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Tropes specifically applying to the characters based on their appearances in Star Wars Legends can be found here.

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This page is specifically for Outer Rim planets without a known sector.


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Other Outer Rim Worlds

Akiva

Location: Akiva System, Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Ahia-Ko (extinct), Uugteen
Immigrated Species: Human
Capital: Myrra

A hot jungle planet, Akiva was the location of Confederate droid factories during the Clone Wars. Following the end of that conflict, the ruling Satraps allied themselves with the Galactic Empire, who occupied the world. A few months after the Battle of Endor, a group of Imperial leaders held a summit on Akiva that was ultimately broken up by an uprising by the population and a New Republic fleet, after which Akiva joined the New Republic.

    Mister Bones 

Mister Bones

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mister_bones_sw.png
"I PERFORMED VIOLENCE. ROGER-ROGER."

Model: B1-series battle droid

Appearances: Aftermath | Life Debt | Empire's End | Poe Dameron

"A HUG IS LIKE VIOLENCE MADE OF LOVE."

A B1-battle droid rebuilt and upgraded by a young Temmin Wexley to serve as his friend and bodyguard.


  • Attack! Attack! Attack!: Though certainly dangerous, he tends to get damaged because he rushes into combat without a plan beyond stabbing everything to death.
  • Blade Below the Shoulder: As shown in the official poster released with Aftermath: Life Debt.
  • Blood Knight: He loves violence.
  • Collateral Damage: During the Battle of Jakku, Mister Bones saves Temmin by killing the drivers of an AT-ST chasing him. Unfortunately, two New Republic A-Wings flying by destroyed the AT-ST on a strafing run, destroying Mr. Bones.
  • Dance Battler: He's been upgraded with several extra joints, making him extremely fast and flexible.
  • Expy: Of HK-47, being a Laughably Evil murderous red droid. He was originally intended to be a Canon Immigrant version of HK-47 before the Lucasfilm Story Group vetoed the decision to integrate him into the novel.
  • Glad He's On Our Side: Jas says this of him.
  • No Indoor Voice: ALL HIS DIALOGUE IS CAPITALIZED TO SHOW THIS.
  • Personality Chip: An adult Snap Wexley still carries Mr. Bones' personality chip with him. Poe uses it to reprogram an unhelpful Clone Wars-era commando droid into a fighter.
  • Punny Name: He's a rebuilt "B1" battle droid named "Bones".
  • Retro Upgrade: He's a B1 battle droid that Temmin upgraded into a very effective killing machine.
  • Red and Black and Evil All Over: He's described as being black and red and, while he's not evil, he certainly loves violence.
  • Robot Buddy: To young Temmin Wexley after his mother leaves him to join the Rebellion.
  • Robotic Psychopath: Deeply enjoys violence.
  • Shout-Out: At one point in Empire's End, he uses the phrase "meatbags", à la HK-47.
  • Skeletons in the Coat Closet: He gets his name from the numerous bones that decorate his body.

    Esmelle 

Esmelle

Species: Human

Appearances: Aftermath

The sister of Norra Wexley, aunt to Temmin Wexley, and wife of Shirene. She raises Temmin after his mother leaves to join the Rebellion.


    Shirene 

Shirene

Species: Human

Appearances: Aftermath

The wife of Esmelle.


  • Brutal Honesty: Criticizes Norra for leaving her son to join the Rebels but she's a lot nicer about it than Esmelle.
  • Opposites Attract: She's described as being Esmelle's opposite in both appearance (Esmelle is thin, pale, and silver-haired while Shirene is heavier, dark-skinned, and dark-haired) and personality.

    Brentin Lore Wexley 

Brentin Lore Wexley

Species: Human

Appearances: Aftermathnote  | Life Debt | Empire's End

The husband of Norra Wexley, and the father of Temmin "Snap" Wexley. Years before the Battle of Endor, he relayed messages for the Rebel Alliance, but was soon discovered and arrested by the Empire, sent to a prison labor camp on Kashyyyk called Ashmead's Lock.


  • Manchurian Agent: At some point, per Palpatine's contingency plans, Rax had the prisoners at Ashmead's Lock implanted with bio-chips in their brains that would turn them into drones in an attempt to assassinate New Republic command if they were rescued.

    Akivans on Other Pages 

Andelm IV

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/adelma_4_city.jpg
Location: Outer Rim Territories

An Outer Rim planet with deposits of dedlanite, which is used in the manufacturing of blasters. After the destruction of the Death Star in the Galactic Civil War, Chewbacca was stranded on the world after his A-Wing crashed there. At the same time, Jaum was converting citizens into slaves for his mining industry, but an escaped slave named Zarro managed to get Chewbacca's help to end Jaum's tyranny.

    Zarro 

Zarro

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zarro_sw.png

Species: Human

Appearances: Chewbacca

A teenage girl that Chewbacca meets after crash-landing on Andelm IV. She wishes to liberate her people, who have been enslaved by Jaum to work as miners.


    Arrax 

Arrax

Species: Human

Appearances: Chewbacca

The father of Zarro. When he was unable to repay his debts to Jaum, he and Zarro were taken by him as his slaves.


    Jaum 

Jaum

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jaum_sw.png

Appearances: Chewbacca

A mining tycoon who uses slave labor and is trying to cut a deal with the Empire.


  • Arc Villain: He is the main antagonist of the Chewbacca comic.
  • Bad Boss: He executes one of his men after he reports a Wookiee attacked him in the mines, assuming the man was high on spice.
  • Bizarre Alien Biology: He doesn't breathe oxygen and has to wear a special gas mask. At one point, he detaches one of the tubes and sprays some of the gas into a human's face to torture him.
  • Evil Debt Collector: How he gets most of his slaves.
  • Villainous Friendship: He is friends with Tyvak, his Shistavanen bodyguard and second-in-command. He is outraged when Chewbacca kills him, although being a pragmatic businessman he offers to pay-off Chewbacca with Tyvak's share to get him to stop attacking his operation.

Arvala-7

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/arvala_7_sw.png
Location: Outer Rim Territories
Immigrated Species: Jawa, Nikto, Ugnaught

An arid desert world that is home to vapor farmers and travelling Jawas. A compound of Nikto criminals disrupts the peace of the planet in the aftermath of the Galactic Civil War until a Mandalorian bounty hunter arrives to claim a target from their stronghold.


  • Single-Biome Planet: It is a desert world that is covered in hardened mud flats, mountains, canyons, and numerous caves that make it a decidedly difficult planet to navigate on foot.

    Kuiil 

Kuiil

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_mandalorian_1.jpg
"I have spoken."

Species: Ugnaught

Performed by: Misty Rosas
Voiced by: Nick Nolte
Appearances: The Mandalorian

An Ugnaught vapor farmer who was formerly enslaved by the Empire and worked his way out of servitude. He offers his assistance to the Mandalorian when he arrives on Arvala-7, hoping that he will rid his valley of the criminals who have disrupted the peace there.


  • Amazon Chaser: He takes a moment to lightly flirt with the beefy, battle-hardened Cara Dune when he meets her.
  • Determined Homesteader: He doesn't like the way his world has been trespassed upon by criminals and mercenaries and seeks to help the Mandalorian wipe them out to return a sense of normality to the planet.
  • Gadgeteer Genius: He was able to restore function to an IG droid that had its computer core shot up with what is far from a state of the art workshop. He also improved the construction and design of the Child's hover-pram while on the Mandalorian's ship, using just whatever happened to be available. He was also instrumental in reassembling the Razor Crest after recovering the parts stolen from the Jawas, as Mando said it'd need a service facility for the job.
  • Headgear Headstone: Din Djarin gives him a proper burial and rests Kuiil's cap on top of the grave.
  • Horse of a Different Color: He tames blurrgs to use them as mounts and working animals.
  • Indentured Servitude: Says that he worked off his indenture for "three human lifetimes" before coming to Arvala-7. Most recently for the Empire.
  • Ink-Suit Actor: Many fans and reviewers with amusement that Kuiil's face basically just looks like if Nick Nolte was an Ugnaught.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: He's unapologetic about the work he did for the Empire, when Cara (an ex-Rebel) confronts him about it. To be fair, he had no choice in the matter, being an indentured servant, but he worked long and hard on the Empire's behalf to earn his freedom.
  • Mysterious Past: He declines the Mandalorian's offer to have him join his crew as he has spent much of his life working to get out of servitude and become independent. In "The Reckoning," he reveals that he was an indentured servant for the Empire.
  • Nice Guy: He's a bit gruff, but he treats everyone he meets with due respect and even refuses the Mandalorian's offer of reward money and a job for his services. He's on friendly terms with the local Jawa clan, and even agrees to join the Mandalorian on his mission to confront the Client and his Imperial backers on Nevarro, because he believes saving the Child is important and the right thing to do.
  • Sacred Hospitality: Refuses any payment from the Mandalorian due to him being his guest, despite all the help he provides to the Mandalorian.
  • Sacrificial Lion: Is the first major character of The Mandalorian to die, shortly after Moff Gideon makes his appearance.
  • True Companions: He earns Din and Grogu’s trust thanks to his loyalty and kindness to them. Din is disappointed when Kuill turns down a position on his ship and is deeply saddened by his demise.
  • Verbal Tic: When he feels he has spoken enough on a topic and will take no more argument, he will declare "I have spoken". He also uses it as a goodbye. "Guns for Hire" revealed that this is apparently a trait of Ugnaughts in general, as Din encounters another group of them that also use the phrase.

Ashas Ree

Location: Outer Rim Territories

A remote, forested planet with a remote trading outpost as the only sign of civilization. It's a beautiful place, but has a very dark history, having once been ruled by the Sith.


  • Beautiful Void: A beautiful, forested planet with bioluminescent insects... that is also completely uninhabited, with the one outpost having been abandoned and covered in messages advising visitors to "Beware. Evil. Get Away."
  • Schrödinger's Canon: In Legends, Ashas Ree was one of the worlds of the ancient Sith Empire, situated between Korriban and Ziost and near Dromund Kaas. An ancient Sith Lord abandoned a holocron there that taught the fallen Jedi Freedon Nadd the secrets of the Dark Side and let him take over Onderon.
  • Single-Biome Planet: Appears to be completely covered in forest.
  • Temple of Doom: Houses an ancient, long-buried Sith temple absolutely riddled with booby traps and containing a sinister relic.

Askaji

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Askajian

The homeworld of the Askajians, which allied with the New Republic in the waning days of the Galactic Empire. The Askajians were divided into tribes ruled by a chief. The planet is also sometimes known as Askaj.


     In General / Askajians 

     Askajians on other pages 

Bith / Clak'dor VII

Location: Bith System, Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Bith

The swampy jungle homeworld of the Bith. Centuries prior to the rise of the Empire, a terrible civil war between two nation states devastated the planet's ecology and drove most of the population off-world to colonies. They remaining population quarantined the planet, forbidding any offworld Bith from returning, and focused on healing it. There efforts were largely ineffective due to rapidly mutating flora and fauna caused by the fallout from radiological and biological weapons. After centuries of being ignored by the Republic, the Bith sided with the Separatists during the Clone Wars and faced harsh reprisals from the Empire in the aftermath.


  • All There in the Manual: Most information about the planet and Bith culture comes from source and guidebooks.
  • Civil War: The city-states Nozho and Weogar waged a very short one that ended up rendering a significant portion of the planet uninhabitable.
  • Domed Hometown: What cities remain are built under domes within mountain ranges and expand both down underground and up higher onto the mountains.

    Bith 

Bith

The natives of Bith, they are a musically inclined species but are also commonly found working as scientists and engineers. Due to the civil war and subsequent quarantine that prevents any offworld Bith from returning to their homeworld, most Bith embrace pacifism and view war with wariness. However, many Bith did offer their services to the Rebellion as spies due to their persecution by the Empire and outrage over Alderaan's destruction.


  • Alien Hair: Of the Tenctonese variety, with all Bith being entirely hairless with large craniums.
  • Bizarre Alien Biology: They lack noses, and instead have an organ underneath their facial flaps which they use to smell.
  • Humanoid Alien: They have the same basic humanoid body structure as most other species in the galaxy.
  • Super-Hearing: Bith have extremely sensitive hearing, which allows them to separate and isolate sounds. This is what causes so many Bith to become musicians or enter other fields where their hearing allows them to contribute more or give them an advantage over most other species. However, their hearing is so sensitive that sonic grenades can make their heads explode.

Carlac

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/carlacmingpovillage_afin.png
Location: Carlac System, Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Human (Ming Po)

A snowy world that was home to the Ming Po. During the Clone Wars, the Death Watch temporarily set up camp on Carlac, abusing a local Ming Po village.

