More world-building reference, because I feel like these are harder to find when I want them than they should be.
- WA-7 server/waitstaff droids – classic diner droids.
- Autovalet – cleans and presses clothing. (High end/luxury, usually)
- Bell-bot – handle luggage on luxury liners, resorts, etc. Wook lists a couple specific droid types used for this.
- VeeTen Valet droid – presumably provide personal assistance and maintain clothing and personal spaces.
- Household service droid – generic household help for all the chores you don’t have time to do when you’re busy saving the galaxy.
Tag: droids
How was the imperial probe droid able to broadcast the image of the rebel base on Hoth to the super star destroyer so quickly?
Imperial probe droids were equipped with high-frequency HoloNet transceivers for exactly that purpose. Because the HoloNet functioned by routing messages through hyperwave transceivers, not subspace ones, communication over the HoloNet was nearly instantaneous and depended little on the distance between the source and the destination.
~ Jacen
Do you have any sources on the legal status of droids? Were they required to have owners, or were they able to work & live independently?
It depends pretty heavily on the planet. Though extremely rare, there are droids out there who don’t have owners and live and work on their own, but the legality of it is not recognized by many worlds. If an unowned droid is found on one of these planets, it will likely be seized, memory-wiped, and sold.
Many galactic laws also treat droids as property rather than people (notably, the Droid Statutes).
On other worlds such as Naboo, however, higher-level droids are considered sentient and are treated as equal. Class three droids, built for interacting with humans and commonly considered the most complex droids out there, are more likely to be seen as personable and granted autonomy than other classes. Class five droids will pretty much never be seen as more than basic labour units, because they are usually built without advanced cognitive modules. This is a simplification, because the whole issue is vastly complicated, but if you have the money I would suggest getting the D6 guide Cynabar’s Fantastic Technology: Droids. It sums it up very nicely, and it’s an interesting read. (If you’d like to message me privately, I can legally send you a few pages of the book, in case you can’t afford it at the moment.)
The legal status of droids on different worlds is usually closely tied to whether the society believes droids can be sentient. I have a whole ton of thoughts on this subject in both Star Wars and the real world (over the last semester I’ve ended up writing three papers on the subject) and I won’t get into depth about my own opinions here, but if you’d like to discuss it further I would be more than happy to. Suffice to say, the galaxy is very divided on this issue, and whether a droid is legally considered “free” will depend on the individual droid and the legal system.
Hope that helps!
~ Jacen
Would it ever be possible to use as a defense the propagation of a virus or reverse hack into an astromech as it links up to a central computer?
I’m no expert on computers, but we have seen this sort of thing before. In one episode of Rebels, the Empire manages to take control of Chopper and use him as a spy after he hooks up to an Imperial data port. From what I know of viruses (in the real world), it could be possible for a droid to get one if it downloaded something containing it. From what I know of them in Star Wars, one could hack into a droid using an artificially intelligent virus, and use that to take over its systems or search through its memory files.
Hope that helps!
~ Jacen
DO you have tips on how to write droids such as R2 and BB-8? Dialogue wise, what words they would use, how eloquent they speak etc
Droids that speak in binary don’t really get dialogue, at least not in the official novels. When speaking to an organic being, their noises are usually described rather than translated, unless they’re in a starfighter, in which case the noise will often be described, followed by a reading of the translation provided on the screens. If they’re speaking to another droid, there will also usually be both a description and a translation. Here are some examples (from the Revenge of the Sith novelization, cause I had it on hand):
From its socket beside the cockpit, R2-D2 whistled and beeped. A translation spidered across Anakin’s console readout: SCANNING. LOTS OF ECM SIGNAL JAMMING.
R2-D2’s squeal was as close to terrified as a droid can sound. Glowing letters spidered across Anakin’s readout: ABORT! ABORT ABORT!
R2-D2’s whistling reply had a distinctly sulky tone. “Listen, Artoo, someone has to maintain computer contact; do you see a datajack anywhere on me?” The droid seemed to acquiesce, but not before wheeping what sounded like it might have been a suggestion where to look.
C-3PO had turned away dismissively. “It couldn’t have been that bad. Don’t exaggerate! You’re hardly even dented.”
R2’s answering feroo sounded a little defensive. C-3PO sent a wisp of static through his vocabulator that sounded distinctly like a disapproving sniff.
… [C-3PO’s] sonoreceptors picked up a familiar ferooo-wheep peroo, which his autotranslation protocol converted to DON’T WORRY. YOU’LL BE ALL RIGHT.
