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Star Wars Outlaws: Low Red Moon

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ND-5 and Jaylen Vrax embark on their descent into the galaxy’s underworld in search of answers and opportunity, in this essential prequel to Star Wars Outlaws.

Jaylen Barsha, heir to his family’s immense power and wealth, had his life charted out for him neatly and meticulously by his parents, even though he suspected his neglected half-brother Sliro would be a better fit for the bright corporate future his parents envisioned. Then the Empire stripped it all away on trumped-up charges of conspiracy against his family. Before he can reach Sliro for help redeeming the Barsha name, a battle droid arrives at the family compound with a mission to kill every last member of the Barsha clan. Jaylen manages to fend off the attack as the sole survivor, but realizes the droid, who he reprograms, is his only chance to stay alive. But he can no longer be Jaylen Barsha – he’ll have to live now as Jaylen Vrax.

Former Separatist battle droid ND-5 knows he should be scrap metal, all things considered. He was a proficient contributor to the Separatist cause, but what is a soldier without a war? A trigger without aim? Loyalty is in his programming, and Jaylen, who treats him as more than just a weapon, has earned it. Perhaps, the droid thinks, with a partner he can be more. ND-5 just has to earn Jaylen’s trust.

With the threat against the Barsha clan still shrouded in mystery, the pair has no choice but to leverage the chaos and disappear. They find sanctuary in the anonymity of the underworld, building their reputation among scoundrels, bounty hunters, and crime syndicates. But when their latest score gives the first real clue in years to who sent ND-5 after Jaylen’s family, their biggest opportunity presents a new kind of risk. Do they give up this chance at the wealth and power Jaylen was denied to pursue answers? Or will ambition and the weight of the past shatter their unlikely partnership?

363 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 3, 2026

65 people are currently reading
3316 people want to read

About the author

Mike Chen

64 books1,064 followers
Mike Chen is the New York Times bestselling author of Star Wars: Brotherhood, Here and Now and Then, Light Years From Home, and other novels, in addition to Star Trek comics. He has covered geek culture for sites such as Nerdist, Tor.com, and StarTrek.com, and in a different life, covered the NHL. A member of SFWA, Mike lives in the Bay Area with his wife, daughter, and many rescue animals. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram: @mikechenwriter

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Jonathan Koan.
883 reviews871 followers
February 8, 2026
After Mike Chen wrote the superb "Brotherhood" in 2022, I've been hoping he would return to Star Wars. This time, he writes a tie-in for the video-game Star Wars Outlaws. I did not play the video game at all, but I am pleased to report that you can still read and understand and enjoy the book without that.

The first 100 pages are quite a bit shocking and heartwrenching. Every time I thought I knew where Chen was going he went in another direction. He also just wrote a really tragic scene, probably one of the most difficult scenes to read in Star Wars since Beth Revis' "Rebel Rising".

Chen writes the book from both a human perspective (Jaylen Barsha/Vrax) and a droid perspective (ND-5). Writing from a first person droid perspective I will say is gutsy, and I really liked what Chen did with ND-5. He only has about 1/4 of the POVs in the book (maybe a 1/3 at most), but it works really well.

Unfortunately, I thought the middle of the book meandered a bit, and while there were individual scenes that I enjoyed (ie rooftop meeting), I thought it lacked the special ingredients that Chen's "Brotherhood" had.

That said, I thought the twist at the end of the book absolutely raises the story's standing. Mike Chen completely shocked me (and made me feel like I'd read an Agatha Christie book: "Of course this person was behind it").

Mike Chen also incorporates some other characters from the movies and shows, as well as 1 character from his own book (Brotherhood) which I was really happy to see.

Overall, while I definitely liked this book less than Brotherhood, it's still a generally fun book, elevated by it's droid POV and the shocking moments in the first and third acts. Overall, I"ll give the book a 7 out of 10.
Profile Image for Chelsea Zukowski.
228 reviews92 followers
February 8, 2026
A thrilling Star Wars story about memory, trauma, trust, and what it means to be a team.

