#~132 bby
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sudden-stops-kill · 8 months ago
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The Acolyte | Official Trailer | Disney+
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avartheradiant · 4 months ago
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you really can tell who has and who hasn’t read the high republic depending on how they talk about the jedi in the acolyte. truly interesting to watch unfold (ripping my hair out)
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theysangastheyslew · 1 year ago
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Hiiiii I just wanted to say I love your Hange lives AU so much and look forward to each time you post about it 😍 Will their baby and the goats make another appearance soon?
Awww thank you nonny 🥺🥺🥺
I'm so happy you've been enjoying it. It's been therapeutic for me to work on, and I'm glad it's brought a little happiness to you as well ❤️
Lately I've been trying to go in somewhat chronological order (I wasn't before so I reallly need to go back and number the works so the timeline makes more sense 🫠) so yes, the goats and little bby Bean will be appearing, but there's still a couple more things I want to show first. I've always been slow at drawing so I appreciate the patience!
But as a treat here's a lil peek at an idea I'm tossing around for a little further down the line :3
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mxhlon · 2 years ago
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@catmillers and @mxhlon for the 132nd Biannual Hunger Games Victor's Ball
I believe that the Matrix can remain our cage or it can become our chrysalis. That to be free, you cannot change your cage. You have to change yourself. When I used to look out at this world, all I could see was its edges, its boundaries, its rules and controls, its leaders and laws. But now, I see another world. A different world where all things are possible. A world of hope. Of peace. I can't tell you how to get there, but I know if you can free your mind, you'll find a way. -- Lana Wachowski, The Matrix
Something's brewing in the outer districts. Which pill will you take? Which side will you choose?
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cress-meadowforge · 2 years ago
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To die, to sleep; To sleep, perchance to dream.
Into the murky water, tumbling deeper, held under. Mud stirs from the bottom. Beneath the surface, there is only movement -- that of limbs thrashing against the current, against each other, against the sensation of something small taking hold. Taking a bite. Yet as the creatures are cleaved from flesh, so flesh remains beneath -- bloodied, battered. But alive.
@slate-skylar and @cress-meadowforge for the 132nd biannual hunger games victor's ball
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aelincreativ · 4 months ago
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Oshamir as Mace Windu's Grandparents - Crack Au
This idea is complete and total crack and should not be taken with any seriousness, unless you want to go wild I guess. I thought of this late last night while half asleep.
Mace Windu, renowned, respected, and strong Jedi Master of the Order. Known for his iconic purple lightsaber and having Force Visions of Shatterpoints, or moments of choice in time.
Now timeline can get a bit fuzzy, but Star Wars timeline is always fuzzy. (Plagueis is supposed to be like 15 at the time of the Acolyte so, lotsa questions bout that do I have) But it works out pretty well for Windu to be Osha and Qimir's grandson.Acolyte is set in 132 BBY and Osha is 24. Mace is born in 72 BBY, 60 years after the Acolyte. Say Osha and Qimir have multiple kids, Mace's parent could realistically be born any time between 130 BBY and 100 BBY depending on how well Osha and Qimir age due to their Force connection since we know that affects aging.
I personally like the idea of Mace being the baby of the family, youngest kid of the youngest kid type vibes. Before him, all his Aunts, Uncles, and cousins either didn't pursue a Force connection or trained with Osha and Qimir in the Force. Maybe not as Sith-inclined, but not light siders and obviously not as Jedi.
(I've got a whole bunch of headcanons about Dark/Light and the proper use and connection to the Force, ask me about them later but the gist is that the truly best way to connect to the force is to be balanced. Feeling, acknowledging, and using every emotion with no distinction of good or bad. Understanding that the universe itself is full of both good and bad and that to try and focus on either side makes you weaker.)
(Osha and Qimir are still very much “what a Jedi like you would call a Sith” but they've chilled. To the point as long as you don't touch their family you're fine. They are that old couple that will casually drop the fact they were Bonnie and Clyde if you get them reminiscing but otherwise the grandkids have no idea. Oshamir's kids though, the oldest ones experienced some wild shit but it was normalized for them and they don't realize that was weird.)
