I'm writing a new F&D campaign (posting it here because the setting will be more EotE than F&D), and am looking for some advice on setting it in an alternate timeline to Canon. I know people here have lots of experience with this, so hoping to avoid pitfalls/problems they've encountered.
The tentative title for the campaign is "Shards of Alderaan." My plan at the moment is to set the campaign in the same timeframe as the RPG recommends -- immediately ABY.
The difference is that the Death Star was *not* destroyed. Han Solo did *not* come to the rescue (which was the linchpin of Luke's success); both Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker were killed during the assault; Yavin 4 was annihilated by the Death Star, and the Rebels were crushed and driven into hiding; Leia Organa fled and is currently whereabouts unknown.
Intended effects of the differences
- The defeat of the Rebels at Yavin is hailed as a monumental victory for the Empire. The Rebel Alliance has been dissolved, and driven into hiding. Pride in the Empire is surging, though the simmering resentment still exists on dissatisfied worlds. The story will take place one year ABY, and will open with the victory celebrations over the Rebels -- and a terrorist attack (see The Shard, below).
- Solo's no-show was a small but significant difference that allowed Luke to complete his task. Instead of helping his friend, he continued on as he had originally intended -- to pay off Jabba and resume life as a smuggler. (GM plan is to have him become a leader in a criminal enterprise, though still unclear if/when this will play a role in any future stories.)
- Vader's killing of Luke and eventual death defending the Death Star has made him into a martyr and hero of the Empire. Billions of Imperial Citizens have flocked to a cult that has sprung up in his name, and emergent Force-Users enter into his ranks devote themselves to him as a kind of patron saint of the Sith. This has resulted in a strange renaissance of sorts for Force-Users: they are being sought out and encouraged to come forward, but are emphatically being trained as Sith. This means the Force is no longer considered a "myth" by most people (as in vanilla), though it is still distrusted and misunderstood, and the Inquisitors still fill the same role as before. (Very little has changed w/r/t the social perception of the Force, except that the Empire is now channeling that ignorance differently than in vanilla).
- Leia Organa is still a prominent leader of what were once the Rebels, though they now call themselves the Shards of Alderaan, but are commonly known as "The Shard". Their logo is a shattered blue planet on a black blackdrop. GM plan for the Shard is pretty "dark": after the defeat at Yavin, and being driven underground, The Shard have been forced to rely on terrorist methods: some cells do not shy away from targeting civilians, if the result is sufficiently symbolic or potent. Leia does not promote such approaches but neither does she deny their utility -- her own cell targets only military forces, but she is being pressured to change her approach. The Shard will play an active role in the story.
I'm intending to open the story in Imperial loyalist territory -- specifically, on the ecumenopolis/city-planet of Axxila. The PCs are mostly F&D characters but there are likely going to be 1-2 EotE Force Sensitives in the bunch. They are all trainees in an Imperial Sith Educational Facility -- and their first exposure to organized Force-use will be via the Dark Side. (They will all start with a Morality rating of of 29 to match this opening, though I am also giving them +5 XP and +500 Credits to compensate for the forced start, but also to represent their "training".)
Does this all sound feasible for an alternate setting? Has anyone else here experimented with a similar approach? I'm not intending to be programmatic on the Sith-Jedi morality piece after the start -- it will be entirely up to the PCs on their moral direction. (So, this isn't a "Dark Side" campaign per se. They are entirely open to proceed on a path to Redemption if they so choose.)
Thoughts appreciated.