13.08.2019
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The Imperial Naval Command (INC), also referred to as the Imperial Starfleet, was the military arm of the Galactic Empire in charge of maintaining security, peace and order in the galaxy. Commanded by Darth Vader, it absorbed the military forces of the Galactic Republic after Palpatine's declaration of the New Order.

  1. Imperial Army Star Wars Units

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Characters/StarWarsImperialArmy

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Imperial Army Star Wars Units

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Imperial Army
The ground based branch of the Imperial military, it evolved out of the Grand Army of the Republic. The Imperial Army occupied thousands of worlds across the galaxy, with its fearsome Stormtrooper Corps being one of the primary signs of oppression. Mechanized vehicles like the massive AT-AT or smaller AT-ST were utilized by the Imperial Army to assault and suppress rebellious activity. Prior to the Battle of Yavin, the army also maintained its own separate TIE fighter squadrons, which were incorporated into the naval command structure during the military reorganization that followed the Death Star's destruction.

Grand Generals

Grand General Tagge and Staff

Grand General Cassio Tagge

Species: Human

Homeworld: Tepasi

Portrayed by: Don Henderson
Appearances:TarkinA New HopeFrom a Certain Point of ViewDarth VaderStar Wars Imperial Army Units
'Until this battle station is fully operational, we are vulnerable. The Rebel Alliance is too well equipped; they're more dangerous than you realize.'

A noble from Tepasi, Tagge was the Chief of the Imperial Army and a member of the Empire's Joint Chiefs. He briefly visited the first Death Star with his fellow Chiefs, and unlike his peers he considered the Rebel Alliance to be a possible, if unlikely, threat. Following the Death Star's destruction, Tagge was made the Emperor's chief enforcer, with even Darth Vader subservient to him.

  • Adaptation Personality Change: Much like his Legends counterpart, Tagge is a critic of the Death Star and doesn't think highly of Darth Vader. However, this incarnation of Tagge is much less cautious and much more brazen in his dislike of the Dark Lord, using his superior position to belittle Vader whenever he gets the chance.
  • Benevolent Boss: He trusted Tolvan with commanding security at Eadu, but when that failed big-time, he had her relegated to sweeping out the abandoned rebel base on Yavin 4 for any useful scraps of information they could use against the rebels, which is as non-harmful as a punishment from the Empire can be.
  • Blue Blood: He is a member of a wealthy and very influential family who run TaggeCo, a large corporation with business interests tied into the Empire's operations.
  • Boring, but Practical: He embraces this trope; making it abundantly clear that he thinks the Death Star was a stupid idea from the very beginning and that those resources should have been used to simply build more Star Destroyers. He also does this while insulting Tarkin's and Vader's love of spectacle and grandiose design. When Vader sees him at work, even the Sith Lord admits he is effective.
  • Bullying a Dragon: Namely bullying his own dragon. So far in the comics he has gone out of his way to belittle Vader's importance in the grand scheme of things and seems to enjoy pulling rank on the Sith. However, whenever Vader completes a mission Tagge assigns him, he always compliments him on a job well done, showing respect for Vader's skill but not his position.
  • Commander Contrarian: A rare villainous version who is completely correct in everything he says. He argues with Tarkin and Motti about the vulnerability of the Death Star. He is also highly skeptical of the Emperor's decision to dissolve the senate, wondering how he plans to maintain control without the established bureaucracy.
  • Composite Character: His more active attempts to undermine Vader are reminiscent of Orman Tagge, one of his Legends brothers.
  • Cool Starship: After the destruction of the Death Star, Tagge uses the Super Star Destroyer Annihilator as his flagship.
  • Digging Yourself Deeper: Vader expresses his distaste for Tagge's fixation on statistics and 'graphs'. After Tagge's star has fallen, he tries to defend himself to Vader by citing the percentage improvements and statistical upswing that his actions resulted in. Vader is not impressed.
  • Dragon-in-Chief: Tagge becomes the Empire's main military commander after the destruction of the first Death Star; partially because he was right about the Death Star's vulnerabilities and putting all the Empire's eggs in one basket and partially because he is the sole surviving member of the Joint Chiefs. Even Vader is made subservient to him.
    Emperor Palpatine (to Vader): Tagge always argued against the arrogance of the Death Star as a sole weapon. He alone was properly aware of the Rebel threat. While the second Death Star is constructed his philosophy must be dominant. It was lucky he left the station before its destruction to return to his beloved fleet or I would have no one I could use. He is to assume primacy. You will act according to his will.
  • Foil: He served as one to Tarkin (see Technician vs. Performer below) and is increasingly becoming one to Vader by being an emotionally detached, pragmatic and competent strategist who is able to see the big picture which in contrast tends to highlight Vader's Blood Knight and Not So Stoic tendencies. He is also of average height and slightly pudgy and doesn't really stand out in a crowd which contrasts nicely with Vader and Tarkin's more iconic looks. And to drive the point home when Vader defended Tarkin, saying that he was a man with vision, Tagge coldly, and correctly, pointed out that Tarkin was responsible of the Empire's biggest defeat so far while he has been busy salvaging the situation in the Battle of Yavin's aftermath.
  • Guttural Growler: He has a noticably raspy voice, though he's too much of a Punch-Clock Villain to count as Evil Sounds Raspy.
  • Oh, Crap!: His reaction when the Emperor removes him from supreme command of the Imperial military and replaces him with Darth Vader.
  • Only Sane Man: He argues that the Rebels could pose a serious threat if they get their hands on the Death Star plans, but Motti and the rest of the officers in the conference room laugh at and dismiss his concerns.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: By comparison to Vader, Tarkin and Motti. He never does or says anything evil during the meeting. He's just stating the situation like it is and questions odd decisions, like any competent military commander would. He's also visibly disturbed when Vader chokes Motti while the rest are just sitting there before Tarkin tells Vader to release him.
  • Rank Up: Following his ascension to the Empire's main military commander, Tagge is promoted to Grand General.
  • Spell My Name with an 'S': His name is spelled 'Taggi' in the credits of A New Hope, and 'Tagge' everywhere else.
  • Spared by the Adaptation: Originally in the old Legends continuity, he was supposed to have died on-board the Death Star when it blew. But in the new Disney canon, it's revealed he had returned to his starfleet (in order to investigate the alleged Rebel secret base on Dantooine) just before the battle and shows up alive in Darth Vader.. at least, until issue #25.
  • The Strategist: He is so far shown to be a very capable strategist and unlike some Imperial commanders, Tagge tends to keep a realistic assessment of his forces' strengths and weaknesses while at the same time he tends to avoid underestimating the enemy's capability.
  • The Stoic: He is very big on not letting emotions cloud judgement. In fact, Tagge removes Vader from the hunt for the Rebel pilot that destroyed the Death Star on the grounds Vader is too emotionally involved in the subject (he is more right about that then he realizes).
  • Technician vs. Performer: The Technician to Tarkin's Performer. This fact is actually discussed between him and Vader.
    Tagge: I look at the state of the Empire and ask myself 'How many Super Star Destroyers could we have made with the resources we threw into Tarkin's Folly?'
    Vader: Tarkin had vision. You have graphs.
    Tagge: I have the graphs and the command. My plans may not be as glamorous or as grand as yours or the departed Tarkin but they work.
  • Underestimating Badassery: He tends to view Vader as a simple thug and enforcer; albeit a pretty powerful one. Vader, however, is more intelligent and more cunning than Tagge gives him credit for.
    • Additionally, he almost completely trusts Tulon Voidgazer, and is caught completely flatfooted when she, Cylo, and his remaining forces turn on the Empire. This almost loses them the Executor, and is the reason Palpatine demotes him.
  • We Have Reserves: Sums up his strategic philosophy in a nutshell.
    Tagge: The Star-Fleet is a sea. It is endless and it cannot be beaten and given enough time turns even the strongest rocks into sand. Our larger plans cannot be based around any individual asset. Not a Death Star. Not you, Vader.
  • You Have Failed Me: The Emperor removes him from command for his failures and replaces him with Vader, then leaves to let Vader 'educate [his] subordinates about this brave new era'. Vader then 'educates' Tagge in his usual fashion.

