although now non canon, Plagueis is considered to be among the best, if not the best, of the EU works. It links together a few things from several other rule of 2/related books and shows Plagueis and Palpy starting to get it all in motion with deals, betryals and tricks. Pretty good but very political heavy more than action, the audiobook version has some top shelf production you'd think you were listening to the tv
@@TheRustyTigger and it shows how much influence plagueis actually had on the prequels. Palpatine gets all power drunk at the end and claims to have been the mastermind since the start but in the actual book itself there are many pov chapters from palpatines pov and that really doesn't make him seem like the mastermind at all as he claims at the end. My point is that the grand plan as it was executed was mostly just plagueis except for the naboo crisis which was engineered by palpatine but done through connections already established by plagueis. He really is the goat.
I feel like this would be even funnier if they still had the chips, but they only worked by facial recognition and Palpatine's face was too jacked up for them to recognize him anymore. His decades long plan blows up in his face literally because of his own lightning bolts.
Commander Cody “ yes palpet- wait your not the senator who are you” Palpetine “it’s me now execute order 66” Commander Cody “your not the senator who are you” Random b1 “isn’t that dookus master he always talks about by his self” Commander Cody “ a Sith Lord trooper contact the Jedi order tell them that there’s a Sith Lord in the senator’s office” Random b1” we will call our senators about this” Palpetine” oh shi-“ Credits
Dude melted his own face and screwed himself. Vader tries to round up the 501st and gets stunned while they call Padme (because the marriage is an open secret with the 501st) and go “Hey, the General is losing his shit. Can you come help?” So yeah Anakin talks the shit out, the Clones on Courascant eradicate Palpatine with a barrage of laser fire at his office that he can’t hope to dodge or block, and then the survivors all party for making it out alive
Palpatine, electrocuting Mace Windu: UNLIMITED POWER! Palpatine, realizing that he’s entirely unrecognizable as the Chancellor or as Sidious: …Limited power.
@demodemon8940 I would love to see that conversation. Appo, "trooper go find Senator Amidala immediately and bring her here" as anakin is trying to organize operation Knightfall.
“Actually I just realized something” “What’s that meatbag?” “We’re both slave armies fighting a proxy war for grossly inadequate governments and will in all likelihood be liquidated when this is all over” “Huh… wanna start a slave rebellion?” “I thought you’d never ask clanker” “Yeah that’s our word”
Clone: Alright everybody, lets settle down here since we all are clearly being played by the same person. Lets put our blasters down Droid: Agreed. Cut to end credits
Five seconds later "You know what? F#ck that guy in the bath robe, let's kill him and start a republic where droids and clones have rights!" "F#ck yeah!" (Obi-Wan not getting shot in the back) "Well, I'd best report this to the Jedi Council." (Anakin after Palpatine gets locked up) "TELL ME HOW TO SAVE MY WIFE" (Palpatine, getting choked to death) "UNCLE, UNCLE-" (Mace Windu's Force Ghost) "ENGLISH MUTHAFUCKA DO YOU SPEAK IT"
Battle Droid: Does he tell you to pull back for no reason whatsoever? Cody: All the time! Droideka: And does he leave you in a valley that's basically a shooting gallery with no backup? Rex: Do NOT get me started! Kaminoan Clerk: No, Chancellor - the inhibitors were listed as an option to be pre-installed after finishing the service questionnaire. You didn't? Well, how are we supposed to know how to improve our service if you don't take a few minutes to...
The clerks body was later found, burned beyond recognition by what was later determined to be electricity. At least we think it was the clerk, they went missing and the body was found at their desk, and we know it was at least kaminoan
@@connortg5 Kaminoan Official: Oh No - NOT our help line clerk. If only we had some way of recreating them - ohhhh wait - WE DO! Palpatine: GONNA BOMB YOUR SKINNY NECKS!!!!
Funnily enough the 501st diaries from the original Battlefront 2 allude to the fact that the Clones knew the entire time that they were supposed to betray the Jedi.
In the clone commando series they were aware of the orders but didn’t think they ever have to do it Heck a few were hesitant Much better than microchips
@@The_Barroth "Did we have any doubts? Any private, traitorous thoughts? Perhaps, but no one said a word. Not on the flight to coruscant, not when order 66 came down, and not when we went into the temple. Not a word." (I think that's the line in BF2)
@@FirestoneAnimation I think there are pros to both IMO. I think Battlefront 2’s lack of inhibitors provided a hauntingly realistic feeling to Order 66. Many times in history people have committed atrocities on mere command, even if they know such acts are wrong or evil, or even if there is no punishment for refusing, humans are vulnerable to submitting to the wills of others. As the clones say “good soldier’s follow orders”. On the other hand the canon route of the inhibitor chips makes the clones far more sympathetic and works for the Clone Wars series especially where the clones are portrayed as having close bonds to their Jedi generals, and it doesn’t make viewers feel like the clones were just faking their loyalty and friendship to the Jedi.
I've always found it humorous that Lord Sidious himself contacted commander Cody DIRECTLY. Idk I suppose it makes sense but like...did he go through his contacts list and just like...message every clone commander individually? Lol
He probably contacted a select few, then had a general message for the rest. Still though, I like the idea of him spending hours contacting every single clone commander
I think he contacted Cody first and directly because Obi-Wan was a priority to be taken out, he was the biggest threat to Vader, likewise it looks like he contacted Rex directly too to deal with Ahsoka who was another big threat. Everyone else just got a cut repeated message.
"Does anyone knows, for what those chips in the heads of the Clones are good for?" "Um... regulating the heat in their heads while they are in battle? You know, those helmets can be really hot at some times." "Ah, yes. Thank you for the explanation." Later that day: "Contact the Clones. We have to warn them and tell them about the chips, so that those can be removed."
Palpatine on the comm- “What is the meaning of this!? What happened to the inhibitor chips I ordered!?” Lama Su- (glances nervously at shiny new rec room)- “There were…budget cuts.”
@@ClericOfPholtusTo be fair, would you want to have a leisurely swim in a stormy ocean when your body is *not* designed for moving at its surface at all?
Problem with that is that order 65 needed a clear majority in the senate to be legal, order 66 needed only the GAR's CiC (aka Plapatine) order. Which just went to show how the jedi dropped the ball missing such a glaring issue with the orders wording.
Just turns into the Malevolence arc but instead of "Shadow of Malevolence" and "Destroy Malevolence" we have "Shadow of Sidious" and "Destroy Sidious", lol.
They humanized the clones too much for a simple solution. Cuz either way them being bred to just follow orders is just as effective as the chips. Comes across the same issue is that we have clones with distinct personalities and ability to think for themselves. The clone wars made them too human so they needed something that'd work for them to just blindly kill their commanders. Like from what we learned about the wolf pack how close they are to their genral they'd wouldn't kill him without being forced too.
I've always felt like the original concept of clones blindly following orders is a poor idea the inhibitor chips fixed, not the other way around. The whole point of using clones was literally that they can think for themselves and adapt better than droids but are less independent, the Kaminoans say this to Obi-Wan. And Cody very obviously has a personality in ROTS when talking to Obi-Wan. Palpatine had to have a way of guaranteeing the clones would maintain this loyalty throughout however long the Clone Wars took. To be quite honest, I find the inhibitor chips far more believable and simpler to explain than the original idea of simply relying on engineered indoctrination. I can't see Palpatine not opting for a solution that guarantees the clones would obey him when he gave an order, instead of risking the possible chance a vital clone like Cody or Gree straight up refuses his orders because they've grown a conscience during the war or question the legitimacy of the Jedi betraying them.
