The Mandalorian: Everything you need to know about Moff Gideon’s mysterious Darksaber

Wow, this thing has a lot of history.

There are spoilers from this point on, but if you haven’t seen season 1 of The Mandalorian and are planning on watching season 2, what are you doing? Go get that done.

When we last left Baby Yoda and Mando, they’d beaten Moff Gideon by blowing up his ship and leaving him in the wreckage. They flew off into the galaxy on their quest to find the perfect home for our young, green, adorable friend as they escaped the clutches of the empire.

But, of course, that wasn’t the end of Gideon. He had a trump card, as all villains do. The final season of season 1 was him cutting a hole through the scraps of his ship with this mysterious lightsaber looking thing.

That, my friends, is the Darksaber. And it’ll probably play a pretty pivotal role in this upcoming season.

Whoa, whoa whoa. Slow down. The Darksaber?

Yup. It’s the mysterious, black lightsaber that Moff Gideon is holding in that scene.

Wow so that’s a lightsaber?

Absolutely. And it’s probably the coolest looking one you’ve ever seen.

If you’re not a fan of the extended Star Wars universe outside of the movies, you probably didn’t know about it. But it has more history behind it than any lightsaber you’ve seen before.

So where did it come from?

Alright, here’s the breakdown. The legend of the Darksaber goes back thousands of years in Star Wars lore to the time of Tarre Vizsla — the first Mandalorian Jedi Knight.

It was unlike any lightsaber before or after his time because of its flat blade and dark energy.

THERE WAS A MANDALORIAN JEDI?!?

Yes, that’s right. And after he passed, the Jedi Order kept the saber in their temple for safe keeping because of how special it was.

That is, until members of his clan — house Vizsla — snuck in and stole it. From there, they passed it down from generation to generation of Mandalorian leaders. It was a weapon used for unification. Whoever wielded was seen as the sole leader of Mandalore.

Here’s a quick breakdown from Mandalorian warrior Fenn Rau.

So this isn’t the first time we’re seeing this thing?

Absolutely not. It’s appeared in the animated Star Wars: The Clone Wars series as well as Star Wars Rebels.

Some users have been force wielders like Tarre Viszla and some haven’t. Big names like Darth Maul and Sabine Wren have used it in the past. Wren was the one who discovered it on Dathomir — Maul’s home planet — after it went missing for a time.

She used it to help drive the empire away from Mandalore and unite the planet before giving it to Bo-Katan Kryze, making her the true leader of Mandalore. Kryze was the last person we saw with the saber before Gideon.

So how did Gideon get it then?

That, we don’t know. And that’s what we’re probably going to find out this season. The events of Rebels are from before Rogue One and A New Hope. The Mandalorian is set in a time period after The Return of the Jedi. 

Basically, there’s a lot of time between then for a lot to happen.

So, Mando has to get this thing right?

That would be so cool to see! But we really just don’t know yet. Who knows? Maybe Baby Yoda wields it at some point.

We just have to wait and see.

I can’t wait.

Join the club.

The best Baby Yoda memes from ‘The Mandalorian’ season 1

Time to get ready for Season 2!

WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD! DO NOT READ FURTHER IF YOU HAVEN’T WATCH SEASON 1 OF THE MANDALORIAN! 

The Mandalorian is a fun thrill ride for Star Wars fans starring a totally awesome bounty hunter that gave us a terrific first season.

But really: the biggest star of the series by far was Baby Yoda, also known as The Child, who has become a superstar, and rightfully so!

He’s adorable! He brings some comic relief! He can use the Force!

And of course, the most important thing are the memes. Thanks to li’l Yoda, there were soooo many memes that we’re still all using, and there are sure to be more when the Season 2 premiere drops on Friday.

So let’s look back at some of the best from Season 1:

1. Baby Yoda plays the radio

This comes from Chapter 4: Sanctuary, and it’s a hoot: people putting music to the moment in which the little one presses buttons on Mando’s ship.

Here’s the original moment:

And the memes:

2. Baby Yoda takes a sip

Also from Chapter 4, he’s just sipping and watching Cara Dune and Mando fight.

3. Baby Yoda looks up

I’m not sure which ep this is from, but we’ve seen this look a lot:

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4. WHEEEEEE!