Back to Mace. This idea has Mace being taught by his grandparents as early as he can remember until the age of four when he gets a vision telling him that his greatest path toward achieving balance in the universe takes him to the Jedi. He creates a force bond with his family, but does not view it as an attachment because he understands that his highest calling and duty is to the Force itself and the path it takes him on with the Jedi. He feels no darkside temptation from his missing family because his family is there with him giving him the push and motivation towards his dreams, actively encouraging him to be the best Jedi he can be.
Now. Mace is only four when he goes to the Temple. He was not fully aware of everything going on with his grandparents. (Osha and Qimir not being obvious about their Sith-inclined tendencies. Hiding the red sabers and battle armor from the grandkids and the kids knowing to not bring it up. They still strongly despise the Jedi but what their grandson wants they will support as long as he remembers that his family always loves him and supports him and believes in him.) Mace doesn't keep it a secret that he was trained by his grandparents before coming to the temple. Openly talking about it with his fellow younglings and comparing what he was taught with what they learn at the temple.
Because of this he assumes it's just a known and recorded fact in his profile about his family. It is not. When he becomes a Padawan to Master Myr, he tells her about his family and while initially surprised, she realizes there's no negatives with Mace's connection to his family. Further solidifying in Mace's mind the difference between connection and attachment.
They struggle some through Mace's padawanship and take a visit to his family where Master Myr meets them and also misses the Sith indicators. Just seeing them as another type of Force user. This is because Jedi look for darksiders with very narrow minded cues. They think that all “darksiders” would be rampaging murderers. Not a slightly older couple surrounded by their loving family and carrying their first great grandchild around while picking sticky things out of their hair.
Sure Master Myr is a bit worried about it all, because she is a good Jedi, but she is also a person who sees the happy family and has to suppress her own twinge of jealousy at the large family joyously reuniting and celebrating the success of Mace in his journey with the Force. When Qimir steps aside next to her, and softly but with aged wisdom and surety, speaks about how their family treats the Force and finds greater connection and purpose through it. How it ranges from encouraging the crops they grow to the mechanical work intuition to their one granddaughter, Mace's older sister actually, who is off pursuing a career as an investigative journalist because her calling was similar to Mace's but she wanted to find and expose the corruption so that her little brother would know where to look and work on next.
Master Myr and Mace leave with their bond brighter and stronger than before and a promise to visit again. And if Mace assumes that Myr reported everything about their visit to the other Jedi and as such that the attitude of the Jedi about connection versus attachment is different than what it actually is, that's an issue that doesn't come up till over 20 years later when Anakin Skywalker stands before the council as a scare little boy. Mace's almost off-handed response to the reveal Anakin has no father shocks and then changes the course of the future.
Apparently responding, “So? My grandmother and her sister were Force conceived too. Force conception is rare, yes, but not impossible, just difficult. I would like to meet with his mother though, and ask what her technique was. The process my great grandmothers used was lost with the destruction of their coven when my grandmother was a child.” This response was not the response the other council members, besides Depa Billaba who had been to visit his family during her own padawan years and celebrated as part of the family, were at all expecting or supported.
Mace's further explanation of his family, something he is bewildered to learn the Jedi didn't already know about as he never felt he had kept it a secret. Depa herself chimes in about her meeting with the family and agrees with her confusion about this not being common knowledge. Yoda chimes in about his confusion and when prompted, Mace reveals his grandparents to have trained with the Jedi in their youth before both leaving as teens. He gives Osha's name and when her profile is pulled up there is a startling amount of information redacted from it, the redaction signed off by Vernestra Rwoh, who had vanished on a mission decades prior. Mace found this strange as the information he had been told about his grandparents past all seemed contradictory to what was left in the file.
At this point they shuffle out Anakin and give Obi-Wan instructions to not fuck up the kid they clearly need to do something about but just not right now. Go get him a snack or something and come back tomorrow.It's only after that Mace realizes that a looming shatterpoint had disappeared without a fuss. Strange but he'd had worse and weirder encounters with his unique visions.