Lieutenant Oon-ai

Species: Human

Appearances:Darth Vader
'These are my orders. If you refuse . . . I'll have to report it to the General. Please comply.'

A lieutenant aboard the Super Star Destroyer Annihilator and aide to Grand General Tagge.

  • We Hardly Knew Ye: Lasts all of one issue before Vader disposes of him.

Inspector Thanoth

Species: Human

Appearances:Darth Vader

An Imperial military investigator who Grand General Tagge assigns as Vader's new adjutant after Oon-ai's demise.

  • Affably Evil: He is always very calm and quite polite, even while in the middle of interrogating a reluctant source.
  • The Cameo: Tolvan looks at a picture of him and her in Doctor Aphra.
  • Deadpan Snarker: He likes to add a bit of snark to his interrogations, and really lets it fly when belittling the Astarte twins.
    Doowan: What are you doing back on Anthan?
    Thanoth: I missed the social scene.
  • Face Death with Dignity: He allows himself to be killed by Darth Vader after uncovering his plan to overthrow the Emperor. He says that Palpatine has proven himself too weak and incompetent to run the Empire, and is happy to offer up anything (even his own life) to see that he is replaced with a more worthy successor.
  • Pragmatic Villainy: Values results and information over making any sort of grand spectacle, and so he leaves useful sources of information alive rather than make examples of them. Thanoth is thus infuriated when the Astarte twins execute one of his best sources of information in the sector in order to establish their reputation and intimidate the rest of the local criminal underworld.
  • Sherlock Scan: Determines that Vader had been to Anthan 13 simply by the ionization of surface dust that's still on Vader's armor.
  • Undying Loyalty: Thanoth is likewise loyal to the Empire. Key word being the Empire, not the Emperor. Although Thanoth eventually uncovers Vader's true schemes, he simply tells Vader where to find the missing Aphra wishes Anakin luck, and accepts that Vader is going to kill him to leave no trail. He does this because he thinks Vader makes for a much more suitable ruler than the Emperor, as Thanoth blames the failure of the Death Star on his poor vision.
  • Worthy Opponent: Vader comes to respect Thanoth's skills, and instead of arranging to dispose of him like he did Oon-ai, he simply manipulates him into calling off the search for Aphra to instead crush a Rebel unit that had been harassing Imperial forces in the area.

Other Grand Generals

Grand General Kenner Loring

Species: Human

A Grand General active after the Battle of Endor.

  • Dragon Ascendant: One of several high-ranking Imperial officers vying for leadership of what remains of the Empire following Palpatine's demise.
  • The Ghost: Has yet to appear, but he is frequently mentioned as leading a significant portion of the Imperial Army in a protracted battle against the New Republic on Malastare.
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Generals

Jylia Shale

General Jylia Shale

Species: Human

Appearances:AftermathLife Debt
'Putting so much time, and money, and effort, and people into the ecosystem of that massive battle station was a fool's crusade. Palpatine was arrogant.'

A legendary Imperial general and strategist, General Shale commands the Star Destroyer Ascent. A few months following the Battle of Endor, Shale is among the high-ranking Imperials who gather at the conference on Akiva.

  • Determined Defeatist: Despite her belief that the Empire has probably lost the war, Shale joins the other Imperials on Akiva in order to try and find some potential solution to bring it back from the brink. However, after her capture she cooperates with the New Republic and begins giving them information in an effort to end the war quicker.
  • Foil: To General Borrum: both he and Shale are considered legends by the Imperial military but were sidelined by the Empire and were considered by Fleet Admiral Rax as potentially useful for his plans. Shale failed his tests due to her negativity about the Empire's chances of bouncing back after Endor and by pointing out all of the Empire's crime, while Borrum was selected to join his Shadow Council due to his unwavering loyalty.
  • Genre Savvy: She is well aware of the Empire and the Rebellion's narrative roles in the story of the galaxy.
    Shale: This isn't some kind of inspirational story. Some scrappy, ragtag underdog tale, some pugilistic match where we're the goodhearted gladiator who brings down the oppressive regime that put him in the arena. They get to have that narrative. We are the ones who enslaved whole worlds full of alien inhabitants. We are the ones who built something called a Death Star under the leadership of a decrepit old goblin who believed in the 'darkside' of some ancient, insane religion.
  • Gilded Cage: Due to her cooperation with the New Republic after her capture Shale is allowed to live in a sparse apartment under guard with luxuries she would never get in prison.
  • Heel Realization: After the Emperor's death she began to doubt the Empire and its goals. Following her capture by the New Republic she has clearly become disgusted with having been part of that regime.
    Shale: What we did formed a scar across this galaxy, and I'm not sure it will ever truly fade.
  • Ignored Expert: She opposed the creation of the Death Stars, viewing them as excessive and costly creations that put too many high-ranking officers at risk if they were to be destroyed. Due to this, Shale was shunted aside during the last years of the Emperor's reign, even though her fears proved correct.
  • Insistent Terminology: Among the Imperials who gather on Akiva, Shale is the only one who calls the Rebels the New Republic, acknowledging their victory over the Empire.
  • Living Legend: She is highly respected throughout the Imperial military.
  • Meaningful Name:
    • 'Julia' is the feminine form of the Roman family name, Julius. The name that comes to mind is usually Julius Caesar, though ironically, he led the transition of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire, while Shale was okay with having the Empire surrender to the New Republic for practicality's sake. Their names have similar sounds as well.
    • A shale is a type of rock made from hardened clay/mud and can be easily be broken into pieces. This contrasts her with Commander Kyrsta Agate of the New Republic, as well as referencing the fracturing of the Empire into various Imperial remnants with differing goals.
  • Only Sane Woman: Among those gathered on Akiva, Shale is the only one who acknowledges that the war might truly be lost and that there is likely little hope of even forging a peace treaty with the New Republic. She even suggests that they might be spared if they surrender to the New Republic instead.
  • She Knows Too Much: Rax arranges for her assassination due to the information she is providing the New Republic in her captivity.
  • Worthy Opponent: She considers Admiral Ackbar one, warning her fellow Imperials that he is a master strategist who should never be underestimated.

