Star Wars Griefing Thread (SPOILERS) - Safety off

Christ, Kevin Smith is a loser.

I know it's not relevant to the thread, but Jesus Christ.
I usually prefer to state Kevin Smith aided and abetted a rapist given his entire career was funded by Weinstein. Since to me that's a lot more damning and funnier than calling him a loser. He honestly deserves flak for it since I imagine he's responsible for at least one of the "Casting Couch" incidents whenever he hired on women.
 
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Disgustin'. Doomcuck can't really expect people to buy this bullshit does he?

Double Disgustin'.

Elden Ring. What of it?
"Kathleen Kennedy and Jon Facreau totally hate each other. Look I've been wrong on the insides of Lucasfilm disney on everything but you just gotta totally believe me on this bro. Infact you gotta keep believing me and give me more of your so I can counter those sjws."
 
Here is an interesting what if.
What if Obi-Wan hired Boba Fett instead of Han Solo at Ep 4? How much would that have changed? Boba Fett was a mercenary so he took the side of who was currently paying him more so he wouldnt mind helping the rebels if they were the ones with the big bucks.
Boba was in the employ of Jabba at the time so not free to take contracts.

But what I believe would have happened would have been Boba selling out Luke and Obi as soon as they wound up on the death star.
His contract was to get them to Alderaan, which he did.

Now, this is one of those times where the next part is going to vary wildly:
Are you asking "What if you have 1977 Lucas in a cabin with his team, and are asking them to give them the plot of ANH with Boba Fett instead of Han?"
Or you asking "What if you have 1983 Lucas in a cabin with his team, and want to see how they'd have ANH turn out with boba instead of Han?"
Or are you asking "What would Boba Fett, as we know him, do if he'd been hired instead of Han?"
Or are you asking "What would the plot of a movie look like if it had been Boba?"

Because 1977 Lucas (we'll pretend he's got the idea of the character) hadn't decided that Luke was Vader's son just yet. So I think the way ANH would turn out is with Luke and Kenobi's deaths on the death star (and a united galaxy under palpatine fully prepared for the Vong)

1983 Lucas had made that decision, so I think you'd end up with Sithlord Luke.

Because Boba Fett, as an individual, would make a deal that gets him out of there which is selling out his passengers. Boba, as a registered bounty hunter, probably stays a guest of the Empire until they make the full announcement of Death Star.

But none of those (except for Sithlord Luke) make for a particularly compelling fiction. So I think if we're wanting to replace Han's role with Boba, I don't see Boba being enticed by vague promises of wealth. But I do see the empire turning on him, and him getting revenge and willing to go along with Leia's rescue to get back at the empire.

More importantly, ESB would have likely gone down differently - Slave I Boba Fett's Starship isn't a piece of shit, so it wouldn't have been malingering on Hoth.

This. If there was a character people expected to die in the sequel trilogy was Han because there was no way Ford would ever accept returning without the character being contractually obligated to die.

So while it sucked, I suppose people said that they would compensate with Luke since Hamill was legit excited with playing the character again (oh how naive we fucking were back then...)

Again, I was checked out since they decannonized the EU. But I knew Ford had for a long time wanted to get out from under the shadow of Star Wars and I believe had said in an interview the only way he was coming back was if they killed him off. But that was a few years ago, so I figured Ford's part would be so minor and memberberries it wouldn't matter or basically he'd be the one to take Ma'Rey to Luke's jedi academy to start her wizard jedi training.
Instead, he was so embarrassed by his son's weak rap game, he collapsed and fell to his death.

Han could have had a much more appropriate death, with a hero's funeral, but we must shit on everything that came before and tear it down so we can have Year Zero.

I usually prefer to state Kevin Smith aided and abetted a rapist given his entire career was funded by Weinstein. Since to me that's a lot more damning and funnier than calling him a loser. He honestly deserves flak for it since I imagine he's responsible for at least one of the "Casting Couch" incidents whenever he hired on women.

Weinstein wasn't very involved in Smith's efforts, and most of Smith's efforts were mostly male-centric casts. If any of Smith's talent went to Weinstein, it was for quid-pro-quo. I'm pretty sure something like 80-90% of Weinstein's accusers also knew that there was going to be some quid-pro-dong when they went to his hotel room, but that's not here nor there.

That said, he knew. He knew. And like everyone in hollywood except for Seth MacFarlane, kept silent. Which makes him a hypocrite.

So I don't think he fed Weinstein any talent, but he definitely carried water for a rapist - or at least what his purported feminist ideals would call a rapist.
 
Han could have had a much more appropriate death, with a hero's funeral, but we must shit on everything that came before and tear it down so we can have Year Zero.
Don't remind me. Ford not wanting to do Star Wars anymore isn't an excuse for this happening.
Until the last boomer and Gen Xer is dead and memberberries no longer have sway over them in the grave. Be very careful for what you wish for.
Gen Xers are the reason Star Wars is the way it is now, especially since the Disney movies and shows are aimed squarely at them.
To be fair, it made more sense if Rey was Luke's secret daughter and the force (and maybe even her grampa) are trying to steer her back to her father to help him.
To be fair, Luke was Anakin's actual son and the lightsaber didn't say shit to him because lightsabers aren't Harry Potter wands. Anakin goes through like 5 of them in AOTC and he doesn't care at all.
Only Leia got one because Carrie died IRL.
>stops jedi training because she has a vision saying it would end up killing her son
>doesn't reach out to her son his entire life when doing so could cause him to stop being evil and help destroy the first order
>her brother tries to murder him
>she does nothing
>has multiple opportunities to talk to him but doesn't because shut up
>plan IX
>rey and crylo fight
>leia reaches out to her son through the force
>lets her jedi student kill him
>this somehow kills her too
>she dies alone, none of her friends and family witness her death
>they shove her corpse off to the side where she fades under a sheet
>ben dies anyway
>rey skywalker
 
Don't remind me. Ford not wanting to do Star Wars anymore isn't an excuse for this happening.

Gen Xers are the reason Star Wars is the way it is now, especially since the Disney movies and shows are aimed squarely at them.

To be fair, Luke was Anakin's actual son and the lightsaber didn't say shit to him because lightsabers aren't Harry Potter wands. Anakin goes through like 5 of them in AOTC and he doesn't care at all.

>stops jedi training because she has a vision saying it would end up killing her son
>doesn't reach out to her son his entire life when doing so could cause him to stop being evil and help destroy the first order
>her brother tries to murder him
>she does nothing
>has multiple opportunities to talk to him but doesn't because shut up
>plan IX
>rey and crylo fight
>leia reaches out to her son through the force
>lets her jedi student kill him
>this somehow kills her too
>she dies alone, none of her friends and family witness her death
>they shove her corpse off to the side where she fades under a sheet
>ben dies anyway
>rey skywalker
Better than Luke or Han.
Smug Crying Face.jpg
"I hate this timeline so much."
 
Don't remind me. Ford not wanting to do Star Wars anymore isn't an excuse for this happening.

Gen Xers are the reason Star Wars is the way it is now, especially since the Disney movies and shows are aimed squarely at them.

To be fair, Luke was Anakin's actual son and the lightsaber didn't say shit to him because lightsabers aren't Harry Potter wands. Anakin goes through like 5 of them in AOTC and he doesn't care at all.

>stops jedi training because she has a vision saying it would end up killing her son
>doesn't reach out to her son his entire life when doing so could cause him to stop being evil and help destroy the first order
>her brother tries to murder him
>she does nothing
>has multiple opportunities to talk to him but doesn't because shut up
>plan IX
>rey and crylo fight
>leia reaches out to her son through the force
>lets her jedi student kill him
>this somehow kills her too
>she dies alone, none of her friends and family witness her death
>they shove her corpse off to the side where she fades under a sheet
>ben dies anyway
>rey skywalker
One can only draw the conclusion that Leia and Han's relationship was straight-up abusive, moreso than with Jake. Like, White trailer trash-tier dysfunctional and that caused the divorce and both lost custody of Kylo Ren.
 
This is what a lot of people fail to appreciate about Legacy
...and that's my cheap, tacky way of segueing directly into my next post.

Legacy Comic Coverage - Part III

After much promising and very little delivering over the past month, here is my penultimate slice of coverage of my delving into the Legacy comics as an EU Noob. For those unfamiliar or having missed the chance to see the previous entries, Part 1 of my coverage is listed here, and Part 2 is here. Part 4 is already done, so the gap between this and the next post on this topic will be much smaller.

For the last few weeks, Legacy has sucked me in like you wouldn’t believe, so much so that I’ve been itching to share my thoughts, and to the point where my posts around here have been noticeably sparse as I pen my usual spergpost. This is normally where I cobble together some lengthy preamble recapping my last bit of coverage, along with a brief preview of my overall impressions for the latest revelations of the story. But since I have a staggering amount of ground to cover this time around, I’ll keep this brief. This next bit of coverage encompasses the following story arcs: Loyalties, The Hidden Temple, Vector, and Storms. As a bit of disclosure, there’s also two sidestories involving Gar Stahzi’s fleet and a Mon Calamari Battle waged by Imperial Knights that I’ll be omitting for the sake of brevity…they’re largely self-contained, and have little crossover with the main characters and plotline.

Our story picks up literally a few seconds after where we last left Darth Krayt and his thoroughly humiliated cabal of acolytes. As seen in that last issue, the Sith Lord is furious with his “Hands” for failing to apprehend Cade Skywalker before he was snatched up by his friends aboard the Mynock.

He claims that it was Nihil and Talon’s failure to physically dominate Skywalker before he could escape—which he declares while tactfully and conveniently leaving out the fact that he was the last one to physically lose to Cade before he escaped (B-But nobody mention that…).

Nevertheless, he refuses to let Darth Maladi re-attach Nihil’s severed arm…giving him a very Yakuza-like penance for falling in battle. That’s when Darth Wyrlokk interjects, suggesting he allow the crippled Hand to continue serving him.

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Krayt relents, but opts for a very Sith compromise—Nihil can get a new arm, but only in the form of an agonizing Yuuzhan Vong implant. He is then told by Maladi that Talon is still somehow alive and able to be salvaged after being skewered by a lightsaber (which, again, fucking HOW did she survive that), and Krayt allows her bacta treatment. He also declares that someone named Darth Stryfe will be replacing Nihil until his body—and dignity—have been pieced back together.

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Jumping ahead a few weeks, we’re re-acquainted with the Mynock Crew after their escape from Coruscant, with Cade slinking back into the shadowy depths of the criminal underworld, carrying the scars of his long and turbulent captivity in Krayt’s hands along with him.

His journey sends him back to Sarocco, the same backwater haven of the Bounty Hunter Guild, on which we were introduced to him as a world-weary, Death Stick abusing adult in the early issues of the series. The guild itself resides in a hulking starship called the Crimson Axe, which is plunged deep into a Sarlacc Pit and serves as a joint for headhunters and thugs. A very creative locale on the part of the writers, I must say.

