic the Star Wars universe can be when freed from its usual constraints.
Why these three episodes stood out, and why they’re coming back
So why revisit The Duel, The Village Bride, and The Ninth Jedi? Simple: they lingered. These were the stories that people couldn’t stop talking about, the ones that sparked fan theories, fan art, and quiet pleas for just one more chapter.
The Duel was a visual and tonal curveball, a gritty, black-and-white samurai showdown that felt like Seven Samurai had collided with A New Hope. Created by Kamikaze Douga, it dripped with atmosphere and mystery. The Village Bride, by Kinema Citrus, took a quieter path. It gave us a Jedi in exile, a planet steeped in ritual, and a story where emotional weight mattered more than spectacle. Then came The Ninth Jedi, which many fans felt could have launched a series all its own. Sweeping, ambitious, and full of potential, it imagined a future where Jedi are almost a myth, until one girl discovers that the Force might still be waiting for someone to claim it.
Now, those same stories are getting the chance to breathe again. Season 3 will pick up where they left off, not to redo what worked, but to expand on what made them resonate in the first place.
A spinoff emerges from the shadows
And if The Ninth Jedi left you wanting more, you’re not alone. Lucasfilm is going even further by turning the episode into a full-fledged series: Star Wars: Visions Presents – The Ninth Jedi, set to debut in 2026. Kenji Kamiyama, the director behind the original, is back at the helm. With his background in emotionally complex, high-stakes storytelling (Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex, among others), the project is in steady hands. It’s a clear signal that Lucasfilm sees value in stories that dare to stretch Star Wars in new directions.
Animation studios, both familiar and new, join forces
The upcoming volume is bringing back some of the studios that helped define Visions from the start. Kamikaze Douga, Kinema Citrus, Production I.G., and Trigger are all returning to contribute fresh stories. But they won’t be alone. WIT Studio and Polygon Pictures are joining the creative roster, bringing with them their own distinct visual styles and storytelling sensibilities. It’s a blend that promises to keep things surprising, and visually stunning.
Among the new stories are Yuko’s Treasure, described as heartwarmingly kawaii, and The Song of Four Wings, which looks to mix fast-paced space battles with the soul of classic mecha anime. Both hint at the emotional range and genre-bending spirit that Visions has made its trademark.
Why Visions matters more than ever
In a moment where some corners of the Star Wars fandom feel weighed down by lore and continuity, Visions reminds us that imagination still comes first. It proves that you don’t need a Skywalker or a Sith Lord to tell a story that feels like Star Wars. You just need heart, vision, and the courage to see the galaxy a little differently.
More than just a break from canon, Visions has become a place for innovation, and even healing. For fans burned out by repetition, it offers renewal. For creators from around the world, it’s an open invitation to reimagine a cultural monolith on their own terms.
Looking ahead to a season with soul
Star Wars: Visions Season 3 premieres October 29, 2025, on Disney+, and it’s shaping up to be the anthology’s most ambitious chapter yet. With sequels to beloved stories, bold new worlds, and a deepening commitment to artistic diversity, this season isn’t just about what’s next, it’s about where we’ve already been, and what’s still left to explore. In a universe defined by countless stars and countless voices, Visions reminds us that every story matters, especially the ones that dare to look beyond the familiar.