How this continues is anyone's game, but a key component is Osha and Qimir coming to the temple to drop off Mace's niece who wanted to be a Jedi just like Uncle Mace. During this meeting at the temple, Yoda needs to walk into the room and immediately get into a mental conflict with Osha and Qimir. They rip the green troll apart and put him back together shaken and aware of just how disastrous everything could have gone.
The reveal that Darth Plagueis was killed decades back when the Sith tried to take one of the Aniseya family members to study and experiment on. Unfortunately this left a loose end of Palpatine who had only recently started his Sith apprenticeship when Plagueis was killed. So ripple that out however you want.
What secrets get spilled and what ones don't is all up in the air but yeah. This has been my incoherent ramblings about absolute crack Star Wars AUs.
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tremendouskoalachild · 4 months ago
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The Acolyte takes place 100 years after the Great Disaster. in episode 7 Indara says: "A hundred years ago, this planet was catalogued as lifeless because of a hyperspace disaster." however, that scene takes place 16 years before the show's main timeline, so 84 years after the event. possibilities:
the widely cited fact that the show is set 100 years before The Phantom Menace, which is the origin of its placement to the year 132 BBY on the canon timeline, is a lot more of vague than thought. maybe it's around 116 BBY, or some other currently unspecified year, instead
Indara is just generalizing because the specific year doesn't matter to the subject at hand. a couple years or decades here or there changes nothing about a place being completely lifeless then and a fully functioning ecosystem, with forests (!), now
they wanted to reference Light of the Jedi and knew it took place exactly 100 years earlier, but nobody caught the inconsistency introduced by putting the line into a flashback
Indara failed galactic history
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mrbubblyurchin · 4 months ago
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Torbin- A Character Analysis
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So with this week’s Acolyte episode showing us what really happened on Brendok, and with this being most likely the final flashback episode, I figured I should dive in to creating some character analysis’ of different characters from the Acolyte. So I decided to start with Torbin.
Torbin is first mentioned in episode one as one of four Jedi that Mae has been instructed to kill without a weapon. While his former master, Indara, is shown, Torbin is not. Pretty straightforward.
Moving on to episode two, Torbin is revealed to be a respected Master who resides in the Jedi Temple on the planet Olega. Mae attempts to assassinate him while he is in deep meditation, but is unable to do so, as Torbin has been revealed to have taken the Barash Vow, and has not spoken to anybody in over ten years as of 132 BBY. This would mean he took the vow in 142 BBY, six years after the incident on Brendok in 148 BBY. This is important because it is likely he took the vow after graduating to the rank of Knight. However, Torbin is a Master, meaning that by the rules of the Jedi, he would have had to train a Padawan in between his promotion from Knight to Master. Whether he did this during his time of vow or not is unknown, but it is likely the former.
This would mean that Torbin would have had to go from Padawan to Master in the span of six years, meaning he likely would have made Knight after the Brendok incident. This will be important for later.
Also, note that it is also quite possible that Torbin never took on a Padawan. You can really only be graduated to Master if you have trained a Padawan who has risen to the rank of Knight. And Sol is a Master, but before he met Osha, he had to Padawan, and Osha never became a Knight, meaning Sol should canonically not be a Master in the first place, but I digress. The point is, in the span of what is likely six years, Torbin was promoted from Padawan to Master, and eventually joined a Jedi Temple on Olega.
Now, getting to his death scene in episode two. Mae offers him a poison to drink to help him ‘redeem himself’ or ‘find peace’ and Torbin ends up accepting it, and stating that he and the rest of his colleagues thought they knew what they were doing. He then commits suicide, a very un Jedi like action. I’ll come back to this later. Anyways, Sol and the others find Torbin’s body, and the episode continues on.
Now, a flashback version of Torbin does appear in Episode 3, but I will be skipping over to Episode 7 as that is where the true character and motivations of Torbin are. Torbin is a Padawan when we see him on Brendok, and as we heard earlier in the show, at this point in the galaxy, Jedi Padawans quite rarely left on missions, and Torbin is shown to be very attached to Coruscant, which makes sense if he rarely leaves the place.