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Rav, the Leader of the Bounty Guild and Cade’s former slaver, is lounging in a haze of incense and vice when Cade kicks down the door into his cantina. Having backstabbed Cade’s friends and impounded the ship of the Mynock Crew’s newest addition—Chak the Wookie and Kee the Devaronian—Rav finds himself in at the end of Skywalker’s chopped Rawk special.

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The battle-scarred pirate laughs off Cade’s threats and sends his posse of bounty hunters to skewer him, prompting the Mynock Crew to fight their way through. It’s here that we see how much more composed Cade his grown as a combatant: no longer the drug-addled, unrestrained berserker he was at the start of the series…but focused, restrained, and lethal. Cade’s own crewmates take notice of how much deadlier he’s become, managing to send a shiver down even Rav’s spine.

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Rav quickly tries to exploit Cade’s dependence on Death Sticks, thinking he can bring him under heel just like the old days. But Cade, having seemingly overcome his need for the drugs Rav used to pass along to him to keep him docile and desperate, turns his saber onto him, severing all dependence on his old keeper.

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Back against the wall, Rav tries to sleaze his way out of it, attempting to twist his captivity of Cade and Syn as children into some charitable display of affection, but Cade is having none of it. He remembers the “old days” with Rav far too well—the abuse he put them through, and the loyalty he ensured by the point of a needle.

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While it seems like Cade and his crew have won some breathing room, all they’ve really done is lure the searchlights of the Sith Intelligence, and Darth Maladi in particular, onto their trail. While her fellow Hands are still in Bacta Recovery from the battle at the end of the last arc, she’s upright and kicking…and plans on advancing herself in the eyes of her master by seizing Skywalker herself.

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A side-plot unfurling alongside the exploits of the Mynock Crew is that of some characters we haven’t revisited in quite a few issues—Princess Marsiah Fel and her Imperial Knights. Taking refuge in the fortified Imperial Capital of Bastion with her father, Marsiah herself has finished her trials to qualify as an Imperial Knight herself, to accompany her men during missions assigned to them by the Emperor. We get some brief exposition with her lover, Antarres; to cut it short, he’s been given quite a few severe hints from her father not to cozy up with Marsiah, and turn a cold shoulder to her…meddling that Marsiah can’t and won’t stand for.

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Back on Sorocco, the Mynock Crew parts ways with Chak and Kee…the latter of which warns Cade that he’s got an angry lady to contend with aboard the Mynock. Once they take off and have open space ahead of them, Cade recommends he and his friends lay low from the Sith’s gaze for a while, and return to an old haunt of theirs called the Rawk’s Nest. In the midst of this Syn expresses his eagerness to get it on with some girl he left behind there named Ahnah—that is, if her father isn’t there to serve as an obstacle.

Finally after much banter and stalling, Cade gathers his nerve and retreats to the engine room of the Mynock to confront Deliah, who still hasn’t spoken to him since the rescue mission. He tries to sweet talk her like usual, but she’s being especially brittle right now…and the uncomfortable part of him already knows why:

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Cade tries to emphasize that what happened between him and Talon back at the Sith Temple—all of which Deliah saw via Morrigan Corrde’s surveillance bugs—wasn’t anything serious, but Deliah isn’t the least bit convinced. Pounding her anger into the stray cables and machinery of the engine hull, she basically tells Cade to go fuck himself in Huttese. Opting to cast aside his carefree playboy act, Cade decides to open up, and says that the raw passion on offer from Sith like Talon isn’t real. It’s shallow and empty, an outlet that encourages the worst part of himself instead of making it better…as opposed to what he has with Deliah, where she scrubs it all away by being his ”light” of sorts.

Gotta admit, that’s pretty smooth.

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He decides to cap it off by saying “Uma ji muna”, which catches Deliah off-guard and flustered. This was the first time I decided to look up one of the many Huttese phrases thrown around in these comics, and as it turns out, “uma ji muna” means “I love you”…which, I won’t lie, is uncharacteristically earnest and sweet on Cade’s part.

Then Deliah gives him a kiss, and it’s all better.

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Not gonna lie, I really liked this scene. The immature and childish romance that Cade and Deliah have is simple, but fitting considering they probably met as kids or teenagers somewhere in Cade’s exploits…and still express their feelings as such. I wouldn’t be shocked if this is just one of many instances where Deliah can’t stay angry with Cade because she can’t resist the earnest, boyish honesty at the core of all of his try-hard smuggler charm.

To be honest, their dynamic reminds me of a younger, pricklier version of Jan and Kyle’s romance from the Dark Forces games.
The Mynock touches down on the planet Iego, and the stronghold dubbed “Rawk’s Nest”, which they arrive to find bombarded by an attack from merc ships sent by the Black Sun (yes, they’re still around a century later), who in typical gangster evidently trying to squeeze protection money out of the stronghold’s inhabitants.

Cade and his friends lend their ships to the fight, and we’re quickly introduced to the ragged inhabitants of the Rawk’s Nest: a tough-as-nails old man named Bantha Rawk, his no-nonsense wife Droo, their children Ahna and Skeeto, and this Thundercat-looking alien kid named Micah.

Cade11.jpg

After chasing off the Black Sun raiders, Bantha invites the Mynock Crew down to dock their ship, along with a plateful of his wife Droo’s supper. Unbeknownst to everyone, a mysterious stalker has tracked the Mynock down to the planet, and watches covertly from mounds of dead Black Sun assailants scattered across the dunes.

This functions as the issue cliffhanger and chapter break, indicating that our characters are having their every step monitored.

Cade12.jpg

Skipping ahead a few days, the Mynock crew is finally allowed to unwind and relax within the safe confines of Rawk’s Nest. Now, I know I’ve made frequent mention about how Legacy and its characters/plot structure is riddled with shonen anime vibes…edgy protagonist, spectacle and fight scenes, rolling hills of fan service, all that. But this whole time, part of me has been thinking, is there a time-honored trope of anime that the writers haven’t employed yet?

Oh, that’s right…the demanded-by-law Beach Episode.

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Yes, artist Jan Duursema proceeds to spoil us by showing us Deliah Blue in a bangin' hot bikini. It would appear Duursema is gifted at double-tasking, doing both her usual art duties and God’s work at the same time.

Regardless, Cade being shirtless exposes some of the Sith Tattoos he had forcibly etched onto him while under Krayt’s captivity, prompting Bantha to drag him aside into the privacy of his workshop to demand what happened. Cade shares his all of recent exploits with the old man, as well the run-in he had with his Mother. Bantha gives hints that he’s well aware of who Morrigan Corrde is—and in the heat of their argument, we learn that Bantha’s real identity is none other than Nat Skywalker, uncle to our protagonist.

That’s right, the previous generation of Skywalkers consisted of two boys: one who stayed to shepard the Order, Kol, and his sullen brother who traded his robes and lightsaber for the path of an exile, Nat…a secret the latter keeps from his own children, as he retains the alias of “Bantha.”

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We also learn that after Morrigan walked out of the Skywalker family upon Cade’s birth, Nat helped raise him while his brother Kol assumed the mantle of leading the Jedi Order. Nat very loudly emphasizes that his late brother understood and synergized with the Force “better than he himself ever did”, making him a better fit for the Order’s Leader…leaving the lesser of the two Skywalker brothers to skulk in the shadows, raising Cade.

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But it’s also implied that, despite his status as the prodigy of the two, Kol would never enjoy the long marriage that his younger, inferior brother would…burying all mention of Morrigan after she walked out of their lives, sealing Kol’s broken heart for good.

It’s a very interesting paradox between the two brothers, and a really interesting look at the family dynamics of the Skywalker bloodline. It’s a very novel approach for the writers to showcase that not everything was sunshine and rainbows for Luke’s descendants, and that there’s some very bitter but very real family history strewn about.

However, their conversation is cut short by a galaxy-wide holonet broadcast of Darth Krayt executing an entire slew of Mon Calamari, as a means of eradicating and punishing their race for a planetary insurrection staged against him. As the carnage and fighting nears the planet where Rawk’s Nest is located.

But rather than meet the oncoming Sith head on, Cade orders his crewmates to pack up so they can turn tail and escape…leaving the cries of countless Mon Calamari unanswered as they bolt off.

“Bantha”, however, has other plans. He berates his nephew for trying to cowardly skulk away, and not only refuses to let him run off, but beats some sense into him for good measure:

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It’s clear that, despite some of Cade’s recent experiences granting him some much-needed development, the selfish rot at the core of his personality is ever present, driving him to turn his back on the problems encroaching him and slip into willful ignorance. And just to show how little he’s changed, Cade uses the fall of night to leave Deliah’s bedside, and pop open some Death Sticks.

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Before he can cast off his Jedi burdens in a fume of artificial highs, he’s once again visited by Luke Skywalker’s ghost, this time accompanied by the specter of his own father, Kol. Both of them plead for Cade not to keep retreating into the feverish hold of his addiction, warning him that he can’t keep running away from the world, or indeed the Force.

Cade makes it very clear that, in spite of gaining a better understanding of the Force and a stronger bond with his allies, he has no intent to abandon his old ways…much less get involved with larger galactic events that have nothing to do with him. He plans to keep running…and overdosing…as much as he can, for as long as he can.

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Blocking the voices of the ghosts from himself, Cade wanders the junk-laden wastes outside of Rawk’s Nest, made positively giddy by a Death Stick high. That’s when the mysterious hooded assailant who has been watching the Mynock Crew steps into knock Cade out…but before she can eliminate him, her blaster is snatched away by Nat Skywalker, whose Force abilities appear to be fully intact.

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The masked hunter gives Nat quite a fight, resorting to acrobatics—and ultimately, a yellow lightsaber. But the grizzled old Skywalker is able to apprehend her in a vicious lock, long enough to unmask her, with Cade recognizing her as someone from his past.

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Azlyn Rae is revealed to be a former Padawan and childhood friend to Cade—only she survived a massacre staged at the Coruscant Temple, rather than the one on Ossus, upon having been separated from her own master in the midst of the carnage. Much like Cade himself, Azlyn ended up retreating to odd jobs and bounty hunting in the aftermath…a road that has led her to tracking Cade down. She also reveals that the sleazy and treacherous reputation Cade had developed as an adult had reached her ears, disgusting her enough that she would’ve had no qualms about collecting the bounty on him.

Fortunately, watching his heroic actions on Coruscant from afar convinced her that the Cade she knew from childhood was in fact still there…albeit under layers of angst and drug use.

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Their conversation is cut short by the high-pitched wailing of Imperial TIE Fighters, and the thunderous approach of a Star Destroyer. Nat tells the Mynock Crew to hide, as a scouting party comes down. The Imperial Forces beat Nat in front of his family, ruthlessly interrogating him for Cade’s location. Azlyn tries to slink by using status as a member of the Bounty Hunters’ guild, but the Imperial Officer doesn’t buy it…and cracks her nose.

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Wow, efficient, smart and ruthless antagonists? Within the Imperial ranks? After watching both the Empire and the First Order reduced to complete morons in all current media, I must say that it’s a refreshing thing to see them as competent baddies again.