    Pieter 

Chieftain Pieter

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pieter_sw_6534.jpg

Species: Human (Ming-Po)

Voiced by: Phil LaMarr
Appearances: The Clone Wars

The elder of a village of Ming Po on the planet Carlac. Chieftain Pieter and his people were terrorized by the Death Watch during the Clone Wars.


  • Facial Markings: Like the rest of his people, he has several marks on his face, with three blue diamonds under his eyes.
  • The Leader: Of his village.
  • Too Dumb to Live: While he can't really be blamed for his anger, his aggressive confrontation with Pre Viszla, who Pieter knows is ruthless and dangerous, was just asking for the Death Watch to attack his village.

    Tryla 

Tryla

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tryla_sw_940.jpg

Species: Human (Ming-Po)

Voiced by: Catherine Taber
Appearances: The Clone Wars

"We were kidnapped from a nearby town. We are a simple people. We trust easily, and we were betrayed."

The granddaughter of Chieftain Pieter, she was one of several villagers that were kidnapped and made to serve the Death Watch. She ended up getting killed by Pre Vizsla, who is the leader of the Death Watch.


  • Facial Markings: She has several markings in a pattern on her face. Whether they are tattoos or more temporary markings is unknown.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: She throws herself in front of her grandfather to prevent Pre Vizsla from stabbing him, only to be killed herself.
  • Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: With the Darksaber by Vizsla.
  • In the Back: When Vizsla stabs her, the Darksaber goes through her back.

Chad

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Chadra-Fan

    Chadra-Fan 

Chadra-Fan

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chadra_fan_sw.png

A species of meter-high rodent-like humanoids with bat-like faces.

For information on their Legends depiction, see here.


  • Bizarre Alien Biology: They have two hearts and require only three hours of sleep a day.
  • Funny Animal: They're just anthropomorphic mice / bat people.
  • Little People: The average height for their species is about a meter tall, causing some people to mistake them for children when combined with their squeaky voices. Chadra-Fan can get very annoyed by this as it causes them not to be taken seriously.
    Kriki: I wanted adventure, but no one seems to take me seriously.
    Pook: It is probably because you are diminutive and furry, and you have a high voice. These traits combine to trick the human mind into thinking you are a child or a pet because humans are of lesser intellect.
  • Super-Hearing: They have highly sensitive ears that allow them to hear outside human spectrums.

    Chadra-Fan on other pages 

From Chad

  • Orka on the Colossus page.
  • Doctor Kisma Uttersond on the Nihil page.

Unknown homeworld

Corvus

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Immigrated Species: Human
Capital: Calodan

A forest planet that has suffered many fires from the Empire and the tyranny of its Magistrate.

    Morgan Elsbeth 

Magistrate Morgan Elsbeth

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/eolwtj7xeaegx2g.jpg
"How many lives is the knowledge I possess worth to you? One? Ten? How about a hundred? The lives of these citizens mean nothing to me! Now, because of you, these people will suffer!"

Species: Human, Nightsister

Portrayed by: Diana Lee Inosanto

A former Imperial official who helped oversee the construction of the Imperial Navy. She now rules over Corvus as a tyrannical ruler strip-mining the planet to provide resources to remnants of the Empire, and owns a spear that's made of beskar. However, there's more to her than meets the eye...


  • Ambiguous Situation:
    • Just what is she? She appears to be a normal human in contrast to the white-skinned Dathomiri Nightsisters, but feels an extremely strong kinship with them, and it's implied that she was even present to see them wiped out. Ahsoka seems to consider her a Nightsister in her first appearance in The Mandalorian, referring to them as "her people". Despite being able to wield some Nightsister magick, she's only pronounced a full Nightsister in her final episode, when she gets her trademark facial markings and more powers. It's possible she was a human who the surviving Peridea Nightsisters used as an intermediary, but that doesn't explain why she considered herself a Nightsister beforehand. It's also possible she was adopted into the clan, though it's unknown where she came from. Tales of the Empire reveals she once had the Nightsister facial markings during the Battle of Dathomir and most likely used makeup to give herself a normal human skin pigmentation, while distancing herself from the tragedy Grievous and his Battle Droid armies inflicted on her people.
    • Morgan's exact relationship with the Imperial Remnant isn't entirely clear. Unlike Imperial warlords like Moff Gideon, she employs mercenaries rather than Stormtroopers, and the only people associated with her who show any dedication to the Empire are employees of a factory she owned, but as she seemingly didn't serve in the military, these may be all she ever had to work with. Furthermore, while Captain Pellaeon, who serves on the Shadow Council, is as avid a loyalist of Thrawn's as Morgan is, they're never shown to be communicating or working together despite their mutual employer and Pellaeon's insistence to the Council that Thrawn will eventually return; whether this means that Pellaeon is covering for Morgan until she can rescue the Grand Admiral (in which case, their lack of open cooperation may just be to cover up that Thrawn has yet to return), or if he's just bluffing and the two work independently of each other, is unclear.
  • Ascended Extra: Morgan goes from a Villain of the Week on The Mandalorian to The Heavy in Ahsoka. Justified, as Morgan is primarily an opponent for Ahsoka, rather than Din Djarin (who essentially stumbled into their conflict while on his own journey), so Morgan would naturally be more prominent in Ahsoka's own series.
  • Badass Normal: She may be an ordinary human, but she's able to match Jedi warrior Ahsoka Tano blow for blow during their duel. Subverted when it's revealed she's descended from the Nightsisters.
  • Because Destiny Says So: She believes it is her fate to find Thrawn.
  • Broken Pedestal: By the finale of Ahsoka, her fanatic respect for Thrawn is eroded when he supports her being left behind in the name of Imperial goals. While agreeing to stay behind, she quietly rebukes him with "For Dathomir".
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: During the Imperial era, Morgan had several manufacturing interests in her name, assets which she makes good use of in Ahsoka to build the Eye of Sion for her extragalactic journey to find Thrawn.
  • Cool Sword: She is gifted the Blade of Talzin in the finale of Ahsoka, which is a curved sword with a blade burning with green magick fire. It proves to be capable of deflecting a lightsaber's blade and slashes through one of their handles with ease.
  • Dark Action Girl: A tyrannical magistrate who happens to be exceptionally skilled with a spear, enough to give Ahsoka a hard fight. Presumably comes from being a descendant of the Nightsisters.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: Her people were massacred during the Clone Wars, and she channeled that anger into leading the production of Imperial war machines, such as Star Destroyers. Given that she was a Nightsister who survived General Grievous's massacre of her people, it's unsurprising that she wanted to help the new Empire at the time of its founding build up a massive military so other worlds can suffer the way her people suffered at his Battle Droid minions and lightsabers.
  • Devil in Plain Sight: Appears at first to be an unabashed minor tyrant of an obscure planet ruling through a small private army and casual violence on her citizens, but is actually a Corrupt Corporate Executive, Imperial loyalist, and Nightsister witch who simply cloaked her loyalty by using non-Imperial forces, dead set on returning Thrawn to the Galaxy.
  • The Dragon: She's revealed to be a high-ranking henchwoman for Grand Admiral Thrawn.
  • Evil Is Petty: When Din and Ahsoka turn the tide against her, she coldly orders the villagers slaughtered just to spite them.
  • Fights Like a Normal: While she gives no indication of it during her debut in The Mandalorian, she's a descendant of the Nightsisters and is Force-sensitive, able to wield their magicks.
  • Genocide Survivor: She's a Dathomirian Nightsister, and like Merrin, she's a survivor of the Separatist attack that all but destroyed her people.
  • Half-Human Hybrid: She certainly looks human enough, but she's a descendant of the Nightsisters of Dathomir, which presumably makes her at least part-Zabrak.
  • The Heavy: Of Ahsoka. She is freed in the Cold Open of the first episode and leads the group working to retrieve Thrawn from his exile, so that he can take over as the Big Bad of the New Republic era.
  • Hoist by Their Own Petard: After Morgan destroys one of Ahsoka's lightsabers in their final duel, Ahsoka manages to steal the Blade of Talzin and uses it to kill Morgan.
  • Irony: For being a descendant of the Nightsisters who survived the Separatists's genocide of her people, Morgan is full of ironies.
    • Her usual Mecha Mooks are the HK-87 Assassin Droids, which fight just like the MagnaGuards Grievous has accompanying him throughout various battles of the Clone Wars, such as the Battle of Dathomir.
    • Morgan worked with Baylan Skoll, a Dark Jedi who survived Order 66, and has similarities to Count Dooku, himself a former Jedi, who once had Asajii Ventress as his Sith apprentice and ordered Grievous and the Separatist Droid Army to kill Ventress and Mother Talzin as retaliation.
    • The Empire that Morgan chose to serve was created and controlled by Darth Sidious, the master of Count Dooku and General Grievous, who carried out the genocide on Dathomir.
  • Katanas Are Just Better: The Great Mothers gift Morgan with the Blade of Talzin in Ahsoka, with which to do battle with the former Jedi. It's even glowing with green fire, like a reflection of a lightsaber.
  • Lack of Empathy: Ordering innocent civilians to be tortured and executed is as easy as breathing for her, and she hasn't lost a wink of sleep over the misery and suffering she's spread through Corvus.
  • Logical Weakness: Exploits one for the New Republic - since their most active agents and rangers are overtaxed hunting down Imperial Remnant forces obviously wearing their armor and equipment, they complete overlook her operating maybe the best financed pro-Imperial operation out of her old factories simply because she doesn't advertise her Imperial loyalty... only a subtle one to Thrawn.
  • Meaningful Name: Her name is a clear nod to Morgan le Fay, who is also an evil witch.
  • Oh, Crap!: She manages to shake it off and accept defeat with dignity, but still visibly panics when Ahsoka gets the upper hand during their fight.
  • One-Winged Angel: Before going on to face Ahsoka, the Three Mothers grant Morgan immeasurable power that causes her eyes to blacken and to gain the Voice of the Legion, making her more powerful than ever in facing Ahsoka.
  • Posthumous Villain Victory: Morgan dies holding off Ahsoka to cover Thrawn's escape, but she succeeds in her task and the mission she set out on at the start of the series; Thrawn and the Great Mothers escape Peridea to rejoin the Imperial Remnant, while Ahsoka and Sabine are left stranded.
  • Remember the New Guy?: Ahsoka establishes that Morgan has been a significant ally of Thrawn's since early in his Imperial service, but Morgan was never mentioned in either Rebels or Thrawn's novels prior to her debut on The Mandalorian.
  • Sole Survivor: One of the very few known survivors of the Nightsister massacre.
  • Smug Snake: While she is competent, she thinks she's cleverer than she actually is and is completely blindsided when Din teams up with Ahsoka and loses her entire militia to them as if they were cannon fodder. By the time of Ahsoka, she's wisened up and knows from experience that Anakin's former Padawan will follow her and her minions, despite Shin assuring she and Marrok made a clean getaway on Corellia at the end of "Toil and Trouble".
  • Sympathy for the Devil: After spending so long trying to find Thrawn, she looks crushed when he has her remain on Peridea to fight the Jedi and buy him some time, knowing that the likelihood of her being killed is quite high. That being said, he doesn't look too happy about ordering her to do so.
  • Took a Level in Badass: In the finale of Ahoska, the Great Mothers empower her with proper Nightsister magicks and gifts her the Blade of Talzin, making her a far more dangerous opponent to Ahsoka then she was back in The Mandalorian.
  • Villain of the Week: She is the primary antagonist of "The Jedi" and has been Ahsoka's target for some time, but from Din's perspective, she's another speed bump in his journey and he helps Ahsoka deal with her by the episode's end. Ahsoka later upgrades her to The Heavy, having been rescued by Baylan Skoll and Shin Hati, just as she was being transported for trial.
  • Villainous Breakdown: She is confident, aggressive, and has Ahsoka on the backfoot during their duel in the Nightsister fortress, up until she sees Sabine has decided to remain on-world to save her. This show of loyalty infuriates her and throws her off-balance as Ahsoka goes on the offense, leading to her ultimate demise.
  • You Shall Not Pass!: When Thrawn determines more forces will be needed to keep Ahsoka's group off the Chimera, he wordlessly insinuates Morgan stay behind and keep them at bay. She holds to his request (though more out of loyalty to the Nightsisters by this point) and duels Ahsoka up the Nightsister citadel, successfully delaying the former Jedi long enough for Thrawn to escape, albeit at the cost of Morgan's life.

    Lang 

Lang

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lang_5.jpg
"You and I, we're a lot alike. Willing to lay our lives down for the right cause. Which this is not."

Species: Human

Portrayed by: Michael Biehn
Appearances: The Mandalorian

A mercenary hired by Magistrate Elsbeth to command her security forces and keep the local populace in line.


