#conder kyl
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doctorwenqing · 1 year ago
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can’t stop thinking about “i love you, but that doesn’t matter”
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queer-starwars-bracket · 1 year ago
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Queer Star Wars Characters (Round 2): General Bracket Match 13
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Just Lucky | Identity: bisexual (male and nonbinary) | Media: Doctor Aphra comics
Just Lucky, to pay for his brother’s gambling debts, was forced to become a member of the Canto Bight based crime syndicate the Sixth Kin. There he began a relationship with another lieutenant of the syndicate, Ariole Yu. He later left the active service of the Sixth Kin and broke off his relationship with Yu, which he could do as long as he kept paying off his brother’s gambling debts. He took jobs off planet and eventually became an associate of Doctor Aphra. But when she attempted to obtain the Rings of Vaale, he became a double agent for the wealthy Ronen Tagge. After Aphra “killed” Ronen, he captured her for Dominia Tagge. She offered Aphra a job, while cutting off Lucky.
Needing a constant flow of cash, he returned to the Sixth Kin to see if they had any jobs. He was forced to work with Ariole Yu, his ex, to kill their shared mentor who had defected to Crimson Dawn. They fought Crae, refusing his offer to join Crimson Dawn. After they lost, they were thrown in the brig where they joined Aphra and Sana Starros is escaping. However, Aphra eventually stranded the two. Qi’ra gave her pitch for Crimson Dawn and then let them leave. Back on Canto Bight, the Sixth Kin attempted to bait them into killing each other. They saw through this and decided to take a job from Ronen Tagge to steal the Spark Eternal.
To do this job, they confronted a Spark Eternal possessed Aphra on the Vermillion. But seeing what they were up against, they decided to hit the bricks. As they fled, they ran into Sana Starros’ “Save Aphra” crew, running to confront/save Aphra. Just Lucky ended up convincing Ronen to save Sana’s team after they were defeated and their ship destroyed. Sana convinced Ronen that his only choice was to kill Domina, and that her team would join him to repay their “debt”. They joined Ronen in his Crimson Dawn supported coup for the Tagge Corporation, which turned out to be a trap Domina and Sana set to lure Ronen and his supporters into the open. Sana arranged for all of their debts to the Tagge Corporation to be forgiven, so Ariole and Just Lucky joined her in attempting to save Aphra.
In addition to his reignited relationship with Ariole, he also has a crush on the non-binary Lapin Tagge.
Conder Kyl | Identity: mlm | Media: Aftermath trilogy
Conder Kyl was a New Republic slicer employed by New Republic intelligence. Between the first two books of the Aftermath trilogy, he began a relationship with Sinjir Rath Velus (the first queer character in the New EU), a member of an Imperial war criminal capture squad. However, due to Sinjir’s alcoholism and hatred of vulnerability from being part of the ISB, their relationship was strained. Believing himself to be an unworthy partner, Sinjir broke up with Conder. However, Sinjir latter approached Conder and begged for his help to help work through all the politicking in the Senate against sending New Republic forces to Jakku. In the process, Conder was captured, and after Sinjir rescued him the two reconciled and got back together. Conder later got the chance to save Sinjir’s life in the process of foiling an assassination attempt against Mon Mothma. After the Battle of Jakku, he married Sinjir. His most recent appearance was a cameo in the novel Last Shot, where he is the chief of cyberware in the New Republic’s Digital Warfare Department.
As he is a supporting character, he doesn’t get any PoV chapters. Despite being a very skilled slicer, he is very straightforward and simply good. Despite Sinjir’s own self-esteem problems, he didn’t mistrust Sinjir for being an ex-Imperial. All the conflict in the relationship came from Sinjir’s own mental health problems. 