Cade, stowed away with his friends in a hiding spot, can feel Azlyn being beaten, and nearly loses his shit, as his Dark Side impulses come bubbling back up. Deliah manages to restrain him, just long enough for a battered Azlyn to covertly use a Mind Trick on her captor, convincing them all to lead.

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Part of me was questioning why Nat Skywalker didn’t attempt something similar, but in fairness, he already did mention how he wasn’t as attuned to the Force as his late brother…and reaffirms this again when he sees Cade off.

Handing his nephew a newer and meaner shotgun, Nat warns him that he can in indeed flee from the call to action if he so chooses—but doing so will require cutting everything loose. With the Mynock now readily-identifiable by Imperial forces, Cade’s only shot at absolute peace and solitude completely sever his previous identity and everything tethered to it.

To bury his old self in the sand, and never look back.

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The young crew of hotheads naturally scoff at this, saying that they aren’t about to disband after they fought tooth and nail to find each other again. Cade brashly declares that he has no intention of giving up his friends, the Mynock, or the freedom to be who he is. If fighting tooth and nail is what it’ll take to be left alone, then he’ll set his sights on the head of the snake.

In true Spaghetti Western fashion, armed with a shotgun and a scowl, Cade only has one thing on his mind—a showdown with his nemesis.

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Nat and his family immediately protest, saying that Cade’s plan is suicidal. But the brash young Skywalker thinks it has the smallest chance of working, having seen just how weak and frail Krayt is right now…and the kind of irrational desperation he’s resorting to. Desperation that could be just the crack in his armor that they need, to strike a blow he can’t recover from. However, even a loner like Cade realizes he can’t attempt this alone…and is in dire need of allies.

Roan Fel and his Imperial Remnant aren’t trustworthy in his eyes, and the last of the Alliance Forces under Gar Stahzi (featured in a side-plot running concurrently) draw far too much attention. Cade is struggling to think of who else he can depend on, now that all the Jedi are dead…

…which is when uncle Nat drops a startling bomb:

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As the Mynock makes its way to the Hidden Temple, it’s revealed that Azlyn is making contact with a third party—Princess Marsiah and her Imperial Knights…whom Azlyn apparently finished her training with in the aftermath of the Coruscant Massacre, and is currently leaving a trail for:

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Nat meanwhile steers the ship towards its destination, recording a log to send to his family back home. He makes small observations about the Mynock Crew—Syn’s mysterious dislike of Jedi, Deliah cozying up to Cade, and her jealousy of Azlyn, whom Cade often reminisces with about their childhood. Azlyn herself remains shifty and restless throughout the whole voyage, keeping something from the others…as well as covertly leaving trackers for the Imperial Knights to use.

The Mynock finally reaches the depths of the planet Taivas, where a covert Jedi Temple sits in the belly of a vast gorge, seemingly forgotten by time itself.

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Cade and his friends disembark, only to find that Wolf Sazen and his Jedi Survivors are already there waiting for him…along with the unexpected arrival of Marsiah and her Imperial Knights.

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Egos clash instantly between Cade and upstart knight Antarres Draco, before Wolf Sazen manages to calm both parties down. He demands to know how the Imperial Knights know of the Hidden Temple’s location, which Cade instantly deduces is because of Azlyn. Furious, he verbally attacks her, accusing her of being a backstabber who sold them all out for credits.

(Deliah Blue must be enjoying this, considering her leverage in their little love triangle has boosted dramatically).

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Princess Marsiah intervenes, saying that she only commissioned Azlyn’s services to track the Hidden Temple down in hopes of forming an Imperial-Jedi Alliance against their common enemy.

Master Sazen, understandably suspicious of the Fel Empire’s motives, states that the Jedi Council will determine if any alliance is to be had.

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Despite Marsiah’s insistence of earnesty, the Jedi Council remembers her father’s involvement in the previous war all too well—despite the fact that we, the readers, know that he and the Fel Empire were manipulated into colluding with the Sith and attacking the Alliance, over fears of the disastrous Ossus Project. Nevertheless, suspicions and tensions are high, especially from Cade.

But Marsiah reveals that her father, Emperor Fel, was always an ally to the Jedi, just like his grandfather Jagged Fel before him. So much so that he even promised Kol Skywalker to withhold all Imperial attacks on the Alliance if he could find evidence that the Ossus Project that started the war had been sabotaged. A promise that Fel was forced to break when he was pressured by his own Moffs to attack the Alliance anyway. Just another way that the Fate of the Jedi novels synergize with these comics: showing the Fel Family stuck appeasing Moffs to keep the Imperial Remnant in one piece.

Upon hearing her story, the Council’s leaders confess that, even with the Fel Empire as an ally, the Jedi Order is too small and scattered in its current state to oppose Krayt’s Sith Order. They even project that it will take generations to raise the numbers to sufficiently defeat the Sith.

Which is when Cade cuts in to remind them all that Krayt isn’t a strong—or even the imposing Sith—they all think he is:

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The Council greets Cade’s revelation with shock, many of them expressing their disbelief that A’Sharad Hett would succumb to the Dark Side, much less lead the Sith. Some, like Master K' Kruhk, express remorse that they weren’t there to prevent his downfall.

Cade continues, emphasizing how crazed and desperate Krayt grows each day, and even better…how his One Sith Rule is breeding rabid competition between his own apprentices, splintering them and turning them against each other like kath hounds. This, he claims, is precisely why now is the time to strike.

Not with an Army of Jedi. A Strike Team.

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The other Masters naturally balk at the idea of a Jedi Hit Squad, resenting the notion of embracing such overtly militant and aggressive tactics they believe incompatible with the Jedi Way (evidently, this iteration of the Jedi Council is more of the passive kind we saw in KOTOR, and not the kind Luke Skywalker led during the Yuuzhan Vong War and beyond, which had no qualms about assembling Spec Ops Teams or even an assassin role like Sword of the Jedi).

Cade is sickened by what he perceives as limp-wristed weakness by the council, ripping into them for not doing what’s necessary when Krayt’s methods grow worse by the day. He stresses the mountainous danger of his Dark Side Healing ability that Krayt so covets—that will make him a nightmarish asset to the enemy the day the Dark Lord finally catches up with him, and ultimately breaks him. Cade very bluntly and vulgarly lays it out for the Jedi: that there is too much at stake to play pacifist, that they have to match the enemy in cold-blooded tactics…or go extinct.

But try as he does to slap some sense into them, the Council refuses to heed Cade’s warning, and opt to reconvene in the morning, prompting Cade to storm off.

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Meanwhile, the Mynock crew lounges in the open foyer of the Jedi Temple, where Deliah’s boredom and Zeltron party girl impulses gets the better of her and she drags a Jedi mechanic to a garage for a joyride, leaving Syn and Azlyn to share a tapcaf and a quiet conversation.

Azlyn appears very apologetic and remorseful for how she deceived Cade, and thinks that she breached their childhood friendship with him. As Syn comforts her, he watches Deliah recklessly palling around with a Padawan, causing some of his anti-Jedi sentiment to boil.

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In that moment, a Jedi Master strolling the halls stops in shock when he recognizes Azlyn. She in turn recognizes him as Rasi Tuum, the Master she had been separated from during the Sith attack on Coruscant.

And in the corner, it appears that Syn recognizes him too…

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Syn is launched into an inexplicable, boiling rage as he watches Azlyn and Rasi excitedly catch up, going so far as to knock a Jedi Knight out cold on his way back to the Mynock.

In truth, all the writers are accomplishing is making him look like an asshole, chimping out and bludgeoning some girl like this.

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Meanwhile, while Cade skulks under the dim glow of the Tavias moon, Wolf and Shado covertly share their concerns with his Assassination Scheme, suspecting that his time with Darth Krayt may have potentially rubbed off on him.

The Imperial Knights, on the other hand, find themselves in the rare position of agreeing with Cade, being arguably his only supporters in the whole Temple.

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All parties ruminate over Cade’s bold suggest…except for Syn. He’s too busy seething over what he’s seen—the face he recognizes. For at long last, we’re finally explained his revulsion of the Jedi, which is rooted entirely in the death of his father. A death, Syn claims, happened squarely at the hands of Azlyn’s master, Rasi Tuum.

A reunion with whom Syn has prepared decades of hatred and a loaded blaster for.

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The calm of night has finally settled over the depths of Tavias. Nat Skywalker broods near a window as he begins to come around on Cade’s proposal, saying that it wouldn’t be a drastic departure from the role that the Jedi took during the Clone Wars. Master K’Kruhk shoots him down, saying that participating in a war like that is precisely what led the Jedi to their doom.

Which, I find really, really strange as a sentiment, since apparently K’Kruhk was alive and well during Luke’s New Jedi Order—and surely must’ve seen their participation in the Vong War. So why would he still have a problem with the Jedi participating in a war when he’s seen them succeed?

It just seems like an oversight by the writers—and a weird one, considering all the effective NJO callbacks they’ve made thus far.

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Cade, meanwhile, is finding less support in his crew than he hoped. Deliah expresses a lot of uncertainty about what he’s trying to do—less out of pacifism, but more because the kind of daredevil theatrics he’s proposing with his Assassination Mission clashes hard with their usual self-serving, mercenary way of life.

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Back at the Temple, we find Azlyn insisting to her old Master that her new alliance with the Fel Empire as one of their Knights is something she wishes to pursue, instead of a role inside the Order. He isn’t wholly convinced she’s choosing the Empire for the right reasons, and bids her leave to meditate.

Which is when Syn decides to make his move, with a toss of his signature Thud Bugs.

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Rasi is able to pin Syn to a wall, and interrogate him properly as to why he’s attacking him. Syn scornfully declares the Jedi as his father’s killer, and is even more infuriated when Rasi doesn’t even remember what he’s talking about.

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Syn delves into the darkest chapter of his childhood, when his father accompanied Rav (Syn and Cade’s slaver from when they were young) on a trading mission…one that, as Syn witnessed, was interrupted by Rasi cutting down the local miners, and apparently trying to make off with a young surviving girl to indoctrinate into the Jedi Order.

Syn’s father attempts to rescue the girl, but is unsuccessful, as Rasi kills him before Syn’s very eyes.

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It isn’t helped when, after Rasi is shot and presumed dead, Syn gets an idea about what the Jedi was attempting to do with the child from Rav, who puts the idea of their zealous religious grooming in his head.

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In that moment, the Jedi were warped in Syn’s eyes into a haughty, self-righteous, vile collection of monks that kidnap children and kill without consequence. It’s a flashback that paints the Jedi in a particularly unsavory light (so much so, that you’d almost think Karen Traviss wrote it).

But then Rasi cuts in to set the record straight.

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As it turns out, it was Syn’s father who had killed the miners—after trying to beat some owed money out of them, and snatching their daughter when they refused to cooperate. Rasi, who was on a completely unrelated Jedi mission, chose to intervene…and while killing Syn’s father, failed to rescue the child.

