Buy writebetterstarwars a Coffee. ko-fi.com/writebetterstarwars

writebetterstarwars:

Hey guys! I just wanted to let you know I’ve set up a Ko-fi for this account. The link is also in my bio. It’s 100% optional and I’m never going to restrict any of the content on here, but if you’ve ever got a few bucks to spare I would really appreciate it! (Uni applications are coming up faster than anticipated :/)

Thanks for your consideration!

~ Jacen

Hey! I’m sorry to do this, but I’m a bit strapped this month for health care costs and bus fares. Once again, no pressure, but if you’ve got a couple extra dollars it would really help me out. Thank you!

Buy writebetterstarwars a Coffee. ko-fi.com/writebetterstarwars

5 Service Droids for Your SW Fics

jedimordsith:

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.

Six Imperial Departments to Flesh Out Your Fics

jedimordsith:

Or, if you’re like me, create plot bunnies…

Imperial Department for Epidemic Prevention seems fairly self-explanatory. But I challenge anyone with even a passing familiarity with human history to imagine the kinds of things they did “for the public’s protection”…

Imperial Department of Military Research handled “research and development of military technology such as equipment, small arms, facility components, and armed starships.” 

Imperial Department of Redesign was a particularly horrifying “elite, highly secretive corps of the Galactic Empire, tasked with subduing or liquidating troublesome non-Human species.” 

Imperial Procurement was an “organizational branch” of the Empire responsible for finding and collecting resources… I’m pretty sure nobody needs to be told that they didn’t feel obligated to abide by Fair Trade standards or concern themselves much with the impact on those doing the producing. 

Department of Punishment tortured captured criminals. Fun fact: it had a habit of forcing prisoners to sign contracts giving their captors permission to torture them to death.

Imperial Xenodetic Survey Department Mapmakers! (And map alterers!) This is probably only going to appeal to geeks like me, but given the information control and strategic erasure of knowledge the Empire is known for, I feel like there’s potentially a lot one could play with here! It is, at very least, a fun tidbit to throw into character conversations whenever navigation comes up. 

How to find things on Wookieepedia, Part 1 – Browsing

maptowhereialreadyam:

[NOTE: I originally posted this on pillowfort but thought it might be interesting to folks here too]

This post is aimed at fic writers but it’s probably of use to anyone who has ever tried to look something up there. It might also be helpful for other Wikis but I don’t frequent those the way I do Wookieepedia, so I can’t verify. These are things that felt like it took me far too long to figure out. I welcome feedback to make it better.

Part 1 is about finding things on Wookieepedia when you aren’t sure what it’s called, aka browsing and using Categories. (this post)

Part 2 discusses narrowing down the results of your browsing (Category intersections).

Part 3 discusses how to track down that thingamajig you saw on that one episode (the Appearances section).

First some general terms.

Articles – These are the pages you are looking for. They’ve got pages on Aunt Beru and on Kathleen Kennedy, T-7 ion disruptors and “Destroy Malevolence”(the 4th episode of TCW). Basically everything.

Stubs – These are pages that are placeholders and haven’t been completely filled out. Still handy depending on how much is lacking, even if it’s only to let you know there’s not much.

Pages – Appear to be the same thing as an article or stub and I’m not honestly sure why they sometimes use this term and not articles.  It should be noted that it is defined in part by what it is not which is a Category (see below).

Categories – A category is a way of grouping articles together. They can have subcategories creating a hierarchy. Every subcategory is technically a category as well. Categories are cool because when you aren’t sure what you are looking for they allow you to browse and hone in on your search. For example, Starships is a category whose subcategories include Starships by Affiliation and Starships by Type.  In addition,  Starships are a subcategory of Spacecraft which is a subcategory of Vehicles. Get the idea?

(There’s also Files – this is most often an image and accessed from an article. I won’t be discussing it much here)

There’s a load of screencaps so more below the cut.

Keep reading

For anyone who doesn’t yet know the ins and outs of Wookieepedia, be sure to check these posts out! Using all the functions of the wiki is a great way to sift through it and find what you want quickly!

Hey guys!

I was curious to see if anyone had any feedback to give on the random planet generator. Any glitches or issues with the site?

As well, at some point in the near future I’m going to attempt changing the format of the mobile site. I also have a “miscellaneous” category in the works that would give out a random fact about the planet—any suggestions?

What Do I Call That Ship, Anyway? – A Guide To Ship Classification

Ever wondered the
difference between a battlecruiser and a battleship, or debated whether your
vessel is a light, medium, or heavy freighter? The Star Wars universe is
absolutely full of all sorts of wonderful starships, but there are so many
terms and classifications for them that it can get awfully confusing sometimes!
This post is intended as a non-exhaustive guide to describing some common ships’
various classifications in your writing, both military and civilian.