Art by @cinno on tumblr
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juniperika · 1 year ago
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I was marching to the wrong drum (with the wrong scum) (3858 words) by KindOfASorcerer Chapters: 1/1 Fandom: Star Wars - All Media Types, Star Wars: Rebels, Star Wars: Aftermath - Chuck Wendig Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings Relationships: Alexsandr Kallus/Garazeb "Zeb" Orrelios, Conder Kyl/Sinjir Rath Velus Characters: Sinjir Rath Velus, Garazeb "Zeb" Orrelios, Alexsandr Kallus, Conder Kyl (mentioned/in flashbacks) Additional Tags: Drinking, Implied/Referenced Torture, Briefly Implied/Referenced Homophobia (made up slurs), Established Relationship, Post-Star Wars: Rebels, Post-Star Wars: Aftermath: Empire's End, everyone is drinking except Kallus but he's stressed out of his mind, basically an elaborate bar joke, come to the dark side we have cookies, consider the ex-Imperials redeemed, this fic can fit so many almost canon mlm couples in it Summary: “I see you’ve got a thing for ex-Imps,” Sinjir says to Zeb with a thin, sly smile. Mainly to get a reaction out of the man who joined them, but to his disappointment, he doesn’t even see a flinch in response. Impressive. He doesn’t just admire the self-restraint, but quickly draws another conclusion. “Let me guess, ISB?” “ISB,” the man confirms, his face blank, his tone even. Or, a Lasat and two ex-Imperials walk into a bar. One of them is hiding something and the other is determined to get to the bottom of it.
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I thought this was worth sharing on Tumblr to reach the target audience (people who are interested in a minor Conder and a not-so-minor Sinjir appearance, or an outside perspective on Kallus and Zeb).
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yuri-alexseygaybitch · 1 year ago
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I want MR. DAVE FILONI and MR. JON FAVREAU to know that if they put just ONE (1) of the Star Wars EU characters I actually LIKE in their SHITTY SHOWS (including but not limited to RAE SLOANE, SINJIR RATH VELUS, CONDER KYL, YRICA QUELL, and IDEN VERSIO) I would become their BITCH and defend their BAD CREATIVE DECISIONS with my WHOLE CHEST
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queeruscant · 2 years ago
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These Star Wars characters are canonically queer men! Links to each character profile will be added as they are posted.
Alak
Ariole Yu
Aytar
Baako Moradi
Casul Seedol
Caysin Bog
Chase Wilsorr
Cohmac Vitus
Conder Kyl
Dec Hansen
Emory
Er Dal
Fel Ix
Flix
Gojuni Motts-Danel
Gulu
Hackrack Bep
Hareck
Harmon
Jom Lariin
Jordan Smythe
Just Lucky
Kitrep Soh
Landonis Balthazar Calrissian
Ledaney
Leox Gyasi
Luu
Marlowe San Tekka
Monti Calay
Orka
Raf Thatchburn
Reyé Hollis
Sinjir Rath Velus
Sonogari
Tam Posla
Tantagru Motts-Danel
Tareesh
TK-421
Tyros
Varko Grey
Vellis San Tekka
Wilhuff Tarkin
Wyl Lark
Zian
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msgayer · 9 months ago
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The second I learn how to draw males, I’m drawing Sinjir Rath Velus as my first, no questions asked.
I can’t forget Conder Kyl and Kallus of course.
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erkhyan · 11 months ago
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As of March 2024:
(List is non-exhaustive, as I very likely missed or forgot many characters.)
Sinjir Rath Velus and Conder Kyl are now a married M/M couple.
Chelli Lona Aphra, Sana Starros, and Magna Tolvan are now a F/F/F polycule.
Sana Starros’s father is stated to have met and settled with a male partner named Luu after his wife died.
Domina Tagge has been explicitly shown having a one-night sexual escapade with Aphra.
Just Lucky and Ariole Yu are a married M/M couple.
T’onga and Losha Tarkon are a married F/F couple.
Larma D’Acy and Wrobie Tyce are a married F/F couple. They’re the infamous “blink and you’ll miss it” same-sex kiss in Rise of Skywalker.
Marlowe and Vellis San Tekka are a married M/M couple.
Lula Talisola and Zeen Mrala are (were?) a F/F couple.
Sion (a.k.a. Force-Kicked Guy) is explicitly stated to have a husband and kids.
Sabé (Keira Knightley’s character in The Phantom Menace) is bi, her unwavering loyalty to Padmé being explicitly stated to owe a lot to her unrequited attraction to Padmé.
Vi Moradi is all but stated to be ace/aro.
Yané and Saché (two of Amidala’s handmaidens in The Phantom Menace) are a married F/F couple.
Yuehiro is a trans man.
Kho Phon Farrus, Taka Jamoreesa, and Lapin Tagge are non-binary.
Anyway, LGBTQIA+ representation is almost routine in Star Wars books by now, while on-screen Star Wars remains as painfully cishet as it’s ever been.