Having the skewed childhood memories of the event shattered by the truth douses Syn like bitingly-cold icewater, forcing him to come to grips with what his father was really doing on that planet…as well as the uncomfortable, humiliating truth that his vengeance-fueled hatred of the Jedi has all been built on a lie. A lie he’d been telling himself for years.

The sting of the revelation is only salted when Rasi asks what happened to the girl. In a scene with some very unsavory implications, Syn gives both him and the readers an ominous idea of what became of her:

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I just want to take a second to point out that, at the time of this writing, Disney has just gotten done airing their atrocious The Book of Boba Fatt TV show, in which they did fuck all in exploring the moral grays and seedy nature of crime within the Star Wars universe. On top of that, they’ve also failed in positioning a victim of circumstance guilty of becoming the person they hate in the character of Reva on the abysmal Kenobi series.

And yet here, John Ostrander tackles both in a way that makes the entirety of LFL’s modern writers look like amateurs. In only a few pages, he did more to delve into the duality of perspectives on crime in the SW galaxy, and the moral ambiguity of victims-turned-thugs. On one hand, Syn’s perspective is the exact kind you’d expect from bystanding normal people outside the Jedi Order—skewed towards the idea that the Jedi are an overrated cabal of high-and-mighty hypocrites, no better than criminals, given how they seemingly commit atrocities and wash themselves of any accountability, placing themselves above the law…and causing tragedy for people like Syn.

But that’s when the story swings the other way, reminding us that Syn’s life in the criminal underworld has desensitized him to the seedier, fouler aspects of it; that he’d rather see the Jedi as the villain than his own father, whom he convinced himself was some kind of exception to the kind of thugs around him. Out of sheer bias, Syn casts his father in an innocent light, despite knowing what kind of people him and Rav are. And when the girl is “saved” from the Jedi, Syn knows deep down inside himself the kind of horrible life of slavery she’s going to be condemned to. All things he refused to face and admit, and would rather spend years deflecting on the Jedi as a convenient scapegoat.

The fact that there isn’t a happy ending for that girl, and that the scene simply ends with a hollow sense of discomfort lingering in the air, is the exact kind of thing Disney would never do. None of this is.

Seeing the criminal element in Star Wars written like this is refreshing as fuck, and one of my favorite parts of the Legacy comics as a whole.
Before morning, Azlyn plucks up the courage to face the Princess, now suddenly having second thoughts about her vows to the Imperial Knights, now that her old Master has stirred feelings of doubts…and Cade has come back into her life.

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When Cade shows up the next morning to hear the Council’s verdict, they predictably refuse to go along with his assassination plan. And the alternative they come up with is the same brand of gibbering stupidity as the Jedi Council from KOTOR; and if you think I’m exaggerating, consider that their solution to Krayt is the exact solution the KOTOR Jedi Council employed to solve the Mandalorian Crisis: “Just sit back and everything’ll to work out, bro.”

In this instance, their logic is that if Krayt’s Order is indeed fractured and competitive, then the best course of action is to sit back and wait for the Hands of Krayt to turn and kill each other…regardless of how long that takes.

Normally, I’m not one to sympathize with Cade’s edgelord logic, but he actually makes a compelling case here, simply because of how moronic the Jedi Council are being:

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Understandably fed up with the Jedi Council’s complacency as Krayt ravages the galaxy, Cade leaves in a huff, intent to carry out his plan regardless of his microscopic chances. It seems like the Mynock crew are completely on their own…until Cade returns to find a surprise in the hold of his ship:

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The cold and uncompromising Imperial Knights pledge their sabers to Cade’s cause, accompanied by a newly-energized Syn, a remorseful Azlyn (much to Deliah’s chagrin), and Shado Vao, who’s tagging along to ensure Cade doesn’t turn to the Dark Side and fulfill everyone’s fears. Oh, and R2-D2, of course.

With this unlikely band of companions, Cade sets forth to do what the Jedi Order is too weak to do—to meet the Dark Lord on his own terms, and with a dark power to match his own.

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Now, with everything in place, you’d think the story would progress without any hurdles, right? I mean, we have new character dynamics set up, an interesting and novel premise in the heroes embarking on what is literally a Rogue Ops mission, charting a beeline straight towards the main villain. This next part should be smooth sailing, free of any intrusion…

And you’d be right. If not for the fact that, out of seemingly fucking nowhere, the format of the story changes to incorporate a crossover.

Yes. A crossover.
To fully illustrate how baffling this is, I need to take you back to when these comics were being written. In 2008, Dark Horse had a multitude of different Star Wars titles running at the same time—Knights of the Old Republic, Dark Times, Rebellion, and of course, Legacy. And someone (I don’t know if it was editor Randy Stradley or someone else) decided that the best way to boost interest in these titles was to have a year-long crossover event linking these four comic series together. Now, while that sounds bizarre, you need to remember that, by this point, Dark Horse owed a lot of their popularity and readerbase to their infamous crossovers, such as Alien versus Predator and RoboCop versus Terminator. It made sense to try and work that crossover magic on their Star Wars line, which continued to maintain popularity and sales even without the hype of a movie to tether themselves to.

Where the problem arises is that all four of the aforementioned Star Wars titles took place in different eras: Knights of the Old Republic taking place thousands of years before the films, Dark Times between Ep. III and IV, Rebellion between Ep. IV and V, and Legacy in the far future. So how the fuck could you possibly have a crossover between all these titles? Have characters from each title time-jump and interact with each other, in a canon-destroying spree of reckless fanservices?

Well, Dark Horse’s solution with their crossover, Vector, was to have to have the opposite: have one character time-jump to these different eras, and interact with the characters of each title.

And really, I wouldn’t even really have a problem with this if not for the intrusive and frankly irritating aspect of Crossover events in comics…that being, if your series of choice is roped in for the ride, and you haven’t READ the other series involved with the crossover, it is nearly impossible to care or get invested in what’s going on. Worse yet, the issues of Legacy involved in this crossover aren’t relegated to a filler sideplot—this is a MAJOR part of the central Legacy storyline, with the Vector plot elements dovetailing into the stakes and main characters of Legacy. These issues are not just the finale of the Vector crossover, and can be ignored as such; they’re the next part of Legacy’s story, with important information that can’t be skipped. So if you’re like me, and you were just reading Legacy as its own, isolated story, this is not only intrusive, but flat out annoying, as I know have to peruse through the earlier issues of this Vector crossover just to get context for everything.

Now, I’m not about to start reviewing and covering issues of Old Republic and Dark Times, because that’ll sidetrack my coverage to an absurd degree…so I’ll just give a brief synopsis to give context as to who the protagonist of Vector is, and what her deal is.
Basically, the gist of Vector, in the chronological order of the comics:

-During the KOTOR Comics: A young Jedi Knight named Celeste Morne discovers an ancient relic called the Murr Talisman—an amulet hosting the soul and malice of an eons-old Sith Lord named Karness Muur, who used the amulet’s power to create a mutated, zombie-like beast that can emerge from viral infection…called Rakghouls. Yes, those Rakghouls. Remember them from the Taris Undercity Levels of the original KOTOR Game? This Muur guy is directly responsible for their creation. But more than that, during Muur’s life, he had the ability to control the minds of Rakghouls, like a Necromancer controlling undead in a fantasy setting. Now that he’s dead, the vengeful spirit of Muur infests the talisman, attempting to bond it with any Force User it comes into contact with and dominate their mind for his use…a bit like Sauron’s One Ring. Our unlucky protagonist Celeste Morne sadly gets this Talisman attached to her, but was able to seal herself in Sith-designed sarcophagus to place her in suspended animation, and keep the ancient Sith Spirit from realizing his plans

-During the Dark Times Comics: Thousands of years later, Celeste is revived by Darth Vader, whom she fights with. But it’s okay—we don’t have Ahoska levels of plot armor here; she doesn’t beat Vader, because they’re interrupted when the Talisman causes his stormtroopers to turn into Rakghouls, and forces him into a retreat.

-During the Rebellion Comics: Celeste is stranded on the moon where Vader found her for nearly a decade, until she’s discovered by Luke, Han and Leia. Things go awry when the Rebel Troops that accompanied them are swiftly infected by the Rakghoul virus (making this the second zombie virus Han has gone up against, if you count Dark Troopers), forcing them to kill her friends. Celeste is possessed by the Talisman and fights Luke, until Leia comes between them and gets possessed by the Talisman herself. But Celeste, in a very noble and selfless stunt, takes back the nightmarish artifact to free Leia…before luring all the Rakghouls onto a Rebel ship and closing herself in. She and a swarm of Rakghouls remain on the derelict Rebel craft, adrift in space for the next hundred years…

So now that we’re all caught up, let’s see how all of this ties into Legacy. Thanks Dark Horse, by the way, for making my job more difficult. You’re all a bunch of swell folks.
We’re briefly told that a decade ago—presumably during the war between the Fel Empire and the Alliance, an Imperial Cruiser Iron Sun went missing, after it veered off-course to investigate an ancient craft from the old Rebel Alliance days.

You can imagine what happened next:

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Celeste Morne sits in the captain’s chair of the vessel, surrounded by rotting corpses of the Rakghoul-infected Imperials, and hearing the cackling voice of Karness Murr scuttle in her mind from within the Talisman around her neck.

Her willpower to resist his domination is swiftly eroding, even as she clings to her consciousness with the aide of the Force. She thwarts his advances, but he constantly mocks her with the possibility that he’ll escape and possess another…just as he did with Leia a century earlier:

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Cutting back to the Mynock Crew—fucking FINALLY—we learn that they’ve decided on their chief tactic to assassinate Krayt; to use Cade as bait and lure the depraved Sith Lord over to a planet within the Deep Core, called Had Abbadon (which, as a piece of trivia, was going to be the name of Palpatine’s Imperial Capital in the early drafts for Return of the Jedi. Nice touch there, Ostrander).

There is also a lot of exposition to try and explain who the Legacy characters are, which I’m not going to go over, as it’s clearly here to help contextualize the era for people just here for the Crossover.

We find Cade meditating in his quarters, stubbornly trying to ignore the voice of Azlyn Rae outside his door, trying to get him to accept her apology for deceptively using him to achieve her own ends back on Tavias. Cade finally has enough and opts to block her voice out with the use of Death Sticks…

…which is when the ghostly apparition of Celeste Morne appears right before him.

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The Mynock is instantly yanked out of hyperspace by the interdictor field of the Iron Sun, sending the crew tumbling and shouting over each other. They look up from the viewports and see the Imperial craft looming over them.

Thinking that the apparition he saw was a hologram (not helped by the utterance of “Contact”), both it and the Imperial ship send Cade’s suspicions flaring, making him believe that Azlyn has sold them all out:

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As their ship is yanked into the Iron Sun’s hold by way of the tractor beam, the Mynock Crew is surprised when no TIE Fighters emerge from the Hangar, and they find carbon scoring and burns from interior damage within the hangar. It becomes all to obvious that a battle has taken place within the ship, setting everyone on edge.

