Then I guess current Star Trek & Star Wars must bore you to tears.I'm not into a property or concept milked dry from endless spin-offs watering down said concept.
Depends on whom you ask, some like the Disney-era shows.You can disagree, but I doubt anyone would argue the piles of SW content produced in this century is great or the best of the concept.
Depends on which series and which episodes.
I really liked alot of the "Non-'SkyWalker Saga'" content.
And here I thought Star Wars exists to tell stories set in it's universe first.Irrelevant. Star Was exists for the reasons you mock and resent.
Not necessarilly follow the religious / spiritual under tones that you love.
The great old fashion "Action Adventure" Sci-Fi journey.Then why are you interested in Star Wars as a concept at all?
Because it's a fun universe to explore. Just because it might've been founded on one concept, doesn't mean it has to stay 100% revolved around said concept.The Force--the religious / spiritual characters and influence defined the concept. Without it, and it does not exist, leaving generic sci-fi crap it was never intended to be, so again, why are you interested in Star Wars?
There are plenty of worlds of story telling that don't revolve around that.
I loved "Rogue 1: A SW Story" & "Solo: A SW Story"
I love alot of the TV shows.
Just because you seem to be fixated around the "Spirtitual Core" of Star Wars, doesn't mean other fans are.
Many of us care about other things within Star Wars and aren't particularly attached to that aspect of it.
Different strokes for different fokes.
Why does it feel like you're gate keeping the Star Wars franchise?
That's your take, I don't agree with that, so do many others who like "The Mandalorian" and all it's spin-off content.Bored beyond belief with any character with a helmet and jet-pack beyond the single purpose of the mysterious bounty hunter archetype from TESB & ROTJ.
So apparently only the "SkyWalker Saga" is the REAL Story, and everything else is ancillary.Again, you're conflating the films--the vehicle Lucas used to tell his story--with ancillary market material, only produced to generate coins, not support or influence the real story in the films.
We'll have to agree to disagree on the crossovers not making sense. Doesn't matter if it's Super Hero content or other types.No. Each is its own "animal", designed to live and breathe by its own unique standards that are as "oil and water" as one can imagine, unlike superhero content, where most--at the end of the day--all function from / driven by similar creative launchpads, character motivations and a basic, familiar universe that allow for some successful crossovers (though most rarely made sense).
Funny how it seems like you're "Gate Keeping" the franchises into a defined box, and us "Non-Fans" aren't allowed to play in said box because apparently you're the "Gate Keeper" as to what is "True Star Wars".Funny how Star Trek and Star Wars at their creative best, never needed fanwank crossovers to create great stories.