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Jedi Profiles is a Star Wars fan work written by TR_SB92 and first published in June 2022, consisting of a list of character profiles for Jedi and other Force-sensitive characters from across the Prequel Era of the franchise. The work describes a timeline taking elements from both Legends and Canon, but occasionally diverging in interesting ways.


Jedi Profiles provides examples of:

  • Adapted Out: Almas Academy is absent, as are most of the characters associated with it. The few exceptions, like Halagad Ventor, make no mention of it. The planet Almas is still mentioned in the profile for Nysis Belzara, but the Academy? Apparently gone.
  • Adaptation Deviation:
    • Agen Kolar rather than Obi-Wan Kenobi is the one to fake his death and go undercover as a bounty hunter to foil an assassination attempt.
    • Several separate events are combined into this version of the Jedi Temple Bombing, including not only the original bombing from Star Wars: The Clone Wars, but also a different bombing of the Temple from Star Wars: Kanan and Nax Cirvan’s attempted kidnapping of Force-sensitive children from Darth Vader and the Ghost Prison.
    • It’s mentioned that, years in the future, Jaina Solo will still approach a group of Mandalorians for help and training, but here the Mandalorians in question are not those led by Boba Fett, but Din Djarin’s Clan Mudhorn.
  • Adaptation Expansion: All over the place. Plenty of events and characters have details added.
  • Adaptational Backstory Change:
    • Maul grows up as an orphan on the lower levels of Coruscant.
    • Asajj Ventress retains her original backstory from the Republic comics as the daughter of a pair of Rattataki warlords and has no connection to the planet Dathomir.
    • T0-B1 was based on Mitaka’s Padawan who died in Order 66, according to the artbook. Here, Mitaka is a former Agricorps member and T0-B1 is a fully original artificial being.
    • Supreme Leader Snoke is here a former Jedi Shadow from the Qiraash species, who fell to the Dark Side while in hiding in the Unknown Regions, and received his scars from a duel with Darth Vader.
  • Adaptational Badass: In the Jedi Apprentice books, Cal-i-Vaun was a random guard at the Jedi Temple. Here, he’s later promoted to the commander of the Jedi Temple Guard and holds that position through the Clone Wars.
  • Adaptation Name Change: Cyruss Okent is renamed Cyr S. Okent, to bring him in line with Triffian naming standards.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: Assorted characters are here identified as Master and Padawan, in a few cases resulting in changes from established canon.
    • Thame Cerulian is not Dooku’s Master, only a Jedi Master who assisted with his training on occasion. He later becomes the Master of Rael Averross rather than Dooku.
    • Reess Kairn is the Padawan of Dal Azim and the Grand-Padawan of Oppo Rancisis.
    • Siolo Ur Manka is the Master of Jastus Farr.
    • Even Piell is the Master of Dass Jennir.
    • Volfe Karkko is the Master of Rajine.
    • Keiran Valn is the Master of Ronhar Kim.
    • Cyslin Myr is the Master of Luminara Unduli instead of Mace Windu, though they are still noted to have worked together.
    • Knol Ven’nari is the Master of Windo ‘Warble’ Nend.
    • Puroth is the Master of Dajjun.
    • Minas Velti is the Master of Reva Sevander.
    • Sifo-Dyas is the Master of Mana Veridi, who is in turn the Master of Shylar.
    • Orykan Tamarik became K’Kruhk’s new Master after the death of Lilit Twoseas.
    • J’ilk Torlin was the Master of Tohno.
    • Mace Windu was the Padawan of Original Character Chuiee Two Thorpe, who was in turn the Padawan of T’ra Saa… who was, in turn, the Padawan of Lula Talisola, making Mace the Great-Grand-Padawan of Kantam Sy, and the Great-Great-Grand-Padawan of Yoda.
  • Adaptation Species Change: Any character whose species of origin was unknown in canon is given one here.
  • Adaptational Gender Identity: Any character whose gender was unknown in canon has it identified here.
  • Adaptational Heroism:
    • Kouru is here a member of the Jedi Temple Guard, with no apparent tendencies toward pillaging random villages.
    • Barriss Offee never falls to the Dark Side here like she did in canon, but remains a loyal Jedi through the end of the war, as in Legends.
    • Though she never becomes fully heroic and never stops being a bounty hunter, Aurra Sing does become less dark over the course of her life.