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Cade reaches out with the Force and feels a lifeform—something between a Jedi and a Sith. Antarres Draco states that it has to be one or the other, not both…something Cade takes exception to:

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The gang emerges into the empty hangar, finding nothing but an ancient Rebel ship and numerous skeletons of carnivorous creatures that none of them recognize. Before they can get a proper grasp of their surroundings, a viewport window smashes open, and they’re attacked by what we as the readers recognize as Rakghouls…which, admittedly, are rendered quite nicely in Jan Duursema’s art style.

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Amidst the battle, Cade and Azlyn are both attacked and subsequently clawed by one of the Rakghouls, prompting a mysterious voice to call the beasts off. Celeste Morne emerges, appearing in control of her faculties, and not in control of the Talisman.

Upon seeing the injury Cade and Azlyn have sustained from one of the Rakghouls, Celeste instantly panics, using the Force to fling Cade them into a holding cell, to prevent their infections from spreading.

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Locking the rest of the Mynock Crew out, Celeste interrogates her two prisoners, demanding if either of them are powerful Jedi. Cade instantly says that neither of them are active Jedi, and that realistically, he has more of the Dark Side in him. Celeste deduces that as the reason why the Sith Lord possessing her sought out the Mynock, as a means of getting to Cade and potentially possessing him.

Cade tries to get her to free them, filling her on the state of the galaxy and how he needs to kill Krayt at all costs. Celeste defeatedly tells him that he won’t be able to fulfill his mission; and that his and Azlyn’s injuries mean that they’ll become a Rakghoul within hours.

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And then they start developing the Rakghoul symptoms right there, in the cell.

Thinking fast, Cade uses his Dark Side Healing ability on himself and Azlyn…causing an overload of memories through their Force Bond, and shocking both Celeste and the Sith Spirit dwelling inside her:

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After killing their way through a horde of Rakghouls outside, the rest of the Mynock Crew pry the cell door open and rescue Cade and Azlyn.

Thoroughly impressed with Cade’s healing ability, Celeste decides on the spot to lend her alliance to his crew and assist in his quest to kill Darth Krayt…although the panels leave it ambiguous if she does this out of free will, or under control of the Muur’s spirit.

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With the unexpected addition of their new ally, the Mynock Crew and Imperial Knights put their daring heist into action: using their Imperial Clearance codes, Antarres Draco and his Knights are able to sneak down to the base of their traitorous countrymen on Had Abbadon that have sold their alliance to the Sith, boarding TIES and sending the whole place into high alert as they “chase” Shado under the premise of being TIE pilots.

Then, just as the Sith-allied Imperials gullibly race to their own fighter craft, the Knights turn their laserfire down onto their own Imperial brothers:

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Cade and his friends leverage the moment to smash into the control tower, and face off against the Sith commanding the Imperial forces. Rather than deal with his forces individually, Celeste—in a stunt of both cunning and brutality—uses her Talisman to warp the roomful of Stormtroopers into Rakghouls, and turn them against their master.

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The Sith flees in terror, with Cade preparing to give chase—when Celeste opts to stop him. Cade angrily demands why they’re letting their enemy escape, to which Celeste tells him that the Sith will act as the lure that will bait Krayt into seeking them out, here on Had Abaddon. There’s a barb of disagreement, as both have conflicting experience with the Sith—Celeste from eons ago, and Cade in the present.

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Once night falls and our heroes lie in wait for the arrival of Krayt, Draco sneaks off to make a private report to Emperor Fel. He reveals to him the nature of Celeste Morne’s Murr Talisman, with him and his Emperor already plotting to use it as an Imperial asset behind the backs of Cade and the others.


In addition, Ganner Krieg uses their newfound privacy to have an intimate one-on-one talk with Azlyn, having been denied the chance to speak with her for years, and evidently harboring unrequited love for her…which, to be honest, kind of comes out of nowhere. This is like twenty-something issues after this character has been introduced.

It’s just as well, because Azlyn blue-balls him almost instantly. Poor sap.

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Regardless, Draco walks in and informs the other two about the Emperor’s new directive for him—which, he slyly implies, will act as the key he needs to win Roan Fel’s favor, and the hand of his daughter. Azlyn, on the other hand, is outraged at the Emperor’s plan—utterly galled at the fact that someone who understands the Force as well as he does would turn to Dark Side perversions like the Talisman.

This outburst prompts the other two to question Azlyn’s loyalty, prompting Draco in particular to out her as a potential hazard that they might have to deal with. When Ganner snaps that he won’t allow any harm to come to her, Draco warns him not to let his personal feelings interfere with his duty (which is EXTREMELY hypocritical on Draco’s part, considering how he’s using his Imperial Knight duties solely to get frisky with Roan Fel’s daughter).

Ganner angrily tells him that he agrees with a Azlyn about the Emperor—and how he doesn’t deserve the loyalty when he fails to embody the principles of the Empire, and the Light of the Force. In fact, the Imperial Knights were apparently founded on the contingency plan to take out the Emperor should he ever fall to the Dark Side.

I wonder if Jaina Solo instituted that contingency plan when the Knights were founded. That sounds eerily like the kind of cold-blooded measures she was expected to take as Sword of the Jedi back in her day.

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I must say, I like all of these narrative developments between the Imperial Knights, and the dissent being sewed between them. It’s about fucking time the writers did something with them—I didn’t expected to happen during a literal crossover event, but they’ve been gathering dust as passive observers in the foreground for so much of the story, that I’ll take what I can get.

Now, if you thought this comic had traces of anime DNA before, cling to your armrests because this story is about to sprinkle in another well-worn trope of that medium…a love triangle. Yes, really.

For while tempers are brewing inside the base, turbulent jealousy is brewing within the holds of the docked Mynock. Syn finds our sassy girl Deliah locked in a pout, stung by how cozy Cade is getting with his old Padawan friend from childhood, Azlyn. She makes a point about how a swinger species like hers don’t typically get hung up on this kind of thing, but as we see, her attachment and loyalty to Cade goes far beyond a simple fling…which is actually cute.

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Deliah knows that however many years of tight scrapes and daring heists she’s shared with Cade is nothing compared to the long, intimate bond that he and Azlyn have likely harbored since childhood…a bond poor Deliah can’t hope to match.

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Elsewhere aboard the Mynock, we find Azlyn herself sneaking her way to Celeste Morne’s quarters…blaster drawn, hoping to destroy Morne and the Talisman along with her, in order to make sure her misguided Emperor can never make use of either.

Cade sneaks up behind her and confronts her, in a series of rather odd panels that have a Rob Liefeld-like fixation on the characters’ teeth.

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The two of them argue to the point of coming to blows, clashing both sabers and principles in a rain of sparks. Azlyn tries to make Cade see the kind of danger that the Talisman poses, the nightmarish power that threatens the galaxy just as much as Krayt and his Sith do.

Cade manages to shake her out of her raging paranoia, telling her to trust his judgment on letting Morne live…as well as trusting the other feelings she’s bottling up. In seconds, we see that Deliah’s fears about these two are quiet valid:

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So, like the complete man-whore that he is, and literal days after confessing his love to Deliah, Cade spends the night with his childhood friend…with the panels and the posing clearly implying sex. We find them engaging in a little pillow talk, reminiscing about their days as Padawans.

Meanwhile, I’m reading this wondering who’s going to be more pissed off about what’s going, Deliah or Ganner, considering both of them just got cucked to orbit.

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The couple’s cutesy talk is cut short when Azlyn feels a surge of Dark Side energy crackling in the Force, one that Cade feels, too…and that he’s been feeling consistently since they let Celeste Morne aboard the Mynock.

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Cade suits up and confronts Morne inside of her quarters, where he tells her that he can feel the presence of the Sith Spirit in her talisman, itching to escape and attempting to worm his way into the minds of the other crewmen aboard the Mynock in order to escape to one of them as a new host. Cade warns her to keep her relic under control, otherwise he’ll have to give into Azlyn’s insistence to kill them both.

Morne wryly states the person who should be most afraid of being possessed is Cade himself, considering is warped alignment and consistent basking in the Dark Side make him a prime specimen to tantalize the spirit inside the Muur Talisman. Cade laughs this off, telling her to watch herself.

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While all of this is going on, we finally catch up to the Sith Commander that our protagonists spooked, having fled all the way back to Darth Krayt, licking his wounds and recounting a frenzied report of Skywalker’s appearance and his accomplice that turned their troops into Rakghouls.

Krayt, accompanied by the disgraced Nihil’s vicious and elite replacement, Darth Stryfe, listen to the commander’s tale, before his infested wounds transform him into a Rakghoul right there in the throne room.

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After new arrival Stryfe beheads the creature, resident alchemist Darth Maladi examines its body and identifies it as some form of ancient Sith Alchemy…far older than anything she’s ever seen. She recognizes it from ancient records relating to an outbreak on Taris, bewildered how it could’ve survived centuries later.

That’s when a communications officer informs Krayt that an emergency transmission from Had Abaddon is being signaled to him, revealed to be a Jedi woman he doesn’t recognize…under the sway and voice of a Sith Lord:

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Karness Muur demands an audience with Darth Krayt, to barter power and control of the galaxy between them. The Sith Emperor scoffs as to why he should entertain the Spirit, to which Muur responds with a most alarming form of blackmail…the shackled and prostrated body of Cade Skywalker.

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Desperate to keep Cade alive as his last hope for survival, Krayt agrees to come. Muur cackles triumphantly, stating that he will make their meeting worth the trouble…boasting that he’s learned about Krayt’s cancerous condition, and is in possession of ancient Dark Side secrets that can potentially heal him, with a greater success rate than even Cade’s powers.

Darth Wyrlokk, loremaster and keeper of ancient Sith history, is all too aware of who Karness Muur is, having learned about him via ancient scrolls on Korriban…and he warns his master that Muur’s treacherous history suggests that they shouldn’t trust him to benefit anyone but himself.

Krayt decides to venture into the trap anyway, knowing that regardless of whatever lies Muur spews out, Skywalker must be kept alive at all costs.

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Thus, the One Sith entourage of Krayt, Talon, Stryfe and Maladi touch down on the treacherous canyons of Had Abaddon, finding the Sith-possessed Celeste Morne waiting for them with Cade in captivity.

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The two Sith finally confront each other, with Krayt demanding to know what the other desires in return for his ancient Dark Side Secrets. Muur’s price is simple: for Krayt to murder the female host body that he currently inhabits, and allow the parasitic talisman to latch onto him. And with Muur needing to take good care of his new host body, he intends to heal Krayt once they’re “joined”.

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Now, remember that holding onto his individuality and not becoming a mindless slave to a parasite growing inside him is Krayt’s entire motivation to heal himself. So naturally, he isn’t keen about becoming a slave to a new parasite in the form of this Talisman.

Muur decides to tempt Krayt with a sample of his power, and decides to heal him—but just a little. Krayt is instantly taken aback by the strength of the healing power, so much so that both he and all of his Hands are distracted…just long enough for Cade to escape his shackles, and spring the trap.