From my review on Space Wizards Book Club/Substack:

There’s something special about how Star Wars can take a single line in a movie or TV show and run with it — exploring a years-long war that toppled a centuries-old government or showcasing the glory days of the Jedi before their light dimmed. In the case of the newest Star Wars book to hit shelves, the story largely stems from a cutscene in a video game.

In Star Wars Outlaws, crime lord Jaylen Vrax confronts his estranged half-brother Sliro — an ISB agent who had been masquerading as the leader of the crime syndicate Zerek Besh. With victory and pain on his face, Jaylen exclaims that he may have been the heir to the Barsha family business on Corellia, but he and Sliro were family. Everything Jaylen had been doing for nearly a decade led to getting revenge on Sliro, who Jaylen learned had sent BX droid commando ND-5 to kill the entire Barsha family.

Star Wars Outlaws: Low Red Moon by Mike Chen unravels the messy history between the two brothers as well as the origins of ND-5 in a thrilling novel about memory, trauma, trust, and what it means to be on a team.

I’m not a gamer. The extent of my gaming prowess mostly includes cozy sims like Disney Dreamlight Valley, Animal Crossing, and Tiny Bookshop. But, boy, do I love a good story, and games are where so many incredible stories live. That’s why I get so excited when Star Wars announces a new game tie-in book. I finally get to experience a slice of the story and characters that make a Star Wars game so great? Yes, please.

I didn’t really have expectations going into Low Red Moon, primarily because I had little information about the novel’s main characters — ND-5 and Jaylen Vrax (née Barsha). I waffled between watching a game movie or a compilation of cut scenes so I would get the gist of the world of Outlaws. But because of the nature of the open-world game, I decided to just dive right in (okay, I did read a few character synopses).

Doing this allowed me to get to know Jaylen and ND-5 with no preconceptions about who they would become by the time of Outlaws. I was able to empathize with Jaylen and especially Sliro after learning about their virtually loveless childhoods. I love stories that dig into the psyches and motivations of villains and anti-heroes. More often than not, good people do bad things out of want for revenge, justice, or simply survival. Neither Jaylen nor Sliro is a hero by any means, but their dastardly deeds make a lot more sense when put into the context of Low Red Moon. Their traumas shaped them, making them into the cold, resentful (Sliro) and charming and cunning (Jaylen) men we met in the Outlaws timeline — several years after the Battle of Yavin.

It should come as no surprise that the brightest parts of Low Red Moon were the ND-5 chapters. It’s rare we get a droid’s perspective, especially in such a nuanced manner. Reading ND-5’s inner thoughts (artificially intelligence processes) is something only a book could do and be successful at. Chen excels at presenting a droid in such a thoughtful, engaging way that I often forgot I wasn’t reading a human character. Despite being made of mechanical parts, ND-5 grows and evolves in his intelligence and emotions through the novel’s four parts. Honestly, ND-5 “matures” and learns from his experiences better than Jaylen ever has — or likely ever will.

The excellent character work is made possible by the book’s time jumps — starting during the tail end of the Clone Wars and formation of the Empire through the early Imperial years and the beginning of the Galactic Civil War. On the cusp of inheriting his family’s empire of starship engine manufacturing, betrayal and murder take it all from him. Through the years, he struggles to reconcile his former life with his new one — that of a scoundrel trying to make his way around the galaxy. Luckily for him, he quickly learns to use his traumas as tools. That includes ND-5, who was the assassin programmed to kill the Barshas.

Through ND-5, we get to explore ideas of how memory and a lack thereof inform our perspectives and behavior. We also learn more about the depth of malleable intelligence contained within droids and the lengths organics go to control them. ND-5 may be just a sidekick or highly intelligent tool for Jaylen, but the book’s intimate exploration of the former Separatist droid’s inner thoughts makes him relatably multi-dimensional.

Interested in cameos? Low Red Moon has plenty. That includes big names that are predictable but still fun to see on the page, and several that made me pause and think, “wait, I know them from somewhere.” There are likely more quick cameos and Easter eggs that I missed, but will be easily spotted by Outlaws players.

