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All spoilers for the Skywalker Saga will be left unmarked. You Have Been Warned!

Prequel Trilogy Films

Original Trilogy Films

Sequel Trilogy Films

A Star Wars Story Films

Other Films

Live-Action TV Series

Animated Series

Video Games

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Listed Trivia:

  • Adapted in Another Country: The first four movies in the series have each been adapted into a four-chapter manga (except The Phantom Menace, which got only two chapters).
  • Author Appeal: Much of the film with its fondness for cool spaceships which can be tricked and tuned up like hot rods is a result of Lucas' own passion for fast cars. The Jedi and its mystic nature, as well as the Empire and their battleships are a result of his own passion for war movies, samurai movies, and Eastern mysticism.
  • Baby Name Trend Starter: "Luke" and "Lucas" as baby names were already gaining in popularity thanks to Cool Hand Luke. It was just out of the Top 200 when A New Hope released, and it cracked the Top 100 in the early 80s. After slowly gaining momentum in The '90s, it reached the Top 10 in 2018 and has been there since.
  • Cash-Cow Franchise: With 20th Century Fox famously signing away the merchandising rights to George Lucas as a way to save money on A New Hope. There's also a reason Disney bought Lucasfilm for $4 billion.
  • Cast the Runner-Up:
    • Billy Dee Williams was among those considered for Han Solo. He would later play Lando Calrissian.
    • David Prowse (Darth Vader) and Peter Mayhew (Chewbacca) were both offered each other's roles. Prowse didn't want to play a goodie, while Mayhew didn't want to play a baddie, so they switched.
    • George Lucas considered casting Peter Cushing as Obi-Wan Kenobi before casting him as Grand Moff Tarkin.
    • Christopher Lee turned down the role of Tarkin. He would later play Darth Tyranus/Count Dooku in the prequels.
    • Lucas originally wanted Orson Welles to voice Darth Vader, before deciding that his voice was too recognizable. He did narrate trailers for the film.
    • Vinette Robinson auditioned for Padme Amidala. Two decades later, Robinson was cast in the role of Wrobie Tyce, a Resistance pilot, in The Rise of Skywalker.
    • Benicio del Toro was offered the role of Darth Maul, but turned it down when most of his dialogue was removed. He later played DJ in The Last Jedi.
    • Mark Lewis Jones auditioned for a part in Rogue One but did not obtain it. He was later offered the part of First Order captain Moden Canady for The Last Jedi.
    • Billie Lourd, the real life daughter of Carrie Fisher, was offered to play Rey. However, she would go on to play Lieutenant Kaydel Connix and serve as her mother's double for The Rise of Skywalker.
  • Cowboy BeBop at His Computer: Even fans tend to severely exaggerate the prequel trilogy's use of CGI.
  • Creator Backlash: Despite its large popularity, many people affiliated with Star Wars grew to resent their time with the franchise for varying reasons.
    • Sir Alec Guinness, while he didn't entirely hate Star Wars, admitted to growing irritated with the franchise over time because of how audiences came to only remember him for the role as Obi-Wan Kenobi despite his illustrious career. He once famously told a fan who claimed he had seen the film a hundred times that he could have an autograph if he never watched the film again. Ironically, Star Wars made him rich, as he was the only actor able to get a cut of the gross (2%). In his autobiography, Blessings in Disguise, he acknowledges this irony, and admits that the film gave him the financial freedom to do whatever he wanted with his career for the rest of his life; "blessed be Star Wars," he says. The other cast members knew how much he disliked the franchise while filming, and commented that he still remained professional despite his own feelings towards the film. Despite his misgivings about the first film, he agreed to reprise his role in the two films that followed, even after George Lucas cautioned him that by doing so, nobody would ever again be able to look at the actor without seeing Obi-Wan Kenobi. Furthermore, Guinness was personally upset about being killed off with A New Hope (partly out of attachment to the character but also because it was a change mid-production) and had to be cajoled by Lucas. Despite it all, Guinness admitted to liking Lucas on a personal level and enjoyed working on the film.
    • Jake Lloyd hated playing young Anakin in The Phantom Menace so much he felt George Lucas ruined his acting career. After the film's release, he was constantly teased by kids making lightsaber noises and harassed by angry fans blaming him for "ruining" Star Wars (while he was only nine). After giving over sixty interviews to press and voicing Anakin in five video games, he quit acting and swore off associations with the film. His opinions of Star Wars have since gotten better, though.
