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1WildMassGuessing for ''Film/ANewHope''.
2----
3[[WMG: Vader wasn't really trying to kill Obi-Wan.]]
4He doesn't fight Obi-Wan very hard, and when Obi-Wan becomes [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence one with the Force]], Vader seems puzzled and starts rifling through the EmptyPilesOfClothing he left behind. There are a couple ways this can go:
5* He was reluctant to kill his old master. He says straight up that Obi-Wan "should not have come back." He knew where Obi-Wan was hiding on Tatooine, but he didn't hunt him down -- not just because of the canon reason that his memories of Tatooine were too traumatic (because he could still have just hired someone else to off Obi-Wan), but also because he didn't really want Obi-Wan dead. Vader duels Obi-Wan as a kind-of respected opponent. When Obi-Wan stops fighting, Vader hits him with what he expects is a non-lethal blow; he didn't expect it to actually finish Obi-Wan, hence his confusion at the empty robes.
6* He wasn't sure it even ''was'' Obi-Wan; it might have been a trap. When he senses Obi-Wan's presence, he says he hadn't felt it in a long time; it might have been so long, he might not have been sure what he was sensing. He knows it's possible to make a Force {{Doppelganger}}. Compared to their duel in ''Revenge of the Sith'', Obi-Wan spends less time trying to convince Vader that [[IKnowYoureInThereSomewhereFight there's still good in him]]; he even addresses Vader as "Darth", as if to acknowledge that Anakin Skywalker [[ThatManIsDead is dead to him]], something Vader doesn't think Obi-Wan would ever do (he underestimated how far Obi-Wan believes he's fallen). Vader checks the robes to see if the trap is about to spring.
7* He's just toying with Obi-Wan. He wants to show Obi-Wan how much better he's gotten ("I was but the learner; now ''I'' am the master.") His rather reserved lightsaber combat is reminiscent of what he does to Luke in ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack''; he could land the killing blow at any time, but he wants to show his opponent [[ArrogantKungFuGuy how much more powerful he is]].[[note]]Granted, we don't really see Vader ''ever'' exhibit that level of lightsaber skill outside the EU, but we can be pretty sure he's got it.[[/note]] When Obi-Wan stops fighting, Vader is disappointed that Obi-Wan has given up and kills him in disgust; it's only after this that Vader reflects on Obi-Wan's line, "If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine." Then he fiddles with the empty robes thinking about what Obi-Wan meant by that.
8
9[[WMG: Obi-Wan's Force Ghost mind-controlled Tarkin not to send the TIE fighters out.]]
10Tarkin may have been proud of the Death Star and [[SuicidalOverconfidence suicidally overconfident]], but he's not ''that'' stupid. He knew that the Death Star's main weapon was AwesomeButImpractical for anything other than killing planets; you'd need a few TIE fighters to deal with much smaller targets like the Rebel fleet. So why didn't he? Because Obi-Wan's Force ghost is clouding his judgment. It's the same influence that convinced Luke to relax and trust his instincts to nail the final shot into the Death Star. It may also have been what convinced Tarkin not to evacuate when told of the possible danger (although that might be really mean of Obi-Wan and just an unintended consequence of messing with Tarkin's head).
11
12If you're going to argue that there ''were'' TIE fighters flying around above the Death Star to meet the Rebels, the [[AllThereInTheManual supplemental material]] was quite clear that this had nothing to do with Tarkin. That was Darth Vader's personal fighter squadron; Vader saw what Tarkin couldn't, and not having the hierarchical clout to convince Tarkin to change his mind in time, he just did what he could with what he had.
13
14If you're going to argue that the Death Star had a crapton of surface lasers to deal with a group of small manned fighters -- which, in the film, actually do a great job of blowing up several rebels who are [[PlotArmor not Luke Skywalker]][[note]]Indeed, there were only thirty pilots engaged in the battle, and after ten minutes, only ''three'' were left -- one was an anonymous Y-wing who stayed back from the action, one was an X-wing flown by the single best non-Jedi starfighter pilot to ever live, and the third was, well, Luke freaking Skywalker[[/note]] -- well, it's not enough. First, those surface lasers cannot aim at fighters who get too close to the surface itself -- indeed, the whole point of ducking into the trench is to avoid the surface lasers. Second, the surface lasers are fixed to the Death Star and need to wait for enemy fighters to approach it. They can't deal with anything happening beyond their range -- like, say, travel a bit further out and catch Han and Chewie on the ''Falcon'' ambushing Vader and giving Luke a clear shot.
15
16If you're going to argue that Obi-Wan's Force ghost in ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack'' clearly says that he cannot interfere with the living world... well, he's just convincing people to do what they were always going to do. He can't ''make'' Luke put away his targeting computer and trust the Force, but Luke was already inclined to do it in the back of his mind. Similarly, he can't ''make'' Tarkin rely solely on his surface lasers, but Tarkin was already so cocky that it wouldn't have taken much to convince him. You can argue whatever you want, but this is WMG -- there's almost always room for it!
17
18[[WMG: Tarkin was [[TheMole a Rebel agent]].]]
19A much more difficult theory than the above, but also more interesting:
20* He intentionally lost the Battle of Yavin. The above WMG goes into detail about the implications of Tarkin relying entirely on the surface cannons and not sending out a ''single'' TIE fighter to deal with a pretty small Rebel attack force. (Remember, the ones we see up there were Vader's personal squadron.) Sure, the surface cannons took out most of the Rebels, but they left three of the most important pilots: the Rebels' AcePilot Wedge Antilles, ambush pilot Han Solo on the ''Falcon'', and of course Luke Skywalker.
21* He may have actually ''sabotaged'' the Death Star. It's not like anyone would have been able to stop him. He could easily get a droid to do things he's not technically competent to do. He may even have been ''entirely'' responsible for the destruction; Luke's torpedo wouldn't have done anything, and Tarkin worked the timing to make it look ''plausibly'' like Luke did it.
22* He was the one who leaked the Death Star plans to the Rebels. (This requires ''Film/RogueOne'' to have been an incomplete account of how the Rebels stole the plans.) If we assume that Tarkin personally blew up the Death Star, obviating the need for a weakness in the Death Star, he may have (unwittingly) set up the second Death Star to have a ''real'' vulnerability from their solution to a problem that didn't exist to begin with.
23
24Tarkin was a bit too conservative in maintaining his facade, which led to a lot of the good guys getting killed. He did save many of the important people, but he started to get [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone very guilty]] about all the blood on his hands, especially what with [[MoralEventHorizon blowing up Alderaan]]. That's why he refused to evacuate the Death Star when he knew it was going to blow up.