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The rest of Cade’s allies leap into action, catching the Sith acolytes unprepared. Celeste Morne, having willingly given control to Muur’s spirit inside of her to make the trap all the more convincing, regains control and fights Krayt. The Dark Lord, tantalized by the brief healing he experienced, decides to take Muur on his offer in the heat of mad impulse.

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Cade meanwhile has a frenzied and hostile reunion with his old adversary, Darth Talon. Between lightsaber blows, she minces vile words about her and Cade’s time together, and how the latter secretly desires to come back…sending a spike of fury into Cade’s blood.

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In the confusion of the battle, Draco decides to play his cards and go after the Talisman. Azlyn tries to warn him yet again about the absurdity of what he’s trying to do, but Draco—being the complete idiot that he is—pushes her aside. The two almost kill each other when Ganner intervenes, more out of protectiveness for Azlyn than anything else.

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Celeste already feels Draco’s intentions through the Force before he even reaches her, and mockingly fends him off. Amidst their duel, Karness Muur’s spirit emerges through Morne’s voice to admonish Draco, writing him off as too weak in the Force to be a suitable host—an unworthy replacement.

Especially not when Krayt is right there to be a far greater asset.

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Krayt himself, meanwhile, is swarmed by Rakghouls, seemingly only surviving their lashings thanks to his Vong Armor. Stryfe attempts to rescue his master, but Krayt liberates himself—creating a literal cocoon of Force Lightning around himself, and intent on seizing his last chance for survival.

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Cade, meanwhile, comes face-to-face with Stryfe, whom he provokes like an angry bull. When the Sith acolyte breaks into a berserker rage, Cade leverages the moment to get Syn to litter the ground with some thermal detonators.

He then Force kicks Stryfe, and the grenades, against the wall in one single explosive movement—which instantly reminded me of that hilarious “grenade kick” kill from Rambo III:

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Celeste Morne briefly regains her consciousness from Muur’s control as she battles Krayt, succumbing to her exhaustion as she trades blows with him. Suddenly, Darth Maladi slinks in, lending her Force Lightning to the fight, and allowing both Sith to gang up on Morne.

She struggles against the downpour of lightning from both sides, Muur’s spirit taunting her to give in to the onslaught of pain.

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When it looks like Morne is going to buckle under the strain of battling two Sith at once, Azlyn decides to dive in to the fray. Both Cade—and Ganner—look on as she pushes her way into the battle, and for a moment, it looks like she’s going to fulfill her earlier plan: kill Morne, and destroy the Talisman.

Instead, to the utter shock of both Cade and the audience (and the glee of Karness Muur), Azlyn dives after Krayt instead, plunging her saber into his back.

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Muur sees his chance to finish his adversary off, unleashing a literal storm of Force Lightning onto Krayt, while flaying Azlyn to bits as well. Cade can only stand by and watch in horror, as Azlyn falls to the ground—a charred corpse—while Krayt’s seemingly dead body crumples and plummets off the edge of a cliff.

Not gonna lie, I didn’t see any of this coming.

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Cade is, ah…understandably upset with Celeste Morne, heartbroken over the death of his childhood friend. Morne attempts a callous, uncaring exterior, but her guilt over yanking yet another innocent life into her struggle to control the Talisman is too much to bear—with this new death happening directly from her fingers, rather than the claws of another Rakghoul.

Morne realizes that her control over the Talisman is slipping faster than she’d like to admit, and that she can’t carry on this task for another four millennia. She turns beseechingly to Cade, comparing him to the Jedi Zayne Carrick she once knew eons ago…while Cade hauntingly utters the words of his father: “We take what is given.”

Which are effective in describing Morne’s long, difficult burden that she’s had to carry throughout the Vector series. Nice touch there, writers.

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Morne finally falls to rest, and the Talisman—and Sith Spirit—latch onto Cade almost instantly. It seems like Karness Muur has exactly what he wants: a dark and exceedingly powerful host, one that he can dominate the galaxy with. But as Morne said just before she died, Cade is a remarkable specimen in that he has zero temptation in using the Talisman’s unimaginable power…

…and therefore, is strong enough to sever his connection with it, and vanquish Muur’s spirit for good; and by doing so, bringing Celeste Morne’s tireless, millennia-spanning mission to a close.

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That’s when Cade’s allies examine the charred body of Azlyn and realize that, somehow, the woman is still alive…just barely clinging to life, the same way I imagine Palpatine was after he was torched alive by his own lightning during his fight with Mace Windu. Cade naturally tries to restore her with his Force Healing…but this time, it isn’t working. Or at least, not well enough to save the dying woman in his arms.

In a panic, Cade tries pumping her with Force Energy, siphoning Dark Side Power into Azlyn’s frail body until they can get help at a medical facility.

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Now, I actually appreciated this happening, because by this point I had been consistently rolling my eyes at the way the plot seemed to routinely bail the characters out thanks to Cade’s “insta-resurrection” powers, which seem to ONLY ever work without any hangups or compromises. Here, though, it seems to imply that the Force-inflicted damage is too much for even Cade to reverse, implying that his powers have less effect on unnatural, Force-related injuries.

This would make some sense, since with his past instances of healing—Wolf Sazen, Syn and Deliah, and Marsiah Fel—he was healing lightsaber wounds or flesh-eating diseases. Tangible, biological damage. But with Force Lightning being a form of unnatural life-drainage (at least from what I recall from the Jedi vs Sith: Essential Guide To the Force…yes, I’m one of the autists who read that, don’t laugh at me), it makes sense that he has a harder time making his healing factor work.

Nevertheless, he scoops up Azlyn and makes off with her, much to the protest of the Imperial Knights. But Cade, having witnessed their treachery with the Talisman with his own eyes, has lost all trust in them….and remember, he started this arc with a wary sense of distrust for them. Ganner tries to retrieve Azlyn, but he’s blue-balled yet again, this time by a literal blue alien in the form of Shado Vao.

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The Mynock limps away from the battle…with Morne finally at rest and Darth Krayt finally dead, at an exhausting and terrible price.

Or is he dead?

We pan down to see that a broken and twisted Darth Krayt still clings to ragged breath on the blasted wasteland, found by his lorekeeper, Darth Wyyrlok, who has taken it upon himself to retrieve the other Sith disciples and place them in bacta tubes, and is left stunned that his master still lives. Krayt weakly croaks that he must be restored to health, that his crusade to bring order to the galaxy is still left undone.

And then in a bold and jaw-dropping stunt of treachery, Wyyrlok determines that the quest does indeed need fulfilling…just not by Krayt himself.

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That’s right, I didn’t believe it either, but it’s true: Wyyrlok, who has been arguably the most loyal and unshakeable disciple of Krayt’s Order, backstabs and murders his master on the spot. Keep in mind that up until now, Wyyrlok has been tirelessly looking for a cure for Krayt’s illness, even venturing to the hazardous depths of Korriban (in a sidestory I opted to omit for time) to battle with ancient Sith Spirits to discover one. He’s the third of his lineage, the third “Darth Wyyrlok” in his family to serve Krayt, and has shown unwavering loyalty to him where other hands like Maladi and Nihil have secretly shown brewing contempt for how the Dark Lord shuns them.

So believe me when I say that this sudden heelturn comes completely out of left field—and I’m deathly curious as to what Wyyrlok’s motive and reasoning behind this is. Ultimately, the lorekeeper Force levitates his master’s corpse into the shuttle with him, seemingly to use for a future plot as he returns back to Coruscant…intending to seize the empty throne left behind by his master.

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Cade and his friends may have achieved their mission in destroying Krayt, but the galaxy still remains in the clutches of a new dark master, having snatched it up mere moments after the last breath of his predecessor.

Cutting ahead a few months, we delve deep into what the writer describes as the “dark womb of the Korriban” temples (nice verbiage there, Ostrander), where Wyyrlok keeps the preserved corpse of his former master floating in a bacta tube…and no, not because he’s a sick fuck, but because it helps aide in a clever deception he’s allowed to spread across the Sith ranks.

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You see, Wyyrlok’s cunning plan is to operate under the false pretense that Krayt has entered stasis following the previous battle—just as Krayt already did to leapfrog through time over the centuries he’s been alive. Exploiting that precedent, Wyyrlok is now operating as the “voice and will” of the Dark Lord, assuming command of his vast empire until the day he awakens…which is a responsibility the previous “Darth Wyyrloks” in his family have undertaken in the past.

The catch this time? Our generation’s Wyyrlok intends to keep that status quo permanent, to his own advantage.

This is a really interesting turn of events, because it now requires Wyyrlok to exhaustively maintain the masquerade that Darth Krayt is still alive, continuously having to fool the other Sith disciples. It’s a really neat premise…very much akin to Jacen’s personal ruse he had to continue throughout Legacy of the Force, and the narrative trajectory of which I’m eagerly anticipating.

Mostly to see what maneuvers Wyyrlok, and the writers, use to keep this masquerade going.
Meanwhile, the Mynock is racing towards Bantha Rawk’s hideout on Kiffar, braving an atmospheric storm as Cade does everything he can to help Azlyn cling to her last breath. Writhing in a state of unimaginable pain, she tries to pressure him into letting her go…to let her surrender to her wounds and die. She’s served her purpose, vanquished Krayt, and wants nothing more than her agony to end.

But Cade, feverishly gripped by blind, selfish attachment as ever, refuses to let her die…keeping her on the brink of death in an act that seems more cruel than compassionate.

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Cade runs out into the rain-splattered Kiffar plains with Azlyn in his arms, and thrusts her to Bantha’s custody, barking orders at everyone around him. The flicker of rage causes his eyes to warp into a foul Sith yellow…and it doesn’t go unnoticed, even as he succumbs to his own wounds, and blacks out…

…keeping the secret that Azlyn is ready and willing to die all to himself.

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Cade awakens in the arms of Deliah…yeah, remember her? That loyal, lovesick Zeltron girl who he’s been neglecting? Good, because Cade doesn’t remember her either. All he cares about is Azlyn, whose recovery seems dubious at best.

Deliah tries to discourage him from barging in and trying to interfere with her recovery, prompting Cade to snap back in pig-headed ignorance that she’s only getting in the way out of jealousy. If I were Deliah, I would’ve smacked him in the mouth till his teeth came out, but in an admirable display of selflessness, she states that she cares far more about Azlyn’s ability to make him happy…even when she herself can’t.

She really is Best Girl. It’s a shame Captain Asshole here can’t see that.

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Later, Cade is skulking anxiously over Azlyn’s healing cell, and tries to barge in, only to find his uncle blocking the way. The old man states that he can already see the effect Azlyn’s condition is having on Cade, and that one more surge of Healing Power might push him too far over the Dark Side…maybe for good, this time.

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While Cade is huffing and pacing restlessly outside, Bantha and his wife continue to attend to their patient. If you’re like me, and you’re wondering what they could possibly do to aide Azlyn that Cade’s Force Healing couldn’t do, well, the story’s got you covered: evidently, Droo isn’t any random Kiffar—she’s part of a clan of special healers, who operate with advanced and obscure medicinal techniques. We also learn that Droo is part of a Kiffar clan descended from Quinlan Dros…a nice nod to Ostrander and Duursema’s previous creation in the Republic comics.