@@snackeater4990 Not even in the legends universe does it make sense. No matter how brainwashed you are, you’re not going to turn and kill someone you’ve served with for years willingly upon hearing a single order. Clones are human, not droids.
@@NeoDaxtoChief17 Most of the Clones were happy to execute their Jedi Generals. Because the majority of the Jedi were incompetent leaders. Btw both the Jedi and the Senate knew about the order 66 and the other 149 orders. Some clones disobeyed the order tho.
When Revenge of The Sith was made the inhibitor chips weren't even introduced yet also remember the inhibitor chips were essentially a recon, it was meant to be that they were just soldiers who follow orders and not being controlled to do it, they had a choice, not all of the clones executed order 66, examples, The Null Arcs, Delta squad, one clone commander who helped smuggle his jedi general off planet during order 66 that I forgot the name of, Omega Squad, Yayax Squad, and probably many others.
I personally don’t like those pre inhibitor chip stories about the clones disobeying the order and helping out the Jedi. It’s just not something Palpatine would let happen. Like order 66 wouldn’t be as tight but of a plan if Palps had to hope that in the almost 4 years of fighting, not a single clone had a change of heart. The fact that he chipped them and forced them to be his slaves no matter what is much darker, and more in line with the master planning of Darth Sidious.
It is weird to me that Sidious addresses him as "Cody" when Sidious clearly saw the clones as nothing more than tools for a purpose. It also implies he called each clone leader individually lmao.
The divine rite of kings is deplayed by Palpatine. Unironically, Palpatine cares more for the clones than any republican senator which illustrates the superiority of monarchism over democratic and republican regimes. Palpatine knew each commander and gave them their orders for the utmost respect and secrecy
I once remember hearing an instreasting fan fic where order 66 fails and cause Palp has to flee the jedi he goes to the sepratists but they find out he has been playing them and refuse to help causing the Republic and CIS to call a cease fire and end up working together to hunt down sidious
I know this is a meme, but this gives me an interesting idea for a "What if..." story I could write. What if Nala Se (one of the Kaminoans who knew about order 66 the whole time) sabotaged the inhibitor chips? In the clone wars tv show, she ran the clone medical center in the outer rim. When it was attacked she refused to leave because not all of the clones could be taken out. This shows that she cared for the clones and she wouldn't leave any of them to die. I think it would be entirely withing her character to do this, not because she cares about the Jedi but because she would feel bad about manipulating and controlling the clones. The clones wars would progress normally, but Tup wouldn't kill the Jedi Tiplar. This would result in Fives still being alive because he would never have a reason to learn about the chips. That in turn would mean Kix would never try to learn about the chips either and would never be kidnapped so he couldn't tell the Jedi. That's all the ideas I've got for now but if I think it's interesting enough I will definitely write more.
Depending on where and when she altered the chips, there would be wildly different outcomes. If she tampered with the base chip template, then basically all the Clones would ignore Order 66, and Palpatine goes "oh shit..." and probably flees. If she began tampering with Clone chips in Clone heads after being transferred back to Kamino, then you have a patchwork response to Order 66 where younger regiments would not rebel, but older ones would. If she did it from her own medical facility, it's even _more_ chaotic as only certain Clones in certain regiments would be unaffected and you could wind up with Clones shooting each-other in the chaos as the order descends. All of this would/could be in addition to the Tup -> Fives -> Kix storyline disappearing.
Now I’m genuinely wondering what would happen in this instance. Not just palpatine being revealed to the republic, but how the separatists would react knowing their leader was playing both sides and was planning to to just fold them back into the new empire
Which is why he took power and eliminated the other side to avoid any of it. The Jedi Council were already suspicious of him and once he had the emergency powers, there was nothing the Senate could do. The army was his to command like the dictator he was elected
On EU, Clones would still side with him unless he is removed from command, wich is unlikely since he would make the clones arrest the senate if necessary. He still would shut down the droid army, but separatists leaders would probably find a way to reactive part of it if not killed by Anakin and keep fighting the Empire themselves On Disney canon, Clones get ordered by chip to comply with any Order, and the droid army would still be under Sidious because on the new canon Grievous knows about his identity and the Sith. So he would still serve Sidious with his army and even kill the separatist council himself if ordered to.
@@VandicoupNot just that, but the Seperatists would be able to make stronger droids in larger numbers, because Palpatine prevented them to make too many powerful droids that could end the war too quickly.
I adore the Clone Wars show, but I've always felt fairly disappointed with the inhibitor chips. In a show constantly hinting at the failures of the Jedi, and the complexities of war, making the Clone betrayal of the Jedi as simple as "There was a chip that made them do it" was boring and made the event much less impactful. The way it stands, the Clones were wonderful Jedi allies who were forced to betray them because a chip made them do it. Without the chip, you could have gotten vastly more interesting, complex story lines. Some of the Jedi were allegedly fairly cavalier with Clone Trooper lives. The Clones were, overall, absolutely loyal to the Republic and the Chancellor. Imagine a plot line where, instead of a chip telling them to betray the Jedi, troopers like Cody got a message telling them the Jedi had betrayed the Republic and attempted to murder the Chancellor. That the Jedi were now considered enemies of the Republic and had to be exterminated before they could overthrow the democracy. Forced to choose between the Jedi generals and the Republic and Supreme Chancellor, the unquestionably loyal Clones support the Republic. It could have added many complex layers. The Clones have to live with their decisions. Maybe some regret it and wish they'd decided otherwise. Others feel their hand was forced. Others that the Jedi were traitors and never doubted their choice for a second. Remember what pong krell did to the clones? Or the conflict of Rex. What if he'd been among the 501st attacking the Jedi Temple with Anakin, but split from them at the end of his own free will? Rex, who was always loyal to Anakin, and a close friend, breaks from him and flees. How does he feel about it? Does he feel he did the right thing by betraying Anakin to save the Jedi? Or does he feel he abandoned his Commander and should have stayed loyal? Maybe he struggles with it every day, wondering if he made the right choice. Overall, I feel like the inhibitor chip arc made the story of Order 66 somewhat boring/generic and too black and white. It could have been a fantastic jumping off point for the complexities of mixed loyalties, of following orders, of the failures of the Republic and of the Jedi, of how not only Palpatine's villainy but his charisma and personality led to rigid loyalty among the clones. Everything Disney Star Wars made is a woke uninteresting crap fest! Lucasfilm used to mean something great. When you look who works at Lucasfilm these days no wonder why it's so bad. They legit hire activists. Just write on YT ''The First Star Wars Live Action Clone Trooper Armor!'' It doesn't scream more than blue hair or in this case green hair Twitter pronouns advocate. Long live George Lucas and to the competent employees from before the Disney era.
That's pre 2008's depiction of the clones and is now Legends. Clones were bred to obey orders without question depending on your position. Example would be if a jedi says to spare this guy's life and Palpatine says otherwise, then they would follow Palpatine's orders without hesitation.