  • Adaptational Sexuality: Across both Canon and Legends, Asajj Ventress has had exclusively male romantic interests and Aurra Sing has never really had any. Here, they eventually marry each other.
  • Adaptational Villainy:
    • In her Legends appearances, bounty hunter Vianna D’Pow was a relatively harmless villain. Competent at her job, but never seen killing anyone or taking much pleasure in violence. Here, she’s part of the group that bombs the Jedi Temple, though, to be fair, she’s referred to as having been seduced.
    • Some of the members of the Cult of Maul are taken from the Jedi Academy novels by Jeffrey Brown, in which they’re background characters or, at worst, school bullies. The Cult of Maul is quite a bit worse.
    • In canon, while Prosset Dibs first fell to the Dark Side early in the war, he only actually left the Jedi after the end of the war. Here, he leaves during the war and becomes one of Dooku’s Dark Acolytes.
  • Aerith and Bob: As in canon. Jedi Master Oorallon, for instance, was active during the same period as Jedi Padawan Sean.
  • Age Lift:
    • Reva Sevander is in her late teens at the end of the Clone Wars rather than her tweens or pre-teens. This may have been done to make her the same age as her actress during the events of the show.
    • Oppo Rancisis and Yarael Poof are old enough to have already been on the Jedi Council during the High Republic era in canon, but here the latter is only born several centuries later and the former is still born several decades after the relevant events.
      • Rancisis’ Padawan Dal Azim is thus also moved forward in time.
    • Barriss Offee was originally depicted as a peer of Anakin Skywalker in supplementary materials for Attack of the Clones, then retconned into a peer of Ahsoka Tano in Star Wars: The Clone Wars. Here, she’s exactly halfway between them, being four years Anakin’s junior and four years Ahsoka’s senior.
  • Alas, Poor Villain: Evan-Ott was definitely a scumbag, and he deserved to wind up in prison, but that doesn’t mean he deserved to get extrajudicially beaten to death in his cell.
  • Alternate Continuity: In addition to elements from both canons coexisting, the Clone Wars are extended to last for six years rather than three. Past the events of the Original Trilogy, more surviving Jedi are mentioned to join the New Jedi Order, and there are implications of further divergences farther out.
  • Alternative Calendar: Mostly uses ‘AR’ (After Ruusan, referring to the in-universe Ruusan Reformation). Celeste Morne’s profile also mentions ‘BR’ (Before Ruusan). The more traditional ‘ABY’ also makes some appearances once we hit the New Republic era.
  • Ambiguous Gender Identity: Reess Kairn is implied to be a transgender woman, though it isn’t explicitly stated. It’s suggestive, however, that their profile switches from male to female pronouns partway through.
  • Anachronic Order: Though each character’s bio is almost always in chronological order, the different profiles are listed in alphabetical order. Justified, since the work is formatted as a list of character profiles.
  • As Long as It Sounds Foreign: Text-only version. Jedi Knight Bŏb has his name spelled with a breve over the O. This would be pronounced exactly the same way as ‘Bob’ without the breve.
  • Ascended Extra: All over the place, though given the work’s format it can be difficult to quantify.
  • Ascended Fanon: Fanon isn’t exactly the right word for it, but several elements are taken from authorial intent and Word of God:
    • The ages of Shon Kon Ray, T’Bolton, and Durnar, and the species of the latter two, are taken from forum posts made by John Ostrander.
    • Nem Bees being the Padawan of Shon Kon Ray was the original intent of Bees’ creator, Ryan Jewhurst.
    • Yoshi Raph-Elan being killed by General Grievous was the original intent of writer Abel G. Peña.
    • The names J’ilk Torlin and Kerrshnek for otherwise unnamed Jedi are taken from the website of their creator, artist Joe Corroney.
  • Bad Guys Do the Dirty Work: Rogue Jedi Shon-Ju, while plotting his revenge on the Jedi Order for defeating him once, is killed and his entire organization wiped out by Nax Cirvan, a different rogue Jedi working for the Confederacy.
  • Cassandra Truth:
    • Nobody was willing to listen to Sifo-Dyas about his prophetic visions, due mainly to the fact that he had no evidence. It didn’t help that his next recourse was to yell about his visions in various parts of the Temple and occasionally punch people.