  • Didn't Think This Through: Even if he managed to get a shot off before Din, it's highly unlikely his sidearm would have penetrated his beskar armor, and if he did successfully kill Din, he'd have to contend with Ahsoka alone, and he struggled to deal with her when he had an army, including two assassin droids, backing him up.
  • The Dragon: For Elsbeth. He commands her security forces and is the one she delegates to deal with Ahsoka and Din when they come for her.
  • Dragon Their Feet: Lang is killed seconds after Ahsoka defeats Elsbeth in their duel.
  • Hired Guns: He's a mercenary who's hired out his services to Elsbeth.
  • I Surrender, Suckers: When he realizes Ahsoka has won the duel with Elsbeth, Lang lays down his rifle... only to quickly draw his sidearm and attempt to shoot the Mandalorian. Unfortunately for him, Din was quicker on the draw.
  • Know When to Fold 'Em: When Ahsoka defeats Elsbeth, he decides she isn't worth dying for and lays down his weapon, before drawing his pistol to get a cheap shot at Din. It earns him a shot to the chest.
  • "Not So Different" Remark: He invokes this with Din, saying they both fight for what they believe to be the right causes. Though he never says a word, it's clear Din wasn't hearing it.
  • Shotguns Are Just Better: His main weapon seems to be the blaster version of a pump-action shotgun, complete with plasma "pellets" instead of a single, straight shot. He doesn't get to make much use of it onscreen, though.
  • Too Dumb to Live: See Didn't Think This Through and I Surrender, Suckers above. Considering that Ahsoka was shown sparing a disarmed mook earlier and Din seemed to accept his capitulation before Lang pulled his cheap shot, it's likely that they would have let him live had he been honest about surrendering.

    Wing 

Governor Wing

Species: Human

Portrayed by: Wing Tao Chao

A citizen of the capital city Calodan.


Crait

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/swtlj_crait_700x300.jpg
Location: Crait System, Outer Rim Territories
Native Fauna: Vulptex

"Not exactly the hottest holiday spot in the galaxy, is it? Though I guess if you really want to get away from it all, this is the place."
Ress Batten

A world home to salt flats, as well as an old abandoned rebel base by the time Starkiller Base is destroyed.


  • Artistic License – Biology: Despite having no trees, it has a breathable atmosphere. Handwaved away in All There in the Manual, where it is explained that it comes from the gradual dissolution of some of Crait's crystals that suspend oxygen and nitrogen. Also, at least one native species is made of crystals.
  • Symbolic Blood: The surface is a plain of red crystal covered by a thin layer of salt. After the battle of Crait, the surface appears to be covered in blood due to the red gashes.

Er'Kit

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/er_kit_5df42d73.jpeg
Location: Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Er'Kit
Immigrated Species: Human

A desert planet, home to the Er'Kit species. Before the outbreak of the Clone Wars, Senator Danry Ledwellow took bribes from Thalassian slavers to allow them to use the planet for their illicit activities before his scandal was discovered.

    Danry Ledwellow 

Senator Danry Ledwellow

See his entry on the Galactic Senate page.

    Dyro Felldor 

Dyro Felldor

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dyro_felldor_sw.jpg

Species: Er'Kit

Appearances: Commander

A male Er'Kit that served as the representative of his homeworld and worked with Saponza's Gang to defeat the Blood Dawn slavers during the Galactic Civil War. Despite their alliance, he ultimately chose to remain neutral in the war. However, Saponza's Gang would later learn that Felldor was using the Alliance and the Empire as tools to advance his power on Er'kit.


  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Presents himself as an ally to the Rebellion, but is only aiding them to better his position.
  • Playing Both Sides: He provides aid to both the Rebels and Imperials in order to gain power on Er'Kit.

Hays Minor

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hays_minor_sw.jpg
Location: Otomok System, Outer Rim Territories
Local Species: Humans

"There wasn't a lot to see on Hays Minor. That's kind of what happens when your world is a desolate wasteland with almost no atmosphere."
Paige Tico

An ice planet known for exporting crystalline ore. The First Order used the planet to test weapons and also abducted children from there for their Stormtrooper programme.


  • Apocalypse How: The First Order's destructive mining practices and weapons testing caused a lot of pollution; according to Paige Tico, they eventually "ripped our planet apart for its ore", causing many deaths.
  • Child Soldier: Many children were abducted from the planet to be brainwashed and trained as stormtroopers by the First Order.
  • Crapsack World: Initially averted; Hays Minor isn't the most exciting place in the galaxy, but it's not an awful place and people seem to live relatively comfortably there. Then the First Order showed up.
  • Flower Motif: According to the Star Wars Databank, the emblem of the planet and the Otomok system in general is a snowgrape leaf (which the Tico sisters' pendants are designed to resemble).
  • One-Product Planet: It was apparently settled as a mining colony due to being rich in ore and is said to be better known for its ore than its people.
  • Polluted Wasteland: Became one after the First Order occupied the planet; their destructive mining caused dust and smoke that blocked out the sky.
  • Single-Biome Planet: The planet's primary terrain is ice.

    Thanya and Hue Tico 

Thanya and Hue Tico

Species: Human

Appearances: Age of Resistance
The mother and father (respectively) of Paige and Rose Tico. They lived a humble life working for Central Ridge Mining on Hays Minor, until the First Order showed up.
  • Aerith and Bob: Thanya and Hue are more fantastical-sounding names than the names of their daughters.
  • All There in the Manual: Their names are given in The Last Jedi's Visual Dictionary.
  • Deceased Parents Are the Best: They're shown to be loving parents and are revealed in Age of Resistance to have been killed by the First Order prior to The Force Awakens.
  • Good Parents: They have a very close and supportive relationship with their kids, encouraging their dreams and ambitions. They also scrounge up money to pay for Rose and Paige to get off Hays Minor so they can find the Resistance, while they remain behind on their First Order-occupied planet.
  • Happily Married: They seem to be a pretty happy couple.
  • I Will Wait for You: When Rose and Paige promise to come back to Hays Minor before leaving to find the Resistance, Thanya promises that they'll "be waiting."
  • Killed Offscreen: They were killed by the First Order’s excessive mining and weapons testing, which practically tore apart their homeworld.

     Haysians on other pages 

Hubin

Location: Outer Rim Territories

A temperate moon orbiting a gas giant that is home to Clan Markona, a mercenary group with a bloody past.

    Markona 

Thane Markona

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/markona_sw.jpg

Species: Human

Homeworld: Hubin

Appearances: Star Wars (Marvel 2015)

"You can never undo the wrong, but you can always do right."

The Thane of Clan Markona and father of Tula. When Luke, Leia, and Han arrive on Hubin, Markona tests them to see if the Rebellion is worthy of his Clan's assistance.


  • The Atoner: Upon hearing of Alderaan's destruction by the Empire, Markona began to think back on his services to them and how much blood he indirectly has on his hands by doing jobs that helped secure its rule. He eventually decides that Clan Markona needed to ally with the Rebellion to wash the sins of their past away.
    Markona: After I heard of the Death Star, I have done nothing but consider my actions. I was a professional. I asked few questions. The Markona did much work... including some for those I now know I shouldn't have.
  • Blade Below the Shoulder: His gauntlets have long blades built into them that he can extend out for melee combat, which is his preference.
  • Blood Knight: Relishes hand-to-hand combat, dismissing blasters as unsporting.
  • But for Me, It Was Tuesday: Even he isn't sure what exactly it was that Clan Markona retrieved for the Empire that allowed them to retire peacefully and own Hubin, telling Luke that to him, it was just one more job.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Fights SCAR Squadron by himself to buy the rebels and the Clan time to evacuate Hubin, and is quickly gunned down by the elite troopers when he charges them.
  • No Name Given: His given name is never stated or offered.
  • Secret Legacy: His mother was a Jedi Knight who fell in love and left the Order, a fact which Markona keeps as a closely guarded secret due to the Empire's persecution of anyone with ties to the Order.

Ibaar

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ibaar.png
Location: Outer Rim Territories
Immigrated Species: Human (Ibaarian), Aqualish, Snivvian

A mountainous agricultural planet continuously suspected of rebel sympathies during the Galactic Civil War. In the eve of the war, Imperial forces, under the jurisdiction of Imperial Security Bureau Agent Kallus, enforced a blockade around the planet in a failed attempt to lure and destroy wanted rebels in a supply drop to the world. Imperial sanctions on Ibaar continued well into the war.


  • All There in the Manual: According to First Order propaganda, while under New Republic control after the Galactic Civil War, it had undergone famine.
  • Butt-Monkey: If the First Order is right and not blowing anything out of proportion, then Ibaar has it kind of rough, either suffering from getting punished for housing suspected rebel sympathizers or starvation, with the former probably being created by the latter if the Empire/First Order has anything to do with it.

Jelucan

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Local Species: Human (Jelucani)
Native Fauna: Muunyak
Capital: Valentia

A mountainous, remote planet near the very edge of the galaxy home to two distinct cultures, the valley kindred and the mountain people, which sided with the Separatists during the Clone Wars. It formally joined the Empire eight years after the end of the war.

    In General 
  • Alien Sky: Its sky is described as grey.
  • Colour-Coded Patrician: The wealthier mountaintop-dwelling nobility wear bright, colourful clothing, while the poorer valley kindred wear drab homemade clothes. After years of Imperial rule, however, this distinction is erased in the subjugation of the planet's population.
  • The Exile: The valley kindred, the older of Jelucan's two cultures, were exiled to the planet five hundred years before the Clone Wars after losing a civil war on their previous homeworld.
  • Honour Before Reason: The valley kindred's exile to the planet was because they refused to violate their oaths to the man they saw as the rightful king of their old planet. Thus, the culture places a massive emphasis on never breaking an oath, even if it may be morally wrong to do so, such as if the oath was sworn to an entity undeserving of it.

    Oris and Ganaire Kyrell 

Oris and Ganaire Kyrell

Species: Human

Homeworld: Jelucan

Appearances: Lost Stars

The parents of Dalven Kyrell and Thane Kyrell.


  • Abusive Parents: Oris abused his sons on a regular basis.
  • Dating What Daddy Hates: Well, Oris disapproved of Thane's friendship with Ciena, who is from a lower class, so whatever his reaction may be to learning that Thane and Ciena are Star-Crossed Lovers leaves little to the imagination.
  • Parental Favoritism: Oris considered Dalven better than Thane, despite the former graduating with poor grades and into a third-rate job as well as only being in the Royal Imperial Academy in the first place because Oris decided Screw the Rules, I Have Connections! Meanwhile, Thane actually works hard to get into the Royal Imperial Academy and becomes a high-ranking TIE pilot. Maybe it has to do with Jerkassery somehow being better?
  • "Well Done, Son" Guy: Ganaire seems emotionally absent from her family, or at least to Thane. When the Kyrells go to see Tarkin, the young Thane asks if he's old enough to join the Empire in spite of Dalven's claims, and Ganaire's response is "Yeah, sure, whatever, you're as old as the Empire, which I guess is good enough.", which she then repeats a couple more times that same day when Thane keeps asking her.

    Paron and Verine Ree 

Paron and Verine Ree

Species: Human

Homeworld: Jelucan

Appearances: Lost Stars

The parents of Ciena Ree and the late Wynnet Ree.


    Jelucani on Other Pages 

Kaller

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kaller.png
Location: Kaller System, Outer Rim Territories
Native species: Kalleran

An Outer Rim world occupied by the Separatists near the end of the Clone Wars. After being liberated by Jedi Master Depa Billaba and her Padawan Caleb Dume, the two were betrayed on Kaller by their clone troopers during Order 66, which Dume escaped from. The clone troopers then occupied the planet, which became part of the Galactic Empire.

    Kallerans 

Kallerans

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kalleran_sw.png

The reptilian natives of Kaller.


    Gamut Key 

Governor Gamut Key

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gamut_key_sw.png

Appearances: Kanan

"My world has seen many masters. The Republic, the Separatists, the Republic again — if briefly. The Empire. Often it hardly mattered to whom we bowed. But even an old politician such as myself can develop an aching back."

The governor of Kaller during the Separatist occupation and under the Empire's rule.


  • Corrupt Politician: To a certain extent. He looks the other way for certain criminal elements like Janus and Tapusk so long as they give him useful information.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • When he learns that Caleb is going to be executed by the clone troopers for treason, Key is stunned and almost protests, but lets the matter drop and tells Caleb to make peace with the Force, knowing that it would be foolhardy to defy the Empire.
    • Fourteen years later, Key has come to realize that the Empire is far worse than any of its predecessors and offers his aid to the Ghost crew should they ever need assistance.
  • Failed a Spot Check: Does not recognize Kanan as Caleb. Potentially subverted, as he followed Kanan to Tapusk's hideout and then made a few comments, such as calling him "master" and referencing Janus Kasmir, that hint he may actually know who Kanan is but decided not to mention it.