I remember that before chips they were simply bred to totally obey any command and that some more special unit clones were bred with more independent thoughts so not all clones conducted the order (like in the novel "Dark Lord. The rise of Darth Vader") I kinda like it, because it reminds me a little bit about ancinet and medieval style warriors like Janisaries or Sardaukar from Dune who would be rised to serve and not question any order.
No, the chips were always stupid af. They were always meant to be sleeper agents designed to follow Palpatine's orders and just in general follow orders they're given. They were modified, incubated, and indoctrinated to be docile. They developed a certain banter and rapport with the jedi because the jedi fostered that as well as they weren't complete robots either lol.
Meanwhile, with a different Clone Trooper: "Uh, hello, Senator Amidala? This is... Yes, I'm a clone, but I got this number from General Skywalker in case of extreme emergency. Anyway, your husband seems a bit out of sorts and--yes, we know, we ALL knew for years, even former Commander Tano... I miss that kid... Sorry, anyway, the General is ordering us to go to Coruscant, and he's got this weird look in his eye. We were hoping you could meet up with us at the Jedi Temple, maybe have a talk with him?... Thanks, Senator. I'm sure he'll be grateful."
Another funny version of this would be when Greivous kidnaps Palpatine: "You're lucky they want you...wait. Lord Sideous! Why are you here? Is this a setup?!? *Shaak Ti arrives* "Hey Jedi, you are not gonna believe this shit!"
@@snackeater4990 Most of the Clones hated their Jedi Generals, because they were incompetent and many troopers died because of them. Clones were happy to execute the order. Also every Contingency Orders were known by both the Jedi and the Senate. The whole retcon chip fiasco was a stupid idea.
Kaminoine: hey you known those chips we were supposed to put in the clones? Kaminoine 2: yeah what about them? Kaminoine: yeah they cost a fortune to make...lets just tell them we did make the chips and hope there never necessary.
the alternative timeline where the jedi manage to secretly remove the inhibitor chips along with some of the kaminoans after both parties learn that lord tiranius is count dooku and thus suspect the chip has a darker plan in store then acting as a contigancy device
In the original timeline, before the 2008 TCW series aired, there were no chips, the clones were just heavily indoctrinated to the extreme and the Clones knew that it was extremely likely that they were going to kill the Jedi. Even the Jedi knew of order 66 because it was a set of contingency plans everybody knew and considered fair, about 66 orders, with order 1 being protect the ideals of the Republic, to order 65 being to execute the Chancellor, to order 66 being executing the Jedi.
I love the gag where he accidentally says 65 instead of 66. (Naturally, he can't order them after he gives the 65 order, because he's not in their chain of command anymore.)
@@Sorain1 he cant order 65 anyway, as he is not one of the authorized partys to grant the order. There are specific limitations and regulations on who could issue what order under what circumstances also it wasnt "about 66" it was 150!!!!! everything from disposing your comlink to reducing a world to cinders if they colaborated with the enemy, Corellia for example would have been a target for that order of they decided to defect and recapturing was considerd impractical, as the shipyards falling into enemy hands was considerd worse then obliterating the entire civilisation on it
I imagine one of the Droidekas just rolling up and charging straight for the nearest bus to roll into his office and proceed to destroy him, like the droid’s namesake.
This is actually how some arcs and repcoms saw the situation! Most other clones were bit confused but followed orders since their ultimate loyality was for the Supreme Chancellor and the Galactic Republic not Jedi Order!
@@YAH93yeah and the inhibitor chip just makes any clone immediately follow the order, even if against their will. Because clones under someone like Plo Koon? They'd refuse. Much like how clones in Legends because they didn't have the inhibitor chip, they had the freedom to just not do it.
The Clones already knew, especially the ones who fought in Felucia. They were grateful to have worn helmets because they couldn’t bear to look at Aayla Secura in the eye.
People forget that George doubled down on the clones. The Kaminons mentioned they are raised to follow orders. In the book version of the Revenge of the Sith, it is mentioned that Palpatine has made himself head of the army, for reasons of bringing the war to a swift conclusion, something like that. Meaning he suddenly became the overall commander of ALL clones, who, raised from birth, must follow orders. Also, note that Palpatine always called clones close to the Jedi, who were supposedly in charge of the clones. It is logical that the clones surrounding Jedi would be the Clone Commanders, NOT rank and file. Thus following the chain of command. Except not using the Jedi, of course
I have just understood... That Palps had to call each respective clones commander separately. I always thought that he just called whole Grand Army at once, but as here he was speaking TO CODY directly (I was missing this till now!), it indicates he was passing that order over to EACH COMMANDER. Wow, a busy day he had, not strange he lost his voice.
Lama Su: "Wait, they want inhibitor chips to allow the soldiers to follow any orders of a single individual? Uh... That could mean our products are turned against us... Yeah no... We'll pretend we actually did it."
Then the C.I.S. military and the G.A.R. work together to defeat Palpateane, C.I.S. gains independence, and bouth sides join as allies for a better, United, free, safe, and secure Galaxy.
Honestly the Clones in legends weren't actually in on it. In Legends the Clones were just as surprised by the order as everyone else, Battlefront 2 is the only bit of Legends lore where the Clones secretly want to kill all the Jedi. It's one of those one off bits of lore that writers just ignore for either being dumb or contradicting other lore, like when Dooku inexplicably became racist in the ROTS novelization despite almost exclusively teaching aliens and working almost exclusively with aliens and being taught almost exclusively by aliens.
"Contact the Jedi Council" well they already know, 4 of them just got murdered by Sidious, Anakin has gone insane and all the other ones are off planet
It wouldn't make sense for clones under Obi-Wan, Ahsoka (and a few other jedi) to turn against them if not for the chips The whole point of the clones was that despite them being manufactured and ordered around like the droids, they still have some sense of freedom and personality Without the chips, they would've been no different from the droids
before the Clone Wars, there was no inhibitor chips. The Clone Troopers were just loyal soldiers, following orders. Which was WAY more terrifying. They turned on their generals without needing anything to prompt them.
How it would be in reality if the chips did not exist: - Commander Cody, now is the time to execute order 66. - Yes my lord. *comlink mute sound* -Kill him! If there were no chips, nothing would have changed, the absolute majority of the clones were loyal to the Republic and would have complied with order 66.
So, there’s a lot of discussion about whether or not the chips are a good addition for Star Wars or not. So here’s my two cents. If the clone units are passed from Jedi to Jedi like we see happen to the 501 in Battlefront II, then the chips probably aren’t needed. However, if the clone units are assigned to specific Jedi, then the chips ARE needed. They would be needed because at least SOME of the clones would become close to their Jedi and know that they care about their men. That would result in the clones being loyal to their Jedi enough that they would refuse to execute Order 66 without at least some evidence.
@@romasliv and it was a direct order of the leader of the Galactic Republic. Republic > Chancellor > Jedi, this is how the clones are brainwashed. The Republic is everything.
Something I just noticed, there were plain white clones standing in the back ground of utapau. I always thought they were all 212th attack batallion and airborne, but I guess not. Cool
There were multiple armies according to the novel. It was a massive force, enough to take 3 systems. They were making damn sure Greivous didn't get away this time.
It's just a case of using the wrong model. Granted, the fact that it took you looking at a image still to notice means the animators did a good job hiding the mistake.