    • Dooku likewise went largely unbelieved about the second Sith being in control of the Senate. To be fair, his own profile points out that he was actually telling a half-truth by omitting his own subordination to that second Sith, and that he further undercut his claim by personally presiding over the deaths of almost two hundred Jedi very soon afterwards.
    • B’dard Tone was unable to convince anyone that General Grievous was a high-priority threat after the General maimed him and killed his Padawan on Nadiem. It’s noted that everyone came around very quickly after Grievous’s public debut two years later, but at that point it didn’t really help.
  • Child of Two Worlds: Xeltek, a Colicoid Jedi, suffers from this. He’s genetically less empathetic than most other Jedi, but still much more empathetic than others of his species, making it difficult to fully fit in with either group.
  • Composite Character:
    • Several nameless background Jedi are combined with named characters who have never made visual appearances: Aruden Kej, Nan Latourain, Cyr S. Okent, Keer Stenwyt, and Jaizen Suel.
    • Ool Awmod, from Star Wars: Galaxies, is combined with Sivad’s unnamed Ithorian Padawan from Star Wars: Brotherhood.
    • Dairoki, from the comic miniseries Jedi – The Dark Side, is combined with Sol Mogra from the Dark Legends anthology.
    • In canon, Jor Aerith and Katri are two separate Mirialan members of the Jedi Council; Here, they’re combined into the character of Jor Aerith Katri.
    • Evan-Ott, a character mentioned in Star Wars: Republic, is combined with an unnamed Fallen Jedi from Darth Vader and the Ghost Prison.
    • Kendalina, from the Jedi Prince novels, is combined with the unnamed protagonist of the The Way of the Jedi Gamebook.
    • Ken, the titular 'Jedi Prince', is here identified as the same character as Dathan, the father of Rey.
    • Feemor, Qui-Gon Jinn’s first Padawan, and Sirrus, a minor Republic character, are combined into Feemor Sirrus, a single character.
    • J’ilk Torlin, from an issue of Star Wars Gamer, is combined with an unnamed background extra from Jedi Council: Acts of War and the unseen Master of orphaned Padawan Tohno in Republic.
  • Continuity Nod: All over the place, but a few examples:
    • Two Jedi, Tafasheel Arkan and Jaizen Suel, are noted to be from the same unnamed alien species as Gormaanda.
    • A small group of Jedi operates out of “an abandoned temple on Kiffex.” The temple in question goes unidentified, but may be the same one where Volfe Karkko was previously imprisoned for a thousand years.
    • In the General Grievous comic book, an unidentified Gran Jedi is shown on the Jedi Council. Here, two Gran Jedi – Maks Leem and Ko Solok – are noted to have served on the Council during the Clone Wars, as temporary stand-ins for absent members.
    • The Revenge of the Sith novelization by Matthew Stover mentions the planet Tellanroaeg among a list of locations where Order 66 is being carried out, but no Jedi has ever been shown or mentioned to be on the planet. Here, Jedi Knight Mina Podia is noted to have survived Order 66 while stationed on that planet.
    • The short story “Hero of Cartao”, from Star Wars Insider, ends with its protagonist, Jedi Knight Jafer Torles, vowing to track down the stolen cloning cylinders.. except he’s never seen again, though the cylinders in question end up on the planet Wayland. The novel Dark Rendezvous includes a line of dialogue where, among a list of anonymous Jedi meeting their ends, Mace Windu mentions ‘being shot down over Wayland’. Here, Torles successfully tracks the cylinders down, only to be shot out of the sky.
    • The Battle of Gligger combines an anecdote from The New Essential Guide to Droids, the illustration from a trading card, and the obscure Jedi Tyffix.
    • Many to Star Wars: The High Republic:
      • Lily Tora-Asi and Porter Engle are both mentioned to have served as inspirations to later Jedi.
      • The profiles of several long-lived Jedi mention involvement in the Nihil War.
      • Master Coleman Kcaj hails from the planet of Dalna.
      • T’ra Saa is the Padawan of Lula Talisola (and Zeen Mrala).
      • Shaak Ti broke Vernestra Rwoh’s record of being Knighted at a young age.
      • Bil Valen is an Evereni.
      • Kantam Sy is listed among Yoda’s Padawans.
  • Death by Adaptation:
    • Bairdon Jace and Naat Reath become members of the Padawan Pack and each die during missions.
    • Jedi Knight Yoshi Raph-Elan and Dark Jedi Lii and Kaa are all three killed by General Grievous on Dica.