    Janus Kasmir 

Janus Kasmir

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/janus_kasmir.png

Appearances: Kanan

"You lie. You cheat. You steal. You survive."

A native of Kaller alive during the Clone Wars, he found Caleb Dume after Order 66 and took pity on the young Jedi.


  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Although he can be pretty mean, he comes to truly care for Caleb and pursues the clones who capture Caleb alongside Kleeve, with both men wondering why exactly men like them are risking their lives for Caleb. Years later, he even rescues Ezra Bridger from stormtroopers without ever knowing Ezra's connection to Caleb/Kanan.
  • Meaningful Name: Janus was the Roman god of doors and thresholds, and also beginnings, endings, and transitions.
  • The Mentor: Teaches Caleb how to hide from the Empire as well as steal to survive.
  • "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Gives one to Commander Grey about serving the Empire and hunting down Caleb, accusing him and the other clones of no longer even knowing who or what they fight for and for turning on their Jedi friends without a second thought.
  • Reptiles Are Abhorrent: Played with. Janus is not friendly, especially towards humans, but he does take pity on Caleb.
  • Smug Snake: Doesn't think too highly of humans.
  • Snake People: A variant. He is Kalleran, and has a Cobra-like upper body, but walks on two legs and does not have a tail.

Koboh

Location: Koboh System, Outer Rim Territories

A remote world on the edge of the Outer Rim, it was amongst the farthest Republic outposts during the High Republic era but was subsequently abandoned when its mines were not as productive as expected and its moon was heavily damaged during an Emergence from the Great Disaster. During the age of the Empire, the planet was sparsely populated by scrappers and scavengers who resided around Rambler's Reach. Near the planet was the Koboh Abyss, an anomalous region of space within which the world Tanalorr supposedly existed.


  • Artifact of Attraction: A non-magical example. The High Republic ruins of the area eventualyl caused the miners
  • Close-Knit Community: Thanks to Doma and a few other resident's efforts, most residents of Rambler's Reach look out for each other and assist how they can, even if they don't particularly like each other.
  • Dying Town: Rambler's Reach is one, as between the Bedlam Raiders, the hostile wildlife, and the increasing Imperial presence, many prospectors have left due to the difficulties and dangers in looking for priorite. Cal's efforts help revive it a bit and boost its population, but in the postgame several characters depart due to the Empire moving in, with the presence of a Star Destroyer in the sky suggesting darker days ahead for the planet.
  • Dug Too Deep: A variation. The prospecting operation was apparently a far more prosperous and widespread enterprise, building into a large scale industry... until the miners started finding impenetrable "cubes" and "monoliths" deep in the ground, after which the miners started going insane with obsession, idolizing the "cubes" and becoming fixated on opening them and plumbing the treasures within and eventually all killing each other. From the point of view of the Apocalyptic Logs left behind, these monoliths come off as Artifacts Of Attraction, but they were actually elevators to Jedi training halls: only openable with the force, but entirely harmless otherwise. It was the miners' own greed and paranoia that did them in.
  • Ghost Town: There are several abandoned towns and mining outposts across the planet, with Rambler's Reach being the only known active settlement.
  • Gold Fever: While the prospectors of the present are, while opportunistic, very close knit and respectful to each other, the prospectors of the past turned on each other and killed each other off to obtain their score.
  • Ominous Obsidian Ooze: Due to its proximity with the Koboh Abyss, Koboh is home to a mysterious black substance named Koboh Matter. It manifests both as a dust-like gas that is suffocating to breathe and as a creeping, impenetrable vine-like ooze, as well as expansive marshlands of deadly black tar. In the past, the High Republic set up research facilities and creates scores of specialized technology to study it, though unlike a Mineral Macguffin this was not to harness the subtance, but the opposite: to learn how to control and potentially get rid of it as part of their attempts to breach the Koboh Abyss.

    Doma Dendra 

Doma Dendra

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/doma_dendra_sw.png

Species: Waluna

Voiced by: Rebecca Wiscosky
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

"Stuff that's new is exciting. But what really counts is consistency. Reliability."

The unofficial mayor of Rambler's Reach and owner of a commodities shop.


  • Friendly Shopkeeper: Runs the outpost's general store and is happy to sell to Cal in thanks for his aid and in spite of him being a newcomer, which she is usually weary of.
  • Good Is Not Soft: She is a welcoming person with the best interests of Rambler's Reach in her heart. And if the best interests of the town involve gunning down thieves and other criminals who try to steal needed supplies from her people, then that is what Doma will do.
  • Hidden Depths: She really likes the music Ashe plays at the cantina and tells Cal that deep down she believes she was born to dance, but Doma hides that side of herself from the rest of the town to keep her serious reputation intact. Doma has been so effective at hiding that side that when a customer heard her humming a tune to herself they looked at her like she lost her mind.
  • The Lost Lenore: The reason why she is so attached to Koboh is that her partner is buried there. Cal finds their grave and listens to a Force echo where Doma states that they came there together and were supposed to leave together, and vows to never leave them.
  • Man of the City: Rambler's Reach might just be a little outpost, but Doma will be damned if she lets anything threaten its safety and survival. She will kill or imprison raiders and thieves, harbor Jedi against the Empire, and anything else she needs to for its prosperity.
  • Parental Substitute: It's heavily implied that Doma essentially adopted Turgle and is one of the reasons the latter is still allowed in the outpost.
  • Secret-Keeper: Reassures Cal that his status as a Jedi will be protected by her and the town in thanks for his aid against the Bedlam Raiders.
  • Tough Leader Façade: Admits to Cal that she feels she has to keep the mask of a serious leader up at all times to reassure the town's population, and that showing anything but that to them could ruin that reputation.

    Turgle 

Turgle

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/turgle_sw.png

Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A frog-like alien who is perpetually down on his luck.


  • Beware the Silly Ones: Mostly inferred by lore, conversations and collectables rather than anything he does during the story, but while Turgle may be silly, oblivious and at times lethally foolish, his schemes are often as ambitious as they are impulsive and he has little compunctions about barrelling forward with them even if they're dangerous to himself and others - as the string of wacky cons behind him that ended with the deaths of various Raiders and Imperials can attest. in a rare conversation, Turgle himself claims to have enacted one of the biggest heists in galactic history, ending up stranded on Koboh in his escape - when Cal questions this, Turgle says that people underestimate him so much it can be easy to get what he wants. It's up to the player whether to believe him.
  • Butt-Monkey: Very few people like or tolerate his presence, and besides his on-screen woes, Cal also frequently finds Force-echos that show how rough Turgle has had it.
  • Con Man: Many of his get rich schemes involve conning someone. Cal meets him as the Bedlam Raider's prepare to make an example of him for selling them a fake tuner device, and he later mentions selling the location of a priorite mine to an Imperial officer that didn't exist and instead just leading the officer on until coming across a rancor that ate the Imp.
  • Didn't Think This Through: A common issue for Turgle is that he does not think through exits from his schemes or what would happen if his marks figure out his con. Several of his conversations with Cal have the Jedi point out flaws in ideas Turgle is brainstorming.
  • Friendless Background: The places he lived before Koboh were even less friendly than Rambler's Reach to him, with Cal finding one Force echo where Turgle bemoans how he constantly screws up and causes no one to like him.
  • The Friend Nobody Likes: His presence is at best tolerated by the rest of the outpost, who haven't run Turgle out yet, but even Doma who has saved his life several times finds him tiring and difficult to be around due to his lack of awareness and talent for getting into deadly trouble.
  • Frog Men: He looks a lot like a frog, and in fact multiple people including himself refer to him as a frog.
  • Lethally Stupid: How he hasn't wound up dead yet is a miracle, as his poorly thought out schemes are constantly landing him in danger and causing trouble for the outpost. Thankfully the only ones who do end up dead because of him are Bedlam Raiders and Imperials.
  • Nice Guy: Despite being a Con Man, he's pretty friendly and cheerful.
  • These Hands Have Killed: Part of how he got into the mess with the raiders was when he accidently killed one by knocking them down a canyon when they assaulted him, which horrified Turgle. This is also Played for Laughs when Turgle later views Rayvis's death as his fault as well, claiming that Cal never would have had to kill him if Turgle hadn't started him down that path and trying to drown his sorrows over it. Of course, Turgle is ignoring all the other reasons Cal had to get involved, and Turgle's grief over Rayvis's death is very misplaced.

    M-6NK 

M-6NK (Monk)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/monk_sw.png

Appearances: Jedi Survivor

The bartender droid of Pyloon's, Monk is a friendly individual who takes an interest in the well-being of his customers.


  • The Bartender: A classic example of one, taking the time to listen to the woes of his customers and offer helpful advice back to them.
  • Bearer of Bad News: It falls to him to break it to Zee about how long she has been deactivated, the rise of the Empire, and the destruction of the Jedi Order.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: He doesn't like talking about it, but he used to work at a casino run by a syndicate and was made to spy on the customers at his table and divulge their information to his bosses.
  • Restraining Bolt: He was outfitted with one by his previous owner. When it malfunctioned, Monk immediately took the opportunity to flee and go into hiding from them.
  • Ridiculously Human Robot: Even by the standards of this franchise, he has a remarkably advanced personality - not just humanlike, but charismatic and extremely emotionally intelligent (in addition to the normal droid intellectual advantages of an excellent head for business). Whoever originally wanted a bartender bot got their money's worth and then some.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: He and Greez are constantly bickering, with Monk wishing Greez would do more around the saloon to help out while Greez thinks Monk is changing things around the saloon to his liking and is planning on taking over. However, they do really care for each other and have a close friendship, with Greez actually entrusting the saloon to Monk at the end of the game, who insists back that he will be its caretaker for Greez.
  • You Are Better Than You Think You Are: After the fall of the Path hideout on Jedha and the deaths of Cere and Eno, Monk takes the time to let Cal vent and consoles him, insisting he not blame himself.

    ZN-A4 

ZN-A4 (Zee)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zee_sw.png

Voiced by: Kendal Rae
Appearances: Jedi Survivor

A droid who served Jedi Master Santari Khri during the High Republic, Zee became trapped in an underground chamber below Rambler's Reach during the emergence that broke apart Koboh's moon. Over two centuries later she was rescued by Jedi Knight Cal Kestis and learned of the Jedi Order's destruction and began to aid Cal in his quest to reach Tanalorr.


  • Affectionate Nickname: Monk refers to her as Heritage, referencing her being a very old model who carries secrets of the past with her.
  • Fish out of Temporal Water: The galaxy is vastly different in the 220 years since she was trapped, with the Jedi Order and Republic having not just fallen from its high standards of the High Republic Era, but the Jedi being all but extinct and the Republic transformed into the Empire. Zee is quite distraught at these developments and struggles with what her place will be in the galaxy now.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: Khri wipes the knowledge of how to reach Tanalorr from Zee's databanks, regarding the information as too sensitive to leave with her during the evacuation of Koboh.
  • Living MacGuffin: Subverted: Dagan has the Bedlam Raiders capture Zee because he believes she will have the knowledge needed to reach Tanalorr, unaware that Khri had wiped that information from Zee's memory banks.
  • Sanity Slippage: Being trapped under rubble for two-hundred years and being unable to fulfill the last mission she was given causes Zee to be a bit out-of-sorts upon reactivation, and Cal worries she may not be all there mentally. Thankfully, upon reaching the surface and realizing how much time had passed, Zee is able to recover mentally and come to terms with her situation.

    Mosey Cimmaron 

Mosey Cimmaron

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mosey_cimarron_sw.png

Species: Human

Voiced by: Elizabeth Frances
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

The owner of the stables in Rambler's Reach, Mosey is also an expert hunter and tracker who aids in the defense of the town.


  • Action Girl: She is one of the few citizens of Rambler's Reach who can defend themselves. Mosey is never seen without her axe on hand.
  • Amazonian Beauty: Her muscular arms are mentioned by a few other characters, some of whom are suggested to be attracted to her because of them.
  • Animal Lover: While she is a hunter, Mosey loves animals and cares greatly for the nekkos in her care. She only kills animals as necessary, for food or because they are dangerous. When she learned of a raider chieftain who was murdering boglings for fun, Mosey hunted him down in return and killed him for killing defenseless creatures.
  • Birds of a Feather: She and Merrin hit it off as friends instantly, thanks to their straightforward and sarcastic personalities, along with their combat abilities.
  • But Now I Must Go: In the post-game, Mosey bids farewell to Cal and departs from Koboh, believing it is time to move on to new adventures and hunts, but that she hopes to see him again one day.
  • The Confidant: When Cal returns to Koboh after Bode betrays the crew and is outed as an Imperial mole, Mosey is the only one to whom Cal initially reveals what happened, dancing around the issue with the rest of the patrons of Pyloon's who notice that something is wrong.
  • Hates Their Parent: Despises her mom for the harsh upbringing she and her siblings endured, particularly how they had to compete for food and attention to stand out. Mosey's mom would always find some way to criticize her no matter how well she did at something, and Mosey now heavily resents her despite the survival skills she learned. When Cal notes he never knew his parents, Mosey muses that is not always such a bad thing.
  • Massive Numbered Siblings: It's not clarified how many siblings she has, but she mentions it was a lot to the point they sometimes competed for food.
  • Training from Hell: Subjected to it as a kid alongside her siblings to become an expert hunter and tracker.