Mother Aniseya uses this desire to return to Coruscant as a way to get inside Torbin’s head and control him, and while it is easy to accept Torbin is merely homesick, I think there is something larger here. Torbin’s fear. Torbin as a character does not strike me as very sure of himself, more insecure and cautious. Which makes sense. He’s a teenager, and teenagers can be insecure, reckless, and irrational at times.
Torbin doesn’t believe he can be a good Jedi. He fears that he doesn’t have what it takes and frankly, Indara doesn’t seem like the best fit Master wise for him. She has good intentions, but takes the more rigid approach to teaching, which the insecure and unbalanced Torbin doesn’t need. Torbin’s fear is failing his master and Sol and Kelnacca as well. Failing them and failing as a Jedi. So he yearns to go back to Coruscant because there he is free of that failure. So he falls victim to Mother Aniseya’s manipulations at first, and when he finds out that Mae and Osha are a vergence, and that they are his key to getting home, away from his failure, which he now fears even more because of Mother Aniseya, he takes that opportunity.
And in the process, he fails even more.
In the episode, we are shown that the witches of Brendok are indeed selfish in some of their actions, and one of the Mothers manipulates Mae and the other witches into fighting the Jedi. They are actively being needlessly aggressive. But Torbin doesn’t know this. So in his eyes, when Sol goes after him, and an entire planet’s population of witches, mothers, and at the time, what he believes to be Mae dies, Torbin cannot help but feel it is his fault, which he admits to Indara at the end of the episode.
So, sixteen years later, when Mae approaches him and offers him a chance to redeem himself for his failures, he takes it. Because Torbin’s mind has been fractured after being essentially tortured by Mother Aniseya. His head is not a safe place. He thinks himself a failure. In his mind, he didn’t just let down Indara, Sol, and Kelnacca. He let down an entire family and population. In his mind, he was the one who killed them. And in his mind, he failed as a Jedi. His greatest fear. And he then spent ten years being trapped with his own thoughts, in his own splintered mind, with only one thing in his head. The fact that he let everyone down, and that as far as he knew, his greatest fear had been realized.
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animazi · 5 months ago
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ok I actually need to Shut Up now. but.
mae and osha as the side of the same coin!! this episode was like literally all about that - osha restating that she knew she couldn't kill (even capture really) mae even though mae is a murderer because mae is still her sister, her twin, half of who she is (1) but osha is able to set this aside from her purpose. she asks yord to do what she cannot, she is very honest with how she feels that she can't do this, even though it is for the protection of jedi! including sol! and then mae's utter obsession with osha, to the point where she is willing to leave her revenge quest behind if it means she can get her sister back!! they are more than just light/dark, good/evil, jedi/sith but also at the same time they are parallel mirrors of one another; osha and mae, the stars and the fortress, and just argh. mae's eyes soften when she hears osha is alive (2), oshie?, they matter so much to each other, even with everything that has happened between them. mae always was your wound (3), and the same is true of osha for mae!
(1) Mothers Koril and Aniseya, How To Make Your Daughters Codependant, Coven Press, Brendok, 156 bby, pp. 328-567
(2) Master Sol, The Guide to Being Emotionally Literate for Jedi, Jedi Temple Publications, Coruscant, 148 bby, pp. 2-4
(3) Yord Fandar, Sounding Like A Wise Jedi Master: For Dummies, Jedi Temple Publications, Coruscant, 132 bby, p. 87
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imarvelatstars · 3 months ago
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Turbulence
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No Romantic Pairings
featuring Enya Keen, Jecki Lon, & Yord Fandar
Content: platonic soulmates, reincarnation, canonical character deaths, jedi religion/beliefs, spoilers for cataclysm
[ao3 link]
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382 BBY, Dalna.
Enya feels her heart pounding in her chest when she sees it. Her blaster aims at his chest. “That lightsaber doesn’t belong to you.”
The Path member bathed in a green kyber glow snarls at her, spittle on his chin and the faded blue paint of his sect dripping down his face. “Then come and get it, trash.”