    • A great many of those involved in Star Wars, up to and including George Lucas, temporarily saw it as a noose around their necks. Lucas especially felt this way since working on the films led to a divorce from his first wife and he has at various occasions expressed doubts and misgivings that Star Wars ended up taking over his later career.
    • Everybody who worked on The Star Wars Holiday Special either denies its existence or wishes to hunt down and destroy every copy. Yes, that includes George Lucas (even though he wasn't directly involved in it). When Conan O'Brien brought up the subject of the Holiday Special with Harrison Ford during an interview, Ford first tried denying it ever happened. Then, O'Brien announced they had a clip. The look on Ford's face was one of whether he should flee the scene or terminate O'Brien with extreme prejudice. Carrie Fisher had similar feelings about the special. She mentioned in her autobiography Wishful Drinking that both the special and her association with Star Wars as a whole led to her to start taking drugs (her role as Princess Leia in the special has her noticeably intoxicated in each scene she's in, and some eagle-eyed viewers noted that she even had a visible "coke nail").
    • In an interview, Natalie Portman said she has no intention of ever showing her children the prequels (though that was more because her character dies at the end rather than anything else), and that acting in the franchise hurt her career, though even then she was discussing the fan backlash and not the film. She has repeatedly expressed love for the production of the films and her participation in them, and still shows up occasionally to discuss the films.
    • On social media and in interviews, Oscar Isaac and John Boyega have made it adamantly clear that they dislike where both Poe and Finn's characters ended up at the end of the Sequel Trilogy, and have zero interest in reprising their roles in any future projects (Isaac explicitly saying he'd only consider coming back if he needed the money for a new house). Boyega has also expressed anger and disappointment at the violent racism that he and Kelly Marie Tran experienced from the fandom, and that in his opinion Disney gave all the nuance in the Sequel Trilogy to its white characters. In an interview with GQ, he said:
      John Boyega: What I would say to Disney is do not bring out a black character, market them to be much more important in the franchise than they are, and then have them pushed to the side.
    • A more lighthearted example with Mark Hamill. He enjoys watching other characters in Star Wars, but can never stand watching his own performance.
    • Marcia Lucas, George Lucas's ex-wife who worked on the Original Trilogy with him, has gone on record in J.W. Rinzler's Howard Kazanjian: A Producer's Life (Rinzler provided other Star Wars reference and behind-the-scenes books) that while she likes Kathleen Kennedy, she had a lot to say about the direction she and J. J. Abrams have taken with the Sequel Trilogy. note 
      Marcia Lucas: I like Kathleen [Kennedy]. I've always liked her. She was full of beans. She was really smart and really bright. Really wonderful woman. And I liked her husband, Frank. I liked them a lot. Now that she's running Lucasfilm and making movies, it seems to me that Kathy Kennedy and J.J. Abrams don't have a clue about Star Wars. They don't get it. And J.J. Abrams is writing these stories — when I saw that movie where they kill Han Solo, I was furious. I was furious when they killed Han Solo. Absolutely, positively there was no rhyme or reason to it. I thought, 'You don't get the Jedi story. You don't get the magic of Star Wars. You're getting rid of Han Solo?' And at the end of this last one, The Last Jedi, they have Luke disintegrate. They killed Han Solo. They killed Luke Skywalker. And they don't have Princess Leia anymore. And they're spitting out movies every year. And they think it's important to appeal to a women's audience, so their main character is female, who's supposed to have Jedi powers, but we don't know how she got Jedi powers, or who she is. It sucks. The storylines are terrible. Just terrible. Awful. You can quote me—'J.J. Abrams, Kathy Kennedy–talk to me.'
    • In the same book, Marcia Lucas also says that she dislikes the Prequel Trilogy.
      Marcia Lucas: George is, in his heart and soul, a good guy and a talented filmmaker. I wish he would've kept directing [other kinds of] movies. But when I went to see Episode I—I had a friend who worked at ILM, who took me as a guest to a preview—I remember going out to the parking lot, sitting in my car and crying. I cried. I cried because I didn't think it was very good. And I thought he had such a rich vein to mine, a rich palette to tell stories with. He had all those characters. And I thought it was weird that the story was about this little boy who looked like he was six years old, but then later on he's supposed to get with this princess who looked like she was twenty years old. There were things I didn't like about the casting, and things I didn't like about the story, and things I didn't like—it was a lot of eye candy. CG.
    • Harrison Ford enjoyed working on the films and is grateful for the original being his Star-Making Role, but is known to get pretty grumpy when people act as though Han Solo is the be-all and end-all of his career.
  • Creator's Favorite: George Lucas considered R2-D2 his favorite Star Wars character.
  • Darkhorse Casting: What George Lucas was trying to do, and almost succeeded in doing, when casting for the Original Trilogy. Harrison Ford read the part of Han Solo while they were casting for Leia, and did so well in the role that Lucas finally relented.
  • Dawson Casting: Retroactive example with Wedge Antilles. In the movie he is played by 28-29 year old Dennis Lawson, but in Rebels is revealed that he is almost the same age as Ezra and Sabine.
  • Demand Overload: Many kids got IOUs instead of Star Wars toys in the 1970s, because back then, film toys were given small runs, and the company in question (Kenner) got completely overwhelmed.
  • Development Gag: Usually shows up in character names.
  • Died During Production: Carrie Fisher's sudden death before The Rise of Skywalker even began filming sent the crew into complete panic, as she was planned to have a larger role in it than either of the two preceding films, and had clearly been set up to have her own dramatic climax with her son being the new Big Bad. They quickly started discussions on their options, including having Leia be killed between films, simply kept offscreen, or using the same CGI double process that had been used with Peter Cushing (and briefly Fisher herself) in Rogue One. * In the end, it would be decided that unused footage of Fisher from The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi would be used in The Rise of Skywalker.
  • Digital Destruction:
    • The 2004 DVD set, despite being billed as "restored", received terrible color alternation, desaturating the soft, fantasy like colors of the original films into darker, more realistic lighting in vogue with the Prequel Trilogy, and much of the clarity and detail of the original prints is lost in the process. This was the result of Lucasfilm ordering this to be done in a breakneck page of 30 days.
    • The 2011 Blu-rays have the brightness turned up a teeny bit, and a few lightsaber fixes- mostly in Return of the Jedi- but that's about it. Colours are still all over the shop, lightsabers in Empire Strikes Back often look terrible, and a lot of the detail in the darker parts of the picture are still lost.
    • Averted with the 2019 4K restorations on Disney+, which fixed the color correction issues and restored film grain that was previously present on the DVD and Blu-ray releases. Notably, The Phantom Menace, which suffered from heavy DVNR on the Blu-ray set which led to a more "pink" presentation, has had its colors fully corrected.
  • Dueling Movies:
    • To a degree the first three films dueled with the first three Star Trek films. In the MAD parody The Empire Strikes Out an off panel person hits George Lucas with a snowball. A reader a few issues later suggested that the snowball was thrown by Gene Roddenberry. That said, a Star Wars and Star Trek movie would not actually be released in the same year until 2002 with Attack of the Clones and Star Trek: Nemesis. The second (and currently last) time it occurred was 2016 with Rogue One and Star Trek Beyond.
    • An interesting case of this happening with advertisements: on May 15th of 2026, to promote The Mandalorian and Grogu, the japanese Star Wars Youtube channel released Welcome Back, Star Wars, a cute animated trailer showing a young fan of the original movie growing up, finding love, and starting a family over the course of the franchise's fifty-ish years of existence... on the exact same day of the release of A Boy With Gundam, another promotional video for an institution of sci-fi with a completely identical premise. (Unfortunately, the comparison this time was not favorable to Star Wars due to the latter's much higher production values.)
  • Fake Brit:
  • Fan Community Nicknames:
    • Warsies.
    • The corners of the Star Wars fandom that are the most critical of the Disney era films (chiefly the Sequel Trilogy and especially since The Last Jedi) and Disney+ shows and very vocal about it are nicknamed "The Fandom Menace" (a pun with The Phantom Menace).
  • Flip-Flop of God: George Lucas has been vague about his plans for a Sequel Trilogy. Lucas made statements claiming that he had plans to create episodes VII, VIII and IX, which originally would have comprised have included the six film long Original Trilogy with the Emperor dying at the final episode. He realized instead that the conflict couldn't last meaningfully for the main cast beyond the three films, and each film was such a difficult undertaking that it became too much of a physical demand for him to prolong it. At the time of the Disney deal, Lucas said he had written outlines for a sequel trilogy but the exact nature of that, and whether it would have aligned with decisions made in the film or not, is an open question.
  • Follow the Leader:
  • Fountain of Expies:
    • Darth Vader has many. To a lesser extent, Palpatine inspired a lot of "lords of all evil" characters. You can even expect to see a Palpatine-esque character with a raspy voice, dark cloak and rugged looks every time a show wants to display its ultimate villain.
    • Boba Fett is so popular that he's inspired other bounty hunters in fiction.
  • Franchise Ownership Acquisition: Disney bought Lucasfilm in 2012 and by extension the Star Wars franchise, but 20th Century Fox had retained ownership of the very first film until Disney bought that studio also in 2019.
  • Franchise Zombie: George Lucas originally planned for twelve films total, but boiled his plans down to nine while working on The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, then went with six from there. After doing the prequels, he was not interested in going further. Enter Disney, offering to purchase Lucasfilm for $4 billion exactly to continue the story. Lucas considered doing Episode VII for them and then selling, but just decided to let others take over the series. He was a creative consultant on the eventual film, only for Disney to throw his concepts out (although the below entry shows some of his ideas were retained, mostly by the first writer Michael Arndt). The only time he returned was when J. J. Abrams visited him prior to writing Episode IX.
  • God Never Said That: Lucas did, in fact, state outright that Disney threw out the story concepts that he wrote for the sequels and started completely fresh. Kathleen Kennedy later clarified that they didn't discard them entirely, they simply rearranged things and took creative license wherever they wished. Later reports confirm partially that ideas such as a Luke going to an ancient Jedi temple, a young female scavenger (Rey, but Lucas named her Kira) being his Padawan, Han and Leia's son being corrupted by the dark side, and a scene set in the ruins of the second Death Star - did indeed end up being featured, though the original context of these plots and concepts have not yet been revealed, on account of Disney being less transparent on behind the scenes matters as compared to Lucasfilm as an independent production house.
  • I Am Not Spock: Nearly the entire cast has suffered this to some degree. Most of them have embraced it, while others were left resentful (most notably Alec Guinness, the only member of the cast who was already big star before Star Wars).
  • Killed by Request: Harrison Ford also wanted Han Solo killed off as soon as the original trilogy, which didn't happen... until The Force Awakens.
  • Multiple Languages, Same Voice Actor:
  • No Origin Stories Allowed: George Lucas has stipulated that Yoda's species, homeworld, and origin cannot be revealed, and this still applies after the Continuity Reboot. Fan Fic doesn't abide by this, though; there's plenty of Fanon on it.
  • The Pete Best:
  • Playing Against Type: An interesting retroactive case for Mark Hamill, who's spent almost his entire career since these films playing villains, the nastier the better. Luke Skywalker now kind of comes off as a piece of Early-Installment Weirdness for him.
  • Promoted Fanboy:
    • Nearly three generations have grown up with Star Wars, so almost anyone working on modern projects is one of these.
    • The 501st Legion, the world-wide "definitive Imperial costuming organization", was rewarded for their service by being canonically named as Vader's Praetorian Guard, as well as being made the "stars" of Star Wars: Battlefront 2.
  • Real-Life Relative: Wedge Antilles' actor (Denis Lawson) is the uncle of Ewan McGregor, who plays Obi-Wan. Famously he tried to talk his nephew out of the role, fearing that, like his own career, McGregor would meet with early success and then a nosedive. He was wrong and this was actually McGregor's breakout role, and Lawson has had a mild resurgence himself on British TV. Also, since 2022, McGregor is married to Mary Elizabeth Winstead, who portrays Hera Syndulla in Ahsoka.
  • Recursive Inspiration: Dune (2021) and Dune: Part Two are partly inspired by Star Wars given the latter franchise helped inspire big sci-fi sets on film while being inspired by the original Dune book. Denis Villeneuve even said his version of Dune would be Star Wars for adults. In contrast, Hans Zimmer purposely avoided having Dune be too orchestral like Star Wars, opting for a more mystic feel to the soundtrack.
  • Refitted for Sequel: has its own page
  • Running the Asylum:
    • A lot of Expanded Universe writers started turning their favorite characters into The Woobie or otherwise conflicting characters to fit their own fantasies. Popular targets in Star Wars include Luke, Mara, Boba Fett, and Talon Karrde.
    • Dr. Curtis Saxton became a technical adviser for the prequels and wrote the Incredible Cross-Sections supplemental books for Episodes II and III entirely because of the impressive detail of his website, "The Star Wars Technical Commentaries". Of course, it probably helps that he not only has a PhD in astrophysics, but also that his doctorate thesis paper was essentially Version 1.0 of his website. However, he has received criticism that his works on the Incredible Cross Sections don't really match up what we see on-screen, and in fact overshoot them by several orders of magnitude. His more visceral critics flat out accuse him of trying to rewrite canon to win a fan debate.
    • The Original Trilogy depicted Darth Vader as powerful, but far from invincible, with it all but stated he was a shadow of his former self and that was the reason he was The Dragon and needed Luke to have a chance at overthrowing his master. The prequel trilogy and Legends continuity largely stuck to this portrayal, but in Disney canon, because he's now written by men and women who were his fans as children, he's stated to be the most powerful force-user ever whose crippling only made him stronger and is feared by his master. Almost every new story he appears in gives him a new feat until the fact that the OT was written decades before seems the only reason anyone could ever defeat him.
  • Saved from Development Hell: Anthology films focused on Boba Fett and Obi-Wan Kenobi were planned early into Disney's ownership of the franchise. The Fett film went through multiple iterations, one set to be made by Josh Trank before he parted ways with Lucasfilm, another with James Mangold attached; meanwhile, the Kenobi film was expected to be directed by Stephen Daldry. Both films were halted following the financial failure of Solo, but with the success of The Mandalorian, they were retooled into Disney+ shows, The Book of Boba Fett and Obi-Wan Kenobi, each with new creative teams.
  • Science Imitates Art:
    • The Agathidium vaderi fungus beetle is named after Darth Vader — if you really squint your eyes, its shell looks like the infamous Sith's armor.
    • Similarly, Bathynomus vaderi is a species of supergiant isopod discovered off the coast of Vietnam.
    • The trilobite species Han solo. Officially, the genus name Han comes from the fact it's a Chinese fossil, and solo is because it's the last known surviving member of the family Diplagnostidae, but the describer later admitted he was dared by his friends to scientifically name a species after a character from Star Wars.
    • A form of mitochondria found in a species of deer tick is named Midichloria mitochondrii.
  • Screwed by the Lawyers: The reason Disney didn't release the original and prequel trilogies on Blu-Ray prior to the purchase of 20th Century Fox: they still technically owned the rights to the films until 2020. Even after that, they were slated to have perpetual ownership of A New Hope.
    • That said, even after they did get the rights, they reportedly said to J. J. Abrams that it isn't possible for them to release the orignal unedited versions. The general hint is that Lucas' sale of the films included clauses that insisted that only his chosen editions for Star Wars be the default versions going forward. In addition to that, the sale of Lucasfilm came with the offer of extending Lucas a seat in Disney's board of directors, while also making him the largest individual shareholder, giving him a great deal of clout in the upper echelons of Disney, in addition to the prestige of being the creator of the franchise.
    • More than that, internally within Lucasfilm (most of whose employees still work under Disney), the consensus backs Lucas on the Special Editions' superiority over the originals, since the original negatives are not in good condition. Financially, the Special Editions have provably vindicated itself with newer audiences with multiple re-releases since the controversy showing no great demand for the original versions. The Walt Disney Corporation which has its own long history of shuffling movies to its vaults, and altering films on home video and later releases (often without the consent of the film-makers who made it as opposed to Lucas), does not offer much indication that this is a hill they are keen to fight on.
    • In the 2025 BFI screening of a rediscovered IB Technicolor print of the 1977 release, Kathleen Kennedy personally introduced the film for what she said (perhaps jokingly) were for legal reasons, further hinting that Lucas did indeed insert special clauses about the screening of the original theatrical release versions of the OT. Said screening however provoked a deeply mixed response from audiences, with many reporting that the unaltered film's special effects didn't hold up well in a pristine print that needed no restorations whatsoever.