    Zygg Soza 

Zygg Soza

Species: Human

Homeworld: Koboh

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

Rambler's Reach's local mechanic and one of a few citizens who was actually born on the planet.


  • Butch Lesbian: Downplayed, she's not especially masculine unless put next to Wini. Who she is very obviously dating not long after meeting her.
    • She wears overalls, she gets grease on them, she wears her hair up & doesn't care if she's messy. She's a tomboy, by the standards of 70s (ironic considering when Star Wars started).
  • A Friend in Need: When Zee is captured by the Bedlam Raiders, Zygg heads towards their base on her own to try and figure out a way to rescue her. She quickly realizes she is out of her depth, and thankfully Cal catches up to her to aid her by clearing a way back to Rambler's Reach.
  • Nice Girl: She is one of the nicest and most helpful people on the planet, to the point where she even fixes up some of the old B1 battle droids despite them being dangerous because she can't stand to see them falling apart.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: With the arrival of a Star Destroyer above Koboh and the increasing Imperial occupation of the planet, Zygg and Wini decide to depart before things get too bad.

    Moran 

Moran

Species: Mirialan

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

"It's not just about getting out. It's about getting out before you lose everything."

A former "trader" from the Core Worlds, after the Empire destroyed his business, he fled with his remaining goods to Koboh and spends his days drinking at Pyloon's.


  • Corrupt Bureaucrat: When he worked in the Republic's tax division, he used his position to discover useful intel and potential partners for his smuggling venture.
  • The Cynic: He is highly cynical and is often at a loss for words regarding the selfless acts that Cal and others in town take.
  • Don't You Dare Pity Me!: After mentioning to Cal the friends he lost the Empire's crackdown on smuggling rings when it first arose, Cal offers his sympathy. Moran immediately bites back that he seems to have forgotten asking for pity from him. Moran apologies later and offers Cal the opportunity to look through what goods he has remaining for taking out his frustrations on him.
  • Drowning My Sorrows: Spends most of his time drinking and bemoaning his lost business and deceased friends at the Empire's hands. He is also drinking away memories of his partner Dreyo, who left when he saw the writing on the wall with the Empire's rise and couldn't convince Moran to join him.
  • Everyone Has Standards: Most of his former colleagues who were not killed by the Empire went to work for the Hutts. Moran's tone of voice makes it clear he views that choice with derision and notes he has no interest in working with them again.
  • Hidden Depths: First revealed when he confides in Cal that he was not a trader but a smuggler. They get deeper when he admits that it's not just the loss of his business that he is mourning, but the loss of friends and partners to the Empire when they began ruthlessly crushing any criminals they didn't control. The final reveal is that at his core, Moran is simply heartbroken about not going with Dreyo when he had the chance and that is the cause of most of his more caustic moments.
  • Jerkass Realization: He's a jackass who even goes as far as to be insensitive about Cal's status as a former child soldier who had to endure Order 66. He realizes what he said was going too far and apologizes, and from then on becomes friendlier.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: As rude and cynical as he can be, Moran is always happy when things work out well, even if he has trouble expressing it.
  • Straight Gay / Camp Gay: A great example of how those are not a binary. When you get down to it he's just a guy. A guy who's blatantly not just talking about losing a bussiness partner (though he was that too).

    Toa 

Toa

Species: Twi'lek

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A scholar who came to Koboh to study the High Republic ruins after being run out of her university in the Core worlds by Imperial policies.


  • But Now I Must Go: In the post-game of Survivor, she reaches out ot her old university and learns that many more of her old colleagues have been run out and disgraced in favor of Imperial propagandists. Inspired by what she had learned on Koboh, she brings her them together into a network of academics dedicated to protecting information the Empire seeks to suppress, and in time departs the planet in order to help set up the group in person.
  • Sheltered Aristocrat: As a well off scholar, she has little experience with the harshness of the Empire beyond the meddling the Empire tends to have in her university's affairs - which she only saw as a nuisance. At first expresses that she doesn't think life under the Empire is particularly different from life under the Republic, but after hearing the stories of others and seeing examples of the Empire's brutality herself, she eventually concludes that she was wrong and that they are far more monstrous.

    Tulakt 

Tulakt

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tulakt_sw.png
"Tulakt excavates that which cannot be so easily grasped."

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

"Regret is a mirage that leads many off the path."

A fortune teller who arrives on Koboh shortly after Cal did.


  • But Now I Must Go: Departs Koboh in the post-game, telling Cal she has served her purpose there and is going on with her path.
  • Call-Forward: One of her fortune readings sounds like she is prophesying the destruction of Jedah by the Death Star.
  • Fortune Teller: Makes her living as one in the saloon, but she offers her readings to Cal for free to help him on his journey, although as is typical they are fairly cryptic fortunes. However, the advice makes sense in hindsight and suggests that Tulakt is potentially Force sensitive.
  • Genocide Survivor: She is the only member of her family who escaped the Empire's assault on her homeworld.
  • It's All My Fault: Subverted as part of one of her teachings. When Cal Kestis confides in her that he blames himself for all the people he lost, she shares with him a story about how, when the Empire attacked her homeworld, she led her family to what appeared to be a perfect shelter that they could survive in for some time. The shelter was later bombed directly by the Empire, and she lost much of her family. However, she makes the point to Cal that she emphatically does not blame herself for the loss, noting that while the shelter didn't work out in the long run, in the situation it was still the right decision to try and use it.
  • Third-Person Person: Refers to herself by her own name a few times.

    Gido and Gulu 

Gido and Gulu

Species: Trodatome (Gido), Human (Gulu)

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A pair of old curmudgeonly prospectors who spend their days near Pyloon's Saloon making fun of the outpost's citizens and other events.


  • Birds of a Feather: Their relationship began because they both realized that they were absolutely miserable people and that they wanted nothing more than to mock other people together.
  • Eye Scream: Gido is missing his right eye, although it is never mentioned what happened and he wears an eyepatch to cover it up.
  • Grumpy Old Man: They are two of the oldest residents of the outpost and spend their time doing nothing but complaining and mocking all the other inhabitants of the town.
  • Interspecies Romance: They are a human and a Trodatome in a very loving relationship based on making a mutual mockery of everyone else.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Near the endgame when the Empire's presence on Koboh begins to increase, they will begin discussing putting together a resistance movement against the Empire, much to Cal's surprise. They swiftly abandon the plan when they cannot decide on a name for the movement.
  • Signature Laugh: They always ended their mockery with mutual "haha hahas".
  • Those Two Guys: They are always together and making comments on the various happenings in town, which includes making fun of their fellow citizens and taking very little seriously. Them ending each conversation with laughter about the jokes they just made makes them a clear reference to Statler and Waldorf.

    Skoova Stev 

Skoova Stev

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/skoova_stev_sw.png

Species: Sakavian

Homeworld: Sakavi Tar

Voiced by: JB Blanc (English), Klaus Nierhoff (German)
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A master fisherman who wanders Koboh seeking the rarest fish to catch.


  • Driven to Villainy: In the past, he was forced to join a pirate crew in order to protect his hometown. Eventually, he couldn't take it any more and in the middle of a fight hesitated to shoot an enemy, leading the pirates to then jettison him out an escape pod for going soft.
  • Great White Hunter: A fisherman variety. Stev is a heroic master fisherman who goes on expeditions to fish for the rarest and most elusive creatures in the deep throughout the galaxy. However, he does not kill the creatures he hunts, and instead mostly does so for the thrill of finding them. He proudly says he catches and releases most of his catches, but particularly rare ones he keeps so that he may one day find them suitable mates.
  • Jive Turkey: Talks in a nigh impenetrable mix of sailor jargon and Scottish slang. He often outright replaces things entirely with sailing metaphors, referring to guns as "harpoons" for instance and - in turn - only speaking of his time as a pirate in terms of "fishing where he shouldn't be."
  • Lilliputians: He is a Sakavian, and as such could reasonably fit in a human being's hands.
  • Moby Schtick: Played with. He is somewhat obsessed with hunting down a Purgill, the elusive space whales of the Star Wars universe, but not to kill it. He only wishes to see one again, as he glimpsed it during his near death experience in an escape pod and considers it the most beautiful sight he had ever seen.
  • Pirate: Spend several years pressganged into the service of a pirate crew, until he worked his way up to First Mate, was betrayed by the Captain, and eventually fought back to defeat him.
  • The Storyteller: Each time Cal meets with him and they find another fish for Pyloon's tank, Skoova also regales Cal with another story about his past adventures.
  • Old Shame: He's not specifically ashamed of his decision to join a pirate crew, as he did it to protect others. What he is ashamed of is the fact that after some time with the crew, in his reckless youth he actually started to enjoy it.

    Ashe Javi 

Ashe Javi

Species: Human

Homeworld: Riosa

Voiced by: Andi Christensen
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A musician and producer from Riosa, Ashe became a famous fixture of clubs on Coruscant. They eventually tired of the Core world and its Imperial presence and set out with their partner DD-EC to explore the galaxy for new sounds to mix into their tracks.


    Pili Walde 

Pili Walde

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pili_walde_sw.png

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A botanist who fled her homeworld when the Empire attempted to use her research for biological weapons development. After briefly hiding on Jedah, Pili was recruited by Cal Kestis to journey to Koboh to tend to the garden on the roof of Pyloon's Saloon.


  • Caring Gardener: She loves looking after plants and was even able to grow some within her home on Jedha, which is a fairly hostile planet towards plant life. Under her supervision the garden on Koboh expands and grows significantly.
  • Gentle Giant: Her species is quite large, towering over most other humanoid species, but Pili is a kind botanist who abhors violence.
  • Nice Girl: Probably the most pleasant character in the game, Pili is quite friendly to everyone and is happy to just have a garden she can look after and nurture. In the post-game she watches over Kata in the garden whenever the Stinger Mantis crew is on Koboh and is happy to talk with her and show Kata the garden.

    Wini Eres 

Wini Eres

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

An interior designer from the Core Worlds, Wini left for the Outer Rim after her talents and designs were sought for usage by the Empire's propaganda arm.


  • Lipstick Lesbian: Clearly dating Zygg not long after meeting her, wears a cocktail dress and talks like more like a trendy fashion designer than an engineer.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Left the Core rather than see her work used in any way to promote the Empire. She and Zygg decide to leave Koboh as well once it is clear the Empire will be increasing its presence on the planet as well.

    Dana 

Dana

Species: Human

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A crafty con and scavenger who works with her partner Grock to salvage parts from the abandoned sites of Koboh.


  • Parental Abandonment: Mentions raising herself on the space station where she grew up, suggesting that Dana's parents were not a significant part of her life.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: She and Grock bicker a lot, but they are close partners who have been working together for years since their original crew fell apart.

    Grock 

Grock

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

An older mechanic scavenger and resident of Rambler's Reach. Grock is partners with Dana but is far less caustic than she is.


  • Dogged Nice Guy: Doma mentions that he has harbored a torch for her for years and often comes around her shop, but while she likes him Doma isn't interested in a relationship and never returns Grock's affections.
  • Killed Offscreen: He is killed by Imperials while recovering a fuel injector in Imperial occupied territory near the end of the game. His body can later be found at Prospector's Folly, including a Force echo of Dana discovering him dead.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: While he may argue and bicker with Dana a lot of the time, they are close friends who are the only ones of their original crew who are still together.

    Harr 

Harr

Species: Ovissian

Voiced by: Sam Riegel
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

One of the oldest residents of Rambler's Reach and the town's resident gossip.


  • The Storyteller: As befits the town's gossip, Harr enjoys telling Cal stories about the history of Rambler's Reach and its residents.

    Soont Madas 

Soont Madass

Species: Gotarite

Voiced by: ???
Appearances: Jedi: Survivor

A prospector driven mad, he now lives in a fortified home on the edge of the outpost.