She’s off balance, tired and afraid and longing for her saber, and it nearly gets her killed. But the Force comes to her when she asks for it. Even when she is beaten, when the Path member raises his fist and prepares to strike her down, she remembers to call upon the Force and breathe.
Quiet settles in her mind. Resolve. This will not be her end. The Force is with her, and she is stronger because of it. It is that strength that allows her to dodge his blows, to beat him into submission, and summon the stolen saber to her hand. In the moment between one attack and another, she feels a sense of recognition tingle in her palm. This saber isn’t hers, but the kyber is pleased to serve her in her time of need. She smiles. And she keeps fighting.
It is an infinitely impossible stretch of time later when something stings deep in Enya’s chest – horror, shock, grief, maybe even awe – when she holds Master Darhga’s saber in her hands, flicks her thumb over the blaster burn in the emitter. There should be a hole burning in her throat. The enforcer droid that had shot at her is long gone, too busy trying to bring down the departing shuttles, but its blaster shot had been meant for her. It glanced off the saber’s emitter guard instead, leaving the metal burnt and warped.
Orin Darhga had saved her life, albeit in a remarkably roundabout way.
With the hem of her tunic wrapped around the saber, still too hot to touch, Enya presses it to her chest as her eyes mist over. “Thank you,” she whispers. She chooses to believe that even in his union with the Force, Master Darhga can hear her. “I need your lightsaber to keep fighting,” she continues. “Until the end of this battle, come what may.”
But the victory on Dalna can hardly be called such. Too much was lost and at too high a cost. She’d lost her Master. She’d very nearly lost her own life. The lives of too many Jedi had been ended too soon, one of them being Master Darhga’s, yet still… She looks now at the empty hilt in her hands, its kyber removed and ready to be placed in the Arch.
The Force works in mysterious ways. Master Darhga’s loss would affect the Temple and the Order for many years to come, yet it still remained to be seen how much good his sacrifice would bring. It was because of him that she had survived the battle. Such a debt cannot be repaid, not in one lifetime, though Enya will certainly try. More than anything, she hopes that one day she will be reunited with him in the Force, and they will smile together as if they’ve always been friends, bathed in the light of a million, billion stars.
132 BBY, Khofar.
The creature that cut down her brothers and sisters in the Force was relentless, vicious and horrifically violent, and she’d hardly had the time to think, to ignite her saber and defend herself when he first descended upon her. And then he’d shorted it out moments later, left it sparking in her hands, descended upon her again with that eerie grin carved across his helm, and Jecki had reached for Kelnacca’s blade as if it were instinct. It was the pure, screaming desire to stay alive at all costs that kept her fighting against the fear.
She’s never seen a crimson blade before, she muses in the moments after he disappears, leaves her standing alone in the forest with the smoking remains of Master Kelnacca’s saber and the pounding beat of adrenaline in her ears. Even so, she knows what a saber like this stranger’s means. Master Sol has cautioned her against the Dark Side too many times to count, drilling it into her head just how slippery is the slope that leads from fear to selfishness to the abyss of a blackened heart. But knowledge doesn’t prevent fear.
Jecki draws upon her teachings, upon the wisdom of her Master and the familiar thrum of the Force as she runs. Each step takes her closer to the pulse of chaos and red, arrogant rage that is this creature, this Sith. Find the balance, she imagines Sol saying. Find your strength in the Force. Do not let your eyes deceive you, but let your heart guide you. Do not be afraid.
And when she bursts through the trees, she finds that she isn’t at all. It is the Code that propels her forward, the Force itself burning in her veins. People will die if she cannot stop him. The glittering little lights that illuminate the galaxy with goodness and life will be snuffed out like candles in a gale. It is her duty as a Padawan to stop him, her duty to fight alongside her Master like she was always born to do.
Green and blue brandish against red, burning her eyes until they water. Jecki waits for the right moment, as Sol has always taught her. She sees it when the Sith is flung over a short drop, and she catapults herself after it, her vision tunneling. This is it. She can taste the coppery flavor of finality in the air. The Sith takes too long to find his bearings and she strikes one, two, three times against his helmet until it breaks.
