Well Sabine managed to keep her helmet on for exactly five seconds. What is this now, the MCU? I hope for her sake Huyang goes and retrieves it for her, since I'm pretty sure she just left it lying around in the woods.
Can't help but wonder what she didn't bring her jet pack, but to be fair I've been wondering that since the 'Rebels' coda scene.
Some nice fight consistency here with Sabine. She's doing a bit better than last time, but not unreasonably so. And I like how they seems to always revert back to the ready position Kanan & Ezra taught her. Never anything fancy. Always very direct. Very Mandalorian.
I really loved all things Sabine in this episode but these things in particular stood out. I do wish she had kept her helmet on for longer since its so iconic (for us
Rebels fans anyways). I get why it was conveniently knocked off but I still wanted more of it.
And I was also wondering what happened to her jetpack. Perhaps destroyed (or the memory of it marred) during the Great Purge? Speaking of...
I mean I've been about 90% sure Sabine's family were fried in the the Great Purge of Mandalore given the state she was in at the top of the episode, but now we have it confirmed. I suppose that makes her not just the last sion of Clan Wren, but the entirety of Clan Wren. Suddenly it's clear why Bo Katan didn't invite Sabine to her little party in Mando season 3; she probably can't bring herself to face her . . . but yet stayed somewhat in contact with Ahsoka. Curious.
Also I wonder if Fen Rau survived too. I hope so, but I wouldn't be surprised if he was on Mandalore too.
What did get my attention though was that whole "because your master didn't trust you." part. That seems to imply Sabine was with Ahsoka during the purge. Were they both there with Bo Katan when she surrendered? Or did Ahsoka stop Sabine from going back home altogether? We still don't have the timing of events pinned down, so this could have happened at any point during the OT.
Like I said before, I really hope we get to see the Great Purge in some form at some point. It definitely deserves to be told and more than just a mere flashback (or serious of flashbacks). A lot of important people were there so it would've been one hell of event.
OK, so we all know about the Gandalf thing right? So now that we're at that part of it when she falls and is about to get a wardrobe change, does that make Baylan the balrog of this scenario?
I think it's her trial of spirit. Facing the mirror. Which makes sense; we've never really seen Ahsoka tested like this before, and it is a rather important one for Jedi. Well, unless you count that time she fell to the dark side on Mortis and died, which I'm fairly certain counts as a failure.
So, who what's to bet Ahsoka is about to take a voidspace shortcut to Peridia? That said, I didn't see any gateways along those paths like when Ezra came through there . . .
Yup, this is clearly her aforementioned (by Rosario) Gandalf moment and I can't wait to see it play out. I'm not sure about her using the voidspace to travel to Peridla considering the rules guessed at in "Worlds Between Worlds."
That and I think Purrgil are the key here. In fact, I love the idea of Ahsoka being able to follow Morgan and company a la Ezra, refuting their snide thoughts that destroying the map would make them unfollowable. And they probably don't have high regard for the Purrgill
Forget all the "where's Luke?" bleating, the real question we should be asking is "where's Moria?" Seriously, we're half-way done and we haven't heard hoot one!
Seriously! This show needs more Moria!
Exactly. If they're going to tell Barris's story, I'd rather they actually tell Barris's story, not just blow it on some cheap shock cameo only 5% of the viewership would even understand.
Indeed. Much like the Ahsoka/Luke meeting, I imagine Filoni is waiting for the right time to tell that story in the right way and her being secretly Marrok was definitely not the right way.
Before Hera answered, Chopper's "Yeah, what's up with that?" cracked me up. BTW, does anyone else find Chop somewhat easy to understand? I've understood most of his lines so far. I don't remember it being this way in Rebels.
I still suck at understanding him, but I've heard others say he's easier to understand in
Ahsoka. Doesn't bother me since I usally figure out what he's saying on context...or, like I do with R2-D2, I imagine he's saying obscenities.
