BEWARE SPOILERS: Just like with the previous Disney Plus series, we at Fantha Tracks will be offering our own episode guide for your entertainment! Here we will post every reference, Easter egg, everything named and unnamed per episode and some fun trivia in-between that we have spotted.
Part 4
Official summary: Obi-Wan plots a mission.
Trivia
The flashing helmets during the logo have changed yet again. Added from this series are NED-B, the GNK droid from the first episode where they clock out on Tatooine, Lola and we end again with Darth Vader.
As expected in a series with many allusions: Obi-Wan in the bacta tank mirrors Darth Vader being in one.
Roken (played by rapper O’Shea Jackson jr.) refers to Obi-Wan as General. Did he fight in the Clone Wars or was this just an honorific link to that era?
Others in the anti-Imperial network on Jabiim are Wade Ressellian (Ryder McLaughlin) and Sully, who was portrayed by Maya Erskine. Probably to avoid the mud and near-constant rain that the planet had in the comic, we just see them inside a cave.
Nur being in the Mustafar system was not mentioned in the game, but was mentioned in ‘The Art of Jedi: Fallen Order’.
It seems that Cal Kestis was unable to share data from when he was inside the Fortress Inquisitorius with certain rebel groups like Tala and Roken’s group. Jedi: Fallen Order took place in 14 BBY, which is quite some years before Obi-Wan Kenobi, which takes place in 9 BBY.
A T-47 is mentioned, that is the airspeeder that we saw converted to a snowspeeder in The Empire Strikes Back.
Reva mentions that they have intercepted a transmission from Balnab. Balnab is a planet first seen in The Clone Wars, season 4, episode 6: Nomad Droids.
The Aurebesh as Tala’s code cylinder gets checked at the security gate reads: CAPTAIN TALA DURITH – UNKNOWN
The Security Officer gets no name in the end credits, just the name of the actor: Joss Glennie-Smith. Unfortunately the same goes for the Terminal Officer that Tala kills, who was played by David Will No. The other female Officer seen at the Fortress Inquisitorius is played by Helen Day, but again unnamed.
Despite Obi-Wan not knowing about Cal’s mission at the Fortress Inquisitorius, they both take the same route in: through the water and an opening gate. During his swim you see a Bluevev glider, first seen in Solo, but also in the game.
Tala and Obi-Wan stay in contact using the same kind of comlink from A New Hope.
With the Seeker droid your mind may go first to the ones seen in Rebels, but those are smaller. This is more the size of the one seen in Star Tours: The Adventures Continue.
Obi-Wan finds out that they are hiding down dead Jedi bodies at the secure sector of the Fortress. When he says as much to Tala, he looks at the body of Tera Sinube, a popular Jedi often seen in The Clone Wars. It is likely that all of these individuals are Jedi or are Force sensitive. When he first enters you see a male human and an Ongree body.
The second body, after Tera Sinube, appears to be more like an Imperial advisor like Sate Pestage, while the third looks more like a Partisan belong to Saw’s group. The first unknown female is probably meant to be reminiscent of Padmé to continue the allusions to her and Anakin. The other woman is an unknown and your best guess is as good as ours.
The last one is interesting however: this Youngling matches with one seen in Part I as the same actors are listed: Jonathan & Oliver Ho
Tala lies and tells that they are on Florrum, which is best known as Hondo Ohnaka’s base of operations. Florrum always was indeed part of the Sertar system.
The black stormtroopers that you can see during the climatic escape are Purge Troopers, created for the game but first seen in the Darth Vader comics.
Was that coaxium in the canister causing the explosion upon impact with the T-47 airspeeder of Wade?
Join us next week for the episode guide of Part V!
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