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Convince me (spoiler) . . .
. . . that the new Starkiller is actually a clone. If he is then I will also officially be convinced that this game was just a money grab (as if the absurdly short campaign length and the cliffhanger at the end which conveniently leads into a third game weren't enough).
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Why would anyone be crazy enough to try to convince anybody Starkiller was a clone in the 2nd game when there wasn't a clear answer in the game? ;)
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Both major Star Wars wikis are practically claiming it as fact, and that troubles me. It might be based on the novelization or something like that.
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The end of the novelization of the first game describes his death, as well as his soul leaving his body. There you go.
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Then why didn't they just come out and say it? To me it seems like they must have had Kota express his doubts for a reason. There are also some other suspicious clues:
1. Vader is constantly lying and deceiving. In the first game he changed his story every time they met. 2. Memory is not stored in DNA. 3. The "distant thunder body" from the challenges is not wearing the robes that Marek died in. 4. The novelization for the first game may have been written before the second game was planned. Star Wars has been known to contradict itself in its sequels. But that is a pretty good reason to argue that he is a clone. Thank you. To me, cloning is just a gimmick to resurrect an old storyline. Clone or not, the plot for this game was pretty weak. What with all of the flashbacks strewn everywhere it seems more like the sentimental reunion episode of a sitcom than the sequel of a motion picture. When Kota said that the fate of the entire rebellion rested on the battle of Kamino I was really disinclined to believe him. The storyline went from being great to "remembering the good old days" in the blink of an eye. That's why I hate clones. |
You can find plenty of past debates and arguments on this very subject here on the Force Unleashed forums. All of your points have been discussed before, except your #2. My short answer for that would be: Yeah, memory isn't stored in DNA, but this is the force we're talking about and this IS Starwars. So the idea here is that if Marek is indeed a clone, then his spirit from his original self must have transfered to his clone body or something, like in Dark Empire when the Emperor was resurrected and his force spirit took over his new young clone body. The only problem with that theory is that ALL of the clones of Marek had the memories of the original according to Vader, and they all failed except the Starkiller we control. I would like for there to be a good explanation that this is the original Starkiller or a VERY GOOD explanation saying that he's a clone.
I just really hope that they explain themselves good for TFU3, if it does come out after all. |
Have I missed something? I didn't notice the words "DNA" or "genetic" anywhere in the game. Vader talks about "memory flashes", I always kinda assumed he had some kind of process by which he extracted memories from Starkiller's dead brain and inserted them into a new living brain.
Also, the distant thunder body does wear the clothes Starkiller got stabbed in the back by Vader in. I still think Starkiller's been dead a long time and we've been playing a clone since halfway through TFU1. |
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And I highly doubt we were playing as a clone starkiller in the second half of the game. He obviously didn't do Vader's bidding, why keep making more. That's stupid and their dumbing down Vader even more. |
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This is why I don't want Starkiller to be a clone - it makes the original Starkiller's death mean less. Then again, any reemergence of a character that has been nobly martyred is going to ruin the effect of the martyrdom. I.E. He gave his life to save us . . . wait, never mind. |
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Welp, I don't want to ruin anybody's fun, but there's a few things to consider, most of them not exactly hidden within the story.
There's the fact that we have no evidence whatsoever that the original Starkiller's soul or what-have-you survived his death (and in case anyone cares, the aforementioned novelization makes a case against that belief). Then there's the presence of the cloning facility itself. The Starkiller we follow in the story was grown in a vat. For whatever reason, he's being tormented by the original one's memories, but that isn't evidence that he's special, since the other clones all went through the same thing. The only thing that sets this one apart is that he actually managed to escape Vader (his predecessors probably made similar breakout attempts, but failed). Furthermore, that cloning in real life does not give copies the memories - or even skills - of the host is irrelevant, since cloning in fiction virtually never works that way. It certainly doesn't in Star Wars, as evidenced by the clone army seen in the prequels and a few other odds and ends from EU sources. Quote:
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And the fact that the other clones-or as far as Vader says-had the same flashback memories, it doesn't help determine if he's the real starkiller or just a clone. Quote:
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The memory/DNA thing is a good arguing point for Starkiller not being a clone, except for one fact: the Starkiller that we play as in the game is not the only one that possesses the old Starkiller's memories. We know from the "Distant Thunder" videos that the Dark Apprentice also possesses all of Starkiller's memories, but has "overcome" them and has pretty much become a blind servant to Darth Vader with know real will of his own. But he did struggle with them, just as the clone that the main story follows struggled with the same memories.