  • Series Creator Shift: The original Star Wars comics were initially published by Marvel Comics from 1977 to 1986. When Marvel believed there was no longer interest in the franchise, it went to Dark Horse in 1991, where it remained until Disney bought the franchise, returning it to Marvel in 2017.
  • Shipper on Set: In the sequel trilogy, the actors John Boyega and Oscar Isaac both supported the idea that their characters (Finn and Poe) could be a couple, and actively played up the bromance, although the writers/studio never allowed it.
  • Similarly Named Works: Bound to happen in a franchise with over a thousand works (a majority of the first ones to use said titles being Star Wars Legends works).
  • Sleeper Hit: Nobody expected A New Hope to become as successful as it was and turn into a juggernaut of a franchise.
  • Studio Hop: The first six films were originally distributed by 20th Century Fox, but when Disney bought Lucasfilm outright in 2012, they got control of all of them except A New Hope, as the later films were financed by Lucas himself and merely distributed by Fox. Thus, Disney owned the digital video and television rights to every installment except the original film, which was thought to remain with Fox in perpetuity, while the remaining rights to I-III, V, and VI would revert to Disney in 2020. When Disney proceeded to buy Fox, they gained ownership of all rights to the films.
  • Tie-In Cereal:
    • Over the years, Kellogs has released a number of Star Wars-based cereals, with Yoda (representing the Jedi) or Darth Vader (representing the Sith) adorning the front of the boxes. Other examples include ones with Jedi from the prequel trilogy, BB-8 and Baby Yoda. It was all the same kind of cereal; plain kernels with Star Wars-themed marshmallows.
    • In 1984, Goldenrod released C-3PO's, a cereal based on the character C-3PO with kernels shaped like Bs and 8s.
  • Uncredited Role: Shockingly, James Earl Jones went uncredited as the voice of Darth Vader until Return of the Jedi.
  • Underage Casting: Ian McDiarmid was 38 when he was first cast as the elderly Emperor in Return of the Jedi.
  • Word of God:
    • Lucas long argued that the prequel's story existed in some form or another from the beginning of the saga, as the films featured the subtitles, Episode IV-VI (although the subtitle "Episode IV" wasn't in the first Star Wars film until its 1981 video re-release). A New Hope and a few elements of the original trilogy also make slightly more sense when seen against the Backstory in the prequels, though others are more complicated.
    • Another notable example is Chewbacca's not getting a medal at the end of A New Hope. The official explanation is that such things are against the Wookiee religion — except that the original official explanation, from the Official ''Star Wars'' Fan Club, was that he did get one but Leia wasn't tall enough to put it around his neck. Star Wars (Marvel 2015), after the Continuity Reboot, settled things by establishing the original explanation regarding Leia's height as canon.
  • Writing by the Seat of Your Pants:
    • Sort of. Lucas did have an overall Myth Arc plotted out, but as the production of the films went on the story grew more and more. The version we know is hardly anything like the original story Lucas planned.
    • The entire Disney-produced Sequel Trilogy was never planned in much detail, with Disney's original plan being for each director (Abrams, Johnson and Trevorrow) to come up with their own scripts. Reportedly, one reason Trevorrow left the production of The Rise of Skywalker was because many of his ideas were not compatible with what Johnson had written. In September 2020, Daisy Ridley admitted that Rey's backstory changed many times even during the shooting of the films, with early plans for her character to be connected to Obi-Wan Kenobi being scrapped after The Force Awakens. Even the connection with Palpatine was only pitched when The Rise of Skywalker was being rewritten after Trevorrow's departure, and it was still being flip-flopped on up until the end of the film's production.
  • Writer Conflicts with Canon: The notion of Anakin needing to bring "balance to the Force" is something that fans have debated about for years, but according to Lucas its meant to be that Anakin will "destroy the Sith", stating that the Dark Side is imbalance in and of itself and that ultimately Balance Is Not Good. Multiple entries in the Expanded Universe however, in particular the Mortis Arc of Star Wars: The Clone Wars, make a point that the Dark Side is a necessary element to maintaining the balance and is a natural aspect of the Force, it's the Jedi and the Sith that disrupt that balance by tapping into either side and trying to destroy the other.

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