dissolution.Reverend said:that period would be more about the disillusion of an Empire
dissolution.Reverend said:that period would be more about the disillusion of an Empire
It's like in Clone Wars, I don't think they ever called them 'Venators', it was always 'Jedi' and/or 'Republic' cruiser.Republic Cruiser is my preferred nomenclature. And later on Imperial Cruiser, a term actually used in ANH.
I doubt it.Jedi Cruiser was the internal name of it during the production of ROTJ IIRC.
Oops! Fixed.ROTS?
It probably wouldn't be surprising if we found out Omega was at the Battle of Endor. Though I don't know if she would be an Alliance fighter pilot, or just a transport pilot. They need people to run missions and move equipment and personal around as badly as they need starfighter pilots.
Okay, so there's a planet called Tatooine and a planet called Dantooine. Is there a planet in the middle called Inbetooine?
Not that I know of, but there is a Klatooine...
Isn't "Star Destroyer" kind of an inappropriate name for those ships, come to think of it? I mean, the only literal star destroyer in SW canon, AFAIK, is Starkiller Base. Star Destroyers are much smaller than the planet-destroying Death Star, so at most, they might be able to destroy asteroids or small moons. Alternatively, if you interpret it to mean a starfaring equivalent of an oceangoing destroyer (by analogy with "star cruiser" or "star fighter," say), it has the opposite problem of scale, in that a destroyer is a midsized, maneuverable ship meant to escort and defend larger ships, whereas Star Destroyers are the largest ships in the Imperial fleet (except for even bigger Star Destroyer variants). So one way, it's an extreme exaggeration, and the other way, it's a massive understatement.
Granted, a hyperbolic name isn't exactly unheard of (e.g. the America-based World Series or the strictly Earthbound Miss Universe pageant), but it's rather more disingenuous in a universe that has a literal planet destroyer to compare them against, and eventually has at least one literal destroyer of stars.
I guess maybe the latter definition kind of worked in the original film, when the SDs were seen as support ships for the much larger Death Star. But that doesn't work if they were around two decades or more before the DS.
Your tax credits hard at work.The rule of cool always wins out. "Star Destroyer" is just a great and scary name to go with. I assume the Republic has a committee that is all about coming up with cool nick names and designing Star Trooper and Empire style uniforms that really appeal aesthetically to the eye.
If we see the Batch in live action, do you think they would be Temuera Morrison or other actors? They technically are Jango clones, but thanks to their mutations they look pretty different from him, each other, and other clones.
I did know that. I was thinking of it with this when it started. The Old Republic plays with the idea a little.Speaking of all the "ooine" planets, did any of you know that the Ord in "Ord Mantell" and others actually stands for Ordinance/Regional Depot?
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Ordnance/Regional_Depot/Legends
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