  • Cain And Able: His brother attempted to address Soont's madness and end his obsession with the "cubes" that led to the High Republic chambers. Soont responded by murdering him, and Cal finds his body in the basement of their home.
  • Irony: Soont is obsessed with what he calls "cubes," assuming they are impenetrable ancient treasure chambers. They're actually old High Republic elevators, leading to places he would likely never have found anything of use in as he wasn't force sensitive. Later, he dies attacking Cal Kestis just for stumbling across one of the people he's murdered in pursuit of that treasure, entirely unaware that Cal not only had already been inside several of the chambers by that point, but would have been carrying the means to enter them on his person.
  • Predecessor Villain: As can be found from datapads and force echoes throughout the planet, Soont is the reason Rambler's Outpost is a ghost town. The inventor of the Roller Mines, he initially used them to help build the mining industry in town. However, once he became obsessed with the High Republic chambers he reprogrammed the Mines to turn on anything that moves - killing everyone. In the present, he is the only one left around to remember, with none of other residents being there long enough to know what he's done.
  • Sanity Slippage: He was once a sane prospector before being driven mad by his obsession with the "cubes".
  • Serial Killer: Systematically killed off anyone he thought was going to beat him to opening up the High Republic chambers or damage them in the meantime.

Ktath'atn

Location: Outer Rim Territories

A world ruled by a reclusive Queen who lives in the "Screaming Citadel".

    The Queen 

The Queen

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/queen_of_ktathatn_sw.jpg

The reclusive Queen of Ktath'atn, who makes public appearances once a year. Beings from all over the galaxy visit her to introduce her to strange and interesting people, hoping to garner favors from her.


    Bombinax 

Bombinax

One of the Queen's servants.


    Vespinax 

Vespinax

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vespinax_sw.jpg

One of the Queen's servants.


    Varroa 

Varroa

One of the Queen's servants.


Lasan

Location: Lasan System, Outer Rim Territories
Native species: Lasat

A world protected by its own military, the Lasan High Honor Guard, refraining from participation in the Clone Wars before being devastated and massacred by the Galactic Empire's Imperial Security Bureau via starship disruptors.

    Lasat/In General 
  • Canon Immigrant:
    • There actually was a Lasan in Legends AND a "Suppression of Lasan" caused by the Empire too, and the only Lasat that was known in Legends was a bounty hunter named Puggles Trodd.
    • Lasat culture is also the first instance of Ashla and Bogan in canon. The Bendu later expands on this in Season 3.
  • Code of Honor: Has a warrior code, especially followed by members of the High Honor Guard.
  • Cruel and Unusual Death: The massacre was mainly through disruptors (which were meant to fry starship-scale machinery, not living beings), and you can imagine how well that goes when you get shot by one.
  • Death by Origin Story: When Lasan and the Lasats are re-introduced into canon through Rebels, the world has already been wiped out and the Lasats are all but extinct, but not thriving either.
  • Long-Lived: Lasats seem to have long lifespans. According to All There in the Manual, Zeb's grandma is about three hundred "dust seasons" old, implying that she is three hundred years old. Chava is also said to be pretty old, mentioning having seen prophecies being interpreted differently time and time again.
  • Magic by Any Other Name: They refer to the Force in whole as the Ashla, personifying it as the 'spirit of the Galaxy'. Judging by Zeb's nickname for the pests around Chopper Base, the Bogan is presumably some sort of negative version of 'the Ashla', likely the other name for Dark side.
  • Mix-and-Match Weapon: The bo-rifle, manufactured by the Lasan-Malamut Firearms Corporation, has a bayonet mode and a staff mode. It apparently packs 11,000 bolts and is ridiculously heavy for species that don't have the same strength as a Lasat (which is saying something for Agent Kallus, who can hold the blaster with one arm, despite being only human).
  • No Body Left Behind: Never explicitly described in the show, but the novelization of "Droids in Distress" and Legends, getting shot by a disruptor means your body is disintegrated; it turns to complete ash.
  • Not So Extinct: During the first season, Zeb brings up his fears that he may be the only Lasat left alive. During the second season, it turns out that not only did other Lasats survive the devastation of Lasan, but Lasan was actually just a colony world: the Lasat homeworld of Lirasan is still out there in Wild Space, protected by a cluster of imploded stars, and has a thriving population.
  • Royal Blood: There used to be a royal family. The Last Stand was to defend them at the palace, which was lost. Their fate is unknown as Zeb was knocked out by a bomb for the duration of the battle.
  • Schrödinger's Canon:
    • The terrain of Lasan has mountains, deserts, and arid plains.
    • The Lasat were nomadic and tribal, though they did have city-states. They were also religious and many leaders inherited their positions through this.
    • Apparently, the few Lasat that left Lasan usually became slaves, though they weren't as efficient as other species like Wookiees. Many of these Lasat were also good at making explosives from common chemical agents.
    • The clones of Tango Company (the same clones from The Clone Wars episode "Brain Invaders") fought in the Siege of Lasan. This can't work in this canon if the Siege of Lasan happened long enough after the Clone Wars for most of the clones to be phased out.
  • Shock and Awe: The bo-rifle in staff mode.
  • You Kill It, You Bought It: A warrior code is that if one is defeated by a superior foe in single combat, they give up their weapon to them. Stealing it (especially if it's a bo-rifle and you looted it from the corpse of its owner) is very much considered dishonorable. This code is how Kallus got his bo-rifle during the massacre, rather than stealing it.

    Chava 

Chava the Wise

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chava_sw.jpg

Voiced by: Grey Griffin
Appearances: Rebels

An elderly female Lasat mystic that became a refugee after Lasan fell. She prophesied that the new home for the Lasat, Lirasan, would be found by the "Child", who is none other than Garazeb Orrelios.


  • Back for the Finale: She cameos in the series finale welcoming Kallus to Liresan.
  • Barefoot Sage: She follows in Yoda's (bare) footsteps.
  • Cool Old Lady: A little eccentric, but cool.
  • Miniature Senior Citizens: She's slightly taller than Chopper, not counting her gigantic updo.
  • Prophetic Fallacy: Throughout the years, she has given a couple of other prophecies, and she knows how easily prophecies can be misinterpreted, and that there can be multiple answers to a seemingly straightforward one.

    Gron 

Gron

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gron_tv_tropes.jpg

Voiced by: Gary Anthony Williams
Appearances: Rebels

A male Lasat High Honor Guardsman that served under Captain Garazeb Orrelios, before accompanying Chava at some point after the fall of Lasan. He has also given up his warrior ways and become a pacifist by the time he and Chava reunite with Zeb.


  • Actual Pacifist: He gave up his warrior ways sometime after meeting Chava, much to the disgust of Zeb. This ends up making him and Chava The Load when they get into a shootout scene.
  • Back for the Finale: He cameos in the series finale welcoming Kallus to Liresan.

    Davin 

Davin

A Lasat that survived the Siege of Lasan. Some time after fleeing his homeworld, the Empire sent a bounty hunter named Shel to hunt down Davin, but with the help of Lina and Milo Graf, he evaded capture.


  • Mistaken for Murderer: Shel tricks Lina and Milo into believing that the non-human man in the other cell is The Butcher of Brentaal IV. Anyone who's seen Rebels can tell you that Lasats (not counting the Mercenary) tend to be the victim here.

    Kallus' Honor Guardsman Opponent 

???

Appearances: Rebelsnote 

"The Lasat Guardsman I faced... he... fought well. Died with honor. He gave me the rifle before he—"
Agent Kallus, Rebels, "The Honorable Ones"

A member of the Lasat Honor Guard who possessed a J-19 bo-rifle. During the Galactic Empire's Siege of Lasan, Imperial Security Bureau Agent Kallus would fight him and would result in the Lasat's death, but not before he gave up his weapon to the agent per the Lasat warrior code, the Boosahn Keeraw.


  • Unknown Character: Kallus doesn't know who he was beyond that he was his opponent. We at least know that this Lasat was willing to follow the honor code to his death, even if the man who defeated him is not a Lasat.
  • Worthy Opponent: It would appear so, since he adhered to Boosahn Keeraw. It is worth noting that a blaster and shooting your opponent probably wouldn't have sufficed in the criteria for Boosahn Keeraw, so Kallus' fight with him was, in all likelihood, melee combat, which must have been incredibly difficult to say the least.

    Zeb's childhood friend 

???

Appearances: Rebels Magazine

A friend of Zeb when he was a child. At one point, he went alone into a cave housing a dangerous creature believing he was brave enough. However, his elder brother had followed him and saved him from the creature, but was never to be seen again.


    Childhood friend's brother 

???

Appearances: Rebels Magazine

An unnamed male that had followed his younger brother into a cave housing a dangerous creature. He saved his younger brother and held off the creature long enough for him to escape the cave, but was never seen again and has been presumed dead ever since.


    Boscoface 

Boscoface

Appearances: Rebelsnote 

A male Lasat that seemed to have had some fame, enough for at least one poster of him to be produced. Zeb owned a poster of him while with the Ghost crew.


  • Shout-Out: His name is one to Bosco Ng, a director on The Clone Wars and Rebels.
  • Uncertain Doom: If he was still alive recently, he might've died during the Cleansing of Lasan.

    Lasats on other pages 

Mirial

Location: Mirial System, Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Mirialan

Mirial is the cold and dry desert homeworld of the near-human Mirialans.

    Mirialan 

Mirialans

  • Amazing Technicolor Population: Mirialans usually have yellow-green skin, but some can have pinkish-red skin.
  • Ambiguously Brown: Their choice of clothes and their emphasis on tattoos to show achievements comes off as this. In addition, Luminara's actress is Kenyan and Barriss's actress is Nepalese-Indian, while Cyslin appears to be based off of a non-Caucasian ethnicity (likely African). On the other hand, there's little to no evidence that the Seventh Sister is this.
  • Commonality Connection: It is traditional for Mirialans to select students that were also of Mirialan descent, a practice that would be honored by Mirialan Jedi including Master Luminara Unduli, who selected Padawan Barriss Offee as her apprentice.
  • Facial Markings: They have facial tattoos.
  • Long-Lived: As shown by General Viess, Mirialans can live almost twice as long as humans.

    Mirialans on Other Pages 

The Necropolis

Location: Outer Rim Territories

"The Necropolis? That sounds welcoming. An entire junkyard planet? Okay..."
Rey

A remote junkyard planet littered with the valuable remains of various ships and equipment.


  • I Don't Like the Sound of That Place: The Necropolis isn't exactly cheerful-sounding and scavenging here is even referred to as "pick[ing] the bones of the fallen", although Ara-Nea makes it sound like it's just a bit of morbid humor. It's not.
  • Landfill Beyond the Stars: It serves as a dumping ground for old ships and equipment from various eras, albeit more profitable than some examples, as much of the tech is still functional and thus quite valuable, to the point that Rey wonders why the New Republic hasn't caught wind of it. Turns out there's a good reason for that.
  • Meaningful Name: A necropolis is a large cemetery, especially for an ancient city. The Necropolis is serves as a 'cemetery' of sorts for old starships and as a literal graveyard for the many people Ara-Nea has had killed to steal their money and ships.
  • Scavenger World: The inhabitants of the planet make a living by picking out useable ship parts to sell. They also allow visitors to scavenge whatever they can carry provided they pay for a 500 credit scavenging license.

    Ara-Nea 

Ara-Nea

Species: Unknown

Appearances: Age of Resistance

"Welcome to the Necropolis. I am Ara-Nea. Would you like to pick the bones of the fallen?"

The overseer of the Necropolis.


  • Bad Boss: It turns out that the people working for him are in fact slaves who he keeps locked up in cells; it's implied that some of them may be people he trapped on the Necropolis after stealing their ships and killing others they were travelling with.
  • Creepy Long Fingers: He has very long, thin fingers tipped with claw-like nails.
  • Exact Words: When Ara-Nea asks Rey if she'd like to "pick the bones of the fallen", it turns out he's referring to the fact that anyone sent down to the Necropolis doesn't come back.
  • Fed to the Beast: He intentionally sends visitors to the Necropolis into the lair of a giant and dangerous alien creature so he can take their money and ships.
  • Insectoid Alien: He's an insect/arachnid-like alien, looking almost like a cross between a Xenomorph and an Ohmu.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: He's imprisoned by the very people he enslaved to be tried for his crimes, after Rey - whom he tried to trick into being killed - uses a Jedi Mind Trick on him to make he himself release his slaves and turn himself over to them.
  • This Cannot Be!: When Rey returns to the platform from the junkyard alive, Ara-Nea exclaims "You're back? From...the Necropolis? That's impossible. You were supposed to..."
  • Underestimating Badassery: He thinks Rey is just another hapless traveller he can manipulate, dispose of and steal from. He's very, very wrong.
  • Weak-Willed: Is revealed to be this, as Rey doesn't have too much difficulty using a Jedi Mind Trick on him.

Nevarro

Location: Outer Rim Territories

A volcanic world serving as a hub for the Bounty Hunter's Guild.