Therefore, it is implied that either all of the clones possess Starkiller's memories, or at least some of them do. It doesn't make sense from a genetic point of view, and we don't know why it is so; but it is. Before the game came out, I also used to theorize that it was similar to the Dark Empire storyline with spirit transferal, but since the game seems to suggest that more than one clone possesses Starkiller's memory, as I've described above, I no longer think this is so. Rather, I suspect that something similar to the plot of the movie The Sixth Day is afoot, whereby the clones' memories are manually transferred from the host to the clone after the cloning process is complete, having something to do with the optic nerve (I don't remember exactly). However, that would mean that Vader willingly ensured that Starkiller's clones possessed the original's memories. Why he would do this instead of starting over from scratch, I have no idea. Maybe it has something to do with Starkiller's skills and training being too perfect to start over again. Or perhaps the cloning process has improved since the Clone Wars, and memory transfer has become a standard part to the new and improved cloning process (remember that Jango Fett's clones did not possess his memories). We may never know. |
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It would seem that the very existence of the Dark Apprentice makes it far more likely that Starkiller is a clone, but I'm still holding on to a spark of hope that he isn't. Edit: It would appear from her odd behavior, her survival of a fatal fall, and Vader's last words that the new Juno is fake (from "micksith" on LucasArts forum). So what does this have to do with our debate? Just a thought - it seems like Vader is going all out to recover this one clone - he even wants to take him alive. Why would he go to so much trouble for a clone if he has the body and a "perfect" copy of it in his pocket already? In the databank, a cloning facility employee complains about not having the original body to inspect. |
do you remember the early updates on the game's page? one of the clones had visions about Starkiller's present. maybe some other had or shared visions with him(i didn't read the book)and it might refer that Starkiller is the original one
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It doesn't matter to me TBH, because I dont like the idea of Cloning Force sensitives... so whether the Player is a Clone or not is irrelevant now. Not so Special when theres 2,000 of you :|
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spoilers
If the Dark ending means anything, meaning the Dark apprentice exists just didn't show his face, chances are he is a clone, not only because there is a living, breathing, fully functional clone walking around, but also because of the way Vader talks to him. |
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Another thing: If Starkiller as seen in TFU 2 was not a clone, then why does the facility on Kamino even exist? |
The facility on Kamino has existed long before Vader tried to clone Starkiller in it. Given the Empire's habit of overspending I wouldn't put it past Vader to run the whole Starkiller cloning program for no other reason than to screw with original Starkiller's head and convince him he's a clone.
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^Exactly. I don't think that Vader would go to the trouble of cloning Juno either if he weren't dealing with the original Starkiller.
Also - Kamino is where the clone troopers were made, so it was obviously built for other reasons. |
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Hey, if anyone here is a fan of the Thrawn trilogy, I'm trying to remember: Did Joruus C'baoth possess his template's memories? Did Luuke Skywalker? If so, then the Force sensitivity theory may well be correct. |
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well, he would need Juno's body for that right? |
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Flame and f-bomb removed--again. --Jae
on the ACtUAL BOX- it says, Betrayed by Vader for the last time (!!!!!!) , Starkiller (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) Has eScaped. Not ClOne. Not Starkiller Cousin. NoT even Starkiller' s Evil TWin. STARKILLER. HIMSELF. ESCAPES. AlSO- hOw many times haS an Average Clone Been betrayed by vader? Thats rIght -0 times. Only Real starkiller Was betrayed By DV and Now oly He can be betrrayed for the last (Not first) time. iF u r nOt convInced- tHink, Why wuld vader Chase some sIlly crapy Clone aCross Galaxy, If he had like a 1000000 more of those On kAmino? Hes real, Ppl, Get used to it. Oh, btW -tHose of ya asking stuff like oH, How Did he survive? hE's surely dead! ? He's a sIth, not a jedi, so itS only impossible toclon Jedi, not sith?- i sAy- StarKiller Is special. Get on with it. |
^^^ Interesting points, not sure that the crazy capitalization helped you, or the insulting tone.
I am still unconvinced on either side, only intuition says "not a clone". |
Starkiller is neither a Jedi nor a Sith.
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eEerm......
... omG- he Is a jEdi! 0_o WelL, maybe a Grey- so cAlled- Jedi, neiter In lIght nor dark Side- But still.. oH, and reason why i Capitalise- Its like a bad habbit, dood. I just tought its more sTylish, And then it became habbit ((( |
I think it's Starkiller. If they had successfully managed to clone Jedi, with the Empire's resources, I think the Rebels would have been fighting an army of Vaders, not Stormtroopers.
Just my opinion. |
I mean, why would they go through all that trouble to perfect the cloning process of a powerful force user that could just as easily be their enemy as their ally, when they have two completely devoted Sith to test infinitely.
I think they were probably using Starkiller to experiment with cloning, but he unexpectedly woke up, and Vader just had to improvise. |
He's not a Jedi because the Jedi are an organization, of which he was never inducted into. The same goes for the Sith. He's just a lightsaber-wielding Force user not affiliated with any Force-using organization.
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Not sure how saying the Jedi is an organization really addresses the point. The word Jedi has nothing to do with the cloning process.
When they say they can't clone Jedi, they don't mean it's because of a political organization. It's because of the force, which was very strong in Starkiller. |
I was talking to Bliznez. "32w-9he's a j3di!!1111211!"
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the really confusing part for me, or i guess the part that makes me believe he is a clone, is if you choose the Dark Side ending,
Personally my choice of ending, the light side ending was to "happy go lucky" for me, Starkiller is a tortured soul, there will be no happy endings for him. |
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