Time stretches so thin that each breath feels longer than a life age of the stars themselves. Unmasked, she can see him for who he really is and Jecki chokes on her fury because they all trusted him, and he led them as lambs to the slaughter. She surges forward in a flurry of anger only to find that it costs her everything.
She made a mistake. She hadn’t realized until it was too late.
Her gaze flickers up to meet Qimir’s. His eyes are dark and impenetrable, even illuminated by the glow of their sabers. They both made a choice this night. Now the only thing left to do is accept it. When Jecki drops, eyes wide and dead, she finds herself falling into the Force. She finds herself falling back home.
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If Yord regrets anything in his final fleeting moments, it’s that he came too late to save his friends. He doesn’t have the time to regret anything else, though he is certain he could if he had the chance to ruminate on it. But in the milliseconds between one heartbeat and the next, as Qimir flings him forward and he stumbles to his knees, as Yord feels the darkness close around him, he knows there’s nothing left for him to do.
He catches a flash of white and sun-fire on the forest floor, the streak of a Padawan braid, the very moment Qimir snaps his neck.
I’m sorry. He’s dead before the thought can even find a foothold, but it burns itself into his retinas by the time his body falls. I wish I could have saved you. I wish I could have tried, says the shattered heart of a man too dead to do anything about it. Even in the afterlife, reunited with the beating heart of the galaxy, he finds himself wrestling with his guilt.
The Force replies with the breath of a thousand gods, a thousand lifetimes’ worth of promises made and kept, But you did. You already have and you already will.
All the spiritual beliefs of a billion untold cultures, societies living and dying and clawing for the truth, would still fall short of the reality of the Force and its place in the universe if ever they tried to explain it, though many have come close. If the Force were alive in the way of mortals, it might surmise that the Jedi and the Eirami have been among the closest.
Death is not the end. And there are more lives to be lived than just the one. Yord saved Jecki’s life centuries ago by giving up his own. They will meet again, just as they have countless times before. Orin will save Enya’s life once more, and Jecki will return the favor, and on they will go until the heavens themselves rain down upon the galaxy. Such is the way of limitless things like souls and atoms and star-born promises.
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supersaiyanjedi14 · 5 months ago
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So, um, I noticed something...
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According to Wookiepedia, Vernestra was born around 248 BBY, given she was 16 years old during the events of A Test of Courage in 232 BBY.
Also, the opening crawl of the first episode of The Acolyte establishes the show to take place a hundred years before the events of the prequel trilogy, placing the date at 132 BBY.
Therefore, basic math dictates that during the events of The Acolyte, Jedi Master Vernestra Rwoh is 116 years old.
A Hundred And Sixteen Years Old.
Wow.
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justhereforpirates · 4 months ago
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My fiance pointed out, the minute Plagueis showed up, The Acolyte became a Greek Tragedy
It’s pretty clear, he is going to learn how to create life from the force BECAUSE of Osha. It’s also clear, since Qimir is his apprentice and Qimir is looking for his own apprentice, that Qimir must be planning to kill Plagueis because of the rule of two. There can only be two Sith.
But Plagueis also lives until either right before Phantom or the end of Phantom, so obviously he doesn’t kill Plagueis. And Plagueis takes on a new apprentice, Sidious (and we don’t know how many in between Qimir and Sidious, given that Acolyte takes place in 132 BBY and Palpatine was born in 84 BBY and probably wasn’t apprenticed to Plagueis at birth there could have been a few apprentices between)
So I think it can be easily assumed that Plagueis is going to have to kill Qimir at some point. Sith don’t tend to let their apprentices just quit. But on the other hand, death is not always permanent in Star Wars for Sith (look at Maul, or Sidious himself) so I don’t think that means Qimir will necessarily be like permadead
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ceolona · 5 months ago
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Exhaustion
Is anyone else exhausted from all the hate over The Acolyte? Dial it back
Lesbian Space Witches
Seriously? That’s the click bait the internet is going with? Gotta suggest they’re all bumpin’ uglies at midnight, instead of reasonable analysis. Misandrous or Androphobic is more accurate. This is why I hate people. Grow up.
