Oh absolutely. Frankly, I think a meeting between Dooku and Thrawn(ideally written by Zahn, Stover, or Luceno) could produce some of the single most intellectual dialogue in the mythos.
The only potential problem is that Thrawn would almost certainly find out about Dooku's relationship with Sidious... And once he deduced that Dooku was little more than a puppet(and perhaps that the Clone Wars itself was essentially just a red herring to hide larger machinations), Thrawn might opt to rethink his path as it were, and rejoin his people...
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
__________________ RealistRacism: "Sheevites, much like the Banites, were meant to increase in power with each member. From Lightsnake to Gideon to Azronger, this was supposed to be the case. However, knowledge must've been lost in some kind of Gravid-like incident, as Az turned out to be a mid-tier debater with a sub-par track record, sh!itting all over Tempest's legacy. Sad."
Registered: Jul 2015
Location: The Darkest Corner of your Mind
Account Restricted
It's obvious Dooku never had a very high opinion of Grievous in both Legends and Canon. He probably valued him as a tool, or in his words "a means to an end" but that's about it. Dooku had the same attitude towards Grievous as Sidious did to Dooku.
Let's see:
Dooku mastered the art of lightsaber after years of intense discipline and training. I'm sure he didn't exactly consider Grievous a true duelist after outfitting him with a bunch of fancy cybernetics and a crash course in saber fighting so he could wave around his arms without any finesse.
Also, I can't find it myself, but it's said in both Labyrinth of Evil and Stover's Revenge of the Sith that Dooku loathed Grievous.
The hate isn't quite as intense in canon, but we know that in TCW Dooku was disappointed with Grievous's shoddy performance against the jedi and tested him by letting Fisto into his lair.
In legends, Dooku is a bit of a specist, so idk how that might play into his relationship with Thrawn. TBF though, Palpatine was also one, but I don't think he really let it become a factor with those as talented as Thrawn.
What if Thrawn met Spock?
__________________ "Technology equals might!" "Evolve or perish"
I think Thrawn and Dooku would have a far more interesting dynamic as adversaries then as allies. As allies they would essentially just be sitting around sipping tea and jerking each other off intellectually. But as enemies, you could have a Most Dangerous Game scenario, with them hunting one another while simultaneously having philosophical verbal judo.
__________________
"The Daemon lied with every breath. It could not help itself but to deceive and dismay, to riddle and ruin. The more we conversed, the closer I drew to one singularly ineluctable fact: I would gain no wisdom here."
__________________ RealistRacism: "Sheevites, much like the Banites, were meant to increase in power with each member. From Lightsnake to Gideon to Azronger, this was supposed to be the case. However, knowledge must've been lost in some kind of Gravid-like incident, as Az turned out to be a mid-tier debater with a sub-par track record, sh!itting all over Tempest's legacy. Sad."
From a canon POV, Grievous seemed to detest Dooku far more than Dooku detested him.
Then Palpatine would've never had help mapping Hyperspace routes into the Unknown Regions. This means the Empire would've had nowhere to run/hide following the events of Aftermath, and would have been completely wiped out by the Rebellion/New Republic. This subsequently means the First Order itself wouldn't have had any Imperial foundations/remnants from which to rise in the Unknown Regions.
...Yes, Thrawn was that important to the Empire's survival and First Order's rise.
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
Last edited by Galan007 on Apr 16th, 2018 at 02:15 PM
So, Palpatine is the Senate and Thrawn is the Empire. I see that now.
__________________ RealistRacism: "Sheevites, much like the Banites, were meant to increase in power with each member. From Lightsnake to Gideon to Azronger, this was supposed to be the case. However, knowledge must've been lost in some kind of Gravid-like incident, as Az turned out to be a mid-tier debater with a sub-par track record, sh!itting all over Tempest's legacy. Sad."
Snoke saved the Imperial remnants once they were already in the Unknown Regions.
It was Thrawn's knowledge, however, that gave the Empire a proverbial escape route into the Unknown Regions in the first place:
Without that knowledge, the Empire would have either been: a.) swiftly destroyed if they had blindly fled into the Unknown Regions and tried to navigate through it unaided, or b.) swiftly destroyed by the Rebellion/New Republic if they had stayed within galactic borders. In both scenarios, the First Order(if it formed at all) wouldn't have had any Imperial foundations from which to rise.
So as mentioned: Thrawn was ultimately detrimental to the Empire's survival and First Order's rise.
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
Last edited by Galan007 on Apr 17th, 2018 at 12:59 PM
I hate to say it. But the Disney's SW writing is better than the EU's.
__________________ RealistRacism: "Sheevites, much like the Banites, were meant to increase in power with each member. From Lightsnake to Gideon to Azronger, this was supposed to be the case. However, knowledge must've been lost in some kind of Gravid-like incident, as Az turned out to be a mid-tier debater with a sub-par track record, sh!itting all over Tempest's legacy. Sad."
Disney's writing is more consistent, but I think it's far more bland than the EU. And it relies so much on safer ideas, most of which WERE in the EU. I think it's cheap. We had an opportunity for something new.