25
26Again, a difficult theory -- much easier to pin the "secret Rebel" label on one of the incompetent underlings from ''The Empire Strikes Back'' like Admiral Ozzel or Captain Needa.[[note]]Indeed, ''Empire's'' [[WMG/TheEmpireStrikesBack own WMG page]] suggests this for Ozzel. And an EU novel humorously described a backwater Imperial outpost that avoids retribution from the New Republic because its commander is a relative of Needa's and they ''pretend'' Needa's incompetence was really because he was secretly a Rebel agent.[[/note]] And you'd also have to throw out the ''Death Star'' novel, which suggests that Tarkin is so proud of the Death Star that he's [[CargoShip kind of got a thing for it]]. But... ''interesting''.
27
28[[WMG: Tarkin lives!]]
29"Evacuate? In our moment of triumph? I think you overestimate their chances." "Yeah, you're right, sir. ...Sir?"
30
31His escape pod barely survived the Death Star's explosion, and he was injured pretty badly. But he lived! He just lost his memory in the process, so he doesn't know who he is. That's some ''powerful'' FanficFuel, by the way. He could be a MadScientist! Or a Coruscanti rapper named Tar-Pac! Or could rediscover his memories in ''The Tarkin Identity''! Or he's living the life of a rich lounge lizard on some resort world somewhere, attended to by nubile {{Green Skinned Space Babe}}s! (Actually, he can keep his memory for that last one.)
32
33If you're going to argue that there's no way he could have made it off the Death Star in time, given the shot of him on the bridge right before it blows up, well... it was a ''really'' close call! Or that shot used a body double.
34
35[[WMG: Captain Antilles was an Imperial agent.]]
36The reverse insane Tarkin WMG!
37
38To make this work, we've got to assume he's been TheMole since ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'', which shows him at the meeting between Obi-Wan, Yoda, and Bail Organa deciding what to do after Palpatine wrecked everything. That makes him ''extremely'' valuable, given that he's one of the very few people privy to some very important information. This is how the Empire was able to track the ''Tantive IV'' to Tatooine; not only was the pilot working for them, but he knew where he was supposed to go!
39
40"That's funny. The damage doesn't look as bad from out here." You'll argue that's because Antilles was no fool, knew he couldn't win that fight, and allowed his ship to be boarded to distract the Imperials from Leia loading the plans on the droids and sending them to Tatooine's surface. No, it's because Antilles was hoping they'd ''catch'' Leia. Where was she going to go? Perhaps he didn't think Leia would use the droids -- all that was her quick thinking. Vader killed Antilles after that either because he was a bit ''too'' enthusiastic in not blowing Antilles' cover, or [[YouHaveFailedMe because Antilles botched the operation and allowed Leia a chance]].
41
42Killing Antilles was a mistake; there was no better positioned spy in the Rebellion, and the Rebellion quickly put the Empire on the back foot soon after.
43
44[[WMG: Alderaan was blown up in an attempt to turn Leia to TheDarkSide.]]
45Now, vanishingly few people even know that Leia is Force sensitive, let alone her relationship to Vader. But Leia was an Imperial Senator, and she met Palpatine (the EU shows it). And Palpatine could detect her Force sensitivity, even if Leia herself could not, and even if he couldn't detect where exactly she got it from. Palpatine saw an opportunity at a new apprentice -- yes, he had Vader, but Vader was cyborgified, moody, and unpredictable, and Sith have [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder a tendency to betray each other]] for more power.
46
47His plan was to do the same thing he did to Anakin -- kill Leia's loved ones, make it seem like it was partly her fault, break her spirits, and fill her with anger. It was a lot harder with Leia than with Anakin. First, she knows much less about her own power; second, she grew up with a much stronger [[MoralityPet moral compass]], especially from her adoptive father Bail Organa; and third, she's stronger-willed than the perpetually confused Anakin. But he had something he didn't when he tried to turn Anakin -- a planet-killing machine. The trauma of blowing up Alderaan would be so great that it would overcome even Leia's optimism.
48
49It didn't quite work like that, though. First, Palpatine didn't want to reveal his plans to anyone; he told Tarkin ''et al'' to blow up Alderaan, but he didn't tell them why. Tarkin was more concerned with finding the Rebel base and extracting that information from Leia and used Alderaan as a bargaining chip. Then he remembered that he was supposed to blow it up, and he did it anyway, after he [[ILied promised he wouldn't if Leia gave the base away]]. (Maybe he didn't expect Leia to actually give away the Rebels? Except she didn't -- she lied, too!) It did work to shock and disgust Leia, but not the way Palpatine expected; her anger was righteous rather than selfish, she resolved to work even ''harder'' for the Rebellion, and she never tapped into her Force power until Luke told her she could.
50
51[[WMG: Obi-Wan is the BigBad of the whole series.]]
52Completely insane, but this is WMG. There's a little room for such a theory:
53* He destroyed the sandcrawler himself and then tried to pin it on the Stormtroopers. His claim that "Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise" is belied by [[ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy what we actually see from them]].
54* He personally killed Owen and Beru to convince Luke to go on the heroic journey with him. Luke spent a lot more time than the film implies looking for R2, which would give Obi-Wan time to torch the Lars homestead and then come back to rescue Luke from the Tusken Raiders. Alternatively, he previously rigged the homestead to explode (something he'd been planning for ''years''), and Owen and Beru were killed in the explosion.
55* The targeting computers were almost absolutely necessary to make the shot on the Death Star; Obi-Wan was hoping Luke would believe he didn't need the computer and thus convince him to miss. He underestimated Luke's belief in the Force; either he's a lot more powerful than Obi-Wan thought, or Luke managed to succeed out of AchievementsInIgnorance (probably a combination of both).
56* After Luke blows up the Death Star, Obi-Wan spends ''Empire'' trying to separate Luke from the Rebellion, where he would be a great asset, hoping to undermine the Rebellion. Instead, he convinces him to fly to the middle of nowhere in Dagobah and train with Yoda. He then tries to convince Luke that he's not ready to face Vader, perhaps because he doesn't want Luke to find out that Vader [[LukeIAmYourFather is his father]]. Speaking of which:
57* He lied to Luke that "Vader betrayed and murdered your father." When Luke found out the truth and confronted Obi-Wan's ghost about it, Obi-Wan claimed what he said was MetaphoricallyTrue. But it doesn't jive with so ''specific'' a claim that Vader ''betrayed and murdered'' Anakin -- that's a very odd way to characterise Anakin's fall to the Dark Side.
58* And he set it all up in ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'' by refusing to finish Anakin off and allowing him to survive and become Darth Vader.
59
60[[WMG: Obi-Wan didn't lie; his memory is bad because of his advanced age.]]
61It's Alzheimer's Disease or whatever the equivalent is out there. He didn't remember that Darth Vader and Anakin Skywalker were the same person, and he rationalised his fragmented memories by thinking they were two different people and that one killed the other. He doesn't remember ever owning a droid (admittedly, he ''didn't'' own R2, but he doesn't even recognise R2 and he probably did own some other droids before). He has trouble remembering the deterioration of the Clone Troopers into the Stormtroopers and gives the new kind the aim of the old kind, hence why "only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise."