General Hodnar Borrum

Species: Human

One of the eldest officers in the Imperial Military, Borrum served in the Grand Army of the Republic and continued serving the Empire. He is selected by Fleet Admiral Gallius Rax to serve on his 'Shadow Council', a group of Imperial officials seeking to save and remake the Empire following the Battle of Endor.

  • Flat-Earth Atheist: Despite having fought both alongside and against Jedi, he has little-to-no regard for the Force.
  • Foil: To General Shale: both she and Borrum are considered legends by the Imperial military but were sidelined by the Empire and were considered by Fleet Admiral Rax as potentially useful for his plans. Borrum proved useful to him as his spirit was not broken and he still believed in the Empire, while Shale became a defeatist who denounced the Empire's actions and began providing information to the New Republic after her capture.
  • Living Legend: His numerous campaigns and victories, including leading a charge of clone troopers on the last fortress of the Jedi at the end of the Clone Wars, have made him one of the Empire's most beloved heroes.
  • Old Soldier: He was already old when he served the Republic, but Sloane notes that age has not affected his mind one bit and that his eyes shine with a keen military mind.
  • Passed-Over Promotion: Many in the Empire were perplexed Kenner Loring was made Grand General instead of Borrum.
  • Uncertain Doom: He is the only member of the Shadow Council whose fate is unknown after the Battle of Jakku. Borrum was last mentioned as commanding the Imperial ground forces on Jakku, which were almost completely wiped out and had no means of escape.
Hurst Romodi

General Hurst Romodi

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Colonels

Bergon

Colonel Bergon

Species: Human

Appearances:Dark Lord of the Sith

An officer serving under Grand Moff Tarkin during the early years of the Empire who participated in the invasion of Mon Cala.

  • Fantastic Racism: Refers to the Mon Calamari as 'finners,' completely dismisses their forces as a threat, and suggests bombing them from orbit.
  • Underestimating Badassery:She holds no respect for Ackbar and scoffs at his impending attack. He proves himself to be a worthy opponent moments later and destroys her sky base when his small watercraft fire dozens of missiles directly at her skybase.

Lieutenants

See her page on the Star Wars – Rebel Alliance & New Republic Intelligence character page

Others

Crix Madine

See his entry on the Rebel Alliance & New Republic Army

Imperial Special Forces

Kolar Ludd

Appearances: Marvel's Star Wars

A member of the Imperial Special Forces and an inmate of the Rebel Alliance's Sunspot Prison. He is one of sixteen other inmates released when a team of mercenaries, who believe the prisoners should be executed rather than imprisoned, takes over Sunspot prison.

  • Ambiguously Human: It's unclear if he's an alien or just a really ugly human.
  • The Butcher: His nickname is 'The Depopulator'.
  • If You Kill Him, You Will Be Just Like Him: Leia refuses to execute unarmed prisoners because she doesn't want to be like the Empire.
  • Kill It with Fire: Leia and Sana herd him and several other escaped prisoners into a room, hoping to capture them alive. This doesn't matter as the mercenaries deactivate the prison's sun shields and burn them all alive.
  • Prison Riot: He, along with sixteen other inmates, is released by an unknown party hoping to get Princess Leia to kill him.
  • Rape, Pillage, and Burn: His job. The Empire would send him into an enemy village and he'd leave everyone dead and the buildings burning.

Stormtrooper Corps

Imperial Stormtroopers

'Stop that ship! Blast them!'

Elite soldiers of the Galactic Empire. These faceless enforcers are considered an extension of the Emperor's will, and thus use brutal tactics as a way to keep thousands of star systems throughout the galaxy in line.

