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Greetings Fanboys, Fangirls, EU Fans, and returning Beyonders!
This week, true believers, your EU Guru Nathan P. Butler, and The Defender of the EU Mark Hurliman, take you on a wild adventure as they explore the recent news that came out of San Diego Comic Con 2012 (SDCC), and how it effects your EU.
Some things that were recently discussed at SDCC:
Han Solo, Luke Skywalker, and Princess Leia have spent a lifetime fighting wars, bringing the Jedi back from extinction, raising families, and saving the galaxy more times than they can count. They’ve earned the right to rest on their laurels and let the younger generation shoulder the burden–but fate has another adventure in store for our heroes, a quest only they can tackle and hope to survive…”
Crucible leads Mark into pondering a death of one of the Big 3. He explains why readers would get more out of witnessing the deaths of the Big 3 and the reactions of the rest of the cast, compared to the idea that it should happen off page. Han dies first?
There will also be 5 – 8 issues per year from the following comic series:
We will get 5 issues per year of:
There will also be TWO ongoing series:
We will get 8 issues per year of a new ongoing series that has not yet been given a title. We’re betting this is the same series as above.
There are no current plans to bring back Invasion, The Old Republic, or Jedi… This causes Mark to rant a bit.
Knight Errant is ending after Escape. Blood Ties is ending after Boba Fett is Dead. Lost Tribe of the Sith is ending after Spiral.
Nathan focuses on the marketing and the term “accessible” and what that means. And Mark ponders the need to explore some of the most mined parts of the saga in the name of accessibility. Have we not had retcons, but instead Reboots this whole time? The hosts are all for new stories. And Nathan lays out the gauntlet of stories set between A New Hope and Empire Strikes Back right where the new “Star Wars” series plans to start. It makes it hard to envision this series NOT causing a continuity flubbup. Mark explains how you can’t add minutes to a day, and calls a spade a spade. In a “what?!” Rant that sets both hosts into a fun little moment.
Randy Stradley writes about Invasion-
There are lots of reasons why some series don’t go where we thought they would (disappointing sales, writer’s get stalled on where to take stories, other higher profile projects takeover the publishing slot, and so on), and I’m not going to list the reasons for our decisions for ending or continuing any given series.
I will say this: feedback from comics retailers and bookstore buyers (the people who actually order our books) indicates overwhelmingly that they want more titles that are accessible to casual fans. For instance, Dawn of the Jedi and Legacy, each being at relatively continuity-free ends of the timeline are good fits. The new Star Wars series, which is designed so that readers need know nothing more than what happened in A New Hope is another good jumping on point.
This doesn’t mean that everything we publish will fall into those kinds of categories, but it is a fact that the more accessible titles (or those which focus on important movie characters) sell better than those that require readers to be familiar with Expanded Universe continuity. We totally get that hardcore or longtime fans would like more exploration of the “between times,” but the fact is that sales of those projects don’t come up to the levels of the more accessible story lines. Every decision we make is a balancing act between art and commerce. That’s why I have said — and will continue to say — that telling a good story is far more important than connecting the dots between existing continuity landmarks. A really good story is always receive more consideration from me than one that exists primarily to fill-in the blanks.
Does it make fitting the stories more difficult to fit together when the newer materials ignore previous stories due to how obscure they are? Nathan and Mark try hard not to rant and rave, as they discuss all the various things that came from SDCC.
Wait… the EU isn’t a part of Star Wars?! The hosts ponder a great many things this week. They also focus on the marketing choices by Dark Horse and Del Rey.
There is a lot going on this week. A must listen episode if ever the dynamic duo have ever recorded one.
“What happened to the Star Wars that I used to know…?”
Email: [email protected]
By Star Wars Beyond the Films4.2
160160 ratings
Greetings Fanboys, Fangirls, EU Fans, and returning Beyonders!
This week, true believers, your EU Guru Nathan P. Butler, and The Defender of the EU Mark Hurliman, take you on a wild adventure as they explore the recent news that came out of San Diego Comic Con 2012 (SDCC), and how it effects your EU.
Some things that were recently discussed at SDCC:
Han Solo, Luke Skywalker, and Princess Leia have spent a lifetime fighting wars, bringing the Jedi back from extinction, raising families, and saving the galaxy more times than they can count. They’ve earned the right to rest on their laurels and let the younger generation shoulder the burden–but fate has another adventure in store for our heroes, a quest only they can tackle and hope to survive…”
Crucible leads Mark into pondering a death of one of the Big 3. He explains why readers would get more out of witnessing the deaths of the Big 3 and the reactions of the rest of the cast, compared to the idea that it should happen off page. Han dies first?
There will also be 5 – 8 issues per year from the following comic series:
We will get 5 issues per year of:
There will also be TWO ongoing series:
We will get 8 issues per year of a new ongoing series that has not yet been given a title. We’re betting this is the same series as above.
There are no current plans to bring back Invasion, The Old Republic, or Jedi… This causes Mark to rant a bit.
Knight Errant is ending after Escape. Blood Ties is ending after Boba Fett is Dead. Lost Tribe of the Sith is ending after Spiral.
Nathan focuses on the marketing and the term “accessible” and what that means. And Mark ponders the need to explore some of the most mined parts of the saga in the name of accessibility. Have we not had retcons, but instead Reboots this whole time? The hosts are all for new stories. And Nathan lays out the gauntlet of stories set between A New Hope and Empire Strikes Back right where the new “Star Wars” series plans to start. It makes it hard to envision this series NOT causing a continuity flubbup. Mark explains how you can’t add minutes to a day, and calls a spade a spade. In a “what?!” Rant that sets both hosts into a fun little moment.
Randy Stradley writes about Invasion-
There are lots of reasons why some series don’t go where we thought they would (disappointing sales, writer’s get stalled on where to take stories, other higher profile projects takeover the publishing slot, and so on), and I’m not going to list the reasons for our decisions for ending or continuing any given series.
I will say this: feedback from comics retailers and bookstore buyers (the people who actually order our books) indicates overwhelmingly that they want more titles that are accessible to casual fans. For instance, Dawn of the Jedi and Legacy, each being at relatively continuity-free ends of the timeline are good fits. The new Star Wars series, which is designed so that readers need know nothing more than what happened in A New Hope is another good jumping on point.
This doesn’t mean that everything we publish will fall into those kinds of categories, but it is a fact that the more accessible titles (or those which focus on important movie characters) sell better than those that require readers to be familiar with Expanded Universe continuity. We totally get that hardcore or longtime fans would like more exploration of the “between times,” but the fact is that sales of those projects don’t come up to the levels of the more accessible story lines. Every decision we make is a balancing act between art and commerce. That’s why I have said — and will continue to say — that telling a good story is far more important than connecting the dots between existing continuity landmarks. A really good story is always receive more consideration from me than one that exists primarily to fill-in the blanks.
Does it make fitting the stories more difficult to fit together when the newer materials ignore previous stories due to how obscure they are? Nathan and Mark try hard not to rant and rave, as they discuss all the various things that came from SDCC.
Wait… the EU isn’t a part of Star Wars?! The hosts ponder a great many things this week. They also focus on the marketing choices by Dark Horse and Del Rey.
There is a lot going on this week. A must listen episode if ever the dynamic duo have ever recorded one.
“What happened to the Star Wars that I used to know…?”
Email: [email protected]

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