62
63Dying cures him; his Force ghost has perfect memory, and he can remember more clearly everything about Anakin and Vader. He just doesn't want to admit to Luke that his memory was ''that'' bad when he was alive (c'mon, it's ''embarrassing''), so he tried to claim what he said was MetaphoricallyTrue.
64
65[[WMG: Obi-Wan genuinely believed Anakin died on Mustafar.]]
66While it was still MetaphoricallyTrue to say that Darth Vader murdered Anakin, at least it was consistent in the belief that Anakin was dead. Obi-Wan sliced off most of Anakin's limbs and set him on fire; NoOneCouldSurviveThat, right? And insofar as it was ''possible'' to survive that, Obi-Wan might have had some insight that the process would save Anakin -- it would irrevocably limit Anakin's power with the Force. He'd never be the same again. There would be no incentive to keep him alive. When Obi-Wan reflects on Vader's revelation in ''Return of the Jedi'', he laments, "He's more machine now than man." How would he know this? He wasn't ''there'' for Anakin's transformation into a cyborg. But he could guess that's the only way he could have survived. And he knows that you need to be a fully living being to understand and use the Force.
67
68This also explains a number of decisions that Obi-Wan made that don't make much sense, such as allowing Luke to use his father's surname and live with his father's known relatives on Tatooine. And it makes for an interesting parallel; if Vader hadn't sensed Obi-Wan's presence in a long time, maybe the other way around was true as well, and Obi-Wan never realised that Anakin had survived until their fateful fight on the Death Star. Perhaps not even until the ''middle'' of the fight, hence why he addressed Vader as "Darth" earlier.
69
70The big problem with this theory is why Obi-Wan would refer to Anakin as a former student of his. But as with any WMG, this can be explained [[FanWank in a needlessly convoluted way]]: Obi-Wan saw Darth Vader take Anakin's place as Palpatine's apprentice and basically assumed that Palpatine had procured yet another Sith. After all, he's personally fought enough of them (Darth Maul, Count Dooku, Anakin). But this time, Obi-Wan is horrified to see this "new" apprentice using the Force in a way very reminiscent of how he taught Anakin. He doesn't make the connection that Vader does this because he ''is'' Anakin, but he does realise that his techniques are now being taught in service of TheDarkSide, and [[ItsAllMyFault he blames himself]]. He's not sure where Vader picked up those techniques, but they're ''his'', and he may as well have taught them to Vader. That's why he considers Vader his "pupil", and that he learned the techniques "before he turned to evil" -- they weren't evil when Obi-Wan was teaching them. Indeed, Obi-Wan steadfastly continues to teach Luke the Force in the same way.
71
72** Partially confirmed in the [[Series/ObiWanKenobi Obi-Wan Kenobi series]]. Before Third Sister reveals that Darth Vader is really Anakin made over as a cyborg, Obi-Wan does not know.
73
74[[WMG: Obi-Wan said Vader killed Luke's father because Luke asked specifically how his father died.]]
75Obi-Wan realised from this that Luke believed his father was dead, and he didn't want to go into detail explaining that he ''wasn't'' dead. Insofar as Luke's father was "dead", it was Darth Vader who killed him. Hence, [[MetaphoricallyTrue true from a certain point of view]]. When Luke asked him later why he didn't say his father was still alive, Obi-Wan more or less told him "YouDidntAsk". He might have been more straightforward if Luke had asked if his father was dead to begin with.
76
77[[WMG: Obi-Wan caused the red droid to malfunction]]
78Through the Force, Obi-Wan knew that R2-D2 had valuable information. He also vaguely recognized R2. After watching Luke over many years, Obi-Wan knew that if Luke and his family purchased R2, he could count on Luke to bring it to him (and also use that occasion to properly introduce Luke to his legacy). Ergo, from a safe distance, Obi-Wan caused the red droid to malfunction, knowing that they would buy R2, instead.
79
80[[WMG: Obi-Wan Kenobi and Uncle Owen were clones.]]
81Their names sound suspiciously like serial numbers: [=O-1=] and [=OB-1=]. Given that droids already have RobotNames like this ([=R2-D2=], [=C-3PO=]), who's to say the same doesn't apply to these two? Now, they clearly don't ''look'' like droids -- if they were droids, they were {{Ridiculously Human Robot}}s of the likes we've never seen in the ''Star Wars'' universe. But we do see a lot of clones, so perhaps they were clones of each other.
82
83Indeed, the original Obi-Wan we see in the prequels was ''not'' a clone; both of them were cloned from him. He saw the process up-close in ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'' and over time got curious enough to try it on himself. Interestingly, both "Ben Kenobi" and Uncle Owen, as seen in ''A New Hope'', seem to have aged more rapidly than they should have given the time interval between then and when we last see them in ''Revenge of the Sith'', suggesting the rapid aging didn't go off seamlessly. Obi-Wan set up the clones to watch Luke and Leia at the same time; the real Obi-Wan went incognito to train in the Force, much like Yoda did on Dagobah. O-1 was assigned to Luke, and OB-1 was assigned to Leia. Both were to have active roles in the kids' lives, but Bail Organa was promised that ''he'd'' get to raise Leia, so OB-1 was eventually booted off Alderaan and doubled up with O-1 on Tatooine. The mixup led to the idea that the ''real'' Obi-Wan was on Tatooine and not the clone, so R2 accidentally delivered the message to the wrong person. The real Obi-Wan (who may well have been long dead by then, so this would be his Force ghost) figures out what's up, manipulates the clone into training Luke in the Force, and then has the clone body self-destruct in the fight with Vader. Everything after that is the real Obi-Wan's force ghost talking to Luke, while taking on the appearance of his clone so as not to confuse him.
84
85The idea that Obi-Wan and Owen were clones is an old WMG, incidentally. It doesn't work well in the context of ''all'' the films, but in the late 1970s, right after ''Star Wars'' came out, this was actually a popular fan theory.
86
87[[WMG: Obi-Wan was assigned to ''raise'' Luke, but he didn't want to.]]
88The scene in ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'' was meant to assign guardians to Luke and Leia; Bail Organa volunteered to raise Leia, and Obi-Wan volunteered to take Luke. He then thought better of it and realised how poorly it went when he tried to train Anakin (and perhaps remembered how poorly it went when Qui-Gon tried to train him). He was afraid that with access to Luke from birth, he would accidentally make him a TykeBomb. But it was too late to back down, so he left Luke with Owen and Beru and hung around on Tatooine waiting until he was smart enough to prevent Luke from going down the same path Anakin did.
89
90[[WMG: The fellow who runs the cantina in Mos Eisely got scammed by the Jawas who sold the droids to Uncle Owen.]]
91That particular band of Jawas was known to sell junk quality droids. Unfortunately, the barman in the cantina had traded with the jawas before--not knowing--and he got several droids from these jokers that constantly gave him trouble. Eventually, he started really hating all droids and banned them from coming to the cantina.
92
93[[WMG: Obi-Wan let Vader win.]]