  • Armor Is Useless: The Stormtrooper armor is demonstrably less resilient to punishment than that of their Clone predecessors, seemingly built more for scare value than any proper protection. At best, it prevents blaster shots going straight through troopers, avoiding a potential One-Hit Polykill. Fitting of the Empire's We Have Reserves policy.
    • To be fair, this is more of a fanon joke than an actual fact of the setting. Stormtroopers always go down with a single shot, but we're never actually presented evidence that this means they have died. The only Stormtroopers revisited after being shot are two lying at the entrance breach on Tantive IV when Vader enters, with a third kneeling and checking their vitals suggesting they've possibly survived. It's entirely possible that stormtroopers frequently survive being shot, but are still injured or otherwise out of the fight which is what typically happens when an armored soldier is shot.
  • Bribe Backfire: As shown in the Rebels short 'Entanglement', it is not a good idea to try to bribe a Stormtrooper.
  • Butt-Monkey: Can't shoot straight, beat up by everyone and even if Vader wanted to facilitate the escape this is ridiculous.
  • Clothes Make the Legend: You wouldn't have a Star Wars convention, or for that matter, any major sci-fi convention, without some guys showing up in Stormtrooper armour surrounding a guy dressed as Darth Vader.
  • Elite Mooks: More of an Informed Ability in the movies when fighting heroes with plot armor.
    • Against generic rebel troopers (the Tantive IV boarding and the attack on Hoth), this tends to be a different story - and the stormtroopers acquit themselves extremely well on the Death Star, where they were required to herd the Rebels back to their ship without making it obvious they were doing so.
    • In the EU we learn about tons of even-more-elite troops, including Storm Commandos (Special Ops), Terror Troops (Psychological warfare), and Shadow Troopers. The Emperor's Praetorian Guard is also made of Stormtrooper elites.
    • It's mentioned in some sources that they aren't the 'regular' troops of the Empire. That'd be the little-seen Imperial Army troopers, whose job revolves around holding pacified worlds, compared to the Stormtroopers' job of assaulting and pacifying freshly-taken worlds (much like how historical German stormtroopers, one of their inspirations, were the first to assault enemy trenches, while the regular infantry moved behind them). So even if they're incompetent, they are still technically 'elite'.
  • Enemy Chatter: They're occasionally talking with each other when their superiors aren't looking. Most prominently, the two by the tractor beam controls.
  • Equal-Opportunity Evil: Downplayed. While the Empire is generally prejudiced against non-humans, there are women in the stormtrooper corps as revealed in A New Dawn.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Davin Felth is revolted by the war crimes committed by his squadron and ultimately betrays the Empire by fragging his commanding officer Mod Terrik, who had ordered his squadron to execute the war crimes.
  • Faceless Goons: Very few of them are seen without their helmets.
  • Fake Ultimate Mook: They are supposed to be the Empire's elite, yet are terrible shots and get defeated by Ewoks in Return of the Jedi. However, in the old EU they were portrayed as much more of a threat, and The Empire Strikes Back shows what they can do when they're not fighting people with Plot Armor.
    • Pablo Hidalgo in Rebels Recon #1.09 explains that trooper quality can vary quite dramatically. Elite units like the 501st make short work of rebels like they did on the Tantive IV, while more generic troopers like those on the Death Star did things like fail to hit Luke and Leia while they were in a precarious situation, walk into a partially closed door, and flee from Han when he charged at them while screaming like a lunatic, only turning around when they got a large number of reinforcements. To give them some credit, they were under orders to allow them to escape.
    • On the other hand, elite variants such as Death Troopers and Purge Troopers are genuinely badass soldiers.
  • Fallen Hero: A few stormtroopers are veteran clone troopers who have been reduced from Republic heroes of the Clone Wars into Imperial tools of oppression.
  • Heavily Armored Mook: The Phase II Dark Trooper. While Legends established the Dark Trooper Project as being droid stormtroopers, the Phase II seems to be regular soldiers with heavier armor and weapons.
  • Heel–Face Turn: One Stormtrooper, Davin Felth, comes to realize the Empire he had served his entire life is evil as his commander orders numerous innocents killed in the hunt for the droids he himself had revealed were in the escape pod and, as the Millennium Falcon takes off from Tatooine, he frags his commander and resolves to become a Double Agent for the Rebellion, with the rest of his squadron none the wiser.
  • Highly Conspicuous Uniform: Stormtroopers will wear their stark white uniforms regardless of whether a mission takes them to the lush forest moon of Endor or the sunny desert planet of Tatooine.
  • Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: Trope Namers, due to their inability to do more than graze the main characters after the opening of A New Hope. Lampshaded in the Rebels short 'Art Attack' when Sabine tells them they need more time on the practice range. In a later episode Former Clone Trooper Rex blames the lack of accuracy on the helmet's limited field of view.
    • A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back involved Tarkin and Vader wishing to keep the heroes alive, demonstrating just how expendable the Empire considers Stormtroopers (sacrificing squads just to gain one long-term advantage). On Endor, where there were no such orders to keep them alive, both R2 and Leia are hit by blaster fire, even in thick underbrush. Outside of the firefight at the bunker where they're distracted by fighting the Rebels still there, they have the advantage in the woods right up until Chewbacca steals a walker and starts using it against them.
  • Light Is Not Good/Bright Is Not Good: Don't be fooled by the shiny white armor.
  • Lowered Recruiting Standards: After the Clone Wars, the elite clone troopers who had been trained since birth were phased out of service and the Empire used human conscripts to fill the ranks. This is often seen as the reason why the Stormtroopers pale in comparison to their predecessors.
  • Mascot Mook: Stormtrooper armor is one of the most iconic designs in Star Wars, and they show up constantly in the movies, the EU, and in marketing materials. Even in the Legends continuity, where Stormtroopers are supposedly Elite Mooks who actually make up only a small portion of Imperial infantry, they're absolutely ubiquitous while 'Imperial Army troopers' are nowhere to be seen.
  • Malevolent Masked Men/White Mask of Doom: They're dressed in white armour and serves an evil empire. They can be mean and sadistic, but on the other hand, many of them are Punch Clock Villains.
  • Mooks: They are the Empire's main fighting force and tool of oppression.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: Some of them. A Stormtrooper in the short story One Thousand Levels Down even offers his sympathy to Anandra Milon, a teenager of Alderaanian descent living on Coruscant after Alderaan was destroyed, for having to arrest her simply because of where her family is from.
  • Retcon: In Star Wars Legends, they were described as being repurposed clone troopers that eventually got other gene donors somewhere along the line after samples from Jango Fett ran out, along with conscripts hired along the way. As of Rebels, the clone troopers were retired from combat with the conclusion of the Clone Wars, and Stormtroopers are now exclusively conscripts and volunteer forces. Interestingly enough, the original Expanded Universe explained that the Stormtroopers were conscripts up until Attack of the Clones. Certain sources indicate that some clones were kept around, however. For instance, a member of the Imperial Royal Guard in Lords of the Sith is revealed to be an aging Jango Fett clone.
  • Samus Is a Girl: Female Stormtroopers are only indicated by their voices.
  • Took a Level in Dumbass: Stormtroopers (Scout Troopers included) grow even more incompetent in Return of the Jedi. While in A New Hope they're under orders to let the Rebels escape from Death Star and in The Empire Strikes Back Snowtroopers actually won the Battle of Hoth, here they have no any excuses for losing yet they're not only repeatedly outmatched but also outsmarted by the Rebels and, worse, Ewoks. It's especially bad that the Emperor claimed the Endor garrison to be a legion of his best troops, yet they aren't even close to be the best. To sum it up:
    • They fall for C-3PO's I Surrender, Suckers.
    • After Luke fell from his speeder bike during the chase scene with a Scout Trooper, said Scout Trooper turned around and attempt to shoot him down, ignoring the fact that Luke is armed with a lightsaber that can deflect blaster bolts. The result is predictable.
    • When an Ewok stole a speeder bike, it shouldn't be trouble if there's only one Scout Trooper to chase it. Instead, they sent three, leaving only one trooper to guard the bunker's entrance. Unsurprisingly, he's ambushed by a bunch of Rebel Commandos shortly after.
    • They actually twice pointed their blaster at the heroes (each at Leia and Han) and yelled 'Freeze!' rather than just shoot them down.
  • Villain Decay: By Rogue One they have abandoned any sense of being an 'Elite' force. Stuck with menial tasks like prison guards and escorting cargo shipments. They are wiped out by the platoon load and attempt no tactics.
  • We Have Reserves: Stormtroopers depend on their sheer numbers and fanatic devotion to the Emperor to overcome enemy troops.

