Gethzerion becuase she exploded a molar and Palpatine feared her. Take that logic.
__________________ Recently Produced and Distributed Young but High-Ranking Political Figure of Royal Ancestry within the Modern American Town Affectionately Referred To as Bel-Air.
Vastor is nigh unstoppable in the jungle. I don't know much about Gethzerion, but she would need to be firmly upper-tier to beat him in an all-out setting.
Vastor wasn't the one whom the most powerful Sith Lord in history (who is the most powerful official in history of the most powerful regime in history -- notice a recurring theme) feared enough to interdict an entire planet. And as Tangible God correctly points out, has he ever exploded a molar? Those bastards are durable!
Especially the Wisom's. It took eleven shots of concentrated heroine to get mine out. Where was Geth when I needed her?
__________________ Recently Produced and Distributed Young but High-Ranking Political Figure of Royal Ancestry within the Modern American Town Affectionately Referred To as Bel-Air.
Gethzerion sucks. Vastor breaks peoples' faces and shit, bruised up Mace Windu real bad, abused people, cut kids in half, scared people, got really really ripped, tackled people, cut people in half, Force-pwned people, and was scary and violent.
And yeah, wisdom teeth >>> other molars. I bet Vastor's broken/cut/scared wisdom teeth.
Seriously, you need to cite sources better. The first time you mentioned Kueller - about a month and a half ago - I had no idea who he was. I still have no idea what source he appears in.
__________________ Recently Produced and Distributed Young but High-Ranking Political Figure of Royal Ancestry within the Modern American Town Affectionately Referred To as Bel-Air.
Proof that Palpatine thought about Vastor at all? When Vastor was at full power, Palpatine didn't know about him at all. Mace brought him back (and to Palpatine's attention) without hands. He was hardly a threat. Gethzerion was leader of a powerful Force using tradition.
That's precisely why I mentioned Publius's name in the subsequent sentence only. The dot-like punctuation is called a period and represents the end of a sentence.