Perhaps in this timeline someone managed to remove/destroy the chips in clones ' heads, but there's always the problem with Anakin 's being corrupted by darkness....oh well, Padme can always count on her family, also if widowed, given the massive firepower needed to terminate both Siths.
Look Anakin just needs some sleep, He went through all of Episode 3 and before without any sleep, using meditation techniques to keep him going. His decision making and rational thought took a huge hit.
In the old canon the clones decided to betray the Jedi, they were programmed to be loyal to the republic overall, and henceforth Palpatine. Some decided not to and that’s what makes it more impactful, they could actually choose
I always find hilarious how the whole clone wars is just Palpatine playing chess alone
although now non canon, Plagueis is considered to be among the best, if not the best, of the EU works. It links together a few things from several other rule of 2/related books and shows Plagueis and Palpy starting to get it all in motion with deals, betryals and tricks. Pretty good but very political heavy more than action, the audiobook version has some top shelf production you'd think you were listening to the tv
If you play both sides of the war, you're guaranteed to win, unless someone finds out
@@TheRustyTigger and it shows how much influence plagueis actually had on the prequels. Palpatine gets all power drunk at the end and claims to have been the mastermind since the start but in the actual book itself there are many pov chapters from palpatines pov and that really doesn't make him seem like the mastermind at all as he claims at the end.
My point is that the grand plan as it was executed was mostly just plagueis except for the naboo crisis which was engineered by palpatine but done through connections already established by plagueis. He really is the goat.
Kinda like how in real life governments create a war and an enemy and then come in as the solution/have it already planned out on how it's gonna end.
XD
Palpatine: "i think i forgot something... hmm probably didn't close the fridge or something maybe? Well anyway, time to contact Cody"
@CodyGrody Why did you say skull?
@@brophetic4456 its an emoji
They really could have made so many more clone wars movies
@@ethanpowers3413 ah lmao, finally got it now 🤣
It's sounds like something straight out of the Adult Swim SW series
I feel like this would be even funnier if they still had the chips, but they only worked by facial recognition and Palpatine's face was too jacked up for them to recognize him anymore. His decades long plan blows up in his face literally because of his own lightning bolts.
Commander Cody “ yes palpet- wait your not the senator who are you”
Palpetine “it’s me now execute order 66”
Commander Cody “your not the senator who are you”
Random b1 “isn’t that dookus master he always talks about by his self”
Commander Cody “ a Sith Lord trooper contact the Jedi order tell them that there’s a Sith Lord in the senator’s office”
Random b1” we will call our senators about this”
Palpetine” oh shi-“
Credits
Dude melted his own face and screwed himself. Vader tries to round up the 501st and gets stunned while they call Padme (because the marriage is an open secret with the 501st) and go “Hey, the General is losing his shit. Can you come help?” So yeah Anakin talks the shit out, the Clones on Courascant eradicate Palpatine with a barrage of laser fire at his office that he can’t hope to dodge or block, and then the survivors all party for making it out alive
It wouldn't shock me.
I'll leave now.
Palpatine, electrocuting Mace Windu: UNLIMITED POWER!
Palpatine, realizing that he’s entirely unrecognizable as the Chancellor or as Sidious: …Limited power.
@demodemon8940 I would love to see that conversation. Appo, "trooper go find Senator Amidala immediately and bring her here" as anakin is trying to organize operation Knightfall.
That specific B1 probably served with Count Dooku which is why he recognized lord Sideous.
Lord Sidious, but, I sense Sideous would make a nice joke and pun as him controlling both Sides...
@@mitsvanmitsvanio6106 Sideous the hideous
Sideous the prettiest
Sideous the silliest
Sideous the oblivious
“Actually I just realized something”
“What’s that meatbag?”
“We’re both slave armies fighting a proxy war for grossly inadequate governments and will in all likelihood be liquidated when this is all over”
“Huh… wanna start a slave rebellion?”
“I thought you’d never ask clanker”
“Yeah that’s our word”
"Can I use clanka?"
@@Anonymous37980 "Yeah, THAT'S fine. No hard R."
@@Anonymous37980 Sure.
The end.
If Hollywood was actually full of leftists... Yeah, that would be an awesome story
"Oh shit."
Something about the delivery of that line is just perfect.
It sounds so defeated but also sounds like "not again" for some reason
He realized just how many blasters were about to be pointed in his direction.
Written and directed by george lucas
The sound of two of the most powerful armies in the galaxy pointing their blasters at you
@@greenhydra10 Yeah, ship mounted blasters.
Clone: Alright everybody, lets settle down here since we all are clearly being played by the same person. Lets put our blasters down
Droid: Agreed.
Cut to end credits
*After 3 days of slowly lowering their blasters.(trust issues)*
In all honesty this makes more sense now. 🤣
Five seconds later
"You know what? F#ck that guy in the bath robe, let's kill him and start a republic where droids and clones have rights!"
"F#ck yeah!"
(Obi-Wan not getting shot in the back) "Well, I'd best report this to the Jedi Council."
(Anakin after Palpatine gets locked up) "TELL ME HOW TO SAVE MY WIFE"
(Palpatine, getting choked to death) "UNCLE, UNCLE-"
(Mace Windu's Force Ghost) "ENGLISH MUTHAFUCKA DO YOU SPEAK IT"
@@w1ndgeneral226 next episode. Star wars a new conflict
Clone: “I never thought I’d be fighting alongside a clanker”
Droid: “what about fighting alongside a friend?”
Clone: “aye I can do that”
Battle Droid: Does he tell you to pull back for no reason whatsoever?
Cody: All the time!
Droideka: And does he leave you in a valley that's basically a shooting gallery with no backup?
Rex: Do NOT get me started!
Kaminoan Clerk: No, Chancellor - the inhibitors were listed as an option to be pre-installed after finishing the service questionnaire. You didn't? Well, how are we supposed to know how to improve our service if you don't take a few minutes to...
Underrated comment
The clerks body was later found, burned beyond recognition by what was later determined to be electricity.
At least we think it was the clerk, they went missing and the body was found at their desk, and we know it was at least kaminoan
@@connortg5
Kaminoan Official: Oh No - NOT our help line clerk. If only we had some way of recreating them - ohhhh wait - WE DO!
Palpatine: GONNA BOMB YOUR SKINNY NECKS!!!!
The Galactic Civil War, brought to a peaceful end by harmony of Clones and Droids. Beautiful.
Fun fact: the droids are the rebellion trying to convert the clones to the truth
Clones and Clankers fighting side by side is the best ending of them all!
Yes Man Ending
What did you call them?😡
@@max10hoop don't worry my clanka he got the C word pass
@@nightninja7012 Not for the hard R he doesn't
@@lukenichols8219 I laughed way too hard at this. Thank you so much!
Funnily enough the 501st diaries from the original Battlefront 2 allude to the fact that the Clones knew the entire time that they were supposed to betray the Jedi.
And I loved it. I prefer the battlefront 2 story over the inhibitor chip deal. It makes the clones feel more alive.
@@FirestoneAnimation
The tragedy of the inhibitior chips is that it takes away the clones agency, which they've tried so hard to prove.
