No identity for this show, just a mishmash of nostalgia and a very thin plotline
I did not really like The Mandalorian - it was at times fun to watch, and had some nice pieces of world buliding, but this all was overshadowed by the main issue which was the fact that it had no standalone story. 90% of the episodes were about sidequests which was very annoying.
The last episodes Season 2 were a bit better, The Mandalorian seemed to find solid footing, thanks to the "take back Mandalore" plotline which is at least an actual plotline, so there is that. I hoped they are going to notice this and not make the same mistake with the Boba show, but they kind of did.
This show is also without identity and without plotline. It takes place almost 100% on Tatooine, so the end result is 95% nostalgia bait, and 5% new ideas that are executed in a mediocre way. If you asked me before I've seen the show if I want to see punk cyborgs in Star Wars, I think I would've said "that's risky!". It all depends on the execution, and the Mods are... mediocre. They don't really have individual characters, you can only tell them apart because of their well... mods. Upon seeing them I didn't shout "Get outta here with your Blade Runner bullshit!" at the TV, so they are decent I guess, but by no means are they well executed.
The main storyline is a run of the mill western story - spice traders ("Get outta here with your Dune bullshit!") are terrorizing the town, the sheriff resists and convinces the locals to fight for their own interests, and with some collaboration, the baddies are defeated. Well, that's a plotline for you, but honestly? YAWN. I expected way more from the show, if not on plot level, but on character level. There were some great character moments, don't get me wrong, but they were few and far between.
It was fun to watch these eps, because it's always fun to see Tatooine shenanigans with plenty of callbacks to the OT. Just when I started to get sick and tired of this constant loop of "Remember this? Well here it is with a miniscule addition, and we'll now call it a day, ok?" when the series ended, so it didn't overstay its welcome. However, I'm sad that this spice trading syndycate storyline was played so safe and so straight, only that last episode epic spectacle could save it somewhat. The last episode had its problems as well - Luke would never send Grogu to Tatooine without being absolutely sure that Mando is there and able to protect him is one of them - but was overall fun to watch.
I don't expect Breaking Bad / The Wire level of writing here, but if you want to play a tired and old western storyline this straight, and don't want to put in adequate work for the world building, then write better characters. Summary: Mediocre.