As far as the Thread is concerned, all we know is that “some” consider the Coven’s use of it as “dark”. That’s a whole philosophical discussion summed up on one sentence, provided with no context or depth.
Gotta love the good writing.
The Sith Are Back?
More likely than not, but…. Yes, Darth Smiley (Smilo Ren?) is running around with a red saber. That just means that the Kyber crystal was “bled” by its owner, probably a dark side adept. Sith use exclusively crystals from defeated Jedi. Mae, however, is playing flag football, trying to pull one off a Jedi beforehand, and chose not to take Indara’s blade after her death. None of this connects.
It also appears that the entire setup of the show is not “evil twin joins the Sith to avenge her slain family”, but “confused twin does tasks from a dark master that coincidentally involve her past but changes her mind”. After all, Mae did just go all “fuck this shit I’m out” in Ep4
Right there with you, girl!
Nerd Fight!!
A retcon or a fuck up? Ki-Adi-Mundi is currently hanging out with Sol and company. The Acolyte takes place in the year 132 BBY, but every other source has KAM born in 93 BBY, which is almost 40 years after Acolyte. Take that, along with future KAM denying knowledge of the Sith in Phantom Menace despite possibly encountering them four decades before he was born, and you have the grand battle that went on in Wookieepedia.
Not worth the effort to sort through.
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sapphicahsokatanoweek · 4 months ago
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What is a Crackship?
A crackship is a pairing that is considered bizarre or unlikely for some reasons, such as:
The characters have never interacted. An example of this would be Ahsoka Tano and Ursa Wren. They met during the Siege of Mandalore, but we never see them interact.
The characters have no chemistry. An example would be Ahsoka Tano and Letta Turmond. Although they met and interacted during the Clone Wars, their interactions were as investigator and suspect, with Letta dying before any change in dynamic occurred.
The characters are from different timelines or galaxies and could not have met. An example of this is Ahsoka Tano and Master Indara from The Acolyte series. As The Acolyte was set around 132 BBY, Master Indara had died nearly a hundred years before Ahsoka was born.
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knightsistersblog · 4 months ago
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A murder investigation brings Yord and Osha together again
|| 132 BBY|| "Life's challenges are not supposed to paralyze you, they're supposed to help you discover who you are." - Bernice Johnson Reagon
Rated M for mature themes later on
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handspunyarns · 2 years ago
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You Were Marked: Prologue.
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word count: 268
warnings: none
You Were Marked: Masterlist
In the year 1417 BBY, a small light cruiser left the planet Lew’el to explore the Far Outer Reach System for the purposes of enhancing their standing on the trade routes of the Old Republic. The planet they sought only had the numeric designation of 1207.3, but previous unmanned missions had shown evidence of similar topography and potential assets. The crew of 132 were led by four men: Admiral Stebor Bishop, Captain Clevan Festa, Lieutenant Thombo “Duke” Wellstan, and Lieutenant Hunter Fin-Marsam. The ship suffered major malfunctions upon entering the new planet’s atmosphere, and while the crew was able to land the ship without loss of life, they were unable to raise a strong enough signal for help, and so was presumed lost by their home planet.
The displaced Lew’elans still continued with their mission to research the planet’s assets for mining rights and discovered that the planet did indeed have geothermic properties in the case of a heretofore unknown variety of hydrogen gas. This gas, simply called “Mist” by Admiral Bishop, did have similar toxicity to hydrogen sulfide and hydrogen cyanide, but was not fatal to humans except for overexposure.
With no means of escape, Admiral Bishop declared that their ship be dismantled for the building of a colony where the 132 would live out their days on their new planet. Their new home would be called “Unmanarall” in the language of Lew’ela, and “Nowhere” in the New Basic language. Alone on their new planet, with no means of escape and without any outside interference, the 132 souls grew inward for the future generations to come.
You Were Marked: Next Chapter.
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