It proves that Vader, with no practice whatsoever, was able to successfully use his precog to navigate through a very dangerous portion of space while moving at light speed -- a task not even nav computers and astromech droids were capable of.
As for why Palpatine didn't try and explore the Unknown Regions personally: bear in mind that only Vader and Palpatine himself would have been powerful enough to do so, and they could only pilot one vessel at a time through it... Which is horribly inefficient.
Additionally, with the growing threat the Rebels were posing to his Empire around that time, I imagine that Palpatine felt it best to keep his key assets close to the problem at hand, instead of sending them on random missions into deep space just to indulge his own curiosities. After all, Thrawn was helping Palpatine map the Unknown Regions on the side, so there wasn't really a need for him to try and explore it directly... Though I imagine that Palpatine considered Thrawn's premature 'departure' at the end of Rebels to be a HUGE loss, of which severely hindered his own plans/goals.
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
Last edited by Galan007 on Jul 31st, 2018 at 05:31 PM
From a storytelling standpoint, the first Thrawn novel was indeed superior, imo.
Alliances is still a great read, however, and introduces a few concepts that will undoubtedly be integral to future stories. So if you're interested in current canon, it is definitely a must-read.
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
Last edited by Galan007 on Jul 31st, 2018 at 05:38 PM
Sure, but couldnt they have piloted vessel after vessel through the unknown regions? i mean, if the unknown regions were that important to Sidious youd think he would have wanted to explore them at all costs.
Dont you think the Inquisitors could have also done this? that would have helped lighten the load at least LOL.
It is indeed a good precog feat for Vader, due to the speed at which he was moving, and the sheer number of obstacles he would've had to dodge... And he was piloting a massive Star Destroyer through all that chaos, to boot.
Again, taking one vessel at a time through the Unknown Regions is horribly inefficient. Aside from the fact that the UR are vast, Palpatine also never really knew exactly where he needed to go. He knew the UR held secrets/truths about the force that he wanted, and eventually sensed *something* there calling to him, but that's about it. Pretty vague.
That said, it would have likely taken Palpatine, and/or Vader a good deal of time to find what Palpatine himself was looking for. However, the problem with them going on a lengthy adventure through the UR is twofold:
a.) Searching the UR would have taken either Palpatine himself or Vader away from their duties to the Empire... And with the growing threat the Rebels posed to the Empire around that time, it wasn't really feasible for either of them to leave for god knows how long. Granted Palpatine wanted what the UR had to offer, but he also wanted to hold onto what he already had.
b.) As mentioned, they would have only been able to navigate one vessel at a time through the UR. Even if each of them piloted a massive flagship(like an ISD), their resources/firepower are still very finite. Also keep in mind that the ever-changing landscape of the UR isn't the only thing that makes it so treacherous. There are also, according to Thrawn, a number of other threats lurking there(I'm talking about threats of the sentient type) -- which could almost certainly disable/overwhelm a single vessel, no matter how large.
That's why Thrawn was so very important to Palpatine. Thrawn knew the few somewhat stable hyperlanes that ran through the UR, as well as the "safe-havens" within it. As mentioned, Thrawn being abruptly removed from play was undoubtedly a HUGE blow to Palpatine's underlying machinations/goals. Because without Thrawn's knowledge, there was really no way for the Empire to safely navigate through the UR, and thus no way for Palpatine to safely learn its secrets.
And even the couple of decent Inquisitors do not have precog feats that are indicative of them being able to successfully navigate through the UR while moving through hyperspace.
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
Last edited by Galan007 on Aug 2nd, 2018 at 03:47 PM
If there is no potential, you can be trained by the Father and still you will only be that strong. Otherwise all the Jedi should have had “superb saber skills” since yoda trained most of them
But since Thrawns knowledge was so valuable for Sidious I'm surprised he didn't just pull it out of his mind. I assume Sith still have uber telepathy in canon right?
This novel made it clear that not even a a force-user of Vader's caliber can even begin to decipher Thrawn's mind, let alone pull anything useful out of it:
I can only assume Palpatine would've encountered the same basic challenge if he attempted mind-phuckery on Thrawn. /shrug
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
^ While we don't have an exact number, we do know there are several threats to the Empire lurking in the Unknown Regions -- the Grysk are just one of them:
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."
Thrawn still considered them legitimate threats to the Empire even after he was aware of the power that Palpatine and Vader wielded, along with the Death Star and its capabilities.
__________________
"I am tired of Earth. These people.
I am tired of being caught in the tangle of their lives."