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“The Current State of Star Wars: Old Republic, KOTOR Canon - KeenGamer News” plus 1 more

“The Current State of Star Wars: Old Republic, KOTOR Canon - KeenGamer News” plus 1 more


The Current State of Star Wars: Old Republic, KOTOR Canon - KeenGamer News

Posted: 31 Jan 2021 02:56 PM PST

Disney's monogamous relationship with EA seems to have come to an end, as Ubisoft and another unknown developer interested in remaking the Knights of the Old Republic series have taken over industry headlines. EA's tenure with Disney resulted in remakes of the defunct Pandemic Studio's (which was shuttered by EA) Star Wars: Battlefront series, as well as two original games in Jedi: Fallen Order and Star Wars: Squadrons.

Battlefront II, though eventually deemed satisfactory over three years after its release, was initially condemned for its now fixed pay-to-win loot crate system and lack of playable lightsaber-wielders. Fallen Order and Squadrons, meanwhile, were positively-received overall. Now, Disney has begun working with Ubisoft and the recently revived Lucasfilm Games. Perhaps this means Lucasfilm's former projects will see the light of canonization, but for now, there are very few pre-2014 Star Wars games that are part of the gospel. With all this said, let's go over the current state of Star Wars: The Old Republic/KOTOR canon.

THE CHARACTERS

Are there any Old Republic characters who survived the great Disney purge? On StarWars.com, you can type in the name of any character, vehicle, planet, etc. into the search bar of the website's "Databank." While researching, I typed in the name Cal Kestis, the protagonist of EA's Jedi: Fallen Order game, and was first brought to a short bio detailing Cal's status as a worker in the Scrappers Guild. But typing in the name Kyle Katarn, protagonist of the no-longer canon Jedi Knight series, I found no results.

What about The Old Republic? BioWare still runs the MMORPG based on Knights of the Old Republic. But type in Darth Malgus, and all you'll get is an eight-years-old advertisement for a GameStop sweepstakes. (Is it too late for me to win that Darth Malgus statue, GameStop?)

Star Wars: The Old Republic characters

Star Wars: The Old Republic characters

It's possible that characters specific to Knights of the Old Republic have faired better. KOTOR's Darth Revan does show up briefly: as a character in the mobile MMO Star Wars: Galaxy of Heroes alongside Bastila Shan, Jolee Bindo, T3-M4, Mission Vao, Zaalbar, Malak, and Nihilis. However, Galaxy of Heroes can, unfortunately for Revan and his KOTOR counterparts, hardly be considered canon, in the same way that my playing as Kylo Ren on Kashyyyk in Battlefront II likewise cannot be considered a lore-accurate event.

Interestingly, the Nihil are the antagonists of the new High Republic era of Star Wars, which was just launched recently in the form of various publishing projects. While not seemingly related to KOTORII's Darth Nihilus (they are space pirates, after all), the name is oddly similar. Disney does this to us all the time, though: Galen Erso shares the same first name as Galen Marek, or Starkiller, and the sequel version of the Death Star is named Starkiller base. A squad of Sith troopers in the sequel trilogy is even named the Revan Legion.

As far as I can tell, the other legions' namesakes are all excluded from the StarWars.com Databank. This includes Darth Tenebrous (the master of Darth Plagueis), Sith Lord Darth Desolous, Darth Phobos (who appears as a training simulation enemy in The Force Unleashed), Darth Tanis, and Ancient Dark Lord Andeddu. Is the inclusion of these EU Sith names a signal of yet-official lore, or just Disney throwing us fans a bone?

PLANETS & BATTLES

The KOTOR planets of Korriban and Taris are absent from the official Database, as are the ships Endar Spire and Leviathan. The planet Malachor has, therefore against the odds, successfully become canon through its appearance in the Rebels TV series. In the EU, Revan led the Republic against Mandalorian crusaders here, and the official Databank nearly confirms: "Home to an ancient Sith temple, it was once the location of a heated battle between Jedi and Sith." The temple, however, was not the academy of the EU's Darth Traya, nor was the battle that of Revan's, as the Great Scourge involved no Mandalorians.

Star Wars: KOTOR fighting Mandalorians

Star Wars: KOTOR fighting Mandalorians

(Fun tid-bit, though: the Database entry for Kylo Ren's Lightsaber implies that the generation of Sith who died during the Scourge of Malachor more commonly used crossguard hilt designs. Rebels protagonist Ezra even finds an artifact of one such weapon here with Ahsoka Tano). 

Despite my excitement over EU character names reappearing in canon, and maybe an old planet getting re-established here and there, it's hard to say just how meaningful these references are. Easter eggs aren't made from concrete, so everything is up in the air. Disney and Lucas could easily re-integrate lots of Old Republic material, but they've yet to make a known commitment to do so. Perhaps the rumored KOTOR remake will change things.

‘Star Wars’ rumor: ‘The Acolyte’ show may show rise of Darth Plagueis - Deseret News

Posted: 22 Dec 2020 12:00 AM PST

Disney announced a new "Star Wars" series called "The Acolyte" earlier in December. And new theories suggest the show will tell us something Darth Plagueis and the Sith Order.

What's going on?

Disney announced at its Investor Day presentation that Leslye Headland will lead a new "Star Wars" series called "The Acolyte," which will be "a mystery-thriller that will take the audience into a galaxy of shadowy secrets and emerging dark side powers in the final days of the High Republic era."

Speculation

People are now speculating that the show will tell the story of Darth Plageuis and the rise of Darth Sidious, connecting directly into the prequel trilogy.

Does the timeline work?

  • The High Republic era starts about 200 years before the prequel trilogy.
  • The end of the High Republic would suggest the show takes place close to 50 years before the prequel trilogy.
  • Darth Plageuis was likely born between 147 and 120 BBY, which would make him 20 years old during the High Republic era, Den of Geek reports.
  • Darth Plageuis would likely be in his prime during the time of "The Acolyte." And that means we might see his rise and eventual fall.

One more note ...

As I wrote for the Deseret News, the showrunner Headland said "The Acolyte" will be set in a "timeline that we don't know much about."

  • "It's in a pocket of the universe and a pocket of the timeline that we don't know much about," Headland said, according to IndieWire.
  • "For me, it's less about going through the Star Wars universe cinematically or artistically, I'm actually kind of combing through it geographically and go on a literal journey," Headland said, according to IndieWire.. "When we were pitching, I had my designer create that Indiana Jones-like 'we go here and then we go here,' with the little dotted red line like this is our journey, this is where we're going."

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