Regardless, after hours of exhaustive healing techniques, Roo states that they’ve reached their limit in terms of saving her…at least where allowing her to live on as a stable human being goes. If they do save her from here, Droo warns that Azlyn will live in such a crippled state that it’ll be hardly a life at all.

Bantha tells his wife that Azlyn wants to live no matter what the cost, and that she’s given consent to any operation…at least, according to Cade, who was the last witness to her frail voice aboard the Mynock.

And that’s where we as the audience know that Cade has crossed a shocking line; that he’s lied to Bantha and his wife, that he’s violating Azlyn’s wishes, and is going to revive her as a shriveled husk anyway, because his attachment to her has grown to a toxic point, where his need for her survival outweighs hers.

A possession, if you will.

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Cade ultimately is too frustrated and restless to sit by, and decides to take his mind off of current events by riding into the local town with his friend Syn. Shado catches up with them just before they take off, pondering if Krayt truly is dead, and if the Jedi have indeed won.

Cade scornfully says that the Jedi have nothing to worry about, that someone else crossed the line that they were too afraid to.

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Speaking of Krayt’s death, someone who still hasn’t been clued into the news is Darth Stryfe, having just recovered from his wounds on Korriban, and leaping out of his bacta tank in a confused, vengeful fury.

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Stryfe storms up to the Sith Emperor’s private council chamber, where a lovely Chagrian Sith Acolyte guards the door, and manages to maintain composure in the face of her compatriots livid raving. She bars him from entering…repeating Wyrlokk’s lie about Krayt being in stasis.

Having witnessed the battle on Had Abaddon firsthand, Stryfe doesn’t believe her, and tries to brute-force his way in…think it’ll be an easy task, since the young girl doesn’t even have her initiation tattoos yet.

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He learns quickly that she’s a lot more powerful than she appears to be, matching his Force prowess one-for-one, and even lifting him in the air to twist and contort him like a lump of clay…which looks painful as fuck, and certainly not something Disney would allow in the franchise these days.

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The girl’s hand is stayed by Wyrlokk, who reveals herself to be her father (despite having red skin, though in fairness, I don’t really know how skin traits are transferred between Chagrain family members), and allows Stryfe to enter Krayt’s chambers.

We see that Wyrlokk has indeed created a convincing façade of Krayt in stasis, holding his body in his usual tank…but having raised a potent Force Shield around him to “aide in retaining his slumber”, from which premature awakening can reportedly kill him. A clever lie…one that also bars anyone from sensing the absence of Krayt’s presence in the Force.

Wyrlokk puts on the reluctant, noble mask of having to assume his master’s duties, managing to play Stryfe directly into his hands as a loyal, gullible servant.

Just like everyone else he’s duping within the Sith ranks.

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However, while blind and fanatic loyalty are enough to fool the Sith Acolytes scurrying under Wyrlokk’s authority, the shrewd Imperial servants under his command aren’t as easily fooled…especially our old friends, Nyna Calixte and her lover, Morlish.

Raw intuition tells her that not all is as it seems, something that she’ll likely “recruit” her secret alter ego to reaffirm for herself.

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Back in the luxurious halls of the true Emperor, we find Fel grilling his knights over their failure to retrieve the Muur Talisman, which he foolishly believed to be their last hope at soundly defeating their indominable Sith foe. The only good news that Roan Fel has in his lap is that Krayt may indeed be dead; and that with the head of the snake removed, the Fel Empire might have a better shot at retaking the galaxy.

Bolstering those hopes is the arrival of news from a faceless spy, who alludes that internal corruption maybe plaguing the Sith from the inside. Fel refuses to act on vague news alone, but is nonetheless salivating at the potential of its truth.

He orders his operative to find out more, mysteriously stating that they’ll “regain his approval” should they succeed.

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We return to Kiffar, where after distracting himself with brawling and drinking at the latest shanty town, Cade can no longer sit in frantic silence, and barges into Azlyn’s chamber…where she waits, alive. But decked out in a suit.

As it turns out, Droo’s Kiffar healing procedure was a success—with the cost being Azlyn forced to live out her days in a metallic exosuit pumping bacta into her body…one she can never remove.

Azlyn is driven mad with grief and horror, and turns on Cade in an instant.

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Cade tries fruitlessly to justify his decision, pleading that it’s all “only temporary”, until he finds a way to enhance his healing ability and save her. But Azlyn knows perfectly well that there is no mystical alternative out there—that in a stunt of blind, selfish, possessive love, Cade has doomed her to a living nightmare.

Denying her death, and condemning her to a miserable, prolonged life.

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Deliah butts in, likely happy that the love triangle has tipped in her favor dramatically. But Azlyn doesn’t fight her; she just turns away—disgusted with Cade, and herself—and desperate to get away from everything.

Droo is the next person to savage Cade verbally; she exclaims in horror that he lied about getting Azlyn’s consent for the process, that he put his own needs before hers. Worse yet, his actions manipulated her into performing ancient Kiffar secrets on someone who didn’t want it…a gross perversion of her culture, and altering the way she sees Cade.

Having seen enough, Bantha bitterly tells Cade and his friends to hurry with their repairs and leave, and to never come back.

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Elsewhere, Azlyn takes refuge with an underground contingent of the Kiffar Healers, wallowing in despair and praying for death. She receives a mysterious visitor, who turns out to be none other than Ganner Krieg, the Imperial Knight that—despite everything—still loves her, and wants to take her back home.

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The Mynock Crew finalizes the repairs on their ship, with Syn sending the occasional melancholy glance at the Rawk’s Nest bunch, the second family of him and Cade, the ties with which have been forever tainted.

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Cade slams his controls down, realizing that his obsessive and needy selfishness have finally swung back, and destroyed what he loves most. He tries to cloak it under doing the right thing, something he claims that he’ll never attempt again…deflecting his mistake on the Jedi whose behavior he seemingly tried to emulate.

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But Syn very astutely shoots that notion down. He sees right through Cade, and knows that yanking Azlyn back and accidentally condemning her to this new painful existence of hers wasn’t rooted in kind-hearted selflessness. It was more of his own self-centered need to not let people die on his behalf; to keep the galaxy and its participants revolving around his needs and nobody else’s...just as Wolf Sazen warned him.

Only this time, someone else paid the price for Cade’s selfishness; and no Force Healing or Skywalker-bred power is going to bail that person out, or undo the harm he’s caused to the loved ones he’s slighted.

Cade—cornered by his own, awful mistake—relapses back. With Krayt dead and the galaxy no longer hunting him, he decides to retreat to the Outer Rim and back into his old outlaw life; to hide away in a fume of excess and death sticks, and numb himself to all the guilt he feels.

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The Mynock departs, heading into a galactic storm, while a different storm altogether rages inside Cade. In the wake of recent, climactic events, the galaxy seems to have quieted to a relative stillness. Major players are moving in to take advantage of Krayt’s absence, and the galaxy steadies itself for the next phase of the conflict.

But that conflict won’t involve Cade; he’s finished answering the call to adventure, finished setting himself to suffer grief at the hands of his own mistakes.

He flies off, taking the brewing internal storm along with him, to star’s end.

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Needless to say, I came away very impressed by these last few story arcs for Legacy. You may remember that I showered the story arcs Ghosts and Claws of the Dragon (the arcs in which Cade undergoes a psychological dressdown on Ossus, before being lulled into a Sith trap on Coruscant) with praise for finally adding some texture and drama to the character of Cade Skywalker. Looking back, however, it seems like I might’ve jumped the gun on that praise. For while I enjoyed the internal struggle that Wolf Sazen had managed to coax out of Cade with his fists, and the idea of him facing the consequences of his actions…neither really played a massive role in Cade’s struggle in Krayt’s captivity. Ultimately, the rest of the story just existed to show how “kewl” Cade was for trying to outfox the Sith, and how his greater grasp of the Force allowed him to drop the One Sith on their asses, and then be rescued by his friends.

And that problem was symptomatic of Legacy’s major problem early on with story arcs like Claws of the Dragon: Cade gets a ridiculous amount of focus, which wouldn’t be a problem except for the fact that A) there are other supporting characters who get far less time in the narrative spotlight, and B) the plot seems to bail Cade out constantly. With his tremendous power, “too-cool-for-you” attitude, and callous self-servitude, little in the plot seemed to slow his character down, or present any obstructions for him to overcome. And while the action and dynamic artwork made those issues fun, they lacked a lot of substance, and was starting to make the story feel a bit empty, or at least little more than “The Adventures of Blonde Shonen Protagonist the Skywalker.”

Thankfully, these last few story arcs resolved all of those issues, and resoundingly so.

The other characters in Legacy finally feel less like cardboard stand-ins, and like three-dimensional players with things to do, and personal threads to be fleshed out. Jariah Syn’s backstory and animosity towards the Jedi is beautifully expanded, with a Rashomon-style account of his father’s death—which, for my money, is one of the best parts of the comic as a whole, culminating in a dark, sinister ending that leaves the reader feeling numb, demonstrating a bleakness that Star Wars media rarely ventures into outside of the novels. Deliah Blue’s role is elevated from a careless femme fatale to a turbulent and insecure romantic foil…one who naively falls for Cade’s charms, giving him multiple chances to improve out of a waning sense of real care. The introduction of Nat “Bantha” Skywalker is also welcome addition, as a sullen, grumpy bastard and the less talented, more jaded Skywalker brother to lionized hero Kol. The Imperial Knights even get more substance—with Draco showcasing some manipulative traits in how he wants to win Marsiah, and Ganner saddled with some unrequited love for Azlyn. But more importantly, these characters are allowed to emulate what made Wolf Sazen’s role in the story so refreshing: personally challenging Cade.

This is a narrative trend you might’ve noticed throughout the story, and one even I was taken aback by the frequency of…but these other characters aren’t shy about countering or obstructing Cade. Syn peels away his friend’s self-made delusions, and Bantha savagely lectures him every time his reckless decisions boil over. You have that great scene where Cade defiantly challenges the decision of the newly-formed Jedi Council, presenting an argument that isn’t rooted in his usual, try-hard tough guy mentality, and more out of raw pragmatism…the kind that runs effectively counter to the Jedi’s own philosophy. His stance is something we as the audience agree with, but the story remembers to challenge him with a countering perspective, instead of having other characters nod gleefully with whatever he says and treat him like a paragon of virtue, as Ahsoka is routinely galvanized in every Filoni creation. And of course, there’s the love triangle of Cade, Deliah and Azlyn—at first appearing to be a carousel of fanservice for Cade to parade in, without consequence or blowback from either party, then warping into a tense source of friction that ultimately punishes Cade for making the wrong choice, and putting his own feelings before the woman he loves.

