Since 2015, Indiana Jones: Dr. Chelli Aphra.
Introduced in Star Wars: Darth Vader #3 (2015) by Kieron Gillen and Salvador Larroca, Aphra was intended as a dark take on Han Solo during a period in which Darth Vader was surrounded by twisted opposites of the Skywalker Saga's key players, including deadly versions of R2-D2 and C-3PO and a lightsaber-wielding set of twins out to supplant him as the Emperor's right hand. However, while she may be a daring rogue who plays by her own rules, the idea for Aphra actually came from a totally different Harrison Ford role.
Doctor Aphra is often described as Star Wars' Indiana Jones, the two are very different in some key ways. While Jones is a benevolent adventurer, Aphra is far more amoral, betraying even her closest allies in the name of profit, and rarely worrying about who ends up with the ancient and powerful weapons she frequently discovers. Despite this, Chelle was explicitly inspired by Indiana Jones. In the creator commentary included in collected versions of his Darth Vader run, Gillen states:
The core idea for Aphra came to me when walking around the Lucasfilm offices. We ed a large Indiana Jones display and I just thought, gender - and ethically - switched Indiana Jones. That'd work well in Star Wars. Aphra grew in many other directions, but that was her core inspiration ... (I still can't believe they let me get away with "IT SHOULD BE IN AN ARMORY!")
Doctor Aphra Keeps Things Lucasfilm
While Aphra has often shown genuine reluctance and guilt when she's been pushed to kill. When 0-0-0 attempts to prove she enjoys killing as much as he does in Doctor Aphra #19, she rebukes his assertion, stating that she's not a good person, but she isn't a monster who enjoys suffering.
Doctor Aphra has emerged as one of the true breakout characters of Star Wars Marvel comics era. While Indiana Jones may have provided the spark for her inception, she's now a character all her own, forever treading the line between antihero daring and potential redemption.