    • J’ilk Torlin and Kindee Ya are killed during the Clone Wars.
    • Etain Tur-Mukan is killed during a mission to Qiilura, well before the end of the war, Bardan Jusik and Clan Skirata are killed by Durge on Anaxees, and Kina Ha is killed in a test of Order 66 before the war even begins.
    • Hallena Devis is implied to have been killed on JanFathal.
    • Ma’kis’shaalas’s Hiitian Padawan, here named Thae Bolg, is killed by the Cult of Maul on Florrum, taking the place of Adi Gallia in Star Wars: The Clone Wars.
    • Z’meer Bothu, Ph’ton, D’Urban Wen-Hurd, and Nanda-Ree Janoo are among the twenty-eight Jedi killed by General Grievous over Belderone.
    • Master Treetower is killed in Order 66.
    • Thongla Jur and Coleman Kcaj are killed in Operation Knightfall.
    • Kule Xandar is lured into a trap and killed on Nar Shaddaa.
    • Tobias Beckett is killed by Aurra Sing instead of the other way around.
  • Dies Differently in Adaptation:
    • Adi Gallia, Eeth Koth, Yaddle, Luminara Unduli, Jocasta Nu, Tholme, and Ma’kis’shaalas meet the Legends versions of their respective fates rather than the Canon ones.
    • Jodoo Kreen is killed by the Dark Acolyte Trenox during his attack on Coruscant with Cortosis Battle Droids.
    • Prosset Dibs is killed by Kit Fisto during the Second Battle of Mon Calamari.
    • Tiplee joins Obi-Wan and Anakin in their attack on Tythe, and is killed by Dooku after they land to battle him.
    • Beyghor Sahdett is killed by Aurra Sing on Kidron.
    • The Eighth Brother is killed by Asajj Ventress on Agamar.
    • The Fifth Brother and Seventh Sister are killed by Echuu Shen-Jon on Krant.
  • Doorstop Baby: Obi-Wan Kenobi was apparently left on the doorstep of a monastery on Maryx Minor when he was an infant, and was raised there for around a year before they realized he was Force-sensitive and called the Jedi.
  • Dramatis Personae: Basically the entire work is one of these for the author’s Alternate Universe.
  • Expy:
    • Dav-Wes Renno is a Jedi archaeologist who wields a lightwhip, was once traumatized by a mission to the planet Fillithar (home to a species of sentient snakes), and as a Kyuzo, presumably wears a prominent hat. Hmmm…
    • Togar is a Jedi from the Gank species, an alien race famous for covering themselves with advanced armor, who dies on Hy Izlan. As he’s specifically labelled an expy within the work, the most likely candidate is Toguro from “The Ninth Jedi”.
    • The Waagh is a lightly altered version of the percussionist from Halyx, who was planned to be called ‘The Waag’.
  • Faking the Dead:
    • Tholme fakes his death against Asajj Ventress on Tepasi, and at least once more against Quinlan Vos on Saleucami.
    • Yoda fakes his death in order to secretly attend a meeting with Dooku on Vjun, hoping to convince him to return to the light.
    • Agen Kolar fakes his death in order to go undercover as a bounty hunter so he can foil an assassination attempt.
  • Fish out of Temporal Water: A surprisingly common fate for Jedi. Some examples include Aryzah, Ood Bnar, Denia, Halbret, Celeste Morne, Beldorion and Taselda, Aven Rolk, and Roni von Wasaki.
  • For Want Of A Nail:
    • Since Darth Maul never comes back from the dead, the crew of the Ghost aren’t sent to Malachor, which butterflies away Kanan being blinded and eventually killed.
    • Dooku remains a Jedi until after Qui-Gon Jinn’s death in this universe. Since Qui-Gon never needs to come to terms with his Master leaving the Order, a different Jedi – Kai Hudorra – is sent to rescue Lizel Liit from captivity.
  • Happily Ever Before: Several profiles omit even darker events later down the line if they go as they did in canon, such as A’Sharad Hett’s fall to the Dark Side, or the miserable failure of the resistance movement on New Plympto.
  • Heel–Face Door-Slam: Reess Kairn was on the verge of turning their life around and beginning their work to redeem themself… when Aurra Sing found out she’d been tricked and came back to shoot Kairn in the head.