The rest is under the
cut. Sorry for the long post, mobile users!

Capital Ships

A capital ship is defined
as any armed military starship with a length greater than 100 meters, typically
designed for fleet warfare. The Anaxes War College System, established during
the Clone Wars and used by the successive governments, divided capital ships
into seven main classifications:

  • Corvette: 100-200 meters in length
  • Frigate: 200-400 meters
  • Cruiser: 400-600 meters
    • Light
      cruiser
      : 350-400 meters (sometimes interchangeable with frigates)
    • Medium cruiser:
      400-500 meters
  • Heavy cruiser: 600-1000 meters
  • Star Destroyer: 1000-2000 meters
  • Battlecruiser: 2000-5000 meters
  • Dreadnaught: 5000+ meters

Sometimes, depending
on its armament and typical role in a battle, a ship could be moved up or down
a classification. The Carrack-class
light cruiser, for example, was sometimes considered a cruiser despite technically
being a frigate at 350 meters long. The Secutor-class
Star Destroyer was classified as a Star Destroyer even though it was 2200
meters long, because its role as a carrier ship meant that it had a light
armament that was atypical of battlecruisers. (Note that Star Destroyer as a
classification was separate from the specific term Star Destroyer originally used
by Kuat Drive Yards to describe their own ships. By the time of the Clone Wars,
many capital ships not manufactured by KDY were also referred to as Star
Destroyers.)

Some other terms were
also used to describe capital ships:

  • Battleship: a general name used for large
    capital ships, often Star Destroyer-sized and above. They were well-armed and
    shielded, and took either an active role in combat or a “peacekeeping” role.
  • Warship: often synonymous with battleship, but
    sometimes used as a specific class, comparable to a frigate or a cruiser.
  • Battlecruiser (informal): a large,
    heavily-armoured capital ship that was not considered a battleship, made for destroying
    other capital ships. Alternately, a vessel designated “battlecruiser” due to
    differing naming customs, while serving the role of another class of ship.
  • Flagship: the primary command ship in a fleet,
    usually the largest or most powerful vessel.
  • Carrier: a starship designed primarily to carry
    smaller starships and fighters into battle. While dedicated carriers usually
    had few weapons and weaker shielding, others could serve a dual purpose as
    carriers and battleships.
  • Interdictor vessel: a starship with the ability
    to generate a gravity well and pull vessels out of hyperspace. Interdictors could
    belong to varying capital ship classes, ranging from frigates to Star
    Destroyers.
  • Super Star Destroyer: a ship with the typical dagger-shaped
    profile of a Star Destroyer that falls into the size category of battlecruiser
    or dreadnaught.
  • Superdreadnaught: a little-used term for a very
    large dreadnaught. The Eye of Palpatine,
    at 19 kilometers in length, was considered a superdreadnaught.
image

(The Supremacy, a 60-kilometer wide Mega-class Star Dreadnaught, could be
called a superdreadnaught)

Starfighters

A starfighter is a
small, maneuverable ship used in space or atmosphere battles. There are several
different kinds of ships commonly considered starfighters:

  • Snubfighter: a fighter carrying a crew of one
    or two people, typically equipped with laser or blaster weaponry, missiles or
    torpedoes, and a hyperdrive. The infamous X-wing starfighter is a snubfighter.
  • Bomber: a fighter designed for combat against
    well-armoured targets such as capital ships, space stations, and buildings. They
    carried projectile weapons such as proton bombs, concussion missiles, proton
    torpedoes and thermal detonators, often in addition to energy weapons, and were
    generally escorted by more maneuverable starfighters or support craft like
    frigates.
  • Interceptor: a particularly fast and maneuverable
    starfighter, designed to combat enemy fighters and bombers. They lacked heavy
    armour and ordnance payloads, and sometimes a hyperdrive, in the interest of
    making the fighter as fast as possible.
  • Atmospheric fighter: a starfighter specialized
    for flight in atmosphere, such as the TIE striker.
image

(A few models of classic starfighters)

Sometimes, larger
ships were also considered starfighters. Certain transports, shuttles, and
light freighters—generally, ones that have a heavy armament in relation to
their size as well as decent maneuverability—could be lumped into this
category. In addition, the term starfighter could (but does not always) include
the following:

  • Gunship: a general designation for small troop
    deployment and attack carriers. They were usually equipped with heavy weaponry
    and armour, allowing them to survive and fight through a battle long enough to
    deliver or pick up troops and supplies. They could serve as escorts to larger
    ships, and some were designed to carry large ground-based vehicles like the
    AT-TE onto a battlefield. Sometimes, small capital ships were referred to as
    gunships.
  • Blastboat: a small starship built for combat,
    fast enough to intercept other ships and serve as a patrol craft but strong
    enough to survive encounters with well-armed and armoured opponents. They tended
    to fall between starfighters and capital ships in terms of function, size and
    armament, but some, such as the GAT-12 Skipray Blastboat, were considered heavy
    starfighters.
  • Airspeeder: though a starfighter is almost
    always capable of space combat, the term can sometimes be applied to certain
    low-altitude airspeeders.
image

(Republic LAAT-series
gunships were heavily used throughout the Clone Wars and beyond)

Freighters

A freighter is any
spacecraft used to transport freight or cargo. Sometimes interchangeably called
a cargo ship or barge. Freighters were often arranged into several loose
categories depending on their size/capacity and function, though these classes
could be highly variable.

  • Light freighter: a ship used for small cargo
    operations. Many light freighters were equipped with weapons and a decent
    hyperdrive, and were capable of holding their own in combat. They tended to
    measure around 30 meters in length, but could be larger or smaller, and
    commonly had a cargo capacity of about 50-100 metric tons. The Ghost and the Millennium Falcon were both light freighters.
  • Medium freighter: an ambiguous class of
    freighter. A medium freighter could be anywhere from around 30 meters in length
    to a couple hundred, and tended to have a cargo capacity of several hundred
    tons. Some medium freighters are also considered bulk freighters, and some function
    as container ships.
  • Heavy freighter: an ambiguous class used to
    describe a freighter with a larger cargo capacity than the light freighter.
    Whether a ship is considered a light, medium or heavy freighter depends on the
    manufacturer and series; there is no set definition. There are heavy freighters
    ranging in length from 50 to several hundred meters, and in cargo capacity from
    only 150 tons to over 50,000. Heavy freighter is often used interchangeably
    with bulk freighter.
  • Super freighter: a term used to describe a very
    large freighter or a freighter with a very large capacity. The Cargo Empress-class super freighter was
    one example, with a length of 110 meters and a capacity of 50,000 tons.
  • Bulk freighter: a freighter used in commercial
    shipping operations to carry bulk loads. Usually considered either a medium or
    heavy freighter, and often capable of carrying tens of thousands of tons.
  • Container ship: freighters used to haul large
    numbers of crates and containers, sometimes carried on the outside of the ship.
    Hundreds of thousands of tons of cargo could be carried on a container ship,
    but they were very costly to operate.
  • Drone freighter: an unmanned freighter,
    requiring no crew.
  • Tramp freighter: an unaffiliated ship operated
    by an independent captain.
  • Freight liner: an affiliated ship with
    established and scheduled ports of call.
image

(The class four
container transport, also called an Imperial cargo ship, was a container ship capable of carrying up to 210 large cargo containers)

Other Terms

  • Transport/space transport/starferry: a starship
    that carried cargo or passengers from one location to another, or a vessel that
    performs this same function. Freighters, passenger liners, troop transports,
    and even ground vehicles such as AT-ATs all fit into this classification.
  • Shuttle/shuttlecraft: a small vessel used to
    transport personnel, usually through space, between a planet and a ship in
    orbit, or between two ships.
  • Yacht: a starship (or aquatic ship) used for
    recreational purposes. They were usually about the size of light freighters, but
    could get as large as small capital ships, and tended to be expensive.
  • Scout vessel: a starship used for scientific/commercial
    exploration or for military reconnaissance.
  • System patrol craft: a combat-capable starship
    intended to operate within a star system. They acted both as planetary
    defence/customs and as a first line of defence, and though they usually lacked
    hyperdrives many were considered small capital ships and were capable of skirmishing
    with other capital ships as large as frigates.
  • Boarding craft: a vessel used for boarding enemy
    ships and space stations, sometimes also a kind of shuttle.
  • Assault ship: a general term used to describe
    capital ships and starfighters intended for offensive action.
  • Consular ship: a diplomatic vessel.
    Alternately, any vessel officially used by a member of the Imperial Senate.
  • Courier: a fast ship built for delivery of
    urgent cargo and passengers.
  • Hospital ship: a medical spacecraft of varying
    size, often accompanying a military fleet into battle. More on hospital ships here.
  • Medical frigate: a ship used for medical
    support during battles. They often didn’t fit the size guidelines of other
    frigates, ranging from 35 meters to two kilometers. 
  • Communications/comm ship: a naval vessel fitted
    with extra transceivers to help communication between fleet elements and
    military headquarters.
  • Tug: a starship fitted with tractor beams, used
    to move or guide ships, structures, or cargo containers.
  • Space station: a structure built for use in
    orbit or deep space, often intended for habitation or research purposes or as
    orbiting docks. While they were usually immobile, some military space stations
    such as the Death Star had engines and hyperdrives, making them starships as
    well.