Wondering if you need to play Outlaws to enjoy this book? Well, if you read this far, you’ll know that I didn’t, but still thoroughly enjoyed Low Red Moon. It’s perfectly paced and entertaining with all the deadpan droid humor and witty banter I’ve come to expect from Chen’s Star Wars stories. Though the third part of the novel wasn’t as much of a page turner as the first two-thirds, I found myself eager to find out how the characters get to the events of Outlaws. The ending and epilogue were a bit abrupt, but I have a feeling game fans will be satisfied.

Besides ND-5, my other favorite part of Low Red Moon was the audiobook. Star Wars has set a high bar for its audiobooks, and I was so pleased to see that Jay Rincon and Eric Johnson reprised their roles voicing ND-5 and Jaylen Vrax in the audiobook of Low Red Moon. I switched off reading my ARC and listening to the audio files, and it’s incredibly immersive and engaging.

With compelling character work and an intriguing setting, Low Red Moon is an excellent prequel to Outlaws that can still stand on its own, offering fresh takes and perspectives on classic Star Wars story traits.
Profile Image for Graham Barrett.
1,386 reviews5 followers
February 12, 2026
As is the case with most modern Star Wars games, I have not played “Outlaws”. Yet I still picked up “Low Red Moon” because it is written by Mike Chen, who wrote “Brotherhood” which I enjoyed a lot. Also the cover featuring a Commando Droid wearing a badass trenchcoat just spoke to me you know? The story is a prequel to Outlaws and deals with Jaylen Barsha (later called Jaylen Vrax) going from being scion of a powerful corporation to a player in the Galaxy’s criminal underworld. Partnering up with him is the aforementioned droid, ND-5, who is feeling lost after being on the losing side of The Clone Wars and is now Jaylen’s muscle in criminal dealings. It’s an interesting partnership to say the least because ND-5 slaughtered all but one other member of Jaylen’s family so frankly it doesn’t make too much sense that Jaylen wants to keep him around besides the plot of the book needing to happen (and because both are important characters in the game).

Of the two POV characters, I found Jaylen to be the weaker of the two, or at least the “just okay” one. He’s not a heroic Han Solo-esque rogue with a heart of gold, he’s a fairly ruthless individual that while he had a tragic origin, just becoming more of a jerk the more he commits heinous actions to survive. The issue I had is that Chen struggles a bit with this descent into villainy, showing that Jaylen always had questionable or selfish motivations since before becoming a criminal, which is a fine writing decision. It just felt like there was a repetitive pattern of showing Jaylen wrestling with his morality/treatment of ND-5 throughout the book to the point where it felt like he was already a self-centered crime lord long before the climax when he makes the final plunge in the final chapters. The plotline is not explicitly bad and does demonstrate Jaylen is multi-dimensional but his story does feel too drawn out.

ND-5 meanwhile I found to be a much more interesting protagonist in Low Red Moon. I’ve been reading a lot of “Murderbot” lately so I’m in the mood for robotic characters trying to come to terms with new found freedom and figuring out how much of their actions are driven by programming and how much by life experience. ND-5 is a very engaging variation on that character archetype. His ability to show fondness for the various criminals he works alongside and even Jaylen shows that he’s more than a killing machine and even when not bound by programming controls to serve Jaylen he develops true loyalty for these people. It makes how Jaylen removes ND-5’s agency at key moments of the book all the more tragic. Beyond that though, Chen doesn’t shy away from showing that ND-5 is still a badass soldier and a scary one at that. The sequence of ND-5 murdering his way through a mansion of party goers like something from the Hitman games is particularly chilling (comparable to K2SO’s rampages in "Andor"). Taken all together it made the ND-5 chapters the best of the book and another great addition to the grand Star Wars tradition of the droid characters being among the best of the franchise.

