- Joined
- Oct 3, 2022
For now....only one of them is a Starwars matter.
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For now....only one of them is a Starwars matter.
For now....
iirc yes humans are exactly humans, and they came just short of an old EU book where An Even Longer Time Ago In A Galaxy You Are In the American Graffitis got abducted by ayyyys and taken to A Galaxy Far Far Away but somebody realized that was fucking retarded and stopped itLightsabre melts blast door, in tummy just some black singe on your clothing. Shouldn't it all burst on fire?
No idea if this is canon, can't a Jedi use the force to intensify the lightsabre?
Darth Maul isn't human, so there can be hand waving. In fact are humans in Star Wars actually human? I assume so, but why would they necessarily be?
Anakin only survived because they drained Padme's life force to transfer to him. It's not clearly explain, maybe I am head cannoning but that's how I interpret the "lost the will to live" thing. Anakin wanted to learn how to cheat death for his loved ones. In the end he cheated death by his loved one being sacrificed.
Shouldn't the jedi themselves burst on fires? You have wear gloves in orders to use a plasma torch irl. And do lightsabers generate magnetic fields? Since they clash at each other like they are solid i always assumed this happenend because the magnetic field repelled each other so i wonder if this is a thing in the EU.Lightsabre melts blast door, in tummy just some black singe on your clothing. Shouldn't it all burst on fire?
I suppose maybe a lightsaber has power settings like a blaster, going from ''barely singing you'' to ''LOL blast doors are toilet paper''.Lightsabre melts blast door, in tummy just some black singe on your clothing. Shouldn't it all burst on fire?
A Sith can. Starkiller can pump Force Lightning through his lightsaber, and that ability showed up again in SWTOR.No idea if this is canon, can't a Jedi use the force to intensify the lightsabre?
No, the truth about Padme ''losing the will to live'' is that it psychologically broke her seeing Anakin turn evil, and that led to her death. Palpatine even thinks about it in Dark Lord: Rise of Darth Vader, where he muses that the 501st could've probably killed all the Jedi in the Temple, but he sent Anakin in regardless to make sure Padme would get heartbroken over it and it would lead to her death.Anakin only survived because they drained Padme's life force to transfer to him. It's not clearly explain, maybe I am head cannoning but that's how I interpret the "lost the will to live" thing. Anakin wanted to learn how to cheat death for his loved ones. In the end he cheated death by his loved one being sacrificed.
I still don't get why people shill for Andor within the current framework of Disney-Star Wars. Same with Rogue One. I mean if you can compartmentalize the two things as totally separate things unrelated to the ST, then maybe.I always saw Andor as overrated.
Maul survived before Dave fucked it up. He basically was so angry and dove so hard into the dark side he refused to let his essence leave his broken shell. He was actually too angry to die. It's still dumb to me though, so I'd be fine with icing him.I mean you can just do the Obiwan and turn the enemy into two halves, that is just as lethal unless Filoni goes DURRRRRR, Maul, HURRRRR!
Maul's species is tougher, but not Space marine tough. Being cut at the waist would still be very nasty. Than they are also not splat proof. Its like a fantasy dwarf. You can punch them a bit more, but if you rip them in half they still die. A bottomless pit also kills them.
If Maul was just shoved down intact or Obiwan just lopped a leg off and he fell into the hole, I would believe it that he somehow force-grabbed the walls and slowed himself down, but with being cut in half, he became a smear on the floor at one point. Unless Sidious was there with a jetpack and a very large net.
After Debbie Reynolds died after Carrie Fisher died, I no longer laugh at dying from a broken heart.Maul survived before Dave fucked it up. He basically was so angry and dove so hard into the dark side he refused to let his essence leave his broken shell. He was actually too angry to die. It's still dumb to me though, so I'd be fine with icing him.
As for Padme dying? It sounds silly with how she died, but women who are stressed and going into labor can have complications; like "massive hemorrhage" level complication. Especially since he did force choke the shit out of her.
While I think Maul should have stayed dead because part of the what makes the character cool is how little we knew about him, and learned more is only going to fuck that up.Maul survived before Dave fucked it up. He basically was so angry and dove so hard into the dark side he refused to let his essence leave his broken shell. He was actually too angry to die. It's still dumb to me though, so I'd be fine with icing him.
The only issue I have with Padme dying is George's clunky ass dialog explaining it.As for Padme dying? It sounds silly with how she died, but women who are stressed and going into labor can have complications; like "massive hemorrhage" level complication. Especially since he did force choke the shit out of her.
And in fact, did. In Filoni Wars, Maul's brother, Darth Savage, went looking for Maul after failing to kill Dooku. That's who found him on the garbage planet.But mainly, what they did with Maul they could have just as easily done with someone with a connection to Maul: Family, ally, lover, etc without the Comic Book resurrection.
And in fact, did. In Filoni Wars, Maul's brother, Darth Savage, went looking for Maul after failing to kill Dooku. That's who found him on the garbage planet.