(All the caps lock text is written in smallcaps in the books, but obviously Tumblr doesn’t do that)
Not all books do it the exact same, but it usually resembles this format. Droids such as R2 tend to speak in short, simple sentences, though R2 has picked up so much that, as you’ll notice, he can add some flair to his speech when he wants to. Most droids do take on a particular tone; BB8, for example, is described as often sounding childlike. It seems that the more a droid is treated like another person, the more evident this personality becomes.
Hope that helps!
~ Jacen
A Guide to Medicine in Star Wars – Part 1: Field Medicine
This first post focuses on how medicine is practiced on the battlefield and within various military organizations. The next part will be about civilian medicine and common procedures.
I’ve included both Canon and Legends information, but I’ve distinguished the two where they can’t work together. From here, canon (lowercase) will refer to the new Canon (post-April 2014) and Legends combined. The most prominent and well-known militaries are included in this post; if you don’t see one here, it’s probably because not much information was available and it is a more obscure group. If you would like to know about one that isn’t here, feel free to send an ask.
The rest is under the cut. Sorry if it doesn’t work for mobile users!
Galactic Republic
Within the Grand Army of the Republic, there were several different kinds of medical practitioners. Clone medics and clone medical officers were bred and trained to treat other clones; while clone medics participated in battles with the other clone troopers, medical officers were stationed on Haven-class medical stations, capital ships, and at mobile medcenters, and they wore white uniforms rather than armour. Some medics trained to become a first aid specialist (sometimes abbreviated to FAS), a medic who treated and stabilized injured clones in the middle of a battle.
It is unclear exactly how medics fit into the command structure of the GAR. Some, like Sergeant Coric, had known military titles while others, like Kix, were referred to only as a clone trooper medic. In medical matters, however, medics were known to outrank their commanding officers.
Equipment
Clone medics carried backpacks filled with medical equipment when they went onto the battlefield. They were known to be equipped with two vibroscalpels, two laser cauterizers and a laser scalpel, as well as bandages and various bacta products. Some sources suggest that they carried medpacs, meaning they could also have had medisensors, synthflesh, kolto, spray bandages, hypos, irrigation bulbs, coagulants and various medical drugs on their person. While these supplies allowed the medics to perform basic procedures, medcenters and medbays were relied on for more complete treatment. As a result, on long campaigns or in situations where evacuation could not be provided, medics may be forced to leave badly injured clones behind.
Medical droids were also available to help treat patients. The meddroids used by the Republic during the Clone Wars could be found at any permanent or makeshift medical facility, and sometimes were even set up near the front lines at small mobile aid stations, but they were not generally brought into the actual fighting like the clone medics were due to their restricted mobility. The 2-1B surgical droids and FX-series medical assistant droids were popular models within the Grand Army, and they often worked together with the FX-series as the assistant to the 2-1B. Both could work in tandem with a clone medic/medical officer or a Kaminoan, or perform a medical procedure by themselves. IM-6 meddroids, on the other hand, were able to move into the middle of a fight and drag injured soldiers away for treatment. They were much smaller than the 2-1B and FX-series droids, and hovered on repulsors rather than walking or rolling. They were also very popular in the GAR and could be stationed on anything from Star Destroyers to gunships and walkers. (See links for more specific information on these meddroids).

FX-series (left) and 2-1B (right) meddroids
Treatment procedure
If a clone survived the initial injury and could be recovered from the battlefield, he was brought to a Republic Mobile Surgical Unit (RMSU). RMSUs were small mobile hospitals, able to be set up or taken down in under an hour, that were located near the fighting and were equipped to either completely heal the injury or keep the clone stable until he could be brought to a medical station. They were staffed by surgeons, medical officers and medical droids, and were theoretically capable of dealing with any injury, as they included equipment such as bacta tanks, antisepsis fields and even cloning tanks to grow replacement organs. However, in reality, they often experienced critical shortages of personnel and supplies.
The injured clone could then be brought by medical frigate to a Haven-class medical station. The Republic commissioned twenty Haven-class medical stations at the beginning of the Clone Wars, one for each Sector Army. They were stationed in space near battlegrounds and could treat nearly 80,000 patients at once. There is little information on what these stations were equipped with in terms of equipment and supplies, but they were staffed by clone medical officers, medical droids and, in at least one case, a Jedi and a Kaminoan.

Two common medical frigates used by the Republic were the MedStar-class and the more heavily armed Pelta-class frigates. These ships often accompanied the rest of the fleet into battle and were equipped to both treat and transport patients, and were staffed by medics and, occasionally, Jedi healers. The frigates were also commonly used to transport supplies between medical stations, larger bases and RMSUs.