94Admittedly, this isn't much of a guess; if you watch ''A New Hope'' in isolation, this is the impression the film gives you, what with his ObiWanMoment and [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence Ascent to a Higher Plane of Existence]]. But in the context of the whole saga, especially given the ''last'' time the two characters fought in ''Revenge of the Sith'', it might seem a little odd that Obi-Wan would let Vader win.
95
96There are two obvious reasons for him to do so: first, he can "become more powerful than [Vader] can possibly imagine," and second, it distracts Vader while Luke and friends can make it to the ''Falcon'' and escape -- notice that Obi-Wan and Luke make eye contact before Obi-Wan raises his lightsaber and invites Vader to hit him. But there's another more subtle factor at play -- he needed Luke and Leia to get away from Vader, before Vader senses their power with the Force and realises exactly who they are. That's a big reason why Obi-Wan made eye contact; he had to convey to Luke that he was making a HeroicSacrifice. Luke didn't understand exactly ''why'', but he understood enough. There's also the likelihood that Obi-Wan had grown so disgusted with Vader's ego and obsession with showing his power that he wanted to deny Vader the satisfaction of a good fight.
97
98[[WMG: Obi-Wan let Vader win because he knew the future.]]
99It's established that Jedi can see into the future, to some extent. Obi-Wan could see that Vader would [[Film/ReturnOfTheJedi kill the Emperor]]. He couldn't see exactly ''how'', but he could see that Vader would be the one to do the deed. He needed Vader to stay alive, so he stopped fighting.
100
101[[WMG: Obi-Wan is trying to craft Luke into the perfect assassin.]]
102Obi-Wan went a little [[GoMadFromTheIsolation mad from the isolation]]. He starts getting ideas of revenge into his head, hoping to turn Luke into the machine that could kill Darth Vader and succeed [[MyGreatestFailure where he himself failed]].
103
104Obi-Wan's plan relies on a deliciously Dark Side-like manoeuvre: get Luke to hate Vader and the Empire. He tips off the Stormtroopers who shoot the sandcrawler and makes it a point to tell Luke, when he sees the slaughtered Jawas, that the Empire was responsible. He tells Luke in no uncertain terms that Vader killed his father (not that he ''is'' his father), hoping to give Luke the idea to kill Vader in revenge. He was responsible for Owen and Beru's death; another WMG on this page says he did it himself, and it's unlikely that the Imperials would have actually ''murdered'' Owen and Beru and burned the ranch rather than just arrested them and waited for Luke to come home. And he set up his fight with Vader to ensure that Luke saw Vader land the killing blow, giving him another reason to hate Vader. It would have worked, had Vader not revealed to Luke who he really was, something Obi-Wan didn't anticipate.
105
106[[WMG: Luke is on Tatooine because it's outside direct Imperial control.]]
107In canon, the main reason why the characters left Luke on Tatooine was because they knew Anakin was so traumatised by his experience there that he'd never go back there, even to look for his son. But that's not the smartest of reasons. So we add another layer to the Rebellion's reasoning: it's outside direct Imperial control. They knew it was out in the fringes of the Galaxy; in the Republic era, it was similarly outside government control, what with the legal slavery and everything. They guessed that if the Republic couldn't control it, neither could the Empire. Jabba the Hutt doesn't actually allow the Rebels to organise down there, but he also doesn't care whether news of the Rebellion filters out there, hence why Luke can learn about the Rebels' exploits and dream of joining them.
108
109[[WMG: Han believed a bit more in the Force than he'd like to admit.]]
110On its face, Han just didn't believe in the Force because he hadn't seen anything suggesting it existed. He's sceptical only out of pragmatism; he doesn't want to waste time trying magic powers when he can use a blaster that he knows will work. He would have been too young to remember very much of the old Republic, when Jedi were running around more openly.
111
112But it wasn't that long ago that Jedi were running around more openly. It's one of the biggest pieces of FridgeLogic in the entire saga; how, in the span of maybe twenty-odd years, did the entire Galaxy go from acknowledging the Jedi as an actual political entity, with their own council and everything, to believing they didn't exist? Sure, maybe nobody believed the stuff about the magic powers, thinking it was all a "hokey religion". But they were well-known. And specifically, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker were known as war heroes (said explicitly in the novelisation of ''Literature/RevengeOfTheSith''), so it's not out of the question that Han would have heard of them. And when all of a sudden he starts smuggling two guys with the same surnames, who are sufficiently connected to pay him 17,000 credits if they get to Alderaan, he starts freaking out about what exactly is going on. He doesn't want to get involved in something overtly political that could get him in trouble. He says bluntly that he doesn't believe in the Force and that's not why he's helping them (after all, he "[[NotInThisForYourRevolution ain't in this for [their] revolution]]"). Maybe he was a little ''too'' forceful, but whatever.
113
114Also, Han's shipmate Chewbacca ''was'' around for the old Republic stuff and met Yoda ''personally''. He should have been freaking out equally hard, for the same reason. Unfortunately, we [[TheUnintelligible can't always figure out what he's saying]].
115
116[[WMG: Darth Vader wanted the Death Star plans so he could destroy it himself.]]
117After all, he's a Sith, and the Sith are so prone to ChronicBackstabbingDisorder that they have a tradition of apprentices murdering their masters and taking over. That implies Vader would kill the Emperor and take his place. How much more spectacularly could he do it than by blowing the Emperor up along with his great superweapon? Vader never particularly respected the Death Star; he openly calls it "insignificant next to the power of the Force," which could be an additional suggestion that he thinks he knows more about the Force than his master.
118
119He ''knew'' the droids had the plans but let them escape from the ''Tantive IV'' to give himself PlausibleDeniability. Why steal the plans from the Empire when he can deflect suspicion by stealing them from someone ''else'' who stole them from the Empire? He would hunt down the original thief under Imperial authority, but instead of handing the plans back to the Empire, he would keep them for himself and pretend they had been destroyed. He didn't expect that his old friend/nemesis Obi-Wan Kenobi was down on Tatooine and would know how to keep the plans from him.
120
121[[WMG: Obi-Wan wasn't lying when he said, "Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise."]]
122We all know about the ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy. But that trope's [[Analysis/ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy Analysis page]] has several of explanations as to how they could hit the sandcrawler but not their human targets, including human psychology making it harder to hit humans than machines and at least a couple of instances where they don't ''want'' to hit their targets. Another explanation that page gives is that clones deteriorated between the prequels and the original trilogy; the original Clone Troopers whom Obi-Wan would have worked with didn't necessarily attend the Academy and were ''much'' better shots than what we saw in ''A New Hope''. Obi-Wan's been out of the loop for so long that he didn't realise that Stormtroopers weren't the crack shots the Clone Troopers were.
123
124[[WMG: Obi-Wan was being sarcastic when he said, "Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise."]]