From the final chapter of Season 1, this is how I too would react if I was on a speeder bike.

5. Sleepy Baby Yoda

Actually, it’s Baby Yoda using the Force to protect Mando in Chapter 2, stopping a creature from killing his new friend. But it totally looks like he’s very sleepy.

6. Baby Yoda as athletes and sports fans

7. “Boomer, OK”

Got to love Baby Yoda talking to real Yoda.

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‘The Mandalorian’ Season 2 trailer already produced a new Baby Yoda meme

Of course.

The Mandalorian has blessed us with so many good Baby Yoda memes — remember the pressing the buttons one? That was so good.

Season 2 hasn’t dropped yet — it will next month — but the trailer did … and we already have our first Baby Yoda meme of the season.

In the trailer, we see “the child” in its little floating pod, when the little one sees trouble is afoot, so it presses a button and WOOSH — he closes himself inside to keep safe (although, as we know, Baby Yoda has some extremely potent powers to defeat enemies).

Of course, this quickly became a meme.

Here’s the GIF:

And the memes!

There will definitely be more where this came from. This is the way.

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5 things we learned from the super-cool new ‘The Mandalorian’ Season 2 trailer

Mando and Baby Yoda are coming back!!!

WARNING: SPOILERS FROM SEASON 1 AHEAD! DO NOT READ IF YOU HAVEN’T SEEN THE FIRST SEASON!

We’re just over a month away until we get Season 2 of The Mandalorian, but on Tuesday, a trailer dropped that of course has fans of the show flipping out about the new adventures of the bounty hunter and Baby Yoda.

Like with other Star Wars properties, die-hards spent the morning dissecting the footage and figuring out just what this season will all be about. So, as usual, I’ve put together some of the screenshots and theories that are already everywhere on Twitter.

Here’s a rundown of what we all saw in the super-cool trailer that got us all extremely excited:

1. The plot involves bringing Baby Yoda to its own kind

This is the crux of the whole show. What was Mando going to do with “the child” after fighting to keep it alive and breaking all kinds of rules in Season 1? The answer comes from The Armorer: “You must reunite it with its own kind,” and it involves the Jedi.

2. Who’s that hooded figure lurking?

We know it’s WWE wrestler Sasha Banks. But who’s the character?

There’s some speculation that she could play a character named Sabine Wren, which is intriguing because she was a Mandalorian who once owned the Darksaber. And the Darksaber, as we learned in last year’s finale, belongs to Moff Gideon.

My guess: she’s a Jedi of some sort (we hear about “an order of sorcerers” from the narration when she’s shown) keeping tabs on Baby Yoda. Speaking of which!

3. Baby Yoda will be cute as usual

I mean, goodness this is the best:

And yeah, that’s fast becoming a meme.

4. X-WINGS WOOOOO

Yeah I geeked out hard when I saw them (and yeah, we saw X-Wings at the end of an episode last year, see below, still exciting!). That means the New Republic will be involved again.

5. What icy planet are they on?

I see a lot of snow and ice in this trailer. Does that mean a visit to Hoth, where the rebels once had a base attacked in The Empire Strikes Back? It wouldn’t be the first planet from the Star Wars canon visited in this series — remember that time Mando visited Tatooine and we all thought Boba Fett returned?

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WWE star Sasha Banks makes surprise appearance in ‘The Mandalorian’ season 2 trailer

One of the WWE’s biggest stars is making her acting debut in ‘The Mandalorian.’

Disney dropped a new trailer for Season 2 of The Mandalorian on Tuesday, which featured a surprise guest appearance by former WWE Raw Women’s Champion Sasha Banks.

It’s unclear who Banks is playing in Season 2, but she very well may be a Jedi. She appears in the trailer just as The Armorer says “an order of sorcerers called Jedi,” which certainly implies that Banks is one of them. Season 2 is set to hit Disney+ on October 30th, 2020, so you still have plenty of time to catch up if you haven’t season Season 1 already.

Banks confirmed her role on Twitter. The Mandalorian will be her first acting credit outside of the WWE universe.

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Baby Yoda is finally coming back to us in a new season of ‘The Mandalorian’

Baby Yoda BYKE.