Imperial Combat Drivers

The Imperial Army's elite ground vehicle pilots, known to operate the AT-DP walker, speeder bike, AT-AT walker, AT-ST walker, and the Imperial Troop Transport. The AT-AT Drivers are usually seen being commanded by an Imperial officer, such as Agent Kallus in Rebels and General Veers in The Empire Strikes Back.

  • Attack Its Weak Point: The lightly armored neck of the AT-AT is the only point vulnerable to blaster fire. The rest is too tough. For most other Walkers such as the AT-DP the weakest points are the leg joints.
  • Badass Driver: AT-AT Drivers definitely qualify. Mostly subverted for the AT-ST Drivers as many of them are outwitted by Ewoks in Return of the Jedi.
  • Chicken Walker: AT-STs and their various derivatives/precursors. In fact, they are often called 'Chicken Walkers' by fans.
  • Companion Cube: Walker pilots were known to form strong attachments to their machines, often considering them as extensions of themselves.
  • Cool Helmet: They wear variants of Stormtrooper helmets, except for AT-ST Drivers who wear maskless helmets.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Whenever AT-ATs are around, expect this to happen. An old Republic AT-TE piloted by veteran clone troopers didn't stand a chance, and neither did the Rebellion's Echo base on Hoth.
  • Elites Are More Glamorous: Combat drivers are generally cocky and abrasive, but AT-AT drivers considered themselves the elite amongst the elite.
  • Faceless Goons: Except for AT-ST drivers whose helmets are maskless, though they sometimes wear large black goggles. It is established in some materials that the elevated height of AT-DPs and AT-ATs necessitates face protection.
  • Giant Foot of Stomping: The AT-AT Walkers.
  • Glass Cannon: The AT-ST Walker is powerful, but it explodes if the cockpit falls to the ground.
  • Humongous Mecha: The AT-AT Walkers and to a lesser extent the AT-DP. The three AT-ATs that battled the old Republic AT-TE seemed to be even bigger variants.
  • Interservice Rivalry: They are envied by their peers for their armored cockpits and powerful weapons.
  • Light Is Not Good: AT-AT pilots wear white version of TIE pilot armor.
  • Mighty Glacier: The AT-AT isn't very fast, but they make up for their incredible firepower. However, the walker is faster than it looks.
  • Mook Mobile: They are more-or-less Stormtroopers who operate with ground vehicles.
  • Walking Tank: The Walkers are probably the best-known examples of this trope.
Imperial Supercommandos

Imperial Supercommandos

Task Force 99/SCAR Squad

In General
  • Minor Major Character: They seem like a gimmick for the main Star Wars series, but it turns out that Crait was compromised as a rebel base because SCAR Squad found out about it, as seen in Storms of Crait.

Sergeant Kreel (Agent 5241) / 'The Gamemaster'

Click to see him as the Gamemaster

An undercover stormtrooper and SCAR trooper of the Galactic Empire, serving in the 501st Legion under the direct command of Darth Vader. He was assigned to infiltrate Grakkus the Hutt's organization as his arena gamemaster in order to learn about his stash of Jedi artifacts. After completing that mission, Kreel is given command of a SCAR trooper squad, Task Force 99.

  • Affably Evil: A Double Subversion. As Grakkus' Gamemaster, he may be rough, but he's overall a Reasonable Authority Figure who neither sugarcoats things for Luke, nor talks down to him. Considering he lives on Nar Shaddaa, this probably makes him the best person on the moon. But it turns out he is also an Imperial Agent trying to capture Luke. Then, in Issue 21, we learn that he's a stormtrooper who truly believes that what the Empire is doing is right.
  • Ambiguously Human: Unlike most stormtroopers, his face is actually seen during his tenure as Grakkus' Gamemaster. But he partially concealed his face with a hood and his skin appears to be red at some angles, so it's rather uncertain whether he's human or Rubber-Forehead Alien. While the Empire is notoriously anti-alien, they do have some working for them and Darth Vader holds no bias against them, making it possible that he is a non-human serving in Vader's personal stormtrooper unit.
  • An Arm and a Leg: His second fight with Luke ends badly, as Luke uses a powerful Force-push and knocks him and several heavy ship parts across a room, where one lands on his arm. Kreel is forced to cut off his arm in order to escape the exploding ship.
  • Badass Normal: He's trained in the field of martial arts that are superior to that of his fellow troopers. He also has the capacity to wield a lightsaber — something that very few non-Force-sensitives can use safely.
  • Boss in Mook Clothing: Let's put it this way: he's a Stormtrooper who can not only shoot straight (his entire squad can, in fact), but is competent enough to wield a lightsaber which he uses to fight Luke Skywalker, of all people.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: When he was four, Kreel watched a man die. It made him cry like a baby for a dozen more times. Two years later, Kreel watched his own father being murdered in front of him, but he did not cry. He then started to kill people and worked in the fighting pits, making them his way of life in order to survive.
  • Disappeared Dad: His father was murdered when he was six years old.
  • Elite Mook: He is a SCAR trooper (Special Commando Advanced Recon trooper), an elite variant of stormtroopers.
  • The Faceless: Averted as the Gamemaster where he wore a hood, instead. Played straight as stormtrooper.
  • In the Hood: He wears a hood during his tenure as Grakkus' Gamemaster.
  • Large and in Charge: He is pretty tall and muscular, and the leader of Task Force 99.
  • Laser Blade: He keeps a green lightsaber that he took from Grakkus' palace.
  • Master Swordsman: He was given the task of training Luke Skywalker to fight in the arena, and is skilled enough with a sword that he can wield a lightsaber.
  • Mook Lieutenant: He is the leader of his own elite squad of SCAR trooper, Task Force 99.
  • Mook Promotion: Started his career as a stormtrooper in Darth Vader's 501st Legion. He's later promoted to be the leader of Task Force 99.
  • The Musketeer: As stormtrooper, he primarily uses a blaster, only using his lightsaber for close-quarters fighting.
  • Pragmatic Villainy: Saved Luke from Kongo the Disemboweler, but only because he's under Darth Vader's orders to capture Luke alive.
  • Walking Shirtless Scene: As the Gamemaster.
Misty

Misty

Appearances: Marvel's Star Wars

A Special Commando Advanced Recon (SCAR) trooper in Task Force 99, acting as the squad's sniper.