125It's the opposite of the above WMG; Obi-Wan has been living on Tatooine for long enough to have predicted, heard, or even ''seen'' how the Clone Troopers would deteriorate. The burn marks on the sandcrawler are so erratic that he's snarking. He really means, "Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so ''imprecise''."
126
127[[WMG: Obi-Wan was being ''relative'' when he said, "Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise."]]
128Sure, Imperial Stormtroopers are bad shooters, but the Tusken Raiders are even ''worse''. At least in this particular context -- the Raiders' strategy would have been to spray fire indiscriminately as a distraction, as opposed to actually aiming for the sandcrawler's weak points. Sandcrawlers are huge; it might not be the most efficient to try and disable it from the outside. Imperials are taught to do everything by the book, but the Tusken Raiders are locals and have more experience in dealing with this kind of thing. They would be trying to lure the Jawas inside into a vulnerable position, then maybe sneak inside and take it over. Obi-Wan brings up the blast pattern as another example of absence of Raider strategy, just like moving in single-file to hide their numbers. The Raiders ''could'' aim more precisely if they wanted to -- indeed, in ''Film/ThePhantomMenace'' we see one hit a moving podracer -- but it would have been impractical in this situation.
129
130[[WMG: The "Stormtroopers with terrible aim" were actually Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru.]]
131The first time we see the Stormtroopers, they're actually pretty competent. They defeat the Rebels on board the ''Tantive IV'', capture the princess (with a single stun-hit!), successfully track down the Jawas who took the droids, and destroy the sandcrawler with their precise blast points. Then they presumably kill Owen and Beru and torch the Lars homestead. But we don't see it happen, and the bodies they leave behind are not really identifiable. Those bodies are the ''Stormtroopers''; Owen and Beru killed them and stole their armour.
132
133Owen and Beru are skilled combatants; that's why the Jedi were so confident leaving Luke with them. But they didn't like fighting and didn't want Luke to learn what they knew. However, once the Empire came for them, they realised the significance of the droids they bought and why Obi-Wan was so interested in Luke all of a sudden. They pretended to be dead so that it would be easy for Luke to go with Obi-Wan, then they followed him to the Death Star in Stormtrooper guise. Now, they start missing -- but they're not actually trying to hit Luke. Other Stormtroopers are easily swayed to leave him alone. Owen and Beru prove to be adept at obstructing the ''competent'' Stormtroopers and never letting them get to Luke, doing things like closing the blast doors.
134
135At the end of the movie, Owen becomes one of Vader's wingmen. He sees an opportunity to destroy not just the Galaxy's most terrifying mass murder weapon, but also Vader, his own step-brother, who so stained the family name. He would do this even if it cost him his life. At the end of the film, Owen "loses control" of his TIE fighter, clips Vader's wing, and sends him flying out into deep space. He didn't kill Vader, and he died in the Death Star's explosion, but he did give Luke the chance to blow it up.
136
137By ''The Empire Strikes Back'', the Stormtroopers are suddenly more competent (look at their performance in the Hoth battle). That's because now the traitors are no longer in their ranks causing trouble.
138
139[[WMG: The Grand List of Explanations for the ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy]]
140The Stormtroopers are such bad shots because:
141* They were inferior versions of the Clone Troopers we saw in the Prequel Trilogy. They weren't made from the same process, and possibly not from the same template. The Empire didn't want to spend the money on well-trained and well-developed clones like the Republic did.
142* They ''were'' made from the same template, but Jango Fett had twitchy aim. It was his [[AchillesHeel one weakness]].
143* Their equipment sucks. They can't aim in those helmets, especially in the dark. Heck, even when Luke put on the helmet for his disguise, his first comment was, "I can't see a thing in this helmet!"[[note]]That [[ThrowItIn wasn't in the script]] -- Creator/MarkHamill was commenting on the costume when he thought the cameras had stopped rolling. That just provides proof that those helmets are pretty useless.[[/note]] And if the Empire didn't want to splurge on the cloning process ''or'' the equipment, we can assume their blasters have crappy aim, too.
144* They have trouble shooting at human targets. They're fine with FacelessGoons, or aliens like Jawas, or big machines like sandcrawlers -- that allows them to shoot with precision. But they're reluctant to shoot humans. It's a known aspect of human psychology. Combine it with the idea that they're poorly trained or recently conscripted, and you've got a ''really'' ReluctantWarrior.
145* They've been subject to [[MindControl mind manipulation]]. The Republic never did this with its clones because it had at least ''some'' honour in fighting a war. Palpatine has [[CombatPragmatist no such honour]] and routinely overrides the clones' minds to prevent them from asking tricky questions. By the time of ''A New Hope'', they've been worn down so much mentally that they can't aim anymore.
146
147Or maybe they weren't so terrible after all, because:
148* The characters they miss all have PlotArmor. We don't see them shoot others too often, but when they do, they have a ''great'' hit rate.
149* Their blasters are {{Slow Laser}}s, meaning you see many more shots than you would from a conventional firearm. The same hit rate looks a lot worse coming from a Stormtrooper than from someone using a gun we're more familiar with.
150* Half the time, they're trying to let the heroes escape. Certainly this was the case when Luke and friends escape the ''Death Star''; the Stormtroopers are betting ([[NiceJobBreakingItHero correctly, as it turns out]]) that they'll lead them to the Rebel base. Leia seems certain that they let them escape.
151* They know not to aim at lightsaber users, who are damn good at ParryingBullets. They have orders to shoot, so they can't just hold their fire, but their aim is ''conveniently'' crap to prevent the Jedi from deflecting the lasers back at them. Maybe early in the film they wouldn't have expected to encounter a lightsaber user (it had been so long since anyone had used one), but they might remember what it was like in the old days when Jedi used them in battle routinely.
152
153[[WMG: The Empire had more saboteurs and Rebel sympathizers than one would expect.]]
154They pop up in the oddest places. On this page alone, we've fingered Tarkin himself. On ''Empire's'' [[WMG/TheEmpireStrikesBack WMG page]], we identify Ozzel. We've ascribed more complex motives to Darth Vader. Maybe there are more people on the inside helping the Empire.
155
156For instance, who would design the Death Star with such a fatal flaw? Sure, exhaust ports are necessary, and you can't design them with a cover because that would defeat the entire purpose of an exhaust port. But to route a port ''directly'' from the surface to the core of the station, such that a single well-placed torpedo could blow the whole thing up? That's inexcusable, no matter how impossible that shot might be. A Rebel sympathiser might well believe in the power of the Force and know a bit more about the capabilities of the pilot who would make that shot. Or maybe they were just fed up with Imperial arrogance and installed a deliberate design flaw in the hopes of embarrassing the Imperial leadership for not catching it, not expecting that any Rebels would actually make that shot.
157
158Or the guy who says, "Hold your fire, there are no life forms on board." The stupidity of that decision has been {{lampshaded}} for decades, in sources from ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuyPresentsLaughItUpFuzzball'' to ''Webcomic/DarthsAndDroids''. Was it really ingrained belief in inferiority of droids? Was it really extreme cockiness? Was it really extreme cost-cutting? It would be more logical to think that this particular guy was in on it.
