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Fake out deaths also didn’t count, of course. Like the Grand Inquisitor, whose death was faked by Darth Vader in Obi-Wan Kenobi so Reva Sevander would reveal her true intentions when it was just her and Vader. A fake out death is not a genuine death. But these following characters? They were supposed to be dead. We saw them die or were heavily led to believe they had died. Yet they came back anyway.
8) Palpatine

Emperor Sheev Palpatine aka Darth Sidious was thrown down a reactor shaft by Darth Vader in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi. It was the end of his tyrannical reign, and a memorable one at that. But then he was brought back as, sigh, a clone in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.
The Rise of Skywalker explained that Palpatine survived by transferring his consciousness in a clone located on the Sith planet Exegol. The novelization of The Rise of Skywalker explained that Palpatine sensed that Vader was wavering between the Dark Side and the Light (which he wasn’t, really, not until the second half of Return of the Jedi). He had the clones waiting and ready for a while, so while he was falling down the shaft, he sent his own consciousness to Exegol, meaning his body was dead partway down the shaft. It’s all completely ridiculous. Let’s call Sidious’ resurrection what it was: a big “Uh oh” after much of the fandom didn’t respond well to the big swings taken in Star Wars: The Last Jedi.
7) Burryaga Agaburry

Star Wars: The High Republic is a multimedia project made up of three phases consisting of novels, comics, audio dramas, and the series Young Jedi Adventures and The Acolyte. Wookie Jedi Knight Burryaga Agaburry is someone whose presence has been fairly consistent throughout those.
Agaburry was seemingly knocked off in the novel Star Wars: The High Republic – The Fallen Star (2022), where he was assumed to be one of many dead Jedi at the Starlight Beacon station. Nonetheless, he was revealed to be alive in the following year’s short story Star Wars: The High Republic – Tales of Light and Life “All Jedi Walk Their Own Path.” It’s hard to feel too much about this one, considering Agaburry has never so much as been in a live-action Star Wars project. He’s just been in niche material.
6) Aurra Sing

We don’t see Aurra Sing actually get incinerated in the Season 2 finale of Star Wars: The Clone Wars, but nonetheless the Slave I (she’s partially known as a mentor to Boba Fett) she’s flying crashes on Florrum and blows up. Regardless of whether she was meant to be part of the burned-up wreckageโand it seems perfectly likely she wasโshe still showed up the following season, trying to kill none other than Padmรฉ Amidala.
However, as is revealed in Solo: A Star Wars Story, Aurra Sing was once and for all murdered by Tobia Beckett (Woody Harrelson), who was hired to do so by Dryden Vos (Paul Bettany). Beckett pushed her off the side of a cliff of some type.
5) Asajj Ventress

Nightsister Asajj Ventress died in the 2015 novel Star Wars: Dark Disciple by sacrificing herself, saving her lover, Quinlan Vos, from the power of Count Dooku’s Force lightning. And for nearly a decade she stayed dead until her appearance in Star Wars: The Bad Batch‘s third season episode “The Harbinger.”
Fellow animated series Star Wars: Tales of the Underworld (2025) informed confused fans that Vos and Obi-Wan Kenobi took her body to her home planet, Dathomir. Ventress’ spirit turned down the chance to be with the souls of her fellow Nightsisters and came back to life to be with Vos.