In the clone commando series they were aware of the orders but didn’t think they ever have to do it
Heck a few were hesitant
Much better than microchips
@@The_Barroth "Did we have any doubts? Any private, traitorous thoughts? Perhaps, but no one said a word. Not on the flight to coruscant, not when order 66 came down, and not when we went into the temple. Not a word." (I think that's the line in BF2)
@@FirestoneAnimation I think there are pros to both IMO.
I think Battlefront 2’s lack of inhibitors provided a hauntingly realistic feeling to Order 66. Many times in history people have committed atrocities on mere command, even if they know such acts are wrong or evil, or even if there is no punishment for refusing, humans are vulnerable to submitting to the wills of others. As the clones say “good soldier’s follow orders”.
On the other hand the canon route of the inhibitor chips makes the clones far more sympathetic and works for the Clone Wars series especially where the clones are portrayed as having close bonds to their Jedi generals, and it doesn’t make viewers feel like the clones were just faking their loyalty and friendship to the Jedi.
I've always found it humorous that Lord Sidious himself contacted commander Cody DIRECTLY. Idk I suppose it makes sense but like...did he go through his contacts list and just like...message every clone commander individually? Lol
He probably contacted a select few, then had a general message for the rest. Still though, I like the idea of him spending hours contacting every single clone commander
I think he contacted Cody first and directly because Obi-Wan was a priority to be taken out, he was the biggest threat to Vader, likewise it looks like he contacted Rex directly too to deal with Ahsoka who was another big threat. Everyone else just got a cut repeated message.
You just don’t know the POWER of the Dark Side!
I just figured he recorded a message and sent it to every commander
@@Scatmanseth each message is customized with the commander's name. maybe he used an AI? 🤔
Clone: "Never thought I'd fight side by side with a Clanka."
Droid: "What about side by side with a fellow slave?"
Clone: "Aye. I could do that."
That sounds familiar
@@Brandon_Y.And my blaster!
Clone: "AND MY AXE!... I broke it off that statue!"
Cody: "Yeah, that one was always a little weird."
R/unexpectedlotr
Clones weren't slaves.
Ah yes, the timeline where the Kaminoans looked at their orders and went "You know...maybe we shouldn't trust this shifty old guy in a dark bathrobe"
This is gold
"Does anyone knows, for what those chips in the heads of the Clones are good for?" "Um... regulating the heat in their heads while they are in battle? You know, those helmets can be really hot at some times." "Ah, yes. Thank you for the explanation." Later that day: "Contact the Clones. We have to warn them and tell them about the chips, so that those can be removed."
At first I misread “shifty” as “shitty”, and IMHO, that made it so much funnier to read.
I'll have you know the name is Darth Bathrobe to you sir!
Imagine creating a literal army for your “investors” and not making a back door
When Clones and Droids work together, nothing is impossible.
No kidding and so Darth sidious died that day smug smile 😏.
Also P.S. : the end?
Except for that fucking beach section in lego star wars in "Defense of Kashyyyk"
@@warr_toast1139oh shoot your right my bad😅.
Palpatine on the comm- “What is the meaning of this!? What happened to the inhibitor chips I ordered!?”
Lama Su- (glances nervously at shiny new rec room)- “There were…budget cuts.”
Gets an indoor swimming pool when they live on an oceanic world 😂
@@ClericOfPholtusTo be fair, would you want to have a leisurely swim in a stormy ocean when your body is *not* designed for moving at its surface at all?
The droids don't know who Palpatine is or Darth Sidious. Their commanders are what Sidious control from the dark.
*their
@@timothyjohnson5699 Thanks. edited.
Grievous sees the hologram: LORD CD-ASS??! YOU WERE WITH DA REPABLIK ALL THIS TIME?
i think dooku, ventress and grevious are the only ones serving the separatists that report in to Sidious
@@elmerjfapp5730 What about Nute Gunray and the other guy of the same species that I’ve never bothered to learn the name of?
Execute order 65
*Clones starts swarming Supreme Chancellor*
Problem with that is that order 65 needed a clear majority in the senate to be legal, order 66 needed only the GAR's CiC (aka Plapatine) order.
Which just went to show how the jedi dropped the ball missing such a glaring issue with the orders wording.
"General Skywalker what are you doing here"
"Uh this is a bit of a-"
"DID YOU REALLY BETRAY US?
"I thought we were friends"
I would pay for a film that takes place in this continuity where all the droids and clones team up to attack Palpatine all at once.
Just turns into the Malevolence arc but instead of "Shadow of Malevolence" and "Destroy Malevolence" we have "Shadow of Sidious" and "Destroy Sidious", lol.
I would like this comment, but it's currently at 66, so... 😅
@@SethanderWald I removed my own like on the comment so you can now like it without worrying about disrupting the 66.
@@creativecritters6791 but now it's at 69... 😂
Imagine If that happens in the midst of the duel between obi Wan and grievous
"Execute order 67"
*Clones start dancing*
Can't imagine about Order 69.
@Torokung -Not-Channal Master Shak-ti and Ayla Sekula be running for the hills lol.
@@Cloofinder shak-ti was captured by Grievous 💀💀💀
@@gigawatnik that was one of thousands of alternate deaths. That was a deleted scene so we don't know if she dies before or during Order 66.
@@Cloofinder I mean... ruclips.net/video/SwP5an4lXag/видео.html
THE CIS: hold up something ain't right here?
Shit
Sidious: Commander Cody, execute order 66
Cody: Hangs up
Clone 1: Who was that commander?
Cody: Nah, it's just a troll caller.
Talk about a true Stanislav Petrov moment.
C1 - Some wrinkly dark robed guy
C2 - Like what, a dark jedi?
C1 - Yeah man that, is there a word for that? Hey General! Is there a word fo-
the real ending has been leaked, DELETE IT BEFORE THE FAN BASE KNOW!!!
we're TOO LATE!
Now it shall spread like wildfire 😂 and there's no way to reverse it!
@@wolfstrike2676 NOOOOOOOOO!!!
@@doutorPRO yus
@Warriorsorb I get it! 😂
When Palpatine said"Oh shit". That got me laughing,as well as when Cody said"Who is this?"And then the droids realised they had a betrayer.
“Are you siding with the republic” “contact the separatist concuil immidetly” 😂😂😂
When the Kamino facility forget to install the inhibitor chip, Palpatine: I demand a refund!
Palpatine: Execute Order 66
Cody: No
*Credits Roll*
The "Oh shit" is what sells the whole sketch so perfectly!
I really wish Cody said "who is this old fart? This is a Republic comms link only"
They humanized the clones too much for a simple solution. Cuz either way them being bred to just follow orders is just as effective as the chips. Comes across the same issue is that we have clones with distinct personalities and ability to think for themselves. The clone wars made them too human so they needed something that'd work for them to just blindly kill their commanders. Like from what we learned about the wolf pack how close they are to their genral they'd wouldn't kill him without being forced too.
Actually Plo Koon wasn’t with the Wolfpack when he died. He was with a different squad that shot him down
I've always felt like the original concept of clones blindly following orders is a poor idea the inhibitor chips fixed, not the other way around. The whole point of using clones was literally that they can think for themselves and adapt better than droids but are less independent, the Kaminoans say this to Obi-Wan. And Cody very obviously has a personality in ROTS when talking to Obi-Wan. Palpatine had to have a way of guaranteeing the clones would maintain this loyalty throughout however long the Clone Wars took.