  • All-Encompassing Mantle: Misty wears a hooded cloak that partially covers his/her torso.
  • Ambiguous Gender: Misty's gender isn't specified. The name Misty, in and of itself, doesn't help.
  • Ambiguously Human: Similar to Kreel, Misty is either human or a Rubber-Forehead Alien.
  • Badass Boast: Upon guessing an enemy sniper's position:
    Kreel: Misty, if it was you, where would you be?
    Misty: If it was me, you'd already all be dead. Luckily for us, rebel snipers are all rubbish.
  • The Faceless: Misty is never seen without his/her helmet.

Other Stormtroopers

Lieutenant Crest

Species: Human (clone)

Homeworld: Kamino

Appearances:Tarkin

A clone trooper still in service to the Empire five years after the Clone Wars ended. He serves under Darth Vader.

  • Rank Up: He starts out the story as a sergeant, and while he commits a couple of flubs early in the mission, nearly invoking the wrath of Darth Vader, he's able to redeem himself and ends the story as a lieutenant.
  • Rapid Aging: Due to being a clone, he still suffers from rapid aging, and has to be at least somewhere in his forties during the timespan of Tarkin. Vader even wonders if perhaps this is affecting his skills or reaction time after he scrapes the Sith Lord's mediation chamber while loading it aboard the Carrion Spike.
    Darth Vader: Excuses won't suffice, Sergeant Crest, perhaps you are aging too quickly to remain on active duty.
  • You Have Failed Me: Vader says this to him verbatim after he lets the Carrion Spike get stolen. Although it seems as if a Force-choke is in Crest's future, Vader postones executing him, and Crest manages to redeem himself by capturing crime lord Faazah's warehouse. For this, Vader not only spares his life but promotes him.

Sergeant Torrent (TX-828)

Species: Human (clone)

Homeworld: Kamino

Appearances:Smuggler's Run

A clone trooper still in service to the Empire shortly after the Battle of Yavin 4. Torrent is stationed aboard the Star Destroyer Vehement and serves under the command of ISB officer Alecia Beck during her hunt for the Rebel unit known as the Shrikes.

  • Old Soldier: He was among the last batch of clones bred on Kamino, which still puts him at somewhere over forty.
  • Undying Loyalty: Unlike other clone troopers like Rex and Wolffe who were disgusted by the rise of the Empire and left its service, Torrent continues to happily serve it.

Index

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Imperial Military

Organizational information

Commanding officer(s)

  • Darth Sidious(as Galactic Emperor)[1]
  • DarthVader(as second-in-command)[2]
  • Grand GeneralCassio Tagge[3]
  • Counselor to the EmpireGallius Rax[4]
  • Supreme Commander[5]
  • Joint Chiefs[1]

Sub-units

  • Battle Station Operations[5]
    • Engineering[5]
    • Logistics[5]
    • Maintenance[5]
    • Medical[5]
    • Personal[5]
    • Security[5]
    • Station defenses[5]
    • Technical support[5]
  • Imperial Academy[6]
    • Office of Student Outcomes[7]
  • Imperial Army[8]
    • Administration[5]
    • Army Air Corps[5]
    • Army Engineering Corps[5]
    • General maintenance[5]
    • Imperial Armor Corps[5]
    • Maritime Division[5]
    • Military Police[5]
    • Special Forces Command[5]
    • Stormtrooper Corps[9]
  • Imperial Intelligence[1]
  • Imperial Marines[5]
  • Imperial Navy[10]
    • Imperial Starfighter Corps[11]
    • Military Police[5]
    • Naval Command and Control[1]
  • Imperial Special Forces[12]
  • Joint Chiefs[5]
    • Imperial High Command[5]
    • Naval chiefs[13]
  • Sector Command[14]
    • Subsector Command[14]

Headquarters

Historical information

Formed from

Date founded

Date fragmented

Date reorganized

Date dissolved

Other information

Affiliation

'It may appear to some that the enactment of universal laws and the widespread deployment of a heavily armed military are steps toward galactic domination, but these actions are taken merely to protect us from those who would invade, enslave, exploit, or foment political dissent, and to punish accordingly any who engage in such acts. Look on our new military not as trespassers or interlopers, but as gatekeepers, here to shore up the Emperor's vision of a pacified and prosperous galaxy.'
―Grand MoffWilhuff Tarkin, in his Tarkin Doctrine[src]

The Imperial Military, also referred to as the Imperial Armed Forces, comprised the various branches of the armed forces of the Galactic Empire, such as the Imperial Army and Imperial Navy, as well as agencies such as Imperial Intelligence.

HistoryEdit

'The mining firms are corrupt. They're tied up—ownership, boards of directors—with the shipwrights that have sold the Empire on one construction project after another. Oh, it's all being done in secret, but you can't keep everything secret. A billion Star Destroyers isn't enough. They're building Super Star Destroyers, and Super-Super Star Destroyers, and who knows what else!'
―Clone Wars veteran Skelly, referring to the thorilide triangle theory.[src]

FormationEdit

Following the end of the destructive three-year galaxy-wide conflict known as the Clone Wars, then Supreme ChancellorPalpatine ushered in the formation of the Galactic Empire, a dictatorship composed of the entirety of the former Galactic Republic and with himself as its head of state, the first Galactic Emperor. With vast portions of the galaxy still unconquered and outside Imperial dominion, the Emperor Palpatine transformed the Grand Army of the Republic into the Imperial Military composed of both the Army and Navy of the prior government. Embarking on a massive militarization effort in order to combat the remaining Separatist holdouts across the galaxy, as well as bring more worlds under Imperial control, the Imperial Military would serve as the primary means of Imperial enforcement and expansion from the Imperial Center.[1]

Galactic Civil WarEdit

In the nineteen years following the Empire's rise, a growing rebellion would cause concern within the higher echelons of the Empire, ultimately resulting in the formation of the Alliance to Restore the Republic. For years, the opposing sides fought across the galaxy for control of sectors, systems and the loyalties of their respective populations, with major encounters on the Outer Rim worlds of Yavin 4, Hoth and Endor. Despite crushing the Alliance on Hoth, the Battle of Yavin and Endor would see the destruction of both Death Stars, following which the Empire would enter into a state of disarray as former military leaders formed splinter fleets, while the New Republic slowly pushed Imperial forces back towards the Coruscant Core.[18][10][19][20]