LGBT characters in Disney’s Star Wars canon as of May 2016
Moff Delian Mors and her late wife, Murra Mors
Aleksin and Pavol
Sinjir Rath Velus
Esmelle and her wife Shirene
Iggs’s late fathers
Joph Seastriker‘s mothers
Ledaney and his unnamed Corellian partner
Yup, those cover the L, G, and possibly B parts of the spectrum. No T character yet so far…
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cinno · 2 years ago
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commission for @ /JediHlaalu !! here’s some food for all you Sinjir/Conder fans i know you’re all starving
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stars-n-spice · 3 years ago
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Star Wars Ships' Responses to "I want a baby" Pt. 2
Anakin & Padme
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Finn & Poe
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C3PO & R2D2
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Sinjir Rath Velus & Conder Kyl
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Han & Leia
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Baze & Chirrut
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chimaeracrewandfriends · 3 years ago
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What’s with all the Gay Imperials?
Hi everyone!
 So there’s this trend I’ve been noticing in some of the new “Canon” Star Wars stories we’ve gotten that I’ve been noodling around with in the back of my mind, and I figured that since it’s Pride Month, I’d try to vocalize it. As glad as I am that there are openly gay characters in Star Wars now (none of them from movies or TV of course, have to keep the mainstays of your franchise nice and clean), there is a somewhat unfortunate trend I’ve noticed, where the gay characters tend to be Imperial-aligned.
Below is a chart of all the characters confirmed to be non-straight as well as the stories where their same-sex attraction was referenced:
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 Obviously, I haven’t read or played everything and there’s only so much Wookiepedia scouring you can do, so if I’ve missed out on anyone, please let me know. I’d love to get examples that prove me wrong. I’m sure there are probably one or two in the High Republic sub-franchise, but I’m so disinterested in that era, I wouldn’t know. Also, I’m only including characters whose same-sex attraction is explicitly referenced in the text/supported by authors’ comments. We can point out blatant homoeroticism and ship characters all day, but what I’m focusing on here is specifically the writers’ intentions. Cause… oh boy, what are their intentions?
So, diving into statistics, of the 12 characters I looked at, 8 of them are Imperial characters. Sinjir Rath Velus and Magna Tolvan are a little complicated as they later defected from the Empire, but even then, 50% Imperial is still not a figure I’m wholly comfortable with. I think that it goes without saying that having your gay characters be fascists (or at least indifferent to fascism) is not a great look. I’m not saying there absolutely shouldn’t be gay Imperials, but them being a majority is bad optics in my opinion. Furthermore, of these 12, I’d say only half of them have their sexuality impact their story. The rest are brief references that don’t really factor in. Which is fine, not every character needs to have a romance storyline, but it is part of this discussion. And to be clear, this just my analysis and opinions, it’s completely valid to disagree with me.
To start with non-Imperials with brief references, we have Sana Starros. She had a relationship with Dr. Aphra in college. That’s about it. And there’s also the (in)famous Amilyn Holdo. She’s one of many characters who makes this list by virtue of mentioning in passing that attraction to a single gender or species felt limiting on one occasion.
For more involved relationships, there’s Kaeden Larte, who was introduced in and has only directly appeared in Ahsoka’s eponymous novel as one of the former Jedi’s many semi-platonic female love interests. And Conder Kyl serves as the main love interest for major POV character Sinjir Rath Velus in the Aftermath trilogy and while their relationship was rocky, they ended up finding purpose in each other.
Despite the problems I have with the writing of the Aftermath trilogy, the alleged insertion of a “gay agenda” isn’t one of them. Rae Sloane mentions offhand that she never had time for relationships with men or women. At least she’s one of the more nuanced Imperials. Similarly, Varko Grey, from the Squadrons game, mentions that he has a husband in one of the many pre-flight npc conversations.
For characters with more focus on their sexuality, let’s start with Delian Mors, who easily could have been another “single throwaway line” character; it’s mentioned in her backstory that her wife died prior to Lords of the Sith. However, it’s also brought up a couple times that as the governor of Ryloth, she enjoys keeping green-skinned, Twi'lek women as servants, behavior that’s certainly imperialistic and fetishistic. After that we’ve got Chelli Loni Aphra and Magna Tolvan from the doctor’s eponymous comic series. Dr. Aphra was basically conceived as “evil Indiana Jones” and is an in-universe Darth Vader fangirl. As mentioned previously, she had a relationship with Sana Starros in the past and over the course of her own comic series she develops a homoerotic cat-and-mouse relationship with imperial Captain Magna Tolvan, who eventually joins the Rebel Alliance. Honestly, I’m fine with gay Imperials like these two, and both of them, specifically Aphra, are well-written. As is Sinjir Rath Velus, a former loyalty officer for the Empire, who later defected to the New Republic. There’s kind of “have your cake and eat it too” when it comes to Velus’s gayngst. Despite assurances that the GFFA isn’t intolerant towards non-heterosexual relationships, he still feels awkward telling a woman he isn’t interested because he’s gay and has trouble with public displays of affection with his boyfriend.