If anything, the Vong War brought a wealth of existential and idealogical challenges to both the New Republic and especially the Jedi, who literally begin to question whether or not the Force has abandoned them in the face of this insurmountable enemy, and plummet into the moral dilemma of whether or not they can counter a dogmatic civilization--one bent on expunging the galaxy, seemingly beyond reason or redemption--with a wipe-out solution of their own...and whether seeking that solution undermines the very moral fabric of the light side or the Jedi itself.At least the post-Rebellion conflicts in the EU are cool in a way that don't nullify the OT. When the Vong arrived it didn't nullify whatever the Rebellion did and the way they handled Galactic Empire remnants and successor states is done way more better without it rehashing the same old 'Good Guy Rebels vs Evil Chud Stormtroopers' yet again. Everything still had a purpose and nothing was rendered pointless or all for naught.
Fel Empire my beloved.
They had already done that with the Hand of Thrawn duology, in the end Pellaeon forced the remaining Moffs to let go of their ideological hang-ups and make peace with the New Republic because it was in the Imperial Remnant's objective self-interest to do so. Which didn't mean they had to be best frens or anything, Pellaeon makes that clear during the Vong invasion when the Remnant finally openly joins the fight on the condition that they get to keep any Vong-occupied systems they liberate. Way too nuanced for nu WarsIf anything, the Vong War brought a wealth of existential and idealogical challenges to both the New Republic and especially the Jedi, who literally begin to question whether or not the Force has abandoned them in the face of this insurmountable enemy, and plummet into the moral dilemma of whether or not they can counter a dogmatic civilization--one bent on expunging the galaxy, seemingly beyond reason or redemption--with a wipe-out solution of their own...and whether seeking that solution undermines the very moral fabric of the light side or the Jedi itself.
So encompassing are the Vong as a threat that it actually forces the Empire to evolve out of their old ways and join forces with the New Republic to direct their combined might against a mutual enemy.
You would never see anyone in the Disney regime attempt something that bold, inventive or galaxy-shattering as a narrative concept. And in the pursuit of making everything safe and boiler-plate in a poor attempt to mimic the Original Trilogy, they've ironically created an infinitely more nihilistic outcome than the Vong War by having the OT Heroes die, have their accomplishments washed away, and have them all outlived by the cloned spawn of Emperor Palpatine.
What makes it even better is the realism in the Remnant's slow evolution out of its old form of the Empire; when Palleon does in fact surrender at the end of Vision of the Future, it isn't a clean transition for the faction as a whole. In fact, when the Vong War actually starts years later, plenty of Moffs all dissent from Palleon's peace-seeking position...with one particularly characteristic scene from Dark Tide showing an Imperial Council Meeting in which many scorned and bitter Moffs are calling to simply let the New Republic smolder in the Vong Warpath, declaring: "Why should we lift a finger to help these Rebels, when they drove us into exile and diminished power?" And it's because of that lack of unity that Baron Soontir Fel--once one of the NR's deadliest enemies during the Bantam Era of novels--splinters off from the rest of the Imperial Remnant, and lends aid to the heroes with the deployment of his fleet, led by his son Jagged Fel. And even after the Vong War, there's plenty of holdovers from the previous era (like Lecersen) who not only resent the direction the Remnant has taken as an ally of the heroes, but even work to undercut and betray Palleon. It's only due to years of exhaustive work at the hands of Jagged Fel (and his future wife, Jaina), that all the elements of the Palpatine-Era Regime are stamped out and the Remnant makes its full transformation into a force for peace and justice, as seen in the future of Legacy.They had already done that with the Hand of Thrawn duology, in the end Pellaeon forced the remaining Moffs to let go of their ideological hang-ups and make peace with the New Republic because it was in the Imperial Remnant's objective self-interest to do so. Which didn't mean they had to be best frens or anything, Pellaeon makes that clear during the Vong invasion when the Remnant finally openly joins the fight on the condition that they get to keep any Vong-occupied systems they liberate. Way too nuanced for nu Wars
Thing is, it just ends up like capeshit.If anything, the Vong War brought a wealth of existential and idealogical challenges to both the New Republic and especially the Jedi, who literally begin to question whether or not the Force has abandoned them in the face of this insurmountable enemy, and plummet into the moral dilemma of whether or not they can counter a dogmatic civilization--one bent on expunging the galaxy, seemingly beyond reason or redemption--with a wipe-out solution of their own...and whether seeking that solution undermines the very moral fabric of the light side or the Jedi itself.
So encompassing are the Vong as a threat that it actually forces the Empire to evolve out of their old ways and join forces with the New Republic to direct their combined might against a mutual enemy.
You would never see anyone in the Disney regime attempt something that bold, inventive or galaxy-shattering as a narrative concept. And in the pursuit of making everything safe and boiler-plate in a poor attempt to mimic the Original Trilogy, they've ironically created an infinitely more nihilistic outcome than the Vong War by having the OT Heroes die, have their accomplishments washed away, and have them all outlived by the cloned spawn of Emperor Palpatine.
It's all about fighting against Fascism. FIGHT DA POWAH! It's this senseless idealism of you defeating a tyranny because you can rally the people. This without asking the question if you actually SHOULD, because at the end of the day, the new government is even worse than what it replaced, with Palpatine's heirs manipulating them like puppets. They basically made all governments look bad, be they Republic, Confederate, Empire, or New Republic, and the real good guys were the Resistance, who just rebel without actually trying to form a government.But they're all undermined by one big thing: What's the point of their stories?