Splintering and dissolutionEdit

Following successive defeats at the hands of the New Republic, a year and four days after Endor, the Empire's military forces made their final stand over the Inner Rim world of Jakku. Suffering heavy casualties, Imperial diplomats on Coruscant ultimately signed a peace treaty—the Galactic Concordance—with the New Republic, ending both the battle and the war.[21]

Over the years, remnants of the Imperial armed forces founded the First Order, located in the far corners of the Unknown Regions.[17] Briefly inhabiting a wing of New Republic politics, the First Order eventually seceded from the Republic—a move that was welcomed by many—firmly committed towards reestablishing the former glory of the Galactic Empire.[21][11]

OrganizationEdit

AdministrationEdit

Wars

The affairs of the Army and the Navy were overseen by the Joint Chiefs, the various commanders of the two branches, while the Stormtrooper Corps operated under the oversight of the Army.[1] However supreme command was given to the Galactic Emperor and his Sith apprentice, Darth Vader, referred to as 1 and 2 respectively.[2] The Imperial Department of Military Research helped the Imperial Military by upgrading and developing new weapons and technology, while former companies friendly to the Republic helped manufacture the newer Imperial vessels entering production, with some of the largest being Sienar Fleet Systems and Kuat Drive Yards. Organizations such as the Naval Intelligence Agency, Imperial Intelligence, and Imperial Security Bureau often worked in conjunction with the Imperial Military, with the ISB installing an internal affairs officer aboard all Imperial-class Star Destroyers and utilizing informants to discover the location of the Alliance Fleet during the Galactic Civil War.[7][22]

Enlistment was open to humanmen and women, who were trained at the numerous Imperial Academy complexes across the galaxy, with many members becoming enlisted personnel, officers or stormtroopers.[23] Since the Empire favored humans and looked down on aliens, it was rare to find non-humans serving in the Imperial Military.[24][25] Embodying the spirit of the Tarkin Doctrine, the armed forces relied on the sheer threat of force to keep neighboring systems in line. Fear and intimidation were essential for all Imperial Military operations, exemplified by the sheer size of Star Destroyers which acted as both a physical and psychological deterrent from assaulting it—and the Empire.[1]

