Also in regards to High Republic, I recall a lot of people initially praising the idea of that shitty multimedia's setting because it explored a period in galactic history that previous SW media never touched upon much, but there was a reason for this, as George established in the prequels the "Great Peace of the Republic" a period of almost 1000 years where no major wars happened, just a few minor scuffles or self-contained planetary wars. So having a big fat war between the Jedi and a re-emerging Sith Empire, their Dark Gods and a rising huge cult of bandits just 200 years before the PT is pretty much going against G-Canon there which is what Disney drones originally claimed Disney wouldn't do, yet have done so time and time again.
Precisely this. The reason that nobody touched this era during the EU publishing days was because
virtually nothing of significance happens in this time frame. The millenium starts with Darth Bane's rise and fall from power, and then it's radio silence from both the Sith and in terms of galactic warfare for the next thousand years, until the Clone Wars.
That's the exact reason (aside from the creators involved) why I have zero enthusiasm for Disney's High Republic. The one thing that has characterized the new canon's onslaught of books and comics is that nothing is allowed to happen. No large scale conflicts, no ambitious sprawling story arcs, nothing---all of the new books and comics have fit that mold, and instead of visiting an era that would give the writers freedom to match the EU in scope and ambition, they pick the
one era where nothing important CAN happen due to the Sith still being presumed extinct, and no instances of war allowed to happen without contradicting the Prequels.
So I hope you're ready for more one-shot, inconsequential, monster-of-the-week escapades with our heroes, because that's all you're going to get. Dumb shit with law-enforcing cowboy Jedi fending off space vikings on the new frontier, in a story that never goes anywhere or amounts to anything. Just like the rest of the Nu-Canon.
Dark Horse Star Wars Super-Team John Ostrander and Jan Duursema covered the origins of the Jedi and Sith in a comic series just prior to the Disney takeover.
Yes, indeed:
Dawn of the Jedi. My favorite writer/artist team didn't disappoint with that one---what sucks though is that if you like collecting EU media physically, the trades and even the issues of
Dawn are a bit pricey these days.
I hear that Marvel is coming out with a "Legends Epic Collection" for
Dawn of the Jedi, but fuck having that ugly yellow banner on my shelf. I'll just wait for the right schmuck to sell the original trades for the wrong price. I collected all of the TPB's for
Tales of the Jedi doing that, even the crazy expensive ones.