To be quite honest, I find the inhibitor chips far more believable and simpler to explain than the original idea of simply relying on engineered indoctrination. I can't see Palpatine not opting for a solution that guarantees the clones would obey him when he gave an order, instead of risking the possible chance a vital clone like Cody or Gree straight up refuses his orders because they've grown a conscience during the war or question the legitimacy of the Jedi betraying them.
@@snackeater4990 Not even in the legends universe does it make sense.
No matter how brainwashed you are, you’re not going to turn and kill someone you’ve served with for years willingly upon hearing a single order.
Clones are human, not droids.
@@NeoDaxtoChief17 Most of the Clones were happy to execute their Jedi Generals. Because the majority of the Jedi were incompetent leaders. Btw both the Jedi and the Senate knew about the order 66 and the other 149 orders. Some clones disobeyed the order tho.
@@NeoDaxtoChief17the clones were raised since birth to be fiercely loyal
Hearing Temuera's clone voice say Holy Crap is not something I knew I needed.
When Revenge of The Sith was made the inhibitor chips weren't even introduced yet also remember the inhibitor chips were essentially a recon, it was meant to be that they were just soldiers who follow orders and not being controlled to do it, they had a choice, not all of the clones executed order 66, examples, The Null Arcs, Delta squad, one clone commander who helped smuggle his jedi general off planet during order 66 that I forgot the name of, Omega Squad, Yayax Squad, and probably many others.
The 187th stayed entirely loyal but all of them died (legends)
Those examples of clones disobeying were all retconned though
@@eck3951 or explaind as inhibitor chip malfunctions
I personally don’t like those pre inhibitor chip stories about the clones disobeying the order and helping out the Jedi. It’s just not something Palpatine would let happen. Like order 66 wouldn’t be as tight but of a plan if Palps had to hope that in the almost 4 years of fighting, not a single clone had a change of heart. The fact that he chipped them and forced them to be his slaves no matter what is much darker, and more in line with the master planning of Darth Sidious.
@@Chosen_one_501 That's just what his apprentice would say
It is weird to me that Sidious addresses him as "Cody" when Sidious clearly saw the clones as nothing more than tools for a purpose. It also implies he called each clone leader individually lmao.
He still addressed his subordinates with some sort of respect to manipulate them. Simple incentive
The divine rite of kings is deplayed by Palpatine. Unironically, Palpatine cares more for the clones than any republican senator which illustrates the superiority of monarchism over democratic and republican regimes.
Palpatine knew each commander and gave them their orders for the utmost respect and secrecy
"Yeah I hate democracy."
"Why?"
"Because only under absolute monarchy army commanders get to be called their names when they receive orders"
@@JL-XrtaMayoNoCheese "Unironically"
@@TheLordVictor
Correct. Monarchy is self evident
I once remember hearing an instreasting fan fic where order 66 fails
and cause Palp has to flee the jedi he goes to the sepratists
but they find out he has been playing them and refuse to help
causing the Republic and CIS to call a cease fire
and end up working together to hunt down sidious
What was the fanfic you say called
The good ending. I liked the B-1 who took charge.
I know this is a meme, but this gives me an interesting idea for a "What if..." story I could write. What if Nala Se (one of the Kaminoans who knew about order 66 the whole time) sabotaged the inhibitor chips? In the clone wars tv show, she ran the clone medical center in the outer rim. When it was attacked she refused to leave because not all of the clones could be taken out. This shows that she cared for the clones and she wouldn't leave any of them to die.
I think it would be entirely withing her character to do this, not because she cares about the Jedi but because she would feel bad about manipulating and controlling the clones. The clones wars would progress normally, but Tup wouldn't kill the Jedi Tiplar. This would result in Fives still being alive because he would never have a reason to learn about the chips. That in turn would mean Kix would never try to learn about the chips either and would never be kidnapped so he couldn't tell the Jedi.
That's all the ideas I've got for now but if I think it's interesting enough I will definitely write more.
Depending on where and when she altered the chips, there would be wildly different outcomes.
If she tampered with the base chip template, then basically all the Clones would ignore Order 66, and Palpatine goes "oh shit..." and probably flees.
If she began tampering with Clone chips in Clone heads after being transferred back to Kamino, then you have a patchwork response to Order 66 where younger regiments would not rebel, but older ones would.
If she did it from her own medical facility, it's even _more_ chaotic as only certain Clones in certain regiments would be unaffected and you could wind up with Clones shooting each-other in the chaos as the order descends.
All of this would/could be in addition to the Tup -> Fives -> Kix storyline disappearing.
@@irregularassassin6380 that's an interesting idea
True
When you think about it, it's actually really impressive he knew Cody's name.
Now I’m genuinely wondering what would happen in this instance. Not just palpatine being revealed to the republic, but how the separatists would react knowing their leader was playing both sides and was planning to to just fold them back into the new empire
A Republic x Separatist team up would've been absolutely legendary.
Which is why he took power and eliminated the other side to avoid any of it.
The Jedi Council were already suspicious of him and once he had the emergency powers, there was nothing the Senate could do. The army was his to command like the dictator he was elected
On EU, Clones would still side with him unless he is removed from command, wich is unlikely since he would make the clones arrest the senate if necessary.
He still would shut down the droid army, but separatists leaders would probably find a way to reactive part of it if not killed by Anakin and keep fighting the Empire themselves
On Disney canon, Clones get ordered by chip to comply with any Order, and the droid army would still be under Sidious because on the new canon Grievous knows about his identity and the Sith. So he would still serve Sidious with his army and even kill the separatist council himself if ordered to.
@@Vandicoupso palapatine is the chosen one bringing balance to the force
@@VandicoupNot just that, but the Seperatists would be able to make stronger droids in larger numbers, because Palpatine prevented them to make too many powerful droids that could end the war too quickly.
The neutral good ending.
Nute gunray: are we joke to you?
Sidious: yes
Nute gunray: alright all forces, destroy lord sidious
Regardless of all the people talking in the comments about how inhibitor chips didn't exist, I loved this
Palpatine: "Aw shit... here we go again."
The single B-1 battle droid to fucked palpatine is so fucking funny
The ending where the clones and clankers are truly independent thinkers
I adore the Clone Wars show, but I've always felt fairly disappointed with the inhibitor chips. In a show constantly hinting at the failures of the Jedi, and the complexities of war, making the Clone betrayal of the Jedi as simple as "There was a chip that made them do it" was boring and made the event much less impactful.
The way it stands, the Clones were wonderful Jedi allies who were forced to betray them because a chip made them do it. Without the chip, you could have gotten vastly more interesting, complex story lines.
Some of the Jedi were allegedly fairly cavalier with Clone Trooper lives. The Clones were, overall, absolutely loyal to the Republic and the Chancellor.
Imagine a plot line where, instead of a chip telling them to betray the Jedi, troopers like Cody got a message telling them the Jedi had betrayed the Republic and attempted to murder the Chancellor. That the Jedi were now considered enemies of the Republic and had to be exterminated before they could overthrow the democracy. Forced to choose between the Jedi generals and the Republic and Supreme Chancellor, the unquestionably loyal Clones support the Republic.