It has been so long. It feels like we’ve waited an eternity just to get to this announcement.

But it is here. It is happening. “The Mandalorian,” a Disney+ original Star Wars series, is finally set to return on October 30. And you know what that means. That’s right. BABY YODA IS BACK.

The Mandalorian is an amazing show. But it is absolutely nothing without Baby Yoda — who, by the way, is absolutely a baby and Yoda. Mando, our Mandalorian mercenary pal, is cool and all. But, really, he’s just a side character who takes care of the real hero which is clearly Baby Yoda.

Not only does this mean a return to the screen for our tiny green friend, but it also means more meme fodder for the No Context Baby Yoda twitter account. That’s important!

The internet was so excited to see Baby Yoda return.

This is a momentous occasion for the internet. We all deserve it after the year we’ve been through.

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The Mandalorian: What we learned from chapter eight, ‘Redemption’

We hear the Mando’s name and see his name.

During The Mandalorian‘s eighth chapter, “Redemption,” Mando and his companions fight their way out of a bad situation in an action-packed 49 minutes during Taika Waititi’s Star Wars directorial debut.

But this episode was more about love than violence. When Baby Yoda hugs Mando in the final moments of the episode, the moment was warm enough to melt beskar. Their reunion capped off an episode of sacrifice, trust and camaraderie.

When the episode begins, Mando is surrounded by a gang of stormtroopers and their ruthless leader, Moff Gideon. Escape seems imminent, however, after the arrival of the IG-11 unit — its modifications have made it the most deadly nurse droid in the galaxy. IG-11 is so dynamic that it warms Mando’s hatred for artificial intelligence.

The crew protects Baby Yoda in their escape on an underground lava river, though they lose IG-11, which sacrifices itself by self-destructing in the middle of a platoon of storm troopers. That sets up a final duel between Gideon, in a TIE-fighter, and Mando, using his newly acquired jet pack. In an impressive display of improvisation that would make Iron Man proud, Mando destroys Gideon’s ship and makes an escape.

This final chapter of season one set the foundation for the second season of Mandalorian, which is in production. Here’s what else we learned from chapter eight, “Redemption.”

1. Moff Gideon’s backstory is just as important as Mando’s. And Gideon is equipped with a very special weapon.

We’ve been eagerly awaiting more about Baby Yoda and Mando. Little did we know: Gideon is yet another character with compelling origins.

The episode unpacks the relationship between Gideon and The Empire’s attempts at eradicating Mandalorians. Gideon seems to have been a crucial leader during the siege of Mandalore, during which the Imperial forces killed most of the members of the Mandalorian order. And it seems that, in the process, Gideon acquired The Darksaber.

This is huge. And if you haven’t seen the animated series, you might have missed it. I, for one, thought Gideon was using a vibroblade to cut himself out of his crashed TIE. The episode ends with Gideon standing atop on the vessel with The Darksaber in-hand.

For Mandalorians, this is roughly the equivalent of Luke Skywalker’s lightsaber. The weapon has a long and notable history.

Here’s an abridged version. The weapon came into existence when Tarre Vizsla became the first Mandalorian to join the Jedi Order. The Mandalorians protected the weapon after Vizla’s death, though The Darksaber fell into the hands of a number of non-Mandalorians. Ultimately, a Mandalorian leader, Bo-Katan Kryze, wielded it against The Empire during the final siege on Mandalore. Kryze likely died in The Empire’s invasion — along with almost all of the Mandalorians on Mandalore — and Gideon came into possession of the weapon. It makes him an even more powerful antagonist. (Turns out, he’s also deranged. He seems happy to kill his own stormtroopers, as we learned early in this episode.)

Between his possession of The Darksaber and his obsession with Baby Yoda, Gideon has a huge interest in The Force.

2. We know Mando’s name: Din Djarren.

As Mando comes to care for Baby Yoda — and stars acting like a sentient being instead of a droid — he has revealed more about himself. Most notably, Mando shared how he joined the Mandalorians. The Empire invaded his town, and during that invasion, droids killed his parents. A group of Mandalorians saved a young Djarren’s life.

That’s why he hates droids, and why it’s notable he allows IG-11 to remove Mando’s helmet. IG-11 saves Mando’s life by removing the lid and applying a healing spray. We get our first look at his face. (Unsurprisingly, it looks exactly like Pedro Pascal.) Our protagonist seems to be growing more comfortable with vulnerability, as Mando exposes his face to the world, even if its just the audience of a droid, for the first time in ages.

3. Djarren needs to find Baby Yoda’s species.

There’s an obvious direction for season two. The Mandalorian armorer spells it out for the viewer. Djarren must do one of two things: 1) train Baby Yoda to be a Mandalorian or 2) return Baby Yoda to his native species.

Both outcomes sound pretty dope. On one hand, we can imagine Baby Yoda, flying around with a jetpack and blaster in Beskar armor. On the other hand, we’ve got the prospect of Mando and Baby Yoda finding the Yodans (or the Yodanese or the Yodanians or whatever name you want to make up for that species). Whatever outcome, Mando is responsible for Baby Yoda.

“You are as its father,” the Mandalorian armorer says.

May The Force be with him. And considering how bad of a dad Mando was in season one, he will need as much help from The Force as he can get.

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The Mandalorian: What we leaned from chapter 7, ‘The Reckoning’

We get some serious Baby Yoda revelations.

“The Mandalorian” seemed tonally and thematically eclectic over the last few episodes. Whether the show was a thriller in episode six or flirted with the idea of a Star Wars sitcom in episode four, the show returned to its more natural track — a space western — for the seventh episode of this series.

Mando (Pedro Pascal) returns to face Greef Karga (Carl Weathers) and The Client (Werner Herzog) in this episode. Karga, smitten with Baby Yoda, joins sides with Mando to save the fuzzy, green cherub. And though they have help from Cara Dunne (Gina Carano) and Kuiil, they find themselves trapped by a battalion of stormtroopers and Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito) after killing The Client at the end of the episode.

And sadly, Baby Yoda gets precariously scooped up, quite literally, by the hands of The Empire.

1. Kuiil has spoken for the last time.

What a way to end the episode. And what a shot: Baby Yoda lays swaddled, but oh-so vulnerable while exposed on the desert floor. A stormtrooper zooms in to carelessly grab the Internet’s sweet prince. Then the camera pans over to Kuiil’s smoking body — he appears to be dead.

R.I.P.

The show returned to the most meaningful element of the story: Who and what is Baby Yoda? And what do these post-Empire bad guys want with the child? And as the stakes got more substantial, so did the casualties.

2. There’s an off-chance Baby Yoda could be … bad.

When Dune and Mando arm wrestle, Baby Yoda steps in to help his “dad,” Mando. (Awww!) Sort of like a dog that intervenes when a pair of siblings wrestle, Baby Yoda used the Force to stop Dune. But Baby Yoda has a little more power than your average dog. He ends up Force choking Dune. (Awww shoot!)

At least in the movies, we’ve only seen three characters use that move: Darth Vader, Count Dooku and Kylo Ren. They’re all Sith.

Maybe it’s merely a coincidence and an effort to show Baby Yoda is immature and rash in his use of the Force. Maybe The Empire was planning on using him as a weapon. Maybe that’s why Gideon said Baby Yoda “means more to me than you will ever know.”

Darth Gangreenous … is that you?

3. Kuiil makes a guess at what Baby Yoda is.

Photo courtesy of Disney.

Before he died, he make an interesting conjecture about Baby Yoda. First, Mando suggests Baby Yoda might be “Strand-Cast.” (I have no idea what that means. Maybe: Cast from DNA strand and therefore manmade.)

“I don’t think it was engineered. I’ve worked in the gene farms. This one looks evolved — too ugly,” he said. Kuiil then suggests Cara Dunne is a clone, and she doesn’t say whether he’s right or not.

But it’s hard to say why “too ugly” is a sound rationale for deciding a child isn’t manmade — and, frankly, is factually inaccurate when referring to Baby Yoda, awarded (by me) with the cover of Cute Magazine. It also casts some doubt on the theory that Baby Yoda is a clone.

3. Baby Yoda knows what’s going on.

This has been clear for a number of episodes, but Baby Yoda showed in episode seven, more than ever, that he’s generally aware of his surroundings, Yes, he’s a child — The Child — but he was smart enough to know he was in danger in episode six when the droid was hunting him on Mando’s ship. In chapter seven, Baby Yoda had the presence to heal Karga after he got attacked by a gaggle of poisonous pterodactyl-looking creatures. And lucky for Baby Yoda, that gesture endeared him to Karga, who helped out Mando and Baby Yoda later in the episode, even if the outcome was net-negative.

5. It’s a small galaxy after all.

The jumpy and ephemeral feel from episodes four, five and six may be getting at something: season two (and beyond). Some critics have grown frustrated with the show introducing and disposing of characters in quick fashion. But this episode brought back Dune, Kuiil and the original bounty droid. It seems Dune and the bounty droid might be around for more episodes. And perhaps the same will be true of the backstabbing crew of mercenaries, which Mando abandons in episode six.

This episode seemed reassure the viewers that there may be payout (or payback) coming from the characters on Mando’s side quests. In the meantime, this chapter readdressed the questions at the core of this show.

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The Mandalorian: What we learned from episode 6, ‘The Prisoner’

Baby Yoda is in danger!

Mando needs money, and he’s willing to take significant risks to get it in episode six, “The Prisoner.”

Perhaps what makes him most uncomfortable is the risk he takes when he leaves an unsupervised Baby Yoda in the hands of a droid. For those watching the show closely, it’s one big inside joke. Mando is starting to adore the cutest child in this galaxy far, far away. And he hates droids. (We still don’t know why.)

The episode tackles a side-quest, which requires Mando and a team of mercenaries to break a prisoner out of a New Republic jail. When they find the prisoner, we realize it’s someone Mando left behind on a previous job. The crew suddenly turns on Mando — which they clearly planned all along — and throw him in the same cell as the prisoner they just freed. But Mando quickly breaks out of his cell, stuffs the other mercenaries into a different cell and takes the prisoner back to his employer to collect his fee.

Here’s what else we learned in this episode.

Mando, the thriller.

Strobes. Red, flashing lights. Darkness. As the mercenaries betrayed him, Mando suddenly seemed like the monster in a horror movie.

This was probably the most gripping episode we’ve seen so far. There have been episodes with a twist (like when Baby Yoda appears in episode one) and episodes of exposition and even romance (episode five). But this was a stressful and suspenseful chapter as Mando dealt with backstabbers and deadly droids on the New Republic prison ship. Even Baby Yoda got wrapped up in the tension, as the droid who was piloting Mando’s ship plotted to kill him. (GASP!)

Because this show is starting to feel like one tangent after the next, episodes can take different tones each week. This felt starkly different than last episode’s romp around Tatooine.

Mando isn’t a cold-blooded killer.

It’s unclear if Mando has always avoided killing people or whether this is a new development. But on multiple occasions in this episode, he avoids killing people when it would have been convenient for him to do so.

First, he attempts to save the life of a New Republic prison worker, who Mando and his crew didn’t expect to see. That attempt failed when Mando’s ex, a female twi’lek named Xi’an (Natalia Tena), killed the guy after Mando struggled with negotiations.

Next, Mando chose to imprison — not kill — his betrayers, which may prove unwise in the future. They probably want him dead. And though he had the opportunity to kill almost all of them, he let them live.

“Didn’t take you for the type,” Xi’an says after seeing what she believes is a pet (in Baby Yoda). “Maybe that coat of yours has made you soft.”

Maybe.

Or maybe Baby Yoda has helped the Grinch’s heart grow three sizes.

Mando has an ex?!

How does one have a relationship (and relations) with a Mandalorian who refuses to remove his or her helmet? This episode makes it clear he and Xi’an were romantic. Though, I can’t imagine much romance took place. It’s all very weird.

We know why Mando uses his retro ship

In the first episode, Mondo’s bounty target asks him if his ship is pre-Empire. It is. But Mando doesn’t seem to be whipping around in the old-school spaceship because he likes the way it looks. It’s apparently practical.

“It’s a ghost,” one of Mando’s mercenary comrades says.

His ship is apparently a hard one to track, because of the time period in which it was manufactured.

The show isn’t in any rush to deliver more details about Mando’s past, but episode six gave us a good view into the kind of guy he used to be.

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The Mandalorian: What we learned from episode 5, ‘The Gunslinger’

Who was that character that appeared in the final moments of the episode?

“The Mandalorian” dives into yet another side quest for Mando (Pedro Pascal) and Baby Yoda in the fifth episode, “The Gungslinger.”

Even as the pair navigates life as fugitives, the overarching direction of the show remains unclear. We still know very little about MEME Lord Baby Yoda, who is at the center of the show’s plot. Because Mando isn’t particularly talkative, he hasn’t provided much information on what his plans are for his and Baby Yoda’s future.

The fifth episode felt like another compelling trip down a rabbit hole (much like the second episode, “The Egg”), but the show’s big questions remain a mystery. Here is what we learned from the latest episode of “The Mandalorian” on Disney+.

1. Tatooine!

On first watch, I missed the line of dialogue — “This is Mos Eisley tower.” — that clues the viewer into what planet Mando uses as a place of refuge in episode five. But when he makes an emergency landing on a nondescript desert planet, I began to piece it together. The landscape looked all-too-familiar. Could it be, Tatooine? It is. It’s the home of Anakin and Luke Skywalker. Mando lands in the city, Mos Eisley. In “Star Wars: A New Hope,” Ben Kenobi had a few thoughts on this spot: “You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy.”

For the most part, Mos Eisley hasn’t changed. Both suns still rise and set. Money rules. And the city has a knack for lawlessness. Even the original space cantina — which established one of Star Wars’ set pieces (the cantina scene) — serves as a setting for Mando’s negotiations with a young bounty hunter.

2. Mando isn’t done with bounty hunting.

Because Mando’s space ship takes significant damage in a shootout at the start of the episode, he has to take another bounty assignment to pay for the repairs. Mando has to work on a non-guild project, however. He’s been expelled from it, and is, fact, a target for guild members.

That begs the question: Why doesn’t this young bounty hunter know that Mando is a potential assignment? Apparently, there isn’t a digital “Most Wanted” service, which is awfully convenient for Mando and Baby Yoda.

3. Mando really hates droids.

Mando has made it abundantly clear he doesn’t like droids. In the first episode, he’s reluctant to work with a bounty droid. In this episode, he won’t even let pit droids (which look a lot like the ones Jar Jar clumsily knocks around in “The Phantom Menace”) work on his damaged spaceship.

This hasn’t to become relevant soon, right? Maybe they’re setting up some sort of reveal about Mando’s identity.

4. Mando is a terrible dad.

Photo courtesy of Disney.

I’m probably burying the lede here, because everyone loves Baby Yoda. He’s currently the Lamar Jackson of the Star Wars universe — electric and universally loved. So I think everyone will be in agreement when I say that Mando gets awfully cavalier with fatherhood in this episode.

Not only does he leave the child in his spaceship while he heads to the cantina, but he also lets a stranger babysit the adorable kiddo for the second consecutive episode. What’s more, Mando shoots and kills someone who is holding Baby Yoda.

Note to Mando: THIS IS THE MOST ADORABLE BABY IN THE GALAXY. Also, he’s got force powers and may be the most important baby in the galaxy. Stop shooting in Baby Yoda’s general direction.

5. Fans believe Boba Fett made an appearance at the end of the episode.

The final shot of the episode shows the dead body of Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen), who was Mando’s target earlier in the episode. Then: footsteps.

Who could it be?

Fans think they know. They’ve compared the sounds of those footsteps in episode five to those of Boba Fett’s in “The Empire Strikes Back.”

Some background: Boba Fett was thought to be dead in the Battle of Carkoon – the one with the Sarlaac – in “Return of the Jedi,” but Star Wars confirmed he’s alive. Fett is a Mandalorian, a bounty hunter and the clone of Jango Fett. Perhaps The Client has hired him to hunt down Mando.

But it’s a case of infinite possibility for this character. It’s possible, for example, that it is Darth Maul, who needed robotic legs after Obi Wan Kenobi sliced him in half. What’s most likely? It’s probably Moff Gideon, played by Giancarlo Esposito, who we have yet to see appear in the show.

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