159
160Or the TIE fighter pilot who clips Vader's wing and sends him flying off into deep space, out of control. He did that on purpose; he could see that his comrades were being treated as if they were [[{{Mooks}} totally expendable]]. The pilot, sensing his own impending demise, tried to make it count and rammed Vader into the Death Star. Except he missed, and Vader slipped out into space, [[NiceJobBreakingItHero allowing him to survive the Death Star's explosion]].
161
162* Confirmed for the first part in ''Film/RogueOne'' - the Death Star was purposely designed that way.
163
164[[WMG: Going around the planet to the rebel base ''was'' the fastest way to destroy it.]]
165The original Death Star's superlaser has a long cooldown time. In order to make their shot count, the Empire had to be in point-blank range, hence moving the whole thing around the planet.
166
167[[WMG: Franchise/{{Batman}} destroyed the Death Star.]]
168And we have [[http://web.archive.org/web/20140228003612/files.myopera.com/Sharky8U2/albums/4580632/death-star-batman.jpg the photo to prove it]].
169
170Come on -- don't act so surprised! You ''do'' know BatmanCanBreatheInSpace.
171
172[[WMG: Why Chewbacca didn't get a medal]]
173There are a whole host of [[FanWank long-suggested explanations]] for why Chewie didn't get a medal at the end of the film, some of which have appeared in semi-canonical sources or were hinted at in the ExpandedUniverse:
174* Wookiees don't believe in medals and honours. He was offered a medal but refused because it was [[AgainstMyReligion against his religion]]. Perhaps even Han (or someone else who knew Wookiees) told this to Leia and she knew not to offer it to begin with. Or, if you want to get funny, Han told this to Leia, but Leia didn't believe him, thinking he was trying a mean prank on his friend, only to offer it to Chewie and then get roared at and realise ''she'' was the one getting pranked all along.
175* Chewie refused it for symbolic reasons. He believed that blowing up the Death Star was winning the battle but not the war, and he wanted to make sure the Rebels won the war. (Indeed, this is exactly his reasoning in ''Webcomic/DarthsAndDroids''.)
176* The medals were given for destroying the Death Star. ''Neither'' Han nor Chewie were supposed to get one because they didn't actually hit the Death Star, but Han was a GloryHound who insisted on getting one for his role in giving Luke the clear shot. Chewie was more chill about it and just went to the ceremony.
177* Leia was [[FantasticRacism a little speciesist]] and didn't think Chewie deserved a medal. She did call him a "walking carpet" and didn't seem to like being around him. "I'd just as soon kiss a Wookiee" from the next film was meant to be ''particularly'' nasty, but Han didn't catch on.
178* Chewie and Han are HeterosexualLifePartners, and the medal Han received was actually meant for both of them.
179* Chewie already had a medal, having gotten it on Kashyyyk. It was just hidden under his thick fur.
180* Chewie was too tall for Leia to reach. He didn't want to bend down because it would have been offensive to him, and they didn't want to put Leia on a ScullyBox because it would have looked kind of stupid. Interestingly, this is not only mentioned in the EU, but it's also the reason out of universe; Peter Mayhew was that much taller than Carrie Fisher. (Mayhew joked that Chewie got compensation by getting [[TheUnintelligible the last line of the film]].)
181
182Chewie's lack of medal, and the unintentional insensitivity it showed from our heroes, is a problem that's bothered people for so long that they ''belatedly'' gave Chewie his medal in ''Film/TheRiseOfSkywalker'', perhaps just to [[{{Jossed}} get everyone to shut up about it]]. No can do -- this is WMG!
183
184[[WMG: The Death Star doesn't work properly on gas giants.]]
185That's why they had to move all the way around Yavin to aim at the Rebel base. The superlaser works not by hitting the planet really hard, but by causing a catastrophic reaction in the planet's core. On a smaller planet like Alderaan, it just blows up. But on a gas giant, it either wouldn't cause any reaction because gas giants have a ''solid'' core, or it would cause a really ''big'' reaction that would take out the Death Star along with it (or at least created a huge mess of radiation). There's also the possibility that it would have taken a long time to recalibrate the superlaser to account for the big gravitational effects that close to a gas giant, and the Death Star had to clear the planet's ''gravity well'' for an easy shot at the Rebel base.
186
187[[WMG: The Emperor put Tarkin in charge to cut Vader down to size.]]
188Palpatine knew that Vader was planning to betray him because, well, [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder that's what Sith do]]. Palpatine is trying to prevent that for as long as possible, and he can do it because while Vader has Force power, Palpatine has that ''and'' political power. He periodically bumps Vader down a peg to remind him who's boss. Tarkin was not even a military authority, but Palpatine chose him instead of Vader to command his new unstoppable superweapon.
189
190It's part of a greater [[FanWank arbitrary resolution]] to the problem of why, if Vader was the ChosenOne who was prophesied to bring balance to the Force and was instrumental to Palpatine's rise to power, he's basically a high-ranking grunt in ''A New Hope''. It also dovetails interestingly with a scene in ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsRebels'', in which Tarkin [[YouHaveFailedMe executes a couple of underlings for their failure]], whereas in this film he stops Vader from doing the same thing to Admiral Motti -- rather than trying to keep useful officers on board, Tarkin may simply be reminding Vader that on his battle station, ''he's'' the one arbitrarily deciding who lives or dies.
191
192[[WMG: The Cantina Band keeps playing the same two songs because...]]
193Take your pick:
194* They only know two songs.
195* They only know two songs in the genre the clientele actually tolerates. If they play their usual stuff, [[WretchedHive they'll be killed]].
196* It's part of a single ''really'' long song, which explains their stylistic similarity. It could be a suite or a concerto.
197
198[[WMG: Han was lying when he said the ''Falcon'' made the Kessel Run in twelve parsecs.]]
199We all know by now that a parsec is [[UnitConfusion a unit of distance, not time]]. This, therefore, became one of the most JustForFun/{{egregious}} mistakes in the saga. Fandom being what it is, the fans [[FanWank came up with a ton of reasons]] why it ''wasn't'' a mistake, concocting different versions of the Kessel Run which would be more impressive to do in a shorter distance, with everything from ferrying between two points moving away from each other to surviving a dangerous shortcut. That last explanation became canon, so ''officially'', it's not a mistake.
200
201But what if it wasn't the writers who made the mistake, but Han himself? Indeed, early drafts of ''A New Hope'' indicate that Han is ''deliberately'' making up his accomplishments and that Obi-Wan is not fooled by his "obvious attempt at misinformation." Indeed, if you look at Creator/AlecGuinness in the finished film, his expression shows just that. Han ''was'' making up the whole Kessel Run thing.