And now we have to talk about Tarkin. Tbh, this one bites. To have arguably one of the most evil and authoritarian characters in the franchise in a same-sex relationship… problematic is a good word for it. Granted, it’s never explicitly stated it’s Tarkin in the story, but context clues indicate that’s who he’s supposed to be. (I haven’t listened to the audiobook, but apparently the voice actor does a Peter Cushing impression for the character.) Although, having read Of MSE-6 and Men, I understand the story potential there; to have someone as stuffy, aristocratic, and high-ranking as Tarkin in a secret relationship with a low-ranking stormtrooper is both comedy and drama gold (the story, as it stands, is merely okay in my opinion). And because there are no female Imperials in the OT, that relationship would have to be gay. (It’s not unlike what you see in fanshipping for media with male-dominated casts, predominant M/M ships are inevitable.) As for TK-421, see above. I will say, it’s somewhat intentionally hilarious that gay icon Luke Skywalker walks around the Death Star impersonating a gay man. Or maybe that was the implication all along.
Overall, I’ll just say I’m not entirely enthused that not only is the cast of characters slanted towards Imperial, but also the Imperials tend to have their sexuality be a bigger part of their characterizations. And I think you could make an argument that there is some inherent harm in having so many villainous gay characters and I’d probably agree with you. But I believe there’s a bit more to it than that. And again, maybe I’m missing a lot of data and there are more heroic gays in stories I haven’t read. I’ll fully admit I’ve read more Imperial-centric stories in the past several years, mostly because I enjoy villains and find Imperial politicking and bickering to be amusing. That and the similarities between the Empire and the U.S. are getting harder to ignore every day.
When concerning some of the more well-written gay relationships or ones with the potential to be narratively rich, it does pose the question “Should certain story developments, regardless of their quality, be avoided because of the unfortunate implications?” The simple answer is “yes” but a more nuanced one is “it depends on the context” which is… not exactly helpful. Because context and presentation are important. Even with a couple of the characters whose sexuality is more prominent, the writers fell into some easy traps vis-a-vis cliche negative stereotypes. As mentioned earlier, Delian Mors’ fetish for Twi'lek women plays into stereotypes about lesbians being predatory. She’s also a drug addict as a result of her wife’s death, which I honestly can’t tell if that’s supposed to make her sympathetic or not. The demonization of drug users is another topic entirely. Even Sinjir’s story hit a speed bump when Jas, who knows he’s gay, assumes that his interest in Temmin Wexley may be sexual, which, even as a passing joke, comes uncomfortably close to associating gay men with pedophilia. It’s these kinds of (hopefully) unconscious biases that can even seep into characters who the writers are putting genuine effort into.
On a related note, we’ve gotten a few transgender characters in Star Wars over the past few years, and as far as I know, none of them are Imperials. This does lend some credence to my theory that writers aren’t intentionally being malicious by having gay Imperial characters in their stories. After all, if their intentions were to make gays look like fascists, why not throw trans people under the bus as well? Based on the available evidence, I believe that some of these writers simply believe (or want to believe) that we live in a post-sexuality society, where it’s okay to have gay villains without there inherently being negative connotations with that association; that there’s no assumed correlation between sexuality and morality. And while that would be nice to think, I’m not so sure that’s where we’re at now.
There is a similar discussion about the prevalence of nonwhite Imperial characters over the past several years. And again, I think that comes from a belief that we live in a post-race society, which is not a new idea, the concept of being “colorblind” in this way started gaining relevance in the 90s. It’s good that we’re having these discussions now, because they’re important. And I think one of the reasons why there’s been more diversity among the Empire’s ranks as of late it that their casts are entirely human as opposed to the multi-species Rebellion and New Republic. So there’s some logistical reasons why, but that shouldn’t be a sole reason, ya’know?