And, of course, if you
need to know the type/classification of a specific starship, you can always
check out its Wookieepedia page or shoot me an ask! Good luck with your writing!

~ Jacen

Want to support what I do? Buy me a coffee!

propheticfire:

COMPLETE LIST OF NAMED CLONE TROOPERS
Organized by Unit
*updated 8/23/18*

Ever needed to know who served under Jedi Master Luminara Unduli? Trying to name an oc and don’t want to repeat a name? Use this handy guide! I went through the list on Clone Trooper Wiki and organized everyone. Many of these names do not have verifiable links, but if it was a name and it was on the list, I included it.

Some notes:
An *asterisk in front of a name denotes a group leader of some sort.

(Sorry about the pictures. There’s no way I could have formatted this on tumblr. And be sure and click through to the original permalink! Because things may have been updated since this has been in circulation.)

I believe I’ve reblogged this in the past, so here’s the updated version

gffa:

Star Wars: Lightsabers – A Guide To Weapons of The Force by Pablo Hidalgo

ANATOMY OF A LIGHTSABER notes of interest:
(NOTE:  This is the 2018 version, so this is a canon reference book.)

  • A true lightsaber cannot be assembled by a machine, only those sensitive to the Force can construct one.
  • “Once the energy is focused, it leaves the handle from a positively charged energy lens inside the blade emitter.  The beam is trapped inside an energy field created by the kyber crystal, which bends the beam back towards a negatively charged high-energy flux aperture in the emitter.  To an observer, it looks like the blade simply stops growing, but this loop of energy creates the lightsaber’s distinctive hum as well as the spinning effect in the blade’s movements, making the weapon difficult to control for those without training.”
  • (This is probably what makes the blades so bouncy against each other, because they’re–as someone once described them–a bit like energy chainsaws, in the way that they’re a loop going around and around, rather than a steady beam.)
  • “A lightsaber is an extention of a Jedi’s Force awareness.  Becasue Jedi let the Force guide their selection of the crystal, the vibration the crystal creates in the lightsaber blade helps Jedi center themselves and find balance in the Force.”
  • MYTH:  Only a Jedi or a Sith can wield a lightsaber.
    FACT:  "Anyone could pick up a lightsaber and use it, but lightsabers are extremely difficult to wield. Those used to swinging solid swords often find using a weightless blade a challenge–one that can have dangerous consequences.  Only through rigorous training and enhanced senses through the Force can a Jedi use a lightsaber to its full potential.“
  • “Training lightsabers emit low-intensity blades that cannot cut and are not lethal.  Contact with a training blade will only sting or numb an opponent; however these blades do convey an accurate sensation of holding a real lightsaber.”
  • “Most lightsabers incorporate a pressure activation lever that causes it to power down if dropped.  They may also have a ‘lock’ switch that keeps the blade active, so a Jedi can throw a lightsaber some distance and guide its path through the Force.”
  • “Beyond its use as a weapon or an instrument of meditation, a lightsaber is a practical tool.  Given enough time, a lightsaber can cut through most substances.  Even shield-rated blast doors will melt after extended exposure to a lightsaber blade, making it nearly impossible to imprison an armed Jedi Knight.  Most Jedi will not risk slicing through bulkhead walls or high-energy force fields, though, because cutting into such a powerful source could be explosive.”
  • MYTH:  A lightsaber can cut through anything.  
    FACT:  The key to creating a solid weapon that can clash with a lightsaber blade is not the metal used in construction but rather the energy the metal conducts.  Energy transmitted across a metal blade or polearm can foritfy a weapon so it can block a lightsaber blade.  The electrostaffs of the MagnaGuard droids or the energized weapons of Supreme Leader Snoke’s Praetorian Guards, for example, pose a challenge to even trained lightsaber combatants.“
  • “Standard lightsabers and water don’t mix.  While some protective measures do exist, such as flashback waterseals, lighting a lightsaber underwater can be a problem.  The weapon may boil the surrounding water, spinning turbulance and making it difficult to control.  Should a Jedi become submerged in water during the course of an assignment, he or she had best make sure the lightsaber is prepared for such a journey.”
  • “A Jedi who loses a lightsaber often builds another.  In times of great need–such as the emergency of the Clone Wars–the Order kept replacement lightsabers for Jedi to use while they built a new one.”
  • “Above all, Jedi must keep track of their lightsabers.  Should a lightsaber fall into the hands of an unpracticed or dishonorable person, it will almost always lead to tragedy.”