  • Hero Killer: Aurra Sing is the stand-out example of this trope prior to the Clone Wars, even receiving the epithet of ‘Jedi Killer’. During the war, Asajj Ventress initially earns this reputation before being overshadowed by General Grievous after his debut. After the war, of course, Darth Vader becomes the new standard by which to measure.
  • I Owe You My Life: Tol Skorr becomes one of Dooku’s Dark Acolytes out of gratitude to the Count for saving his life on Korriban.
  • Identical Stranger:
    • Quinlan Vos and Sov Nalniuq.
    • Downplayed with Qui-Gon Jinn and Ali-Alann, who aren’t identical, but just similar enough for the latter to convincingly serve as a body double for the former.
  • In Spite of a Nail:
    • Scout still takes refuge on Mandalore after surviving Order 66, albeit temporarily.
    • Kendalina and Ochi’s profiles strongly suggest that, despite drawing much more strongly on the old EU, at the very least Rey will still be born and still eventually become a Jedi.
    • Ahsoka Tano is still framed for the Jedi Temple Bombing, despite the culprit not being a friend of hers.
    • K’Kruhk’s profile states that he still ends up on the Jedi Council during the Second Imperial Civil War.
  • Legion of Doom:
    • At one point, the Separatists ally themselves with two separate Dark Side cults, the Jensaarai and an unnamed Bpfasshi group. It doesn’t amount to much, though.
    • The group Nax Cirvan recruits for the Jedi Temple Bombing may count, consisting of Fallen Jedi Padawan Evan-Ott, Zeltron mercenary Vianna D’Pow, and CIS Lieutenant Rackham Sear.
  • Meaningful Name:
  • Named by Adaptation: All the Inquisitors except for Bil Valen, Masana Tide, and Reva Sevander, Thae Bolg, Erd Scav, Aurr-Ken, Basker Dillam, Durindfire, Ettik, Nat Gerine, Kemede, Dorcas Kincarri, Leeran, Mas’h, Mizu, Ola Scrinoff, Moot Veila, Vokone, Orsei Zaphan, and the Ceratrinoan, Dinkinesh, Drgi Pacithhip, and Peyoan species.
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Ofar Tan-Doov discovers a pair of Force-sensitive twin sisters while on a mission to stop a crime lord, and decides to interrupt his mission to bring them to the Jed for training. With his attention split, the crime lord is able to successfully assassinate him, and also kill the sisters’ parents and burn down their home for good measure, leaving them orphaned, homeless, and very bitter, and still not receiving proper training for their abilities.
  • Non-Human Non-Binary:
    • Hutts and Verpines, which are canonically single-gender hermaphroditic species. The three characters from these species with profiles are referred to as “Hermaphroditic” in the Gender field, with notes about “masculine” or “neutral” personalities appended.
    • Sarn Vals, on the other hand, is from a speciesnote  that otherwise consists of males and females and is referred to as just “Nonbinary”.
  • Non-Indicative Name: Jedi Master Bear is not only not ursine, he isn’t even mammalian. He’s actually a member of the goat-like Galderian species.
  • Noodle Incident: All over the place. Really, any event or incident that’s been either altered or created for the work could qualify.
  • Only One Name: Plenty of examples, as in canon. Some of the most well-known would be Yoda, Yaddle, and Dooku.
  • Properly Paranoid: Played with. Shadday Potkin originally acquired her Cortosis dagger for fear of Quinlan Vos, but never had a chance or a reason to use it against him. She did eventually get to use it against Darth Vader… who killed her, took it away from her, and used it against her fellow Jedi.
  • Punny Name: F, from “The Village Bride”, is originally from the planet of Stand IV.
  • Red Baron:
    • Lily Tora-Asi is referenced as ‘The Knight of Banchii’.
    • Sharad Hett had quite a few: The Champion of Krmar, The Defender of Kamparus, The Hound of Worlds, The Nemesis of the Kimm, and simply The Howlrunner.
    • An’ya Kuro has ‘The Dark Woman,’ which she actually prefers to her real name.
    • Aurra Sing receives ‘Jedi Killer’.
    • Of the teachers at the Jedi Temple, Ilena Xan has ‘Iron Hand’ and Cin Drallig ‘The Troll’.
    • Jai Maruk receives ‘the Hawk-Bat’.
    • Lexia Ginorra is bestowed ‘The Sith’.
    • Valin Draco gets ‘the Valiant Dragon’.
