![]() Whatever the explanation is, it's still a point made moot by a story told 40 years ago this coming May. The Death Star's creator left a fuse to be lit, like a cherry bomb, either as vengeance for the Empire killing his wife and scattering his family, or in regret for forcing him to create such a dreadful tool of oppression. ![]() Rogue One purports to answer this by saying the vulnerability was deliberate. Spoiler alert: This article assumes the reader has seen Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. One of the supposed virtues of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is how it patches, or at least explains, a plot feature that has bothered some Star Wars fans since the first film in 1977: How the hell could a superweapon like the Death Star have a kill switch like the thermal exhaust port, much less one unknown to its operators? ![]()
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