If I wanted to be very, very generous, I could argue that the inclusion of nonwhite, nonmale, nonstraight Imperials does work well as it demonstrates that there will always be people in various marginalized groups that will still want to join and try to benefit from oppressive power structures. There may even be a writer or two that intends that, consciously or not. Because even with a more diverse Imperial cast, the high-ranking officials are still predominantly straight (presumably), white men. But… I think that’s a bit too nuanced of a view for the current crop of Star Wars writers to collectively hold at large.
And you may call me a hypocrite for shipping Thranto and writing slash fanfics with Imperial characters… and that’s not entirely unfair. But, please understand that there’s a big difference between me writing free stories in my little apartment and the published works of a multi-billion dollar media giant.
So after going through all this, I’m going to have to say I’m not opposed to there being gay Imperials, but it would be nice to see some changes. Namely, writers should try to avoid negative stereotypes and write more non-Imperial gay characters, especially ones whose sexuality is more than just a passing reference. Writers should ask themselves “What is the context of this character’s sexuality and what kind of message does it convey?” And, as I said, given that we haven’t seen any transgender Imperials, I think the writers do have the degree of self-awareness to do better. And who knows? Maybe in earlier drafts of stories, there were more heroic gays and they got straight-washed during the editing process, so proportionally more gay Imperials make the final cut. That’s the line I’m taking, writing less gay Imperial characters isn’t as important as writing more gay non-Imperial characters. But at the same time, it shouldn’t just be about hitting some quota. Again, I would like to see a greater level of awareness and consideration of the implications of what they’re writing, which would fundamentally lead to stronger long-lasting change. If the writers truly are well-meaning, this would result in characters whose sexualities are better incorporated into the narrative and would hypothetically lead to more good guy gays because the underlying issues of the creative process have been addressed. I hope that’s not too big of an ask.
Sinjir/Conder and Aphra/Tolvan are great canon gay pairings that we’ve gotten and it would have been a shame to have never gotten them at all because of a complete ban on gay Imperial characters. But it would also be cool to continue to see more couples with that quality of writing, ideally more heroic ones, so I’m not going to put my foot down and say absolutely no gay Imperials. That shouldn’t be the focus, is my main takeaway. The problem isn’t that there are gay Imperials at all, it’s the naivety and unexamined bias (and likely homophobic editors) that led to there being a greater number of gay Imperials. And who knows, I believe starting sometime soon, Star Wars novels will be released under a new publishing house instead of Del Ray. Perhaps they’ll have more progressive editors. Fingers crossed.
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Star Wars fans everywhere are sleeping on my favorite canon pairing Sinjir Rath Velus and Conder Kyl
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cal-an-ambulance · 3 years ago
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This ship needs more fics. Hope someone reads this
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queer-starwars-bracket · 2 years ago
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Queer Star Wars Characters (Round 1): General Bracket Match 20
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Dec Hansen | Identity: gay | Media: Join the Resistance
Dec Hansen is a main character in the aborted middle grade novel series following a squad of 14 year olds who joined the Resistance. He was born on the isolated swamp planet of Ques. An only child, his mother built him a droid named AG-90 to act as his brother. When he was young, he ran away from home because of “something that made him different”, before eventually crawling back to his mother and telling her about it, where it turned out his community was actually accepting. Ben Blacker, one of the authors confirmed this was about him being gay. Which feels like meta-commentary about representation. Ques wasn’t homophobic, but because Dec had never heard of same gender attraction he felt isolated. 
With the Resistance, Dec was quite the trouble marker, in part because command didn’t accept AG as his brother and let him train as a pilot. He quickly became friends with the main protagonist of the series, Mattis. After his shenanigans caused a power outage on the base, J-Squadron was sent to the thought to be abandoned planet Vodran to scavenge. Dec was separated from most of the Squad and ended up on the planet's moon, where Hadra the Hutt, the planet’s old ruler, was living in exile. They bonded over their mental health problems and feeling different from their community, which convinced Hadra to help liberate his friends from the First Order prison on the planet. With J-Squadron reunited, they traveled to Starkiller Base to save Jo from his First Order parents. They managed to escape right as Starkiller Base was being destroyed and returned to D’Qar right before the evacuation. They were presumably sent on a special mission shortly after, like the many Resistance characters who didn’t appear in TLJ. Unfortunately the failure of TROS means it will be a long time before his series is finished.
