Re: Star Wars: Rebels
Posted: 2016-11-01 07:42pm
Deleted.
Posted in wrong forum. Apologies.
Posted in wrong forum. Apologies.
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Germany was still launching offensives into 1945, even as they were losing quite badly by any reasonable measure. The raw speed of hyperdrive means that such things will always be possible. It doesn't make their position strategically sound.NecronLord wrote: "What about the attack on the wookies." "It's a system we cannot afford to lose." The CIS was still invading vital systems on the last day of the war, and raided Coruscant the day before.
In any case, they were tricked into joining the CIS, according to Dooku. In his dialog with Obi-Wan, he claimed that Gunray came to him for help after the deal fell apart. While you could argue that he was lying about the details, we see no evidence that any of his statements in that dialog were anything but true. Like Vader and Palpatine, he was extremely talented at skillfully telling the truth to fool others.But he does shield them from consequences after TPM, notice how people say it's an outrage that Nute Gunray is still in power. The plan fails, and he still protects them.
True, just as the CIS would have never been built or had any military strength, neither would the Republic. This fails to address the question of why Palpatine would have thought it wise to allow Dooku to have more military strength than he himself would control. Dooku was just uppity enough to be a threat, why would Palpatine give him an army to rival his own?He also leaked the location of Utapau and ordered the seperatist leaders to be sent to Mustafar to be vulnerable. The attack on Utapau might have gone very differently without that.
The problem is that droids being wildly wrong about probabilities is extremely common in Star Wars. There is the famous 3720-1 odds given by 3PO, as well as the 96.7 percent chance of failure according to K-2SO in the Rouge One trailer. We know how both of those turn out. Why should Kalani be the exception?The Onderon militia deliberately kept information from Kalani and kept him ignorant of the rebels strength until too late; garbage in, garbage out. Aside from the duplicity of Sidious there's no reason the CIS would be holding particularly much from Kalani - it's possible there were more republic forces than they realize, but I'm prepared to accept him as an expert.
I suppose that is true, but based on what they knew at the time they should have been somewhat more suspicious of the clones in general. Though it does fit with Yoda's reaction, in which he doesn't totally trust them.See, the idea I got from season 6 was that it was all happening in the last week of the war. Or at least the incident with Tup and Yoda's journey to Moraband/Korriban, and they prompted Palpatine to end the war quickly, due to how close the Jedi were getting to working it out.
Why do you think the droids were wrong?Adam Reynolds wrote:The problem is that droids being wildly wrong about probabilities is extremely common in Star Wars. There is the famous 3720-1 odds given by 3PO, as well as the 96.7 percent chance of failure according to K-2SO in the Rouge One trailer. We know how both of those turn out. Why should Kalani be the exception?The Onderon militia deliberately kept information from Kalani and kept him ignorant of the rebels strength until too late; garbage in, garbage out. Aside from the duplicity of Sidious there's no reason the CIS would be holding particularly much from Kalani - it's possible there were more republic forces than they realize, but I'm prepared to accept him as an expert.
Out of curiosity, from what source? Base Delta Zero was mentioned in the first season of Rebels, but they didn't expound on what it actually is.NecronLord wrote:Just like nothing except sidious' orders stopped Grievous reducing Coruscant to molten slag in the raid (BDZ scalre bombardments are canon again).
Why would any rational military start using strategic weapons against the enemy civilian population? All that would lead to is retaliation in kind, as well as a massive backlash against the Confederacy. Look at how much of a political hit the Empire took after Alderaan. This is even more true if they are at a military disadvantage at this point, as that retaliation in kind would be even more brutal than what the CIS could do in return.NecronLord wrote:I don't have time for a full reply but no. No German offensive in 45 threatened a critical civilian area of the allies. Yes. Hyperdrive means they can hit each other more directly in the vulnerables. Just like nothing except sidious' orders stopped Grievous reducing Coruscant to molten slag in the raid (BDZ scalre bombardments are canon again).
Not usually directly, which would have given Dooku the potential option of staking out for himself if he was ambitious enough. Making the CIS the weaker power in the first place is a far superior strategy for a Sith Lord.The CIS answers to Sidious, not Dooku.