    • Over the course of the Clone Wars, Obi-Wan Kenobi becomes ‘the Negotiator’.
    • Anakin Skywalker gets two: ‘the Hero with No Fear’ and ‘Warrior of the Infinite’.
  • Related in the Adaptation:
    • Mira Koth is an ambiguous example. In Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith, she’s married to ex-Jedi Eeth Koth. Here, they never meet that we know of, but she’s still called Mira Koth. Maybe they’re related, or maybe it’s a coincidence.
    • Valco, from “The Village Bride” is here the Margrave of Hy Izlan, meaning he’s a possible ancestor of Margrave Juro from “The Ninth Jedi”.
    • Inverted with Maul and Savage, who are not biologically related in this universe.
    • Rhad Tarn and Eremin Tarn are twin brothers.
  • Retcon: The author returns periodically to update the work. For the most part this consists of adding rather than subtracting, but there have still been cases.
  • Shaped Like Itself: Some unidentified species are referred to this way. For example, Tieren Nie-Tan is referred to as a “Male of Tieren Nie-Tan’s Species”.
    • For a more subtle example, Yoda’s species is identified as “Species-Y1541”. If you run that through a standard numbers-to-letters translator, 1=A, 2=B, and so on, ‘Y-15-4-1’ spells out ‘Y-O-D-A’.
  • Ships That Pass in the Night: Asajj Ventress and Aurra Sing.
  • Shout-Out:
  • Spared by the Adaptation:
    • Nim Pianna survives her death in canon and lives until at least 978.
    • Skippy the Jedi Droid is specifically mentioned to have survived his Heroic Sacrifice.
    • Melik Galerha, Anise I’Zak, Lissarkh, Voolvif Monn, and Pix all survive Order 66.
    • Initially inverted with Barriss Offee, who meets her Legends fate of being blown up by an AT-TE on Felucia, but then played straight when she manages to survive it.
    • Aurra Sing and Asajj Ventress get a happy ending.
  • Take That!:
    • The characters of Karen Traviss do not have good things happen to them. See Death by Adaptation, above.
    • The ruling body of the planet Gatalenta refuses to tell its citizens anything about the war going on, ostensibly in order to prevent panic or leaks to the enemy, even against the advice of the Jedi. Eventually, the citizens revolt, and the Separatists are able to move right in once the Gatalentans have torn each other apart. In canon, Gatalenta is the home planet of Admiral Holdo.
    • An ancient Jedi outpost, long since forgotten by the Order, contains the texts of the Order of the Terrible Glare, an organization that once fought a war with the Jedi. The outpost in question is on the planet Ahch-To.
    • Halagad Ventor’s profile describes him projecting his own issues onto Anakin Skywalker while completely missing Anakin’s actual issues.
    • Maul’s profile goes out of its way to refer to his body as being “pulped” upon hitting the bottom of the reactor shaft.
  • Token Heroic Orc: Several Jedi come from alien species much more closely associated with villainy:
  • Twin Telepathy: Rhad and Eremin Tarn are bond-twins, which allows them a level of this. Doesn’t work out so well for them after Rhad’s death, though.
  • Uncertain Doom: Any Jedi whose bio ends before the Battle of Geonosis might have died there. Same for any Jedi whose bio ends before the end of the Clone Wars – good odds they died later in the war or in Order 66.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Well, she was hardly unwitting, but it’s unlikely that Kadrian Sey could have predicted how much trouble the Cult of Maul would ultimately get up to.
  • Vague Age: Any Jedi who has only a generation listed in the age field. Depending on the specific one, a generation could cover anywhere from three to eleven years. Any Jedi whose age field is left blank is an even greater example.
  • Villainous Friendship: Asajj Ventress and Durge. In canon, Ventress was brought to Boz Pity on orders from Dooku. Here, Durge brings her there to receive medical treatment on his own initiative after coincidentally stumbling across her.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Many, many characters have their fates left uncertain, even in some cases when the bio ends leaving questions unanswered.
  • Worf Had the Flu: Darth Vader benefits from this twice:
    • Shaak Ti is noted to still be in recovery from her injuries in the Battle of Coruscant when she tries to defend the temple from Vader.
    • Ma’kis’shaalas suffers injuries from his encounter with the Cult of Maul on Turkana that permanently hamper his combat ability, which helps justify his poor showing against Vader on Kessel.


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