Conder Kyl | Identity: mlm | Media: Aftermath trilogy
Conder Kyl was a New Republic slicer employed by New Republic intelligence. Between the first two books of the Aftermath trilogy, he began a relationship with Sinjir Rath Velus (the first queer character in the New EU), a member of an Imperial war criminal capture squad. However, due to Sinjir’s alcoholism and hatred of vulnerability from being part of the ISB, their relationship was strained. Believing himself to be an unworthy partner, Sinjir broke up with Conder. However, Sinjir latter approached Conder and begged for his help to help work through all the politicking in the Senate against sending New Republic forces to Jakku. In the process, Conder was captured, and after Sinjir rescued him the two reconciled and got back together. Conder later got the chance to save Sinjir’s life in the process of foiling an assassination attempt against Mon Mothma. After the Battle of Jakku, he married Sinjir. His most recent appearance was a cameo in the novel Last Shot, where he is the chief of cyberware in the New Republic’s Digital Warfare Department.
As he is a supporting character, he doesn’t get any PoV chapters. Despite being a very skilled slicer, he is very straightforward and simply good. Despite Sinjir’s own self-esteem problems, he didn’t mistrust Sinjir for being an ex-Imperial. All the conflict in the relationship came from Sinjir’s own mental health problems. 
Art by @cinno on tumblr
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conderkyl · 4 years ago
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Fuck I never posted this yesterday!! I did a quick kinda meh redraw of this old piece of the aftermath crew!! (really only proud of the Jas and Sinjir in the new one but im blaming it on my lack of time to work on it lol)
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permian-tropos · 6 years ago
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thing I never considered but suddenly really want: poe dameron x sinjir/conder oc son for peak star wars mlm
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queeruscant · 2 years ago
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These Star Wars characters are canonically queer! Links to each character profile will be added as they are posted. List begins under the cut!
Ackmena
Adrialla
Alak
Alys Ongwa, aka Crash
Amara Kel, aka Shadow
Amilyn Holdo
Ariole Yu
Audj Seedol
Aurin
Aytar
Baako Moradi
Beesar Tal-Apurna
Bibs
Brene
Cassie Cryar
Casul Seedol
Caysin Bog
Ceret
Chase Wilsorr
Chass na Chadic
Chelli Lona Aphra
Chellwinark Frethylrin
Cincey
Cinta Kaz
Cohmac Vitus
Conder Kyl
Dec Hansen
Deemus Abrus
Delian Mors
Detta Yao
Dima
Domina Tagge
Eemee
Ela Radodan
Eleodie Maracavanya
Emory
Er Dal
Eron
Erta
Esmelle
Eustacia Okka
Falloo
Fel Ix
Flix
Gen Tri
Gido
Ginruda
Gojuni Motts-Danel
Gulu
Hackrack Bep
Hareck
Harli Jafan
Harmon
Holo
Howlrunner (Theta Squadron)
Ilini
Ilyana
Ione Marcy
Irei
Isabalia
Jezra'lin
Jom Lariin
Jordan Smythe
Jordanna Sparkburn
Joy Iya
Just Lucky
Kaeden Larte
Kalandra
Kantam Sy
Keo Venzee
Kho Phon Farrus
Kimb
Kinni
Kiren
Kitrep Soh
Klerin Chekkat
Kor Plouth
Kryys Durango
Lando Calrissian
Lapin Tagge
Larma D'Acy
Ledaney
Lee Skillen
Leox Gyasi
Losha Tarkon
Lula Talisola
Luu
Magna Tolvan
Marlowe San Tekka
Matthea Cathley
Merrin
Moona
Monti Calay
Murra Mors
Nubarron
Occo Quentto
Odelia
Orka
Oshi Karmo
Rae Sloane
Raf Thatchburn
Raidah Doon
Reyé Hollis
Rhee
Ric Farazi
Rooper Nitani
Sabé
Saché
Sana Starros
Sannab Ro
Shirene
Sinjir Rath Velus
Sister
Sky Graf
Smeemarm
Sola Naberrie
Sonogari
Sorschi
Svi'no Atchapat
Sylvestri Yarrow
T'onga
Taka Jamoreesa
Tal Veridian
Tam Posla
Tans
Tantagru Motts-Danel
Tareesh
Teemank
Tepoh
Terec
Thandeka
TK-421
Ty Yorrick
Tyros
Varko Grey
Vel Sartha
Vellis San Tekka
Vernestra Rwoh
Vi Moradi
Vukorah
Wesson Dove
Wilhuff Tarkin
Wrobie Tyce
Wyl Lark
Yana Ro
Yané
Yarli Yren
Yrica Quell
Zae-Brii
Zeen Mrala
Zian
Zohma
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