Lord Sovereign
The resident Britbong
More AI voice shenanigans:
I’m literally sobbing. This work of art has touched me on a sublime level. My life is more complete with it.
More AI voice shenanigans:
I’m literally sobbing. This work of art has touched me on a sublime level. My life is more complete with it.
(X) Doubt."AI is Love, AI is Life." — God, probably.
More AI voice shenanigans:
Episode 7 missed a golden moment. Having Luke, Han, and Leia reunited one last time.Well now I just feel old. I was a little kid when that song came out.
I actually really liked the Rebels episode where Ahsoka was fighting Vader. It ended on a note reinforcing Vaders evil and power, the sacrifice didn’t feel meaningless, and this was after seeing Ashoka beating the brakes off of those inquisitors with Maul. The time travel was shit though.
No real thoughts on Kreia, but Kathleen Kennedy managed to squander a lot of good will and an amazing universe in a half baked money grab. You can stand by a subpar price of media without attacking your most fervent fans. And Episode 7 wasn’t bad when it came out, but it was made infinitely worse when the other sequels arrived.
Episode 7 missed a golden moment. Having Luke, Han, and Leia reunited one last time.
Hilariously, the writers behind Picard saw this and realized there was an opportunity for their own show. The last few episodes of the last season were basically a love letter to tNG fans.Episode 7 missed a golden moment. Having Luke, Han, and Leia reunited one last time.
If Star Wars was German.
Well, it’s AI art, so that’s about expected.Very creepy/uncanny valley vibes
Which only happened because the show had basically already been written off as a loss and abandoned by those responsible for how terrible the first two seasons were, giving the people who actually gave a crap about the franchise and stayed on free reign to do whatever the heck they wanted with it for season 3. Which, while a rousing success, was immediately pounced upon by the very people who almost completely ruined the franchise, as an excuse to return and try to finish the job.Hilariously, the writers behind Picard saw this and realized there was an opportunity for their own show. The last few episodes of the last season were basically a love letter to tNG fans.
I wish I could say that is a cynical view, but that's most definitely what happened, yeah. Still, we got some good shit out of it at the end, aye?Which only happened because the show had basically already been written off as a loss and abandoned by those responsible for how terrible the first two seasons were, giving the people who actually gave a crap about the franchise and stayed on free reign to do whatever the heck they wanted with it for season 3. Which, while a rousing success, was immediately pounced upon by the very people who almost completely ruined the franchise, as an excuse to return and try to finish the job.
Vader is best if used sparingly. He is a storm, a tempest. He arrives and everything before him dies. You have nothing that can stop him and you can only slow him down.
In other words, treat him as a force of nature. That way you don't cheapen his appearance through the hero's victories.
IIRC, it wasn't even that Vader was "playing with his food", but rather that letting the Ghost crew escape was the plan all along. Since there was a tracker in the shuttle that allowed Vader to follow them back to Phoenix Squadron, which Vader then proceeded to single-handedly dismantle.and the only reason they don't all pretty much instantly die is he's sadistic enough to 'play with his food' and has the classic Force user weakness of underestimating non Force users.
IIRC, it wasn't even that Vader was "playing with his food", but rather that letting the Ghost crew escape was the plan all along. Since there was a tracker in the shuttle that allowed Vader to follow them back to Phoenix Squadron, which Vader then proceeded to single-handedly dismantle.
And there is that lovely shot from Kenobi, where he pulls a ship that just launched back to the ground with the force, then force-tears it's hatch open.It's a little of everything. Vader let them run at the end, but he wasn't intending to spare Kanan and Ezra.
That's the encounter in a nutshell. This is basically a five-on-one fight with the entire protagonist Rebel cell fighting Vader, they throw everything they have at him and fight with good teamwork and good use of the environment. . . culminating in successfully knocking him down and dropping a pair of AT-RT walkers on him. Which a few seconds later turns out to have not even scratched him.