    In General 
  • Hub City: Due to being the location of an Imperial stronghold and the headquarters of the Bounty Hunters' guild. By the time Mando returns in Season 2, Cara and Greef have cleaned up most of it, and the former Bounty Hunters Guild has been converted into a school.
  • Single-Biome Planet: It appears to be mostly volcanic plains, although unlike Mustafar and Sullust, it's more inhabitable, having native species like the lava meerkat and massive flying reptavians.

    Greef Karga 

    Cara Dune 

    The Mythrol 

The Mythrol

Species: Mythrol

Portrayed by: Horatio Sanz
Appearances: The Mandalorian

A debt jumper who is one of The Mandalorian's more ordinary quarries.


  • Amusing Alien: He's often the source for a lot of comedic relief whenever he shows up.
  • The Bus Came Back: Shows up in "The Siege" unfrozen and working off his debts for Karga.
  • Butt-Monkey: He's stuffed into carbonite in his first episode and spends his second being ordered around by Greef and Cara. They also make him do the dangerous job of walking out onto a ledge with no railing to dump the reactor.
  • The Drag-Along: On the mission to the Imperial base in "The Siege". He's not there by choice and was basically volunteered by Greef as a way of paying off his debts.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": We don't know his name, but everyone just calls him Mythrol.
  • Human Popsicle: Gets frozen in carbonite by the Mando.
  • Indentured Servitude: Greef is letting him work off the money he embezzled, but it's going to take him 350 years to do it unless Greef agrees to take years off.
  • The Precious, Precious Car: He's apparently very attached to his speeder and freaks out when it gets crushed by accident.
  • Put on a Bus: He hasn’t returned in Season 3 since the show returned to Nevarro (due to sexual misconduct allegations against Horacio Sanz, it’s unlikely he’ll ever appear again).

Orish

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Orishen

"Orish knows sacrifice. Orish knows what it is to poison ourselves so that the Empire may not consume us and our world."
Tolwar Wartol

The homeworld of the Orishen species. It was a lush and peaceful pastoral world, until the Galactic Empire enslaved the populace and began strip-mining the planet's resources. The Orishen eventually rose up against the Empire and successfully drove them off their world, though at a heavy price; Orish subsequently joined the New Republic.


  • Agri World: The Orishen's primary way of life was farming, well-suited to Orish's climate, though the Empire heavily exploited this once they came to power.
  • Apocalypse How: Scope Planetary, with a Severity level of Societal Disruption. The Orishen themselves poisoned Orish from the ground to the atmosphere to drive out the Empire. They now live either in a framework of tubes and stations orbiting the planet, or on nearby asteroids.
  • Death World: After the Orishen poisoned their own world with a chemical bomb to free themselves from Imperial rule, Orish is no longer habitable, with the few thousand remaining Orishen living offworld.

    Orishen 

Orishen

A once peaceful race whose lives revolved around farming, the Orishen are known to be tough and stern with a strong sense of honor. They suffered greatly under an Imperial occupation, eventually turning to drastic measures to emancipate themselves.


  • Alien Blood: Their blood is purple.
  • Bizarre Alien Biology: Their bodies and heads are covered in smooth, asymmetrical and reflective plates for protection. They have slits for nostrils, long, tapered tongues and deep-set eyes with X-shaped irises and pulsing, kaleidoscopic corneas.
  • Creepy Long Fingers: They have long fingers tipped with claws.
  • Dying Race: Many Orishen – who always had a comparatively small population – were killed when they bombed their world to defeat the Empire. By the end of the Galactic Civil War, there are only a few thousand Orishen still living.
  • Fantastic Naming Convention: The Orishen tend to have anagrammatic names (e.g. Tolwar Wartol, Tim Tam Tam Tim etc).
  • Flower Mouth: Their lower jaws are bisected, giving the impression of a flower blooming when they speak.
  • Honor Before Reason: The Orishen place a lot of value upon honor and protocol, with Sinjir Rath Velus describing them as "almost overly noble, driven mad by an aggressive sense of honor."
  • Named After Their Planet: The Orishen derive their name from their homeworld of Orish.
  • Pyrrhic Victory: The Orishen succeeded in forcing the Empire to abandon their planet, but only by using a chemical bomb made of hoarded pesticides and fertilizer to effectively poison the entire planet, killing thousands of Orishen as well. However, Tolwar Wartol considers it to be more of a Heroic Sacrifice.
  • Slave Liberation: Type 3; the Orishen secretly hoarded chemicals for farming to construct a powerful and toxic bomb, which they used to poison the ground and air. The Empire abandoned the planet after it was no longer hospitable, though consequently a lot of Orishen were killed and it effectively cost them their homeworld too.
  • Slave Race: The entire race was enslaved by the Empire and abused and exploited, until they managed to fight back.

    Orishen on other pages 

Ovanis

Location: Outer Rim Territories

A planet filled with canyons and caverns. During the Resistance's search for Lor San Tekka, Poe Dameron and Black Squadron visit the world.


  • Meaningful Name: It's name contains "ova" and the main storyline on this planet involves a giant egg.
  • No Name Given: The planet's name is not mentioned until Issue #5, long after Black Squadron has left the planet behind.

    The Crèche 

The Crèche

Appearances: Poe Dameron

A religious order dwelling on a planet of the same name. Their culture centers on caring for a giant egg, which they believe contains the future savior of the universe. Lor San Tekka once stayed with them, learned their ways, and gained their trust.


  • Dark Is Not Evil / Light Is Not Good: The egg hatches in "Poe Dameron #3", releasing a giant that glows with white light, which begins attacking them. It's revealed that there was a second creature in the egg, this one black and red, which defeats the creature and takes the Crèche to a new home.
  • Hidden Elf Village: A small, highly spiritual community with little contact with the outside world.
  • The Messiah: They believe that the savior of the universe will hatch from the giant egg they care for.
  • Underground City: Their home is hidden in a series of underground caverns.

Plazir-15

Location: Outer Rim Territories

A lush terrestrial world with domed cities and droid-dependent population managed by elective monarchs imposing direct democracy.

    The Duchess 

The Duchess

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_duchess_sw.png

Species: Human

Homeworld: Plazir-15

Portrayed by: Lizzo
Appearances: The Mandalorian

The reigning, elected Duchess of Plazir-15.


  • Big Beautiful Woman: She’s played by the heavyset Lizzo and is very beautiful and well-dressed.
  • Big Fun: She’s friendly, kind, a just ruler, and heavyset.
  • Disappointed in You: She says it almost word for word to Helgait after he’s revealed to be behind the droid crisis.
  • Friend to All Children: She quickly asks if she can babysit Grogu and treats him well the whole time he’s in her care.

    Captain Bombardier 

Captain Bombardier

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bombardier_sw.png

Species: Human

Portrayed by: Jack Black
Appearances: The Mandalorian

The Duchess’s husband and consort, and an ex-Imperial.


  • The Atoner: He was rehabilitated from his old Imperial ways and now seeks to atone for them by being a benevolent ruler.
  • Big Fun: Played by the heavyset Jack Black and a fun-loving, affable ruler.
  • Heel–Face Turn: He was once an Imperial but has since reformed into a genuinely heroic person.
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: His status as an ex-Imperial has resulted in Plazir being unable to carry much in the way of weapons, forcing them to rely on Mandalorian privateers and for their own native security force to be virtually worthless.

Ponemah

Location: Outer Rim Territories

A remote desert planet on the edge of the galaxy, where a Separatist cruiser carrying cargo valuable to Count Dooku crashed near the end of the Clone Wars.

    In General 
  • Death World: Its status as a desert planet already makes it unpleasant, but the area around the South Pole is even worse, containing magnetic storms, lava jets, nasty dust storms and giant sandworms.
  • Sand Worm: They live in the unpleasant part of the southern hemisphere, and no one knows what the upper limit on their size is. The largest known specimen was 90 metres long, and it's implied they can get much larger.
  • Single-Biome Planet: Another entry on Star Wars' long list of desert worlds.

Raada

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Local Species: Human (Raadan), Togruta, Rodian, Sullustan

A small moon with a few isolated farming communities. One year following the rise of the Empire, Raada became the hiding place of former Jedi Padawan Ahsoka Tano while also being targeted for occupation by the Empire.

    Kaeden Larte 

Kaeden Larte

Species: Human

Appearances: Ahsoka

A young woman from Raada that Ahsoka befriends a year after the fall of the Republic.


  • Amazon Chaser: Kaeden is in awe of Ahsoka's combat skills, and finds her particularly beautiful when she's wielding her new lightsabers. Foreshadowed earlier in the book when Kaeden sees Ahsoka carrying a very heavy pack with little effort and starts Eating the Eye Candy.
  • Ambiguously Brown: Star Wars doesn't have the same ethnicities as Earth, but she's described as being "lighter than Master Windu but darker than Rex", the two men in question being on the darker side of black and space Maori respectively. Her braids and the fact that her sister was based on Quvenzhané Wallis strongly imply that she's black, though.
  • Cold-Blooded Torture: Subject to this after being captured by Imperials.
  • Cool Big Sis: To Miara.
  • The Force Is Strong with This One: While she's too weak to actively wield the Force like a Jedi would, she's clearly above average in Force sensitivity since she can sense when others use it, noting the Sixth Brother's use of it feels wrong and forceful and that Ahsoka feels more brilliant after she forges new lightsabers.
  • Promoted to Parent: To Miara after their parents died in an accident, she is officially listed as her guardian on Imperial records.
  • Ship Tease: Kaeden has a very obvious crush on Ahsoka, and even claims at one point she would kiss her. Ahsoka herself seems to have some affection for her, but is confused and uncertain of them due to her prior years as a Jedi being taught to avoid attachments.

    Miara Larte 

Captain Miara Larte

    Selda 

Selda

Species: Togruta

Appearances: Ahsoka

The Togruta owner of a busy cantina.


    Vartan 

Vartan

Species: Human

Appearances: Ahsoka

The supervisor of the work crew Kaeden and Miara are on.


  • An Arm and a Leg: Loses two limbs when he gets hit by a shot from an Imperial walker during the evacuation of Raada. Selda jokes that this means they now match.
  • Big Ol' Eyebrows: The only hair on his head apart from his eyelashes, and quite bushy.
  • Parental Substitute: For Kaeden and Miara, after their parents died.

Shadda-Bi-Boran

Location: Outer Rim Territories

"I was seven and the planet we were evacuating was Shadda-Bi-Boran. The sun was dying and we managed to relocate the entire populace, but we couldn't replicate the environment properly. Whatever nutrients they got from their sun, they couldn't get anywhere else."
Padmé Amidala

An Outer Rim world that suffered a planet-wide catastrophe in 39 BBY when its sun began to go out. A relief group, including Padmé Amidala and her father, managed to evacuate and re-settle the planet's populace, but unfortunately they couldn't adjust to their new environment and died out.


  • Apocalypse How: Scope Planetary, Class 3b; due to the sun dying, the planet was rapidly becoming uninhabitable. There was an attempt to evacuate the planet's natives and settle them elsewhere, but sadly they were unable to replicate the environmental conditions provided by their sun which they needed to survive, and the species eventually became extinct.
  • Canon Immigrant: Shadda-Bi-Boran was first mentioned in a deleted scene from Attack of the Clones and in its novelization. It was introduced into Canon in the novel Queen's Shadow.
  • Homeworld Evacuation: The native species of the planet were all evacuated in 39 BBY in an attempt to save them from extinction, but tragically they couldn't survive off-world and all died anyway.
  • Schrödinger's Canon: The native species of Shadda-Bi-Boran were a humanoid species with green skin and large black eyes; they were known to have a peaceful civilization and worshipped their planet's sun.

Shuraden

Location: Galactic Frontier, Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Ximpi

A planet on the Galactic Frontier during the High Republic era, situated between Virgillia system and the Nuknog homeworld, Sump. Homeworld of the Ximpi species.

    Kanrii 

Kanrii

Species: Ximpi

A friendly Ximpi that meets Keeve during her training on Shuraden.
  • Amusing Alien: He's a small alien creature that tries to befriend Keeve while she trains with her master and serves as most of the comic relief in Issue #1.
  • Sidekick Creature Nuisance: He tries talking to Keeve while she's attempting to focus on her training, and is unaware that she finds him annoying.

Sorgan

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Immigrated Species: Human, Klatonian

A backwater forested planet. A local village of farmers was a favorite target for a group of Klatooinian raiders.

    Omera 

Omera

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/omera_sw.jpg

Species: Human

Portrayed by: Julia Jones
Appearances: The Mandalorian

A villager on Sorgan.