AppearancesEdit

  • Kanan 1: The Last Padawan, Part I: Fight(Mentioned only; in the opening crawl)
  • Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith 12: The Rule of Five, Part II(Mentioned only)
  • 'No Good Deed..'—Darth Vader: Dark Lord of the Sith 1: The Chosen One, Part I
  • Adventures in Wild Space: The Nest(Mentioned only)
  • 'The Voice of the Empire'—Star Wars Insider 170
  • 'Orientation'—Star Wars Insider 157
  • 'Mercy Mission'—The Rise of the Empire
  • 'TK-462'—Star Wars Insider 166
  • 'Trouble Again'—Star Wars Adventures 9(Mentioned only)
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Han Solo - From Smuggler to General'
  • 'Bottleneck'—The Rise of the Empire
  • 'The End of History'—Star Wars Insider 154
  • HoloNet NewsSpecial Report: Lothal Jobless Rates Hit All-time Low(link)(Appears in hologram)
  • HoloNet NewsSpecial Report: Rise in Citizen Reporting Results in Captured Criminals(link)(Appears in hologram)
  • HoloNet NewsSpecial Report: Famed Imperial Pilot Moves to Lothal(link)(Appears in hologram)
  • HoloNet NewsBreaking News: Unauthorized Mining Operation Halted(link)(Appears in hologram)
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Machine in the Ghost'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Art Attack'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Entanglement'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Property of Ezra Bridger'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Droids in Distress'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Fighter Flight'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Rise of the Old Masters'
  • 'Learning Patience'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 2
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Breaking Ranks'
  • 'The fake Jedi'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 3
  • 'Kallus' Hunt'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 4
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Out of Darkness'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Empire Day'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Gathering Forces'
  • 'Sabotaged Supplies'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 7
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Idiot's Array'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Vision of Hope'
  • 'Assessment'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 11
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Call to Action'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Rebel Resolve'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Fire Across the Galaxy'
  • 'Senate Perspective'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 9
  • 'Ocean Rescue'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 12
  • 'Rebel Bluff'—Star Wars Insider 158
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Lost Commanders'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Relics of the Old Republic'
  • 'Secrets of Sienar'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 13
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Always Two There Are'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Brothers of the Broken Horn'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Darth Vader vs. the Rebel Fleet - Fearsome Fighter Pilot'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Wings of the Master'
  • 'No Sympathy'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 14
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Blood Sisters'
  • 'Always Bet on Chop'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Stealth Strike'
  • 'A Day's Duty'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 15
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Future of the Force'
  • 'Vulnerable Areas'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 17
  • 'The Size of the Fight'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Legacy'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'A Princess on Lothal'
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'Bounty of Trouble'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Protector of Concord Dawn'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Legends of the Lasat'
  • 'Academy Cadets'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 18
  • 'Escaping the Scrap Pile'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine 19
  • 'The Ballad of 264'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Homecoming'
  • 'The Wrong Crowd'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Honorable Ones'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Shroud of Darkness'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Forgotten Droid'
  • 'The Line of Duty'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'Newest Recruit'
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'Hasty Departure'
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'Accidental Allies'
  • 'Endangered, Part 1'—Star Wars Adventures 7
  • 'Endangered, Part 2'—Star Wars Adventures 8
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Antilles Extraction'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Hera's Heroes'
  • 'Sons of the Sky'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Last Battle'
  • 'A Trooper's Worth'—Star Wars Animation-Magazine 1
  • 'Divide and Conquer'—Star Wars Animation-Magazine 2
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Iron Squadron'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'An Inside Man'
  • 'To Thy Metal Heart Be True'—Star Wars Rebels Magazine
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Ghosts of Geonosis'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Warhead'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Through Imperial Eyes'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Secret Cargo'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Double Agent Droid'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Zero Hour'
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'Art History'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'In the Name of the Rebellion'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'The Occupation'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Flight of the Defender'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Kindred'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Crawler Commandeers'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Rebel Assault'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Jedi Night'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'DUME'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Wolves and a Door'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'A World Between Worlds'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'A Fool's Hope'
  • Star Wars Rebels – 'Family Reunion – and Farewell'
  • 'The Sand Will Provide'—Star Wars 37: Imperial Pride
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'The Stranger'
  • 'Tales from Wild Space: Adventures in Wookiee-Sitting'—Star Wars Adventures 3
  • The Mighty Chewbacca in the Forest of Fear!(Picture only)
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Chewbacca - The Trusty Co-Pilot'
  • 'Droid Hunters'—Star Wars Adventures Free Comic Book Day 2019(Appears in flashback(s))
  • 'Crossing the Line'—Star Wars Animation-Magazine 4
  • 'The Long Game'—Age of Rebellion Special 1
  • 'Stolen Valor'—Age of Rebellion Special 1
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Stormtroopers vs. Rebels – Soldiers of the Galactic Empire'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Darth Vader - Power of the Dark Side'
  • 'Raymus'—From a Certain Point of View
  • Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope(First appearance)
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'R2-D2 - A Loyal Droid'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Princess Leia vs. Darth Vader - A Fearless Leader'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Han Solo - Galaxy's Best Smuggler'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Chewie vs. Holochess - Let the Wookiee Win'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Princess Leia – The Rescue'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'R2-D2 and C3PO – Trash Compactor Rescue'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Han Solo – Taking Flight for his Friends'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Luke vs. the Death Star - X-wing Assault'
  • 'The Bucket'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'The Sith of Datawork'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'The Red One'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Master and Apprentice'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'The Luckless Rodian'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Not for Nothing'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'We Don't Serve Their Kind Here'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'You Owe Me a Ride'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'The Secrets of Long Snoot'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Born in the Storm'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Laina'—From a Certain Point of View(Mentioned only)
  • 'Fully Operational'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'An Incident Report'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Change of Heart'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Verge of Greatness'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'The Trigger'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Of MSE-6 and Men'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Bump'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'End of Watch'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'The Baptist'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Time of Death'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Sparks'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Desert Son'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'The Angle'—From a Certain Point of View
  • 'Tales from Wild Space: The Flat Mountain of Yavin'—Star Wars Adventures 2
  • 'One Thousand Levels Down'—Star Wars Insider 151
  • 'The Trouble at Tibrin'—Star Wars Adventures 4
  • 'The Trouble at Tibrin, Part II'—Star Wars Adventures 5
  • 'The Lost Eggs of Livorno'—Star Wars Adventures Annual 2018
  • Darth Vader 1: Vader(Appears in flashback(s))
  • Darth Vader 3: Vader, Part III(Indirect mention only)
  • Doctor Aphra 1: Aphra, Part I(Mentioned only; in the opening crawl)
  • Star Wars Annual 3(Appears in flashback(s))
  • Doctor Aphra 26: Worst Among Equals, Part I(Appears on viewscreen)
  • 'Shu-Torun Lives'—Star Wars 50: Hope Dies, Part I
  • 'Last Call at the Zero Angle'—Star Wars Insider 156
  • 'Inbrief'—Star Wars Insider 161
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Luke vs. Imperial Walkers - Commander on Hoth'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Han Solo vs. the Space Slug - The Escape Artist'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Boba Fett - The Bounty Hunter'
  • Use the Force!(Vision)
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Darth Vader - Might of the Empire'
  • 'Tales from Wild Space: The Blue Brothers'—Star Wars Adventures 13
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Leia and Han - The Han Rescue' (Appears in flashback(s))
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Princess Leia - An Unexpected Friend'
  • Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures – 'Luke vs. Emperor Palpatine - Rise to Evil'
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'Ewok Escape'
  • 'Blade Squadron'—Star Wars Insider 149–150
  • 'The Levers of Power'—The Rise of the Empire
  • Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – 'Chopper and Friends'
  • 'Turning Point'—Star Wars Insider 169
  • 'Blade Squadron: Zero Hour'—Star Wars Insider 160
  • 'Blade Squadron: Kuat'—Star Wars Insider 168
  • 'The Ghost Ship'—Star Wars Adventures: Destroyer Down
  • 'Blade Squadron: Jakku'—Star Wars Insider 172
  • Bloodline(Indirect mention only)
  • Poe Dameron 8: The Gathering Storm, Part I(Appears in flashback(s))
  • Poe Dameron 9: The Gathering Storm, Part II(Appears in flashback(s))
  • Poe Dameron 10: The Gathering Storm, Part III(Appears in flashback(s))
  • Join the Resistance: Escape from Vodran(Mentioned only)
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens: A Junior Novel(Mentioned only)
  • '—Star Wars Adventures Ashcan(Appears in flashback(s))
  • Star Wars: The Last Jedi: Expanded Edition(Indirect mention only)
  • Galaxy's Edge 2(Appears as a toy)
  • 'Tales from Wild Space: The Heist'—Star Wars Adventures 21(Appears in flashback(s))

Non-canon appearancesEdit

  • 'Far Too Remote'—From a Certain Point of View

SourcesEdit

  • Galactic Empire in the Encyclopedia(link now obsolete; backup link)(as 'Imperial armed forces')
  • Death Troopers Invade Star Wars: Commander – Exclusive! on StarWars.com
  • Dawn of Rebellion(First identified as Imperial Armed Forces)
  • Admiral Motti in the Databank(backup link)
  • Admiral Wullf Yularen in the Databank(backup link)
  • Bespin History Gallery on StarWars.com (backup link)
  • Cloud City in the Databank(backup link)
  • Director Orson Krennic in the Databank(backup link)
  • Nils Tenant in the Databank(backup link)(First identified as Imperial Military)

Notes and referencesEdit

  1. 1.01.11.21.31.41.51.61.7Tarkin
  2. 2.02.1Lords of the Sith
  3. Darth Vader 1: Vader
  4. Aftermath: Empire's End
  5. 5.005.015.025.035.045.055.065.075.085.095.105.115.125.135.145.155.165.175.185.195.205.215.22Dawn of Rebellion
  6. Servants of the Empire: Rebel in the Ranks
  7. 7.07.1Lost Stars
  8. Rebel Journal by Ezra Bridger
  9. Star Wars: Galactic Defense
  10. 10.010.1Star Wars: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back
  11. 11.011.1Star Wars Propaganda: A History of Persuasive Art in the Galaxy
  12. Star Wars 17: Rebel Jail, Part II
  13. 'Orientation'—Star Wars Insider 157
  14. 14.014.1Star Wars: Commander
  15. Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
  16. 16.016.116.2Star Wars: Galactic Atlas
  17. 17.017.1Before the Awakening
  18. Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope
  19. Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi
  20. Aftermath
  21. 21.021.1Star Wars: The Force Awakens: The Visual Dictionary
  22. Heir to the Jedi
  23. Ultimate Star Wars
  24. Star Wars Rebels: The Visual Guide
  25. Star Wars Rebels: Visual Guide: Epic Battles