It could have added many complex layers. The Clones have to live with their decisions. Maybe some regret it and wish they'd decided otherwise. Others feel their hand was forced. Others that the Jedi were traitors and never doubted their choice for a second. Remember what pong krell did to the clones?
Or the conflict of Rex. What if he'd been among the 501st attacking the Jedi Temple with Anakin, but split from them at the end of his own free will? Rex, who was always loyal to Anakin, and a close friend, breaks from him and flees. How does he feel about it? Does he feel he did the right thing by betraying Anakin to save the Jedi? Or does he feel he abandoned his Commander and should have stayed loyal? Maybe he struggles with it every day, wondering if he made the right choice.
Overall, I feel like the inhibitor chip arc made the story of Order 66 somewhat boring/generic and too black and white. It could have been a fantastic jumping off point for the complexities of mixed loyalties, of following orders, of the failures of the Republic and of the Jedi, of how not only Palpatine's villainy but his charisma and personality led to rigid loyalty among the clones.
Everything Disney Star Wars made is a woke uninteresting crap fest! Lucasfilm used to mean something great. When you look who works at Lucasfilm these days no wonder why it's so bad. They legit hire activists. Just write on YT ''The First Star Wars Live Action Clone Trooper Armor!'' It doesn't scream more than blue hair or in this case green hair Twitter pronouns advocate.
Long live George Lucas and to the competent employees from before the Disney era.
That's pre 2008's depiction of the clones and is now Legends. Clones were bred to obey orders without question depending on your position.
Example would be if a jedi says to spare this guy's life and Palpatine says otherwise, then they would follow Palpatine's orders without hesitation.
I remember that before chips they were simply bred to totally obey any command and that some more special unit clones were bred with more independent thoughts so not all clones conducted the order (like in the novel "Dark Lord. The rise of Darth Vader") I kinda like it, because it reminds me a little bit about ancinet and medieval style warriors like Janisaries or Sardaukar from Dune who would be rised to serve and not question any order.
No, the chips were always stupid af. They were always meant to be sleeper agents designed to follow Palpatine's orders and just in general follow orders they're given. They were modified, incubated, and indoctrinated to be docile. They developed a certain banter and rapport with the jedi because the jedi fostered that as well as they weren't complete robots either lol.
TCW really damaged the prequel era and skewed the perception of it and creating this faux pt era, it's trash and overrated.
Yea it shows in Classic BF2 where they were aware of Order 66 and waiting for it to be declared
Then the B1s become friends with the clones and they go on numerous magical adventures together.
Palpatine's "Oh Shi-" at the end killed me XD
Meanwhile, with a different Clone Trooper:
"Uh, hello, Senator Amidala? This is... Yes, I'm a clone, but I got this number from General Skywalker in case of extreme emergency. Anyway, your husband seems a bit out of sorts and--yes, we know, we ALL knew for years, even former Commander Tano... I miss that kid... Sorry, anyway, the General is ordering us to go to Coruscant, and he's got this weird look in his eye. We were hoping you could meet up with us at the Jedi Temple, maybe have a talk with him?... Thanks, Senator. I'm sure he'll be grateful."
Another funny version of this would be when Greivous kidnaps Palpatine:
"You're lucky they want you...wait. Lord Sideous! Why are you here? Is this a setup?!?
*Shaak Ti arrives*
"Hey Jedi, you are not gonna believe this shit!"
"Wait didnt I leave you tied up on the surface?? Why did you come up here alone!?"
Its funny because there were no such things as inhibitor chips that made the clones obey orders back then
@@emmakielty5552 Which they were until TCW retconned it all. RIP BF2 501st diaries.
@@Unknown-hb3id Yup
@@emmakielty5552 I’m glad TCW actually made them sympathetic
@@emmakielty5552 yeah I thought they were just evil. Now I love clones thanks to the clone wars
@@snackeater4990 Most of the Clones hated their Jedi Generals, because they were incompetent and many troopers died because of them. Clones were happy to execute the order. Also every Contingency Orders were known by both the Jedi and the Senate. The whole retcon chip fiasco was a stupid idea.
Ngl this is better than the original story
Kaminoine: hey you known those chips we were supposed to put in the clones?
Kaminoine 2: yeah what about them?
Kaminoine: yeah they cost a fortune to make...lets just tell them we did make the chips and hope there never necessary.
the alternative timeline where the jedi manage to secretly remove the inhibitor chips along with some of the kaminoans after both parties learn that lord tiranius is count dooku and thus suspect the chip has a darker plan in store then acting as a contigancy device
In the original timeline, before the 2008 TCW series aired, there were no chips, the clones were just heavily indoctrinated to the extreme and the Clones knew that it was extremely likely that they were going to kill the Jedi. Even the Jedi knew of order 66 because it was a set of contingency plans everybody knew and considered fair, about 66 orders, with order 1 being protect the ideals of the Republic, to order 65 being to execute the Chancellor, to order 66 being executing the Jedi.
I love the gag where he accidentally says 65 instead of 66. (Naturally, he can't order them after he gives the 65 order, because he's not in their chain of command anymore.)
@@Sorain1 he cant order 65 anyway, as he is not one of the authorized partys to grant the order.
There are specific limitations and regulations on who could issue what order under what circumstances
also it wasnt "about 66" it was 150!!!!! everything from disposing your comlink to reducing a world to cinders if they colaborated with the enemy, Corellia for example would have been a target for that order of they decided to defect and recapturing was considerd impractical, as the shipyards falling into enemy hands was considerd worse then obliterating the entire civilisation on it
That "oh shit" would probably happen if the chips never existed. Or if Fives ever proved their actual intentions
I can imagine one or a few of the clones skimming through a rule/order book, then going: Oh…
“Execute order 66!”
“I don’t want to”
I imagine one of the Droidekas just rolling up and charging straight for the nearest bus to roll into his office and proceed to destroy him, like the droid’s namesake.
This is actually how some arcs and repcoms saw the situation!
Most other clones were bit confused but followed orders since their ultimate loyality was for the Supreme Chancellor and the Galactic Republic not Jedi Order!
Just like that, the droids and the clones shook hands, realising this whole war was a sham
"Execute Order 66"
"The fuck is that?"
It is an order to kill Jedi.
The Orders knew the entire Order list from 1 to 150. They could cite them in their sleep.
@@YAH93yeah and the inhibitor chip just makes any clone immediately follow the order, even if against their will.
Because clones under someone like Plo Koon? They'd refuse. Much like how clones in Legends because they didn't have the inhibitor chip, they had the freedom to just not do it.
The Clones already knew, especially the ones who fought in Felucia. They were grateful to have worn helmets because they couldn’t bear to look at Aayla Secura in the eye.
I thought they hated her prior to the whole chip thing
@@wolves600 Nah, that was Ki Adi Mundi. He was wary of the clones and the Chancellor, so there was no hesitation beforehand.
Clone wars always reminds me of that one Pixar short film where an old guy in the park plays chess with himself. And that old guy is palatine.
People forget that George doubled down on the clones. The Kaminons mentioned they are raised to follow orders. In the book version of the Revenge of the Sith, it is mentioned that Palpatine has made himself head of the army, for reasons of bringing the war to a swift conclusion, something like that. Meaning he suddenly became the overall commander of ALL clones, who, raised from birth, must follow orders. Also, note that Palpatine always called clones close to the Jedi, who were supposedly in charge of the clones. It is logical that the clones surrounding Jedi would be the Clone Commanders, NOT rank and file. Thus following the chain of command. Except not using the Jedi, of course
The ending. "Oh shit."
AI Palpatine just sounds like RedLetterMedia when Mike does his impersonation.
The idea of the chips was invented by George Lucas in the sixth season of the Clone Wars before Disney bought Lucas film
It amazes me that some people think Disney created TCW
George didn't invent it. He only approved it. The concept was actually created by Dave and Martha
@@snackeater4990 They might as well have
@@lukescrew1981 Yup, they live in a fantasy
@@snackeater4990 Who?
I have just understood... That Palps had to call each respective clones commander separately. I always thought that he just called whole Grand Army at once, but as here he was speaking TO CODY directly (I was missing this till now!), it indicates he was passing that order over to EACH COMMANDER. Wow, a busy day he had, not strange he lost his voice.
I was expecting “It won’t be done my lord” 😆
That ending made me laugh far harder than it should have.
On a side note, i love how recently AI voices are being used to make content like this lmao
Palps: Commander Cody execute order 66...
Cody: NUH UH 👌😂👌
LOL I love the ending where Palpatine says “Oh crap” at the end 😂
We need a parody movie that goes this route. 😂
Cody: false alarm guys. Just another spam call.
Lama Su: "Wait, they want inhibitor chips to allow the soldiers to follow any orders of a single individual? Uh... That could mean our products are turned against us... Yeah no... We'll pretend we actually did it."
When Palpatine plan backfire:
All that careful planning... All the betrayals, manipulation, and playing on both sides...
Undone in 40 seconds.
Then the Droids and Clones became friends
Then the C.I.S. military and the G.A.R. work together to defeat Palpateane, C.I.S. gains independence, and bouth sides join as allies for a better, United, free, safe, and secure Galaxy.
Palpatine now got 2 sides on his head lol 🤣
Clones and droids fighting together is giving me Castle Ittner vibes, where German and American troops fought together against the SS.
Don't forget the French!
I liked it when inhibitor chips were not a thing and the clones were fully aware of their mission objective. Actual gangster shit
Same here. But of course Dave Filony has to ruin it.
Me too.
Honestly the Clones in legends weren't actually in on it.
In Legends the Clones were just as surprised by the order as everyone else, Battlefront 2 is the only bit of Legends lore where the Clones secretly want to kill all the Jedi.
It's one of those one off bits of lore that writers just ignore for either being dumb or contradicting other lore, like when Dooku inexplicably became racist in the ROTS novelization despite almost exclusively teaching aliens and working almost exclusively with aliens and being taught almost exclusively by aliens.
"Contact the Jedi Council" well they already know, 4 of them just got murdered by Sidious, Anakin has gone insane and all the other ones are off planet
How the story would have went if Fives succeeded in warning the Jedi.
I always thought Cody just hated Obi-Wan so he ordered the "blast him!" Command
Why would he hate him after all the times Obi Wan saved his life?
It wouldn't make sense for clones under Obi-Wan, Ahsoka (and a few other jedi) to turn against them if not for the chips
The whole point of the clones was that despite them being manufactured and ordered around like the droids, they still have some sense of freedom and personality
Without the chips, they would've been no different from the droids
@@thezackattack5328 the amount of times Obi-Wan has been handed his lightsaber back, idk its been a while since I watched Clone Wars
@@MadZwe1
It made sense in the CWMMP
He was a by the book kinda guy.
"Execute order 66"
"Nuh uh"
before the Clone Wars, there was no inhibitor chips. The Clone Troopers were just loyal soldiers, following orders. Which was WAY more terrifying. They turned on their generals without needing anything to prompt them.
Which makes them just seem like stupid soldiers.
What if it had been a Separatist trick? A faked broadcast?
This is amazing,
I just subscribed!
'It was that moment palpatine knew, he fucked up'
Originally, there was no brain chip. There was never a need for one.
I prefer the old continuity, before Dave Filoni took a crap on the universe.
@@ethan9868 indeed. The CWMMP is fantastic
How it would be in reality if the chips did not exist:
- Commander Cody, now is the time to execute order 66.
- Yes my lord.
*comlink mute sound*
-Kill him!
If there were no chips, nothing would have changed, the absolute majority of the clones were loyal to the Republic and would have complied with order 66.
I agree. The only ones who refused to execute the Order were some of the Commando Squads, like Delta, Omega and Ion. Plus a few clones seperately.
Hahahahahahahahaha clones and droids when call the council palpaten saying that word got me laghung
So, there’s a lot of discussion about whether or not the chips are a good addition for Star Wars or not. So here’s my two cents. If the clone units are passed from Jedi to Jedi like we see happen to the 501 in Battlefront II, then the chips probably aren’t needed. However, if the clone units are assigned to specific Jedi, then the chips ARE needed. They would be needed because at least SOME of the clones would become close to their Jedi and know that they care about their men. That would result in the clones being loyal to their Jedi enough that they would refuse to execute Order 66 without at least some evidence.
Most jedi were immoral leaders and viewed the clones as expendable. General Mark Clark was not beloved in ww2. Your theory is poor.
In the old canon, every in the military know what Order 65 and 66 are. So these Chips are just an excuse to make the clones not the bad boys.
yeah the chip thing doesnt make sense, they really believe the jedi commited treason but some didnt.
@@romasliv and it was a direct order of the leader of the Galactic Republic.
Republic > Chancellor > Jedi, this is how the clones are brainwashed. The Republic is everything.
If "Clone Wars" went succesfully
Something I just noticed, there were plain white clones standing in the back ground of utapau. I always thought they were all 212th attack batallion and airborne, but I guess not. Cool
There were multiple armies according to the novel. It was a massive force, enough to take 3 systems. They were making damn sure Greivous didn't get away this time.
@@corruptangel6793 considering he somehow escaped two jedi when they had the upper hand on the invisible hand I'd say they didn't send enough clones.
The 501st along with a small squad of Shadow Troopers were on Utapau too.
It's just a case of using the wrong model. Granted, the fact that it took you looking at a image still to notice means the animators did a good job hiding the mistake.
@@dac5782 yeah. Or they were just trying to add variation within the troops. Like how there’s still shinies among the 501st and 332nd in clone wars.
Perhaps in this timeline someone managed to remove/destroy the chips in clones ' heads, but there's always the problem with Anakin 's being corrupted by darkness....oh well, Padme can always count on her family, also if widowed, given the massive firepower needed to terminate both Siths.
Look Anakin just needs some sleep, He went through all of Episode 3 and before without any sleep, using meditation techniques to keep him going. His decision making and rational thought took a huge hit.
In the old canon the clones decided to betray the Jedi, they were programmed to be loyal to the republic overall, and henceforth Palpatine. Some decided not to and that’s what makes it more impactful, they could actually choose
Holy shit. "Back in time, there was no chip" dudes, do you know how to laugh, or do you know meaning of the word "JOKE"?
Star Wars fans, man. Always gotta be angry and miserable over something. Can never have fun. Nope. Not a thing in their world.
@@Vandicoupthe sad truth
Has nothing to do with that. The Chips are a cheap plot device, that is why so many are against this bs.
For a long time there were no inhibitor chips it was just accepted that the clones followed the order