In other cases, clones were brought to a medical station by their Star Destroyer. This could be the better option following a battle in space, where injured pilots or crewmembers could be stabilized in the SD’s medbay and transported on one large vessel instead of needing several frigates.
Injured members of planetary defense forces fighting along with the Republic military would likely be dealt with differently, but it is not specified how in canon.
Trade Federation/Separatist Droid Army
The droid army did not employ medics, though they did use the MED-47 and AK-25-MED models of medical droid when dealing with organics. These situations usually involved torture of the opposing side’s soldiers.
Galactic Empire
The medical treatment of Imperial stormtroopers and other soldiers was often very similar to that of the Republic’s clones. Imperial medics and 2-1C medical droids worked in medbays, field hospitals and directly on the battlefield. Medics who were attached to the army, or were currently planetside, wore armour similar to that of an Imperial Army trooper, while those attached to the navy or serving on a ship wore the Imperial Navy crewman’s jumpsuit with backpacks and a hip pack for medical supplies. Those working with the Stormtrooper Corps often wore stormtrooper armour and were called stormtrooper medics, stormmedics or stormsurgeons.
Equipment
A lot of equipment left over from the Republic when it became the Empire continued to be used, including the Republic Mobile Surgical Units (renamed Imperial Mobile Surgical Units), some Pelta-class and MedStar-class medical frigates, and 2-1B and FX-series medical droids. While it is unknown what happened to the surviving Haven-class medical stations after the war, it is possible that they continued to be used as well. In addition to the ships left over from the Republic, the Empire used E-2T medical shuttles, and a variant of the Lambda-class T-5a shuttle called the T-5 Deliverance. The former was used to transport up to twelve Human patients, and the latter would deliver shipments of medical supplies directly to the battlefield.
As a result of the Empire’s tendency to build increasingly massive ships and battlestations, many non-medical vessels also had large medbays. Medics and meddroids alike could be found serving on these ships. However, because it was a large military without a need to be constantly on the move, longer-term medical care was likely conducted primarily in planetside medcenters and other large, permanent facilities. Many temporary Imperial facilities, such as prefabricated garrisons, also housed medical facilities and personnel.
Imperial medics were known to carry medpacs, though it is not known what brand or make they were or what was in them. They likely included vibroscalpels and/or laser scalpels, bacta, laser cauterizers, and bandages, like the clone trooper medics carried. These medics stayed away from the front lines when deployed on the ground. As for meddroids, the 2-1C medical droid was the preferred model of the Empire, as it was designed to operate independently on the battlefield. Though its name suggests a relation to the 2-1B surgical droid, it was actually in the line of FX-series medical assistant droids and had a similar appearance.

Treatment procedure
Naturally, treatment of Imperial troops followed the same basic process as that of Republic troops. As a general rule, a soldier injured planetside would be given first aid, then brought to a mobile hospital or aid station, then transported to a better-equipped medcenter or a capital ship for recovery, wherever was convenient. Pilots rarely survived to have their injuries treated, as standard TIE fighters did not come with shields.
Alliance to Restore the Republic
Medicine was practiced very differently in the Rebellion, especially in its earlier years. Because it was a highly mobile fighting force, injured soldiers and pilots were often treated on large hospital ships such as the Redemption, a modified escort frigate. It was not uncommon for ships to be modified to make room for medical facilities, and Alliance ships that were designed for medical use were often stolen from the Empire. These ships were staffed mainly by medical droids, as organic medics were usually more valuable on the battlefield. Many planetside bases also had medical facilities, though the hospital ships generally had more equipment available.
Equipment and treatment procedure
The Alliance Navy included several modified EF76 Nebulon-B escort frigates, such as their primary medical frigate, the Redemption, that served as mobile hospitals. These ships could hold and treat 745 patients at a time, and were fitted with state-of-the-art medical equipment including fifteen bacta tanks, multi-species operating theatres, intensive care units, recovery wards, and facilities for non-oxygen breathers such as ammonia chambers. They also had their own blood banks, laboratories and morgue, as well as dedicated space for storing medical equipment and up to 6000 tonnes of medical cargo. Patients were treated by a complement of thirty 2-1B surgical droids and eighty medical staff, and the ship’s main medical computer timed and monitored treatments. It is also possible that at least one Nebulon-B2 frigate was modified for use as a hospital ship. Most patients were treated onboard ships like these.

Sprint-class rescue craft, also called med runners, were used to transport the dead and wounded and respond to distress signals in deep space. They could hold forty patients and were staffed by five medics. The E-50 Landseer, a Corellian shuttle, was repurposed for use as an ambulance ship that could be used to transport medical and repair supplies on the battlefield. Other models of starship, such as the stolen Imperial cruiser Mercy which could treat around 5000 patients and had 4250 bacta tanks, could also be converted to hospital ships. In fact, the majority of Alliance medical craft were repurposed, stolen, or both.


