Winnosh said:
I hate the idea of the flaw being put there by a rebel collaborator. First of all it's not really a flaw in the system. It's a coolent tunnel for Gigantic Space weapon. You can't have the damn thing completely insulated, the heat has to go somewhere or else the thing blows up. You bomb the reactor of anything, and it blows, that's not a flaw, it's a feature.
I think it was more that if you bombed it, it would
literally explode, as opposed to just "stops working." Like a nuclear reactor compared to a nuclear bomb; when reactors are damaged, they become super dangerous because of the extreme temperatures and the fallout, but they don't go off like a nuclear bomb. A damaged reactor is just a pile of highly radioactive material sitting there being radioactive. For nuclear materials to explode, you have to design a device specifically to make them explode. They don't just go "critical" and then make a mushroom cloud.
They actually refer to the weakness as a "fuse" once or twice, so I think it legitimately was just him putting some kind of Kyber-powered nuke into the reactor. Which begs the question: why not just make Kyber bombs if they're that powerful?
Why is this moon-sized space station so inefficient?!?!
Scarim Coral said:
Near the end of Attack of the Clones, the Sepertist had a hologram of the Death Star which I guess is the blueprint. Does that means the main character father as an archtitech is invalid? Ok I can assume he is still valid since he probably needed to finish/ polished it off. I mean the contructions took many years right since in Rebel (canon) a piece of it was being made on Genosis.
Jyn's father was specifically an expert in Kyber crystals, which were used to power the Death Star superlaser and - in the new canon - also to power Jedi lightsabers.
So I think the station - which was an impressive feat of engineering in itself - was designed by the Geonosians as a kind of progression from the Trade Federation's doughnut-battlestations [http://vignette4.wikia.nocookie.net/starwars/images/3/34/Lucrehulk_blockade.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20101029182146], and Jyn's dad was brought in to design the reactor and the superlaser, which are both even
more impressive feats considering how much energy it takes to turn a planet into asteroids in less than a second.
Scarim Coral said:
Why Leia was inside the flagship or rather why that Bladerunner was still inside it during the battle? Being a Princess, she was in a dangerous situation despite she can take cared of herself.
That one really fucking bugged me and felt like one of the most forced parts of the ending. Bail Organa bails (heh) on Yavin IV earlier to go back to Alderaan, and specifically says that he's going to find someone trustworthy (his daughter).
But a few hours later at Scarif, Leia and her "diplomatic vessel" are attached to a Mon Calamari cruiser, with C-3PO and R2-D2 (last seen on Yavin IV) on board, ready to get jettisoned onto Tatooine. It doesn't make any sense; if the droids were on Yavin, then Leia and her ship should've been on Yavin. But if Leia was on Yavin, why did Bail go back to Alderaan? More importantly, why'd she decide to hitch a very-impromptu ride on a much larger ship going into a suicide mission? What combat role did she expect to play from inside her unarmed ambassador's ship while inside the hangar of an
actual combat ship? Even if she was just being suicidally reckless, her mere presence there would ensure Imperial retaliation against Alderaan if they failed!
It would have made much more sense for
Bail to be at the Battle of Scarif, die there (a better send-off for the character than being killed offscreen in an earlier film) but pass off the Death Star data to his daughter immediately beforehand, whether through an emergency channel or in the manner the film described (it would make way more sense for Leia to be there if Bail had hastily commandeered Alderaan's royal flagship or whatever).
Or they could have just had the Rebel with the plans jettison himself in an escape pod, then cut to the pod being picked up by the
Tantive IV, then show Vader's Star Destroyer looming behind it. And then there'd be no need to have a weird CGI Carrie Fisher giving a cheesy line about "hope" for the thirtieth time.