The other cast members of Low Red Moon are pretty good aspects of the book as well. One reason I’m always interested in Chen’s Star Wars work is that in Brotherhood he was good at weaving in old characters from elsewhere in the Star Wars Canon and Legends timeline which is true for Low Red Moon. From Canon he utilizes Fennec Shand (a favorite of mine) and Qi’ra, both of whom were fine, nothing too interesting about what they were doing alongside the main characters nor was anything major revealed about their own characterizations and backstories, they were more to fill out the ensemble with some familiar fan favorites. But still, it was enjoyable seeing Chen make use of them. From Legends, Prince Xizor gets name dropped once more in Canon which I am a little more excited about at this point after reading some more of Xizor’s/Black Sun’s Legends stories. I’d say my favorite returning character was one of Chen’s original characters from Brotherhood which I really appreciated considering how Brotherhood left the character’s post-Brotherhood fate up in the air and who I was hoping to see more of anyway and continue to after this book.

As for Low Red Moon’s story, Chen delivers an entertaining tale that’s one part crime heist and another part espionage thriller. There’s fun/funny sequences (mostly due to ND-5 being the straight man to others’ antics, as well as one scene where he convinces another CIS veteran to help him navigate bureaucracy hellholes by saying its a secret mission from General Grievous) as well as some much more serious moments (the aforementioned slaughter of party guests). There isn’t anything too surprising with the text though (the final twist I did see coming as far back as the first few chapters) nor it perhaps doesn’t have too many big ramifications for the broader Star Wars Canon lore. Low Red Moon is just meant to set up the events of the Outlaws. All the same though even though I have no connection to Outlaws, I found the book to be a very entertaining romp through the Star Wars criminal underworld. I can’t say whether those who played and are fans of Outlaws will love the book or hate it for its approach to this character but I for one did enjoy myself.

Regardless of whether you have played Star Wars Outlaws, this spin-off makes for a very solid Star Wars adventure about the Galaxy’s scum and villainy. “Low Red Moon” is another Star Wars literary win for Mike Chen.
Profile Image for Sal Perales.
98 reviews9 followers
February 3, 2026
Mike Chen gives us a story about two fantastic characters we met in Star Wars Outlaws. Jaylen Vrax… who I didn’t like very much, and ND-5… who I liked too much. The story starts off strong and throws our characters immediately into the deep end of a chaotic galaxy where the only thing they can depend on is each other. I came away with a much better appreciation for Jaylen, a begrudging one, as I spent all of my Star Wars Outlaws gaming experience mad at him. And ND-5 could never do anything wrong. I loved the first-person style of ND-5’s parts of the book. Much like Justina Ireland’s The Acolyte: Wayseeker, the first-person narrative style really gets you into ND-5’s mindset. The story is personal and also very much matches some of the themes and tone of Star Wars Outlaws. Jaylen Vrax is surviving under the radar, building his reputation and connections, all while trying to solve the mystery of his family’s downfall. The audiobook is voiced by both Jay Rincon and Eric Johnson, who are the voices of ND-5 and Jaylen Vrax, respectively, in Star Wars Outlaws! This was a wonderful casting decision that gave each character an added layer of authenticity for those of us who played the video game. Throughout their travels, we get to see a few familiar faces, not only from the underworld but also from Chen's own stories! All in all, a solid Star Wars underworld story packed with action, shady dealings, family drama, and mystery!

This is a must-read for Star Wars Outlaws fans looking for an underworld mystery and LOTS more ND-5!
Profile Image for JG Carse.
42 reviews1 follower
February 3, 2026
Overall, this book accomplished the goal of making me want to re-download Outlaws and get lost in the world. I personally believe this story could work best if you haven't played the game. As someone who played the game there were elements that weren't surprising or just felt flat.

There are incredible moments of tension and a specific chapter that is thrilling. The further exploration of ND-5 was some of the highlights.

There is fun to be had exploring more of the underworld and the numerous players involved in the shady business of the galaxy was awesome.