Here is what Wookiepedia gives:Rogue 9 wrote:Out of curiosity, from what source? Base Delta Zero was mentioned in the first season of Rebels, but they didn't expound on what it actually is.
You're very late to the party on this one, chap.Adam Reynolds wrote:For a random amusing comment that is a different digression, one random theory I heard lately is that Rex is one of the commandos on Endor. In particular that he is the one with a beard that later wears the scout trooper armor.
I suppose it could fit if you squint a little, though I doubt that will ever be canon. Though that leads to a question. Do clones still go through growth acceleration as adults?
Where else but an ICS? The TFA ICS has it that the Resurgent can reduce a planet's surface to molten slag; no doubt the thousands of ships under Grievous' command could do it.Rogue 9 wrote:Out of curiosity, from what source? Base Delta Zero was mentioned in the first season of Rebels, but they didn't expound on what it actually is.NecronLord wrote:Just like nothing except sidious' orders stopped Grievous reducing Coruscant to molten slag in the raid (BDZ scalre bombardments are canon again).
While the Legends bombing of Humbarine springs to mind,t the CIS was already depopulating whole planets with slavers in the canon.Adam Reynolds wrote:Why would any rational military start using strategic weapons against the enemy civilian population? All that would lead to is retaliation in kind, as well as a massive backlash against the Confederacy. Look at how much of a political hit the Empire took after Alderaan. This is even more true if they are at a military disadvantage at this point, as that retaliation in kind would be even more brutal than what the CIS could do in return.
That's Legends.Also, without Sidious the CIS would have never been able to launch that attack in the first place, as it required extremely accurate hyperspace routes that the CIS did not have on their own.
Dooku could have ruined him anyway. "Master Yoda, Palpatine is Sidious." It wouldn't have done much for the CIS but Palpatine would be fucked.Not usually directly, which would have given Dooku the potential option of staking out for himself if he was ambitious enough. Making the CIS the weaker power in the first place is a far superior strategy for a Sith Lord.
There is also what the CIS attempts on Ryloth. But there is a difference between attacking an outer rim world and hitting core worlds like Coruscant or Alderaan. It is the same reason a terrorist attack in Paris has far more of an impact than anything Boko Haram does in Nigeria.NecronLord wrote:While the Legends bombing of Humbarine springs to mind,t the CIS was already depopulating whole planets with slavers in the canon.
And even then, killing all the senators and bureaucrats even if you don't flatten the planet, would also have been practicable and productive.
Comments by the Jedi on the Nexus hyperspace rouge supports this idea.NecronLord wrote:That's Legends.Adam Reynolds wrote:Also, without Sidious the CIS would have never been able to launch that attack in the first place, as it required extremely accurate hyperspace routes that the CIS did not have on their own.
That answers itself. If the CIS was outright weaker, Dooku would then be in an unwinnable position. If the CIS is outright stronger there is nothing to stop him from doing something like this.NecronLord wrote:Dooku could have ruined him anyway. "Master Yoda, Palpatine is Sidious." It wouldn't have done much for the CIS but Palpatine would be fucked.
Small spoilers then. So far, Thrawn has had no victories. He has analyzed the Rebels, and let them go. There have been multiple engagements with the rebels, and each time he has a chance to hurt them, or wipe them out, and instead, he holds his action and lets them go. Each time, the rebels are acquiring some small victory here or there. This could be building up to something, but what it's presenting is a man with all hype, no substance.The Romulan Republic wrote:I haven't seen much of the show lately, so I won't comment on its portrayal of Thrawn specifically, but I do think Thrawn's prowess has been inflated over time in the minds of some fans. TTT Thrawn made mistakes, or lost battles because of events outside of his control. He underestimated the threat, and overestimated the loyalty, of the Noghiri. He failed to change the codes on those devices he stole from Lando, as I recall, which allowed one of his plans to be sabotaged. He vastly overestimated his ability to control C'baoth. He's good, but he's not infallible.
Edit: He's also got a mixed track record handling Jedi in general. Like I said, he couldn't ultimately contain C'baoth. And he couldn't stop Luke and Mara when they were on his own damn ship, if I'm remembering the trilogy correctly.