202
203There are two reasons why Han would make it up:
204* The first is that he's feeding Obi-Wan and Luke information he knows is nonsensical to see how much they knew about space travel. Presumably, Han would be more interested in transporting someone with no frame of reference for space travel; it feeds his ego, and he can rip them off by preying on their lack of knowledge. Obi-Wan made a face and made Han think twice about taking them; then Obi-Wan offered 17,000 credits, and Han figured he could do the job they wanted for real. (Obi-Wan's expression may well have saved the entire Galaxy; if he hadn't done that, Han would have taken the two of them on a joyride and they'd never have made it to the Death Star.)
205* The second is that Han really doesn't know what he's talking about. He's got a fast ship, but he blundered into it; even canonically, he [[LostHimInACardGame won it from Lando in a card game]]. Lando was the one who made it as cool and fast as it is. Chewie probably knows a lot more about how it works than Han does. Han's a little insecure about his lack of knowledge and tries to make up for it, but he can't do it realistically. Specifically, he wants the ship to be ''famous''; as a smuggler, he can't really do anything attention-grabbing in it (aside from outrun Imperial starships), but he also doesn't know what realistically he ''could'' do with it that would make it famous.
206
207[[WMG: The Death Star lives!]]
208It's extremely stupid to build an exhaust port that links the core directly to the surface if a direct torpedo hit could lead to the complete destruction of the station. But what if it couldn't? What if the Death Star was never ''completely'' destroyed?
209
210Indeed, when we see the destruction of the Death Star II over Endor, we see fragments of it break away. But we don't see that in the first one -- just a bunch of gases, a single fantastic flash centred exactly on the core. The first Death Star didn't blow up -- it explosively activated its hyperdrive! The Rebel engineers who were analysing the Death Star plans figured that a torpedo shot into the exhaust port would cause a devastating chain reaction, perhaps by destroying some important power relay or control mechanism. They ''theorised'' that this would blow up the station, but they turned out to be wrong.
211
212However, the inadvertent and violent hyperdrive activation slid the Death Star all the way out of the Galaxy. It popped out far, far away, out in the middle of nowhere, and the crew on board either didn't survive the journey or starved to death trying to survive. The Death Star, after a long time, became one of the many moons of a local gas giant. And that gas giant is our planet Saturn, and in RealLife it's the moon [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimas_(moon) Mimas]]. That crater that looks like the Death Star's superlaser ''is'' the Death Star's superlaser! (You'll be amused to know they [[ICallItVera named it "Herschel"]].)
213
214[[WMG: The red guy with horns in the Cantina actually was TheDevil.]]
215Hey, if you really will never find a more WretchedHive of scum and villainy, he'd fit right in.
216
217[[WMG: The red guy with horns in the Cantina is an [[Literature/ChildhoodsEnd Overlord]].]]
218Specifically, [[https://youtu.be/g6PDcBhODqo?t=28s this one here]]. This was before they started working for the Overmind. Heck, for all we know, the Overmind ''is'' the Force.
219
220[[WMG: Jabba was trying to get Greedo killed.]]
221Greedo has proven himself ridiculously incompetent over the years. If Jabba really cared about dealing with Han decisively, he would have sent someone like Dengar. But Jabba was just as pissed off at Greedo as he was at Han, if not more so. He sent Greedo to deal with him thinking one of them would get rid of the other, and the "winner" would be the one worth keeping.
222
223[[WMG: Han shot first because of the Force.]]
224He's a little Force sensitive -- not enough to do any cool Jedi stuff, but enough to pick up on Greedo's clear intention to kill him. While Greedo was boasting about how he'd love to see Han dead, Han senses the danger even before that and slowly reaches for his blaster. When Han's certain that Greedo is about to kill him, he shoots him. Or, if you insist that Greedo shot first, that's how Han was able to dodge Greedo's shot at point-blank range.
225
226[[WMG: Greedo ''did'' shoot first, but he was drunk.]]
227Jabba didn't trust Greedo to deal with Han when he had Fett and Dengar around. Greedo just happened to be in the cantina, [[DrowningMySorrows drowning his sorrows]] about never getting any respect from Jabba. Then he spots Han across the bar and sees his opportunity to make Jabba appreciate him. He confronts Han, takes a seat in the booth (because he's too drunk to stand), and tries to shoot Han point-blank. But he's so drunk he can't shoot straight. Han knew this and didn't see Greedo as a threat at all.
228
229[[WMG: Han's decision to shoot Greedo caused an AlternateTimeline.]]
230In the one where Han shot first, the old EU as seen in ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'' happens, and he more or less survives as a hero. In the one where Greedo shot first, ''Film/TheForceAwakens'' happens, and Han is eventually sidelined back into smuggling and killed by his own son.
231
232[[WMG: Greedo shooting first was InUniverse historical revisionism.]]
233Han really did shoot first. And after the Empire fell, Han Solo became a Galactic hero. But then someone found the security camera footage of Han and Greedo's encounter. If confronted, Han would have basically said it was self-defense; the footage doesn't have audio, so you can't hear Greedo threatening Han, nor do you know the context of the meeting. But the New Jedi Order probably wouldn't have liked the look, so they had the footage edited to make it look like Greedo had shot first. (R2 may have done the dirty work.)
234
235[[WMG: Vader and the Emperor destroyed the Death Star themselves in a FalseFlagOperation.]]
236[[CommonKnowledge Everybody "knows"]] that Luke Skywalker destroyed the Death Star with two proton torpedoes, but proton torpedoes [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything don't explode at a hot enough temperature to melt steel beams]]. Plus, look at how the Death Star explodes. It's gone in less than five seconds. A "chain reaction" can't cause such a rapid energetic disassembly. ''Obviously'', bombs were planted throughout the Death Star's superstructure. And Vader and Palpatine planted them, to give them an excuse to invade Tatooine and depose Jabba the Hutt. This explains why Vader escaped from the Death Star at the last minute -- he knew what was up! [[ConspiracyTheorist We're through the looking glass here, people! The Death Star was an inside job]]!!
237
238[[WMG: Vader and Obi-Wan had a crappy battle because one's a clunky cyborg and the other is an old man.]]
239After all, in ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'', these same two characters fought an epic and protracted sword battle. And that fight left a lot unsettled -- both parties survived, and both continued to wreak havoc against the other (in their own way). There was a lot of unfinished business between them. But neither was actually up for the fight. Obi-Wan had aged, and Vader had lost several limbs and been rather hastily [[UnwillingRoboticisation roboticised]]. Neither had actually kept up their swordfighting skills; Vader quickly became an Imperial administrator, and Obi-Wan was in hiding and out of practice. Also, Vader being the maelstrom of emotions that he is, he wasn't really engaged in the fight; he wasn't expecting Obi-Wan at all. After that fight, Vader realised how clunky his prosthetics were and upgraded them for his fight against Luke in ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack''.
240
241[[WMG: The base on Yavin 4 was ''not'' the Rebel Base.]]