  • Ambiguously Trained: Her unexplained proficiency with blasters and battlefield leadership abilities heavily implies there's more to her past than her farm life leads on.
  • Mama Bear: In the Cold Opening of Chapter 4, when the raiders appear from the woods to loot the village, the first thing she does is run back to Winta (who was playing near the woods) and quietly hide with her under an upturned basket in a shallow pond. That she had the cool head and presence of mind to hide in plain sight as the raiders raided is the first foreshadowing that she's not a mere minnow farmer.
  • Mysterious Past: Despite the fact that she doesn't own a blaster and didn't have access to one until the Mandalorian shows up, she knows how to handle them to the point of being an expert marksman, an odd talent for a poor minnow farmer living on a peaceful backwater world. During the battle with the raiders, she also showed decent field competency, as if used to giving orders in a fire fight. Neither trait is explained or inquired about. The fact she's a widow is about the only part of her past given any mention.
  • Ship Tease: She grows close to the Mandalorian, even offering him a life there alongside her and the villagers. He admits such a life would be nice and almost lets her take his helmet off. Of course, he chooses to leave to avoid putting her and the village in more danger.

    Winta 

Winta

Species: Human

Homeworld: Sorgan

Portrayed by: Isla Farris
Appearances: The Mandalorian

Omera's daughter.


  • Flat Character: Gets few lines and almost no development. She's mostly there for the Mandalorian to contemplate settling down and raising kids.
  • Nice Girl: She's a sweet kid who quickly bonds with The Child and is heartbroken when the Mando has to take him away for safety.
  • Shrinking Violet: Omera notes that she's not used to strangers. She's reluctant to approach the Mando at first and has her mother ask if she can play with The Child.

    Carasynthia Dune 

Stobar

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Local Species: Human, Balnab, Rodian, Twi'lek, unknown tentacle-faced species (Loubo's species)

A world that housed a spaceport and a diner, also ridden with violent criminal activity.

    Plop Dribble's 

Plop Dribble's

Voiced by: Corey Burton (Loubo), Ashley Eckstein (Marwigo)
Appearances: The Clone Wars

""We get some rough characters in here. Things like this happen too often to count. Eh, why don't you and your friend take a load off, I'll get you some food. Meal's on the house."
Loubo

A diner at the Stobar Spaceport, owned by a man named Loubo. Like the rest of the planet, it had its fair share of rough characters causing trouble. At one point during the Clone Wars, Savage Opress caused a scene by choking a waitress, but evaded custody by smuggling offworld to Lotho Minor before the arrival of the local authorities.


  • Improvised Weapon: When Loubo thinks that Anakin and Ahsoka are trying to hurt his staff again after Savage just had his rampage, he runs at them with... a frying pan. The police yell at him to put it away, since one, they're just bystanders and he needs to calm down, and two, does he really think a frying pan is going to work against a Jedi? Though apparently, the serious reaction was because it was supposed to be a blaster instead, which makes more sense.
  • Nice Guy: Loubo is protective of his staff, doesn't discriminate against droids as evidenced by having a droid waitress, and offers Anakin and Ahsoka a free meal after mistaking them for troublemakers wanting to further kick down his already-injured waitress.
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: Due to Stobar being crime-ridden, Loubo is very protective of his staff and will have the authorities called if something comes up, but otherwise, he's understanding, appreciates help, and will apologize if he goes too far, maybe even give you a free meal while he's at it.
  • Seen It All/Unusually Uninteresting Sight: Lots of people stir up trouble on Stobar and in the diner, so a buff and powerful humanoid man randomly attacking a waitress is considered somewhat common (though like any sane person would, it's still worthy of contacting the authorities — a one million credit bounty ended up getting put on Savage's head for fleeing the scene). It's not out-of-it enough for them to suggest to Anakin and Ahsoka to do something about it, and the duo were late to the party anyway.

Taris

Location: Taris System, Outer Rim Territories
Immigrated Species: Human, Kubaz

A polluted urban planet covered with wrecked starships and overgrown swamps. The wealthy lived in nicer skyscrapers.


  • Canon Immigrant: This planet first appeared in Knights of the Old Republic
  • City Planet: Similar to Coruscant, Taris is an urban planet.
  • Polluted Wasteland: Similar to its appearance in Star Wars: The Old Republic. The planet is a toxic wasteland with yellow smog drifting the atmosphere and swamps covering the surface.
  • Schrödinger's Canon:
    • Fantastic Racism: In Knights of the Old Republic The only nonhumans who can walk around in the Upper City of Taris work for the local Exchange boss or are pretty Twi'lek shopkeepers. Others get pelted by stones thrown by children, as seen once. There is a street preacher calling nonhumans a "plague that sweeps through our streets". A seedy hotel has alien occupants despite this being illegal. The slum-like and generally miserable Lower City, overrun by gangs, is where most of the nonhumans live. The racism Juhani experienced as a child on Taris is a major point in her sidequest.
    • Orbital Bombardment: Darth Malak bombards the planet in order to sniff out Bastila Shan.
    • "Shaggy Dog" Story: The Republic tried to rebuild and resettle the planet centuries after the bombardment. Unfortunately, the Sith Empire invaded the planet and undid everything the Republic had accomplished.
    • The Virus: The lower city of Taris is infested with Rakghouls who can turn people into one of them with a bite or scratch. After the bombardment from Malak, the infestation spread to the entire planet
  • Urban Segregation: The wealthy live in nice skyscrapers while the others live in makeshift tenements involving shipping containers or crashed starships.
     Tarisians on other pages 

Thabeska

Location: Thabeska System, Outer Rim Territories
Local Species: Human (Thabeskan)

A planet in the Outer Rim that is home to the Fardi Clan, which controls many legitimate businesses and smuggling operations.

    The Fardi clan 

The Fardi clan

Appearances: Ahsoka

A rich and powerful smuggling family. During the reign of the Empire, in the first years, they managed to avoid scrutiny from the Empire by establishing legal businesses as a cover for their smuggling operations.


    Fardi 

Mr. Fardi

Species: Human

Homeworld: Thebeska

Appearances: Ahsoka

The leader of the branch of the Fardi Clan that Ahsoka works for, and Hedala Fardi's uncle.


    Hedala Fardi 

Hedala Fardi

Species: Human

Homeworld: Thebeska

Appearances: Ahsoka

A young girl from the Fardi Clan that Ahsoka befriends while she hides out on the world of Thabeska, a year after the rise of the Empire.


  • Being Watched: She's able to sense when the Sixth Brother was looking for her, describing it to Ahsoka as if a "shadow" was nearby. Ahsoka is somewhat relieved that her Force talents lean in that direction, as it'll keep her relatively safer.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Ahsoka is forced to leave Thabeska for Raada, and with Hedala being Force-sensitive and Inquisitors already existing, that might not be a good sign for Hedala. She at least manages to evade the Sixth Brother's detection due to him going offtrack when he senses Ahsoka elsewhere, but who's to say the Inquisition didn't find Hedala afterwards?
    • Ahsoka does tell Hedala's uncle about his niece's abilities and the danger she's in.

Takobo

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Capital: Takobo City
Local Species: Ithorian

Home to many immigrated species, Takobo had a large Ithorian population.

    Oora and Pypey 

Oora

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/oora_and_pypey_swr.png

Species: Ithorian

Voiced by: Grey DeLisle
Appearances: Rebels

An Ithorian mother and her Force-sensitive child. Pypey becomes a target for the Imperial Inquisition's latest hunt, but thanks to intervention by the Ghost rebel cell, both she and her child manage to escape the Empire's grasp.


  • Disappeared Dad: No comment is made on the whereabouts of Pypey's father.
  • Put on a Bus: Presumably, the Rebellion sent Oora and her son to a safe place.

Pypey

Species: Ithorian

Appearances: Rebels

Oora's Force-sensitive son.


  • Evil-Detecting Baby: He cries loudly whenever the Inquisitors get close, which proves problematic when Ezra is trying to sneak him out of a building through the ducts without them hearing.
  • Spell My Name With An S: Is it "Pypey", "Pypie" or "Pipey"? The episode credits say the latter, but it seems no one can agree.

The Voxx Cluster

Location: Voxx Cluster, Outer Rim Territories

An asteroid field, home to Vranki's Hotel and Casino.

    Vranki 

Vranki the Blue

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vranki_sw.png

Species: Hutt

Voiced by: John DiMaggio

The owner of a hotel and casino in the Voxx Cluster.


  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: He claims to be "like those [Hutts] you've never heard of", but he turns out to be just as slimy as the rest of them when he tries to scam Ace Squadron into being indebted to him.
  • The Cameo: He's mentioned in Poe Dameron: Free Fall as attending Zeva's meeting with the other crimelords to discuss business with the Spice Runners.
  • The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: Invoked. It turns out his racers are droids that use a main control core to calculate their flight better and faster than regular racers can, though Ace Squadron is able to turn the tables in their favor by having Neeku hack into the casino's computers to help advise their flights.
  • Devil in Plain Sight: Subverted. Nobody trusts him because he's a Hutt (and they prove to be right), but they have no other choice since they're in desperate need for money.
  • Dirty Old Man: He takes pleasure in the idea of having Torra stuck with him especially, an idea that Doza really doesn't take well to.
  • My Species Doth Protest Too Much: Subverted. He tries to come off as atypical for a Hutt and seems to be easygoing, but he turns out to be just as scummy. Poe Dameron: Free Fall also confirms he is or used to be involved in the criminal underworld.
    Vranki: Now now. I know what you're thinking. But don't let my good looks intimidate you. Besides, I'm nothing like the other Hutts you may have heard of. But I'm exactly like those you've never heard of.

Yar Togna

Location: Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Tognath

Homeworld of the Tognath, Yar Togna is a high-gravity planet with a foul-smelling toxic atmosphere. It was conquered and occupied by the Empire, forcing many of the natives, including eggmates Benthic and Edrio, to flee as refugees.

    Tognath 

Tognath

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tognath_sw_card_trader_3.png

These strange, sentient humanoids were genetically related to the Kel Dor and the Gand.


  • Bizarre Alien Biology: They may very well be among the most unique species of the franchise. To start, Tognath cannot breathe oxygen and must wear a breathing apparatus when they are out of their homeworld. The 2018 sourcebook Dawn of the Rebellion for Fantasy Flight Games' tabletop RPG sheds more information on them. They are classified as "insectomammals" and are genetic relatives of the Kel Dor and the Gand, meaning they share features from mammals and insects alike, and they also possess both an endoskeleton and an exoskeleton, making them a rather hardy species. Bizarre Alien Biology, thy name is Tognath.
  • Bizarre Alien Reproduction: Tognath hatched from eggs nurtured in a suspension jelly.
  • Humanoid Aliens: They have the basic humanoid body shape but a distinctly alien appearance.
  • Insectoid Aliens: Not as noticeable as other examples, but Tognath, being insectomammals, have some insectoid qualities, such as the presence of an exoskeleton. They are also related to the much more insect-looking Gand.
  • Named After Their Planet: Played with: part of their homeworld's name contributes to their species name.
  • True Companions: While in the suspension jelly, two or more eggs (not necessarily from the same parent) sometimes grafted together, thus creating a bond that continued throughout the life of the eggmates,

Zeffo

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zeffo_sw.png
Location: Zeffo System, Outer Rim Territories
Native Species: Zeffo

Home to the Zeffo, an advanced species of Force wielders who disappeared thousands of years ago.


  • Ghost Planet: Sort of. There are no Zeffo to be found on Zeffo, but there are people on the planet. Mostly those trying to explore / loot the Zeffo architecture left behind.
  • Look on My Works, Ye Mighty, and Despair: The last remnants of the Zeffo people are large statues and temples.

    Zeffo 

Zeffo

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/zeffo_species_sw.png

An ancient and advanced species of aliens who wielded the Force in times past.


  • Benevolent Precursors: What they started off as. While they do have a brief period of darkness, they don't seem to have gone all the way out to trying to conquer the Galaxy.
  • Expy: An ancient, Force-wielding race who explored a lot of worlds, including Kashyyyk, where they set up temples and statues? They're like a less horrible version of the Rakata, who later turned out to also have existed in the same continuity.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: After a dip into madness and the Dark Side, the majority of them snapped out of it in horror.
  • Named After Their Planet: The Zeffo, of the planet Zeffo.
  • Voice of the Legion: Maybe. The only one heard speaking in Jedi: Fallen Order does so with a male and female voice at once.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: After their foray into darkness, the ones left packed up their bags and headed into the "great unknown". Whether that means they just went elsewhere or a decidedly more final type of unknown is unclear. But they're nowhere to be seen by the time of the Clone Wars, and certainly none of them have popped up at any major point in the Galaxy's history so far. In Jedi: Survivor, Master Cordova reveals he went in search of their trail in the Unknown Regions, and while he found signs of them passing through, he did not discover where they ultimately went.

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