Sprint-class rescue craft (top) and E-50 Landseer (bottom)
2-1B surgical droids were the best-known medics in the Rebellion. Organic beings did serve as medics, and could be found anywhere the droids could, but they tended to work directly on the battlefield and in other places where the droids couldn’t go. 2-1Bs were seen everywhere from capital ships to personal medbays to planetside bases.
New Republic (Canon and Legends)
When the Alliance was reorganized into the New Republic, remaining medical equipment continued to be used. The philosophy that their personnel were non-dispensable also remained, and so the acquisition and maintenance of medical equipment was given great importance. In both Canon and Legends, not much is known about field medicine in the New Republic, but it can be assumed that it functioned more or less the same as in the Alliance. However, the Legends New Republic spent a lot longer fighting the Imperial Remnant than the Canon New Republic, which then maintained peace for perhaps as long as three decades. Without any known major conflicts between the Galactic Civil War and the First Order-Resistance conflict, and due to the New Republic’s demilitarization efforts, field medicine likely did not play a big role under the Canon New Republic for most of its tenure.
Resistance
As a splinter group of the New Republic military, the Resistance likely did have some access to hospital ships, but acquiring large vessels was very difficult. Most equipment they had was quite old, left over from the days of the Rebellion. Supposedly, medcenters on bases and the medbays of capital ships were the Resistance’s main medical facilities. Like its predecessor, the Rebellion, the small number of personnel meant that high priority was placed on being able to save and heal their troops, suggesting that there existed some sort of battlefield medic within their ranks. If they employed medical droids – likely, given that they employed a large number of other droids in order to keep the organization functioning – they may have used 2-1Bs like the Rebellion.
First Order
Nothing is known specifically about medicine within the First Order, but it can be assumed that they had access to advanced medical technology and facilities due to the size and capability of the rest of their forces.
That’s all for this post! Any terminology used here that isn’t already included in the Vocab List will be added shortly, and the next post will be up as soon as possible.
~ Jacen
Hey! I just wanted if there are any humanoid doctors or that job is only done by droids? If so, what does a human doctor do, that a droid cant do? Thank you very much and have a nice day 💕
For sure, there are tons of human and alien doctors. Meddroids aren’t as common as actual medical practitioners, so if you’re thinking of something like a hospital or clinic you would almost certainly be dealing with living doctors. Droids are generally used more as assistants, surgeons, diagnosticians, and in cases where you wouldn’t haul around a living doctor (e.g., on small ships, remote outposts, and in dangerous places such as a war zone). They also act as consultants/specialists on alien species, as a living doctor would be unable to learn proper treatments for every species they come across.
One reason that droids have not completely replaced organics as doctors is that patients like contact with another living being. Another would be the issue of creative thinking—if a droid cannot determine the problem with its diagnostic tools, it may not have the analytical and deductive skills to think of other possibilities. As well, living beings have better mobility in places such as a battlefield or the site of a natural disaster (though workers here would be considered medics more than doctors).
There are cases where a medical team is comprised entirely of droids. For example, the Separatists used droids as medics (and torturers) for dealing with living patients. The Rebel Alliance’s medics were also largely meddroids, possibly due to a shortage of trained personnel. Relief efforts to planets or places have been known to involve droids more often than living medics. However, I would guess that you would have a hard time finding a hospital or clinic on an industrialized world that follows this pattern.
I hope that helps!
~ Jacen
If you don’t mind me asking: in the Clone Wars era Jedi temple, was there any way a Jedi could practice their lightsaber skills other than sparring with another Jedi? Or a way to practice blocking blaster bolts with a saber? Thanks!
Not at all, anon! Jedi Younglings used a practice remote called the Marksman-H to practice deflecting blaster bolts. You’ve probably seen it, it’s the hovering globe that appears as Luke is practicing with a lightsaber on the Millennium Falcon. It’s also seen in Attack of the Clones, when Obi-Wan goes to ask Yoda about Kamino while he’s practicing with a bunch of Younglings.
Lightsaber practice droids were used during the Separatist Crisis to test a Master-Padawan team. They were armed with blasters, and one known model had quadranium armour with a cortosis weave, making it able to resist lightsaber cuts.
Other training droids were equipped with lightsabers and used for sparring, and some of them also served as instructors for Padawans. If you’d like, this article talks about them in more detail.
Hope that helps!
~ Jacen