Ultimately it's not bad a story just a story that fell short for me personally despite it making me want to revisit the game. I still love Mike Chen's writing and I would love for him to explore new characters without it being a media tie in.
Profile Image for Jenn.
195 reviews2 followers
February 5, 2026
It was slow in the beginning for me. But, I loved overall the story. My favorite part about this amazing book is that Fennec Shand showed up😩😩😍😍😍. Mami is back. The badass assassin from Boba Fett. I love her so much. I fucking loved when the Crimson Dawn showed up as well because Q’ira is a big part of that group and she’s the best🥵😍. I was like holy fucking shit🙈👀😳😱. ND-5 droid is a fucking badass. I love that droid a lot and I was so worried about him. I’m glad he’s not dead.
Profile Image for Alberto Calderon.
4 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2026
Spanning over a decade, Outlaws: Low Red Moon by Mike Chen explores the life of Jaylen Barsha as he searches for the truth behind the downfall of Barsha Corporation, his parent's secret dealings, and the disappearance of his half brother, Sliro. A sort of prequel to the video game Star Wars: Outlaws, Low Red Moon presents a different view of the fall of the Republic and the emergence of the Empire. Not from the Jedi or Rebels point for view, but from the underworld and the crime syndicates who saw the chaos of the transition as the perfect opportunity to expand their control. Although this plays a part in the story, it is not the driving force. That falls on the relationship between Jaylen and ND-5, a former BX commando droid of the Confederacy of Independent Systems. After an eventful meeting during a party at the Corellian moon of Gus Treta, Jaylen and ND-5 search the galaxy for Sliro as they cement their position as players in the crime world.

Although mainly focused on Jaylen’s and ND-5 introduction to the smugglers and scoundrels in the galaxy, the known crime syndicates and players we are familiar with, are few and far between and when they finally come into play, it might be too late to ground the story in the known Star Wars underworld.

Commando droid ND-5 stole the book for me and the chapters written from his point of view were my favorites. Since his introduction wearing a tight-fitting coat in a screenshot from the game, ND-5 has been a fan favorite and Mike Chen makes sure he will stay in good standing with the audience. Outlaws: Low Red Moon delivers thrills as Jaylen Vrax transitions from a life of luxury as heir to Barsha Corporation to a smuggler in the Underworld alongside assassin droid ND-5 in search of a truth he can't escape and a secret he can't reveal. If only the Syndicates played a bigger role earlier on.
Profile Image for Joshua.
2 reviews
February 7, 2026
As someone who's not played the game yet (lack of equipment, not desire) I enjoyed this book well enough. The story was told in a competent fashion, with some interesting twists and turns. However...the main twist was incredibly predictable. I called it way back at the start of the book, before the massacre even happened, and it wasn't actually revealed until the last couple chapters.
I suspect this is a plot element from the game, given it's not fully resolved in this book, so maybe it wasn't really meant to be a secret to anyone but the protagonist himself, so I suppose that's alright, but it was deeply unsatisfying to have it play out almost exactly as I had predicted while the main protagonist never even considered it a possibility.
And speaking of the main protagonist...he is a jerk and an idiot and ND-5 deserves better.
Not a bad story, but not great either, probably not one I'll be re-reading anytime soon.
Profile Image for Star Wars Lads.
49 reviews
February 11, 2026
Mike Chen continues to deliver compelling character work; however, the plot of Low Red Moon gets bogged down in a mystery that never feels very compelling, considering those of us who have played the game know where it is going almost immediately.

Check out our full review here:
https://youtu.be/vCtaKgHp2Ao?si=pnyoD...
Profile Image for Raccoon in the Garage.
120 reviews1 follower
February 6, 2026
How does one NOT rate this five stars? HOT DROID HOT DROID.

I'm sad Outlaws doesn't get more love. I need more merch! This was a fun star wars adventure. Nothing too crazy in here and when you've played the game you kind of know a little of what to expect. It's great you should read it.
200 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2026
Surprisingly great crime story set in the Star Wars universe! ND5 might be one of my new favorite characters, and I liked Jaylen in the beginning, but now I hate him lol.
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