Long story short, Baby Yoda and Master Yoda are not the same character, though they do belong to the same Force-sensitive species.
2017. The official Star Wars account on Twitter also says Jango and Boba Fett are not Mandalorian: “According to Prime Minister Almec, (Clone Wars episode 'The Mandalore Plot'), Jango Fett (and by extension, his son) aren't actually Mandalorians, they just wear Mandalorian armor.
In the final scene of the season 2 premiere of The Mandalorian, the galaxy far, far away's most infamous bounty hunter—or at least an unmasked Temeura Morrison, who played Jango Fett in Attack of the Clones—was shown watching Mando (Pedro Pascal) and The Child journey across Tatooine's Dune Sea following the battle
If viewers are wondering how they're supposed to know that is Boba himself risen from the dead, it's largely a matter of casting. Morrison played Jango Fett in Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith, and Jango is the character from which the Mandalorian bounty hunter was cloned in the first place.
As the first live-action Star Wars TV series, The Mandalorian took the galaxy far, far away in a slightly new direction. The lack of original trilogy characters includes Han Solo not making an appearance in The Mandalorian.
The Mandalorian Season 2 brought Boba Fett back from the dead. Temuera Morrison made his triumphant return to the world of Star Wars at the end of the season premiere. While it's unclear exactly when he'll appear again, Boba Fett's comeback may be setting the stage for his very own spinoff series.
Mando is taking Baby Yoda home… wherever that isHowever, one thing we know for certain is that the Jedi will be involved in some capacity. “The songs of eons past tell of battles between Mandalore the Great and an order of sorcerers called Jedi,” the Armorer told Mando in the trailer.
Behind the scenesAs mentioned in the novelization, the Mandalorians were now imagined as "a group of evil warriors defeated by the Jedi Knights during the Clone Wars." Fett's popularity inspired a wealth of Expanded Universe literature about him, which assumed he and his father were Mandalorian like their armor.
Although he has never explicitly said why he hates droids, Mando's anti-droid sentiment most likely stems from his personal history with them. When he was a child, Din Djarin's home was attacked by Separatist battle droids. His parents died in an explosion and Din himself was almost killed by a droid.
Most of the clans were wiped out, forcing what was left of the Mandalorians to go into hiding. For this reason, it was commonly believed by other civilizations in the galaxy that the Mandalorians were all dead, having been massacred by the Empire.
The cause of the Mandalorian-Jedi WarAs odd as it sounds, the war started because the Mandalorians did not understand the Jedi when they first encountered them. Even at the end of The Mandalorian season 1, the Armorer described the Jedi as "an order of sorcerers."
The Mandalorian is a sobriquet for Din Djarin, a character in the Star Wars franchise and the title character of the Disney+ series The Mandalorian. Orphaned as a young child, he was adopted into the Mandalorian culture and became a bounty hunter and warrior.
Some Mandalorians, most notably members of Death Watch, held a grudge against the Jedi for their perceived crimes against Mandalore during the Mandalorian-Jedi War. That the Jedi led an army of clone soldiers—"slaves bred for war", as Confederate propaganda proclaimed—did not speak well to their character.
The Mandalorian finally has a real name besides “Mando” or “Not Boba Fett.” Star Pedro Pascal revealed in an interview (above) that his masked Disney+ character's name is Din Djarin.
Premise. Set five years after the events of Return of the Jedi (1983) and the fall of the Empire, The Mandalorian follows a lone bounty hunter in the outer reaches of the galaxy. He is hired to retrieve "The Child", and chooses to go on the run to protect the infant.
| Yoda |
|---|
| Species | Unknown |
| Gender | Male |
| Title | Jedi Master (Episodes I–VI) Member of the Jedi High Council (Episode I) Master of the Jedi High Council (Episodes II–III) General in the Grand Army of the Republic (Episodes II–III) |
| Occupation | Jedi Master |
Jango Fett murdered a Mandalorian and stole the Beskar, Boba Fett was handed down that same armor, and Djarin is brainwashed from a strict, offbeat regime. New Star Wars fans should know that true Mandalorians indeed remove their Beskar helmets in front of anyone they choose, living creature or droid.
The Mandalore are mostly an extinct race and their weapons are incredibly uncommon. Boba Fett possesses the only pure “classic” armor, akin to what his father wore, and wears the only green variation of the outfit. It's possible that this is the entire reason why Fett made the decision to repaint the armor that color.
Now an orphan, Boba Fett grew up in the galaxy's criminal underworld. As a teen, he joined the crew of Aurra Sing, a ruthless bounty hunter who tried to teach Boba her ways. The boy thirsted for revenge against Mace Windu for killing his father, and bombed the Jedi's starship in a failed assassination attempt.
Mandalorian armor was made from beskar, which was one of the strongest metals in the galaxy. The bounty hunter Jango and his cloned son Boba Fett wore customized Mandalorian armor, which were made with durasteel.
Canon (Post-Disney): Jango Fett is not a Mandalorian, but rather he killed a Mandalorian for a bounty, took the Mandalorians armor and made it his own after recognizing the capabilities of beskar armor made him more effective as a bounty hunter.
He took his helmet off all the time because the prequels were garbage. The sequels were garbage. The prequels weren't that bad. He's not a Mandalorian for starters.
Mandalorian armor is famous in the Star Wars universe. The armor plates themselves can withstand blaster shots, as we see in The Mandalorian, and can even protect the wearer from the glancing blow of a lightsaber — which can be seen in the Legacy of Mandalore episode of Star Wars: Rebels when Gar Saxon is disarmed.
His team stumbled upon a holographic recording from Dr. Pershing as he discussed his experiments, and he revealed the Empire wants Baby Yoda's blood. The goal is to inject the Child's blood into host bodies, presumably in an attempt to grant them Force-sensitivity.
The mudhorns of Arvala-7 laid fur-covered eggs that were edible by Jawas. Around 9 ABY, a bounty hunter known as The Mandalorian sought an egg from a mudhorn cave at the request of a Jawa tribe, in exchange for pieces the tribe had stolen from the bounty hunter's gunship, the Razor Crest.
| Character | Birthdate | |
|---|
| (alphabetical order by first name or title) | (years after Episode IV) | Episode VI Return of the Jedi |
| Admiral Ackbar | Before -52 | >56 |
| Anakin Skywalker / Darth Vader Canon: Age according to post-2014 sources | -41 | 45 |
| