Vympel wrote:I don't think that's very likely. Sending Obi-Wan to Utapau was precisely in line with Darth Sidious plans, in that whatever happened, he would win- General Grievous kills Obi-Wan? Good. Obi-Wan kills Grievous? Good, Grievous would have to be knocked off eventually anyway, and Obi-Wan is still going to get shot in the back by Clonetroopers. Greivous (at that point) served to seperate Anakin from Obi-Wan, so it was all win-win for the Sith. This is all in the novelization. In essence, to suggest that he was built intentionally flawed so that Jedi could kill him is very far-fetched- the Separatists wouldn't want that in the first place, and IIRC they paid for him. I don't see how more armor would've made him anything more but slower- a lightsabre would still have disarmed him.
Well thats weird, it's really easy to see how it wouldn't, all you have to do is not to imagine his skeletal body with more armor slapped on.
It is not hard to imagine a whole new design that doesn't have those ludicrous and glaring weaknesses thats so easily exploitable that would take full advantage of SW cyborg tech, I can see no techological problems at all for such a design but that it would make Grievous too powerfull and Obi-wan would not have had a chance in hell.
And if grievous have had the same technology in his arms that his magnaguards staff had, fat chance in disarming him then too.
And I am not saying the plan was that jedi should be able to kill him, I am saying he should be killable period, thats the only reason I can think of for such glaring design flaws, this is trek style engineering flaws here.
Really when I think about it the amount of changes you need to make to properly protect his chest are miniscule and would barely have added to his weight or impeded his agility.
Maybe they just didn't want to make him too powerfull in order to more easily control him, there has to be a reason though, whatever it might be.