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The separatists, led by the cyborg general of the droid armies Grievous, wanted to buy a gigantic kyber crystal from Utapau, the main component of many weapons, including lightsabers. [ 33 ] [ 34 ] However, the two Jedi decide to destroy the crystal rather than let General Grievous escape with it.
Their commander, a Super Tactical Droid named "General Kalani", [46] had avoided the army-wide shutdown command and now wants to pit his forces against Rex and the Jedi in order to determine whether the Separatist or Republic forces are superior once and for all. As Rex, Ezra, and Kanan battle the droids, Chopper sneaks away and sends a ...
They discover that the droids were sabotaged through nanodroids in the bar's maintenance fluid, which were covertly imported by Commissioner Helgait, head of the planetary Security Office. Confronted, Helgait reveals himself as a Separatist, threatening to activate the droids back to their original 'battle droid' programming before Bo-Katan ...
List of anime based on video games; List of anime by release date (1939–1945) List of anime by release date (1946–1959) List of anime by release date (pre-1939) List of anime conventions; List of anime distributed in the United States; List of anime franchises by episode count; List of anime releases made concurrently in the United States ...
Beast Wars II: Super Life-Form Transformers: Transformers: TV series: 1998–99: Neo Ranga — TV series: 1998: Brain Powerd — TV series: 1998: Maze Bakunetsu Jikuu: Tenpen Kyoui no Giant: Maze: Film: 1998: Super Mobile Legend Dinagiga — OVA: 1998: Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz -Special Edition-Gundam: Film: Compilation 1998: Mobile Suit ...
Tartakovsky stated that he deliberately animated C-3PO with moveable expressive eyes to pay homage to his animated appearances in the Star Wars Holiday Special and Droids. [30] Additionally, the planet Nelvaan's name was a nod to Nelvana, the production company that produced all previous Star Wars animated series. [31]
It follows a group of children as they use AR glasses to unravel the mysteries of the half real, half Internet city, using a variety of illegal software tools, techniques, and virtual pets to manipulate the digital landscape. The title of the show itself, Den-noh Coil, refers to a dangerous separation of one's digital self from the physical body.
While Droids was excluded in the 2014 rebranding of Star Wars canon, [29] recurring villain Admiral Screed—whom A Guide to the Star Wars Universe describes as "the Emperor's right-hand man during the early days of the Empire" [30] —makes appearances in canon novels such as Tarkin (2014) and Aftermath: Life Debt (2016).