On 5/17/2019 at 11:16 PM, Archlyte said:Something that has always bothered me is how the Order 66 scheme as depicted in the movie was effective in completely bushwhacking the Jedi. Except for Yoda, the Jedi were like Whaaat!?
So I know that they were used to the clones and didn't expect them to do that, but aren't they also like able to react to danger more quickly because of "Jedi reflexes" and what not? In in any other situation we would expect Jedi to have a lit light saber out in a blink of an eye. What's up with this?
They frequently did whip out lightsabers and defect stuff, but they were frequently overwhelmed.
Several of the Jedi shown were actively deflecting blaster bolts, but it was a question of volume.
Plus, they aren't all of the same skill level. Some are better at lightsaber work than others, so there is a gradient scale of skill to consider.
They are also not immortal, Phantom Menace made that very clear when kid Anakin talked to Qui-Gon and said what is the typical in-universe, and fanboy misconception about Jedi, that they are unkillabe. He chuckled and was like "i wish that were true." So killing Jedi is possible, just difficult
In Attack of the Clones, during the arena battle, when the Jedi were working in unison, defending each other, with allies at their backs, they were still dropping from the concentrated blaster fire. They were able to hold off against incredible odds, but the nameless Jedi mook extras did die from time to time. So even with a defensive position, with allies, they are not impervious to blaster fire. Couple that with being alone, suddenly sensing your allies are now hostiles, having to process the shock/disbelief about that in a split second, AND then defend yourself from 360 degrees of threat in a moments notice....yeah, they didn't survive it.
I think you're underestimating the emotional impact of finding yourself betrayed by EVERY ally in your army, and suddenly fighting them AND the actual enemy on the other front, would have on someone, Jedi or not.
And if you want to use in game logic for it, they ran out of strain under so many blaster shots, and were unable to deflect/reflect any more blaster bolts that combat encounter.
But Lucas wasn't thinking with game logic, he was thinking with the above points, and narrative logic. It's the same reason that Jack had to die in Titanic, despite the door being big enough for both of them.
Edited by KungFuFerret