242What kind of Rebellion, given the resources of its biggest base, would send out just thirty ships against the Death Star? It's not because the Rebellion is that small; General Taggi says "they're more dangerous than you realise." Nor is it the case that the Empire thinks it's just ''any'' base; Tarkin and Vader both mention that destroying the base will eliminate the entire Rebellion, suggesting that they believe all of the Rebellion's resources are down there. Leia figured out early on that the Empire was tracking the ''Falcon'' and didn't want to lead them to their ''actual'' base. Instead, she flew toward Yavin and had R2 surreptitiously send the Death Star plans to the real base. The real base then sees that there's a chance to blow it up, so they secretly hatch a plan with Leia -- have a minor battle with the few troops on Yavin and try their strategy on the Death Star. If it fails, they lose a minor base and lull the Empire into a false sense of security thinking they've eliminated the Rebellion, allowing for a later sneak attack. If it ''succeeds''... well, it succeeds spectacularly. And with a [[MillionToOneChance one-in-a-million shot]], they succeeded.
243
244Indeed, in ''Film/RogueOne'' we see the Rebels muster a battle fleet powerful enough to destroy two Imperial Star Destroyers and an orbiting space station, ''and'' launch a successful commando raid of the planet-side intallation. That might have been enough to scare Tarkin and the other Imperials into thinking that the Rebellion has enough firepower to win a battle with them if they get caught off-guard. That implies that there's a lot more to the Rebellion than we saw on Yavin. The only way that the Yavin base ''is'' all that's left of the Rebellion is if the Rebels really did dedicate most of their forces to the Scarif raid that got them the Death Star plans.
245
246[[WMG: Obi-Wan was a DeathSeeker.]]
247He [[ItsAllMyFault blamed himself]] for pretty much the entire rise of the Empire -- his insufficient training of Anakin, his approval of the Clone Army that morphed into the Stormtroopers, his ineffective supervision of the Jedi Council, his CowboyCop tendencies, and his failure to finish Anakin off on Mustafar when he had the chance. He had long passed the DespairEventHorizon -- but under Jedi teaching, he [[ICannotSelfTerminate couldn't just off himself]]. He needed to die in a way that advanced the cause of the destruction of the Empire. He jumped at the opportunity to take Luke on an adventure, and then on the Death Star, he fashioned himself a SuicideMission. He didn't try to win his fight with Vader. But he didn't allow Vader to win until Luke showed up -- that gave Obi-Wan the chance at a useful death, wherein he would distract Vader and allow Luke and friends to escape. He then becomes a Force Ghost and can not only continue to help Luke, but also escape his despairing physical form and reunite with his fellow Jedi.
248
249[[WMG: Boba Fett killed Owen and Beru.]]
250We know that:
251* Boba Fett was on Tatooine at the time.
252* It was not in the interests of the Stormtroopers to actually ''kill'' Owen and Beru; they could have just arrested them and waited for Luke to return to them with the droids.
253* Even if circumstances dictated that the Stormtroopers ''did'' need to kill them, they would not have been [[KickTheDog needlessly cruel and petty]] as to cook the flesh off their bones and torch their homestead.
254* Stormtroopers blasters should not be powerful enough to do leave a frigging skeleton behind. But Boba Fett ''does'' have weapons that can do that. It's quite telling that in ''Empire'', Vader sees fit to specifically tell Fett, "No disintegrations!" -- implying that it was a thing he did.
255
256[[WMG: Owen and Beru died by accident.]]
257The Stormtroopers were interrogating them but accidentally killed them, perhaps by exhibiting their [[ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy usual firearm accuracy]]. The Stormtroopers then deliberately started the fire to MakeItLookLikeAnAccident. Alternatively, their poor aim started the ''fire'', and Owen and Beru weren't able to escape in time, succumbing to smoke inhalation even after they made it outside; the Stormtroopers' armour could probably filter out the smoke. It might have been a little like [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3Kor78QPNw this]] ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken'' sketch.
258
259[[WMG: Chalmun, the Wookiee who owned the Mos Eisley Cantina, fought in the Battle of Kashyyyk.]]
260Hence why droids aren't allowed in his bar. Officially (well, per some EU sources), droids are unwelcome because they count towards the maximum occupancy limit but don't drink. But ''(a)'' the Cantina is in a WretchedHive, not the kind of place to care about such rules as "maximum occupancy"; ''(b)'' it's not unheard of for robots to consume alcohol, like [[WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}} Bender]]; ''(c)'' the bartender specifically says, "We don't ''serve'' their kind here," implying that there must be ''something'' you'd serve to a droid in a bar. Chalmun has a particular bugbear here.
261
262[[WMG: Tarkin was going against the Emperor's wishes when he destroyed Alderaan.]]
263Make no mistake, Emperor Palpatine intended for the Death Star to blow up highly populated planets -- but not Alderaan. Not because he [[EveryoneHasStandards has standards]], but because [[PragmaticVillainy Alderaan was a Core World and too valuable to the Empire]]. And even Palpatine wouldn't be able to control the outrage among Imperial citizens at its government destroying a peaceful and important world. Furthermore, the superlaser hadn't been properly tested (Tarkin says he's looking for "an effective demonstration"), so Palpatine would want to do so out in the middle of nowhere. If that test is successful, it could even serve to expand Imperial influence; blow up a populated planet in the Outer Rim, and they'd show their ruthlessness.
264
265But Grand Moff Tarkin was too emotional about Leia's defiance, and drunk with the power of the Death Star, he acted unilaterally and blew up Alderaan. Palpatine was ''pissed'', and Tarkin just hung around on the Death Star for a bit trying to avoid his boss giving him a chewing out. That chewing out would probably have been [[YouHaveFailedMe fatal]], but the destruction of the Death Star made the point moot.
266
267[[WMG: The Empire distributes {{Orwellian|Retcon}} anti-Jedi propaganda.]]
268While the Jedi were pretty well-known before the rise of Emperor Palpatine, everyone treats the ancient religion as either a dying cult or something that has never existed. This is because of Imperial propaganda; either people believe it, or they believe other people who believe it. It's so effective that a smuggler like Han, who's been from one side of the Galaxy to the other, and who has no reason to believe Imperial propaganda, believes the Force doesn't exist. Darth Vader is a considerable oddball and liability for his continued belief in the Force, and Admiral Motti was indeed fulfilling his Imperial duty in challenging Vader's naked assertion that the Force exists and is more powerful than the superweapon they built. Tarkin is internally freaking out at Vader choking Motti; if Vader killed him with the Force, the whole PropagandaMachine could collapse.
269
270[[WMG: Obi-Wan told Luke to forgo the targeting computer because it was made faulty after the Battle of Scarif.]]
271This would have to be the case due to how Pedrin Gual's X-Wing was blasted apart, so Luke can't have flown that one; meaning Luke's X-Wing must have been a rush-job originally assigned to one of the survivors of Scarif whose numbers-stripes were painted on while Dodonna was briefing Red and Gold Squadrons about the Death Star's weakness.

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