It's these multiple elements that give a greater sense of drama to the story, adding more texture and nuance to Legacy beyond its stylistic designs and adrenaline-inducing fight scenes. There were so many excellent moments of this comic where there wasn’t a lightsaber in sight—moments of quiet, contemplative character-building or brewing character drama. And fundamentally, the person who benefits from this the most is Cade himself, since these interactions help enrich his character, as other people around him either get fed up with his antics or retaliate against his behavior. The story shows that it clearly isn’t afraid to reward his actions with actual consequences this time, like having characters like Deliah shun or ignore him, or put him at emotional odds with the likes of Azlyn or Bantha.

Which brings me to quite possibly my favorite part of these recent arcs, and indeed the entirety of Legacy thus far: Cade’s morally dubious decision to save Azlyn against her will, and the shocking consequences of that decision.

You see, something that I’ve kind of omitted as a personal, growing problem with these comics is the presence of Cade’s Force Heal, in that it saps all tension and stakes out of the story. Early on, the writers teased the idea that it came with a terrible price, inching Cade towards the Dark Side with every use…but the problem is that we’re past the halfway point of the series, and this has yet to serve as a real threat to Cade’s character. The plot bails him out regularly, allowing him to revive and heal characters willy-nilly with zero setbacks or consequences, often continuing without any threat to his Force alignment or state of mind. Up till this point, the Force Heal effectively functioned as Cade’s “get-out-of-jail-free” card, always benefitting him and rarely obstructing him, to the point where I was rolling my eyes constantly every time it was used.

Well, Ostrander appeared to have anticipated the problems this would cause, and thus inserted this wonderful final addition of Cade’s misguided saving of Azlyn—to add the ultimate consequence to his Healing Power, and bring out a horrid, selfish part of his character that come back to haunt him.

So much about this works on a narrative and thematic level. Firstly, it builds upon a character flaw that Wolf Sazen pointed out in the Ghosts arc; that Cade puts his own needs above others’, saving people to wash himself of guilt and fundamentally making other people’s lives and wellbeing about him. This was a very real warning that has now flowered into grisly consequence, with Cade violating the consent and desire of an innocent person, and condemning her to a dead state of living that she’ll go on resenting him for. It reveals a lot about how little Cade has changed at his core, the kind of despicable and frankly vile decisions he’s ready to make on behalf of other people, just to make himself feel better. Attaching such a grimy and morally-questionable aspect to a protagonist, especially the hero of a binary space opera like Star Wars, is positively inspired. Secondly, the effect on Azlyn herself is clever, and frightening as a scenario: it’s an ugly, nightmarish side-effect, a narrative endpoint in the same eerie Monkey’s Paw-type sensibility of a Twilight Zone episode, where an ability or choice is rewarded by a grisly and horrifying unforeseen outcome…not at all something I ever thought I’d see in Star Wars. Thirdly, it punishes Cade with something he can’t undo or fix; even as he rationalizes his decision to a mortified Azlyn, he speaks as someone used to bailing his loved ones and himself with reckless use of his Healing Ability…but it’s clear that he can’t easily walk this back like he’s done countless times before. His power can’t undo this malady, or repair the broken and violated heart of Azlyn. He’s lodged in a situation he can’t undo, to the point where Azlyn will likely never forgive him, and no amount of projecting or substance abuse can cleanse his conscience. This is arguably the largest personal obstruction inflicted on Cade in the story…and it’s self-inflicted to boot.

But arguably the greatest achievement of this narrative device is how it builds upon a long-running theme of Star Wars: the danger of attachment. There’s an idea at the core of stories like Revenge of the Sith, that suggest that worst kind of attachment one can form is a parasitic one; a selfish one, in which the love at the core of saving someone becomes sick and feverish…overriding the wants and needs of the person being saved. I mentioned this once already when discussing Ben Skywalker pooling over a similar dilemma over bringing back his mother Mara in FOTJ: Abyss, and how George Lucas has waxed rhetoric on the nature of attachment, and its role in mythology:

You can love people, but you can't want to possess them. They're not yours. Accept that they have a fate. Even those you love most are going to die. You can't do anything about that. Protect them with your lightsaber, but if they die they were going to die. There's nothing you can do. All you can do is accept that fact.

In mythology if you go to Hades to get them back, you're not doing it for them, you're doing it for yourself. You're doing it because you don't want to give them up. You're afraid to be without them. The key to the Dark Side is fear. You must be clean of fear, and fear of loss is the greatest fear. If you're set up for fear of loss, you will do anything to keep that loss from happening, and you're going to end up in the Dark Side. That's the basic premise of Star Wars and the Jedi, and how it works.

--George Lucas

Where Episode III showed Anakin falling deeper and deeper into the obsession to save his wife, only to plummet into despair when he fails…Legacy goes a step further by showing what happens when a parasitic salvation complex actually succeeds.

Azlyn and Cade are basically the reversal of Padme and Anakin; in which instead of the failed rescuer condemned to be a husk in a suit, the rescuee is the one to suffer the agony of living in the suit…saved, sure, but locked in a steel trap her misguided lover put her in, doomed to wallow in despair within the new prison created for her. It’s no small irony that in the same way Lucas intended Frankenstein’s Monster parallels with the birth of Vader in Episode III, that Azlyn is revived in a manner not dissimilar to the Bride of Frankenstein; alive, but deformed and in agony, desperate to be put out of her misery. It's a very grim and melancholy place to take Cade’s story, and I for one applaud the writers for going in this direction. (Me rooting for Cade to get together with Deliah also helps).

However, before I lose myself in praising every part of these last few arcs, I’d be remiss not to isolate the weakest part of this entire comic—and that’s everything related to the Vector crossover. I think the writers made a bad move inserting this crossover into the story, especially so late into the comic’s run. Fundamentally, readers just sticking to Legacy can’t be asked to get invested in someone like Celeste Morne, for whom 3/4ths of her story have been told in unrelated comics elsewhere in the timeline. Worse still, I don’t think that the events leading to Krayt and Azyln’s “deaths” really required either Morne or her Talisman; you could’ve had a Legacy-only character and plot thread unfurl towards that same outcome, and nothing would really change. But instead we have all this Morne business, which comes off as weird and intrusive to the rest of the story, and yet essential in that vital and important plot elements come out of it…meaning, much like crossovers in Marvel and DC capeshit shenanigans, it can’t even really be skipped. Ultimately, I don’t know if Vector’s inclusion is really Ostrander’s fault, and not something that was simply mandated to him by the editorial staff at Dark Horse. Maybe I’ll change my mind if I go back to read and immerse myself in the rest of Vector’s entries, but as someone reading Legacy for the first time, I’d be lying if I said I cared for it at all.

Overall, as we speed towards the final part of my Legacy coverage and the finale of the series overall, the story is heading towards a really fascinating place. Cade is now saddled with the guilt of making arguably the biggest mistake of his life, his Force abilities have failed him instead of bailing him out, the villains have been swapped out in a plot twist I never would’ve seen coming, and relations with some of his closest friends and loved ones have never been more strained. And as the Sith Empire and Fel Empire close in to put their plans into action, the question remains as to what role Cade will play in all this, as the price for his selfishness has now reached a fever-pitch…and he might not ever answer the call to adventure again.

Stay tuned for next time, Kiwi’s, as we see how Ostrander ties everything up next time, in the final fifteen issues of Legacy, and its finale, Legacy War.
 

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Weinstein wasn't very involved in Smith's efforts, and most of Smith's efforts were mostly male-centric casts. If any of Smith's talent went to Weinstein, it was for quid-pro-quo. I'm pretty sure something like 80-90% of Weinstein's accusers also knew that there was going to be some quid-pro-dong when they went to his hotel room, but that's not here nor there.

That said, he knew. He knew. And like everyone in hollywood except for Seth MacFarlane, kept silent. Which makes him a hypocrite.

So I don't think he fed Weinstein any talent, but he definitely carried water for a rapist - or at least what his purported feminist ideals would call a rapist.
Fair cop on the lack of actively feeding victims, but I still consider him a rape enabler because he knew, took money from, and basically had his funding FROM the guy.

It's just something I feel needs to get brought up whenever this hypocritical fake geek faggot opens his mouth to try and play pretend.

As for what if Fett and Han as characters were swapped in screenwriting? That could be interesting if you have an 'honorable' contract sort of fellow who is genuinely scummy rather than a scumbag with a heart of gold. Could be an interesting dynamic if done well.
 
Fair cop on the lack of actively feeding victims, but I still consider him a rape enabler because he knew, took money from, and basically had his funding FROM the guy.

It's just something I feel needs to get brought up whenever this hypocritical fake geek faggot opens his mouth to try and play pretend.

As for what if Fett and Han as characters were swapped in screenwriting? That could be interesting if you have an 'honorable' contract sort of fellow who is genuinely scummy rather than a scumbag with a heart of gold. Could be an interesting dynamic if done well.
"I'm only helping because of the contract. B-baka!"
 
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Okay...so I recently have rewatched the PT in various formats, both on TV and DVD/streaming.

In all honesty and without irony, these movies are not near as bad as they are memed to be. Do I think they are secret masterpieces? No, but the dialogue is at most-grating and a little cringe at its worst, Jar Jar is annoying and TPM would be better with less of him, and all in all the criticisms levied just don't hold water.

I actually watched AOTC and TPM without any EU context blinders (as in thinking about how stuff on screen ties to or relates to EU material), and without any nostalgic sentiment-and in all honesty I do not think them as bad.

The worst you can say is the CGI technology had not matured, and Lucas sucks at writing organic natural flowing dialogue. But the cast, plot, scenery, and score are all fine.

I think its a disservice to the prequels to claim they are masterpieces of cinema or artistry when they are not-but they aren't the caricatures that redlettermedia and the late 2000s/early 2010s internet made them to be.
When the movies were talked about like being the equivalent of 9/11 for 20 years it's gonna be jarring seeing them as the awkward and inconsistent yet incredibly imaginative movies they actually are.
]
Star Wars fans clapping on command. What else is new? And look at the end, it's the Aladdin's Rebels mural @The Gangster Computer loves so much.
 
The ironic thing is Lucas pioneered CGI use in the PT, and it was later developed by Avatar and the MCU/other 2010s films. Would someone else have done it? Probably, but Lucas was willing to make use of new technology, that was not yet fully developed and got a lot of flack for it. Now the same people who attacked "greenscreens" soyjak over Marvel CGI spectacle.
 
The digs at NordVPN sponsorships gave me a hearty chuckle. Auralnauts continue to make Disney's tripe watchable.

"One drugs please."
I do like how they made Reva more entertaining than the actual show and made fun of the whole grand inquisitor's "death"
 
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I actually watched AOTC and TPM without any EU context blinders (as in thinking about how stuff on screen ties to or relates to EU material), and without any nostalgic sentiment-and in all honesty I do not think them as bad.

I remember going to the PT films in theaters as a kid and having a great time; that line in the Plinkett review about how kids'll be bored with trade dialogue and politics never really rang true to me. I probably didn't pay a lot of attention to those parts, but then pod races and cool laser fights and etc kept me pretty well tided over.

Gen Xers are the reason Star Wars is the way it is now, especially since the Disney movies and shows are aimed squarely at them.

"We need another Vietnam, to thin out their ranks a little."
 
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