One side says, "Star Wars is dead, stick a fork in it."
This is the media, be forewarned, this is the same media that shilled every Star Wars project, good to terrible, for the last ten years. Keep that in mind.
The other side says, "Look at the media saying Star Wars is dead! Affirmation!"
No, you got it wrong: the media is throwing in the towel on being the ones burdened with selling terrible Star Wars for the last 10 years. If terrible Star Wars was somehow a success, they would be cheering for this. The media is basically going "sour grapes" on all of Star Wars and giving up trying to shill for the latest pet project, and they collectively know what is coming.
We are going to get what is in their eyes, populist Star Wars, consumerist, "please the audience", simple, back-to-basics entertainment. There will be no message in the next Star Wars, since the company can't afford it, and the people with other agendas trying to sell "using Star Wars" will be told to find another franchise to ruin.
The media is not on your side.
In fact, I can see the same sort of thing coming for D&D. The moment D&D goes "old school" with a revamped AD&D 2nd Edition, the media will pile on it, saying it's a "tone deaf" release, meant for "grognards and old men." It "doesn't speak to an audience who wants narrative storytelling." They will tell people to pile onto Daggerheart and other similar narrative games.
If the media doesn't get what they want, they will tell people to "stick a fork in it."
This is the consequence of letting the media and social media sell your product. You live by them, and you will die by them. The moment they feel they will lose their "power" over the brand, they will turn on you with a vengeance.
And just like D&D, the company will come crawling back to the old-school crowd, asking for forgiveness and asking us to get hyped once again for "a product made for true fans." And we will always be the first ones shown the door when it gets popular, since the media and message crowd will flood in again, if the new version takes off. We are always too "toxic" and "not the younger audience they need."
Yet the true fans are the "hype engine" the brand needs to take that first step toward legitimacy.
It is a cycle as old as the tides at this point, and if you can't see this, go stand next to the ocean for a while and touch sand.
Well, I have my Star Wars games right here. I have decades of solid lore to draw on when writing stories, and Disney did me the favor of invalidating it all by branding it "Legends" content, which means it is set in stone and can never change. Remarkably, there are no warning labels on these books and games, unlike the history of D&D, which the parent company has deemed toxic.
Star Wars Legends lore will not change, is rock solid, and a consistent storyline for me to use to base my own stories on. What a gift to gamers this is. Thank you, Disney!
DIY Star Wars will be the best Star Wars for the next few years.
I arguably have a greater and more stable source of lore and canon to draw upon than anything in D&D, as the Forgotten Realms has always been a world of shifting geopolitics where the map and gods change at the whims of the next edition. Demons and devils come and go, and eventually become character options. New races are dropped into the world without history or lore to support them. The lore changes with every edition of D&D to "sell the product." It is a multiversal planar mess right now that needs to be brought back to basics and untangled.
BX does that perfectly, by the way.
And I am happy to say Disney CAN make a good Star Wars movie or series. Andor, Mando 1 & 2, and Rogue One are proof. They haven't been able to make the magic work recently, but I have faith. They will return to the true fans one day. We just have to have more of a backbone than the media, who give up on a franchise because they don't get what they want.
Did Disney have many huge misses? Oh, for certain, I did not enjoy much of what I watched over the last few years. But I need to have faith that "the audience has spoken" and that they will course-correct. This is what the media is trying to prevent by calling Star Wars "dead." "Sticking a fork in it" is the metaphorical equivalent of throwing down the gauntlet, and the media saying, "prove us wrong." The media wants more and more "bad Star Wars" to continue. And they are throwing a tantrum unless they get it, and they all probably know what is coming down the pipeline.
If anything, their saying "Star Wars is dead" is probably the best sign of hope we have ever had. Something wonderful is coming. If it doesn't, well, I can wait a little longer. If Disney wants me as a fan, they know who to call and what types of stories to tell. I will be there for them should they make magic happen.
I will be telling my Star Wars stories over here on my game table, and I will be patient, waiting, and in the long run, I will be right.
I will remain a true fan.
I'm not giving up.
I shall build upon the rock, while others build upon sand.
I got four decades of the best storytelling and universe creation backing me up. Yes, the new stuff is hit-or-miss, but we have decades more good than bad here, and I am not letting a few tone-deaf mistakes tarnish my childhood memories and love for these stories.
The media, at this point, is an AI-written website that will be gone in a few years.
Mine is the better bet. DIY Star Wars "is the way."
Trust the Force.











