![]() ![]() Oddly enough, Wendig did more for setting up Palpatine's eventual return than the sequel movies themselves, because one plot featured a Sith cultist who was convinced the Emperor would be resurrected somewhere in the depths of the Unknown Regions he even rhapsodized about the powers of the Sith to a prisoner, describing the Force Drain power audiences saw in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. And yet, as prescient as the Aftermath trilogy may have been, Lucasfilm has developed an odd habit of ignoring, retconning, and/or substantially rewriting aspects of it. Looking back, the Aftermath trilogy set in place many of the ideas Star Wars would build upon in the years to come. Following Star Wars: Aftermath and Star Wars: Life Debt, Chuck Wendig delivers the exhilarating conclusion to the bestselling trilogy set in the years. It fell to author Chuck Wendig to begin exploring just how that future came to be, in his Aftermath trilogy. The Star Wars sequel trilogy introduced viewers to a very different galaxy, one where the period of peace after the Empire's collapse had come to a tragic end. Star Wars: The Bad Batch continued Disney's strange habit of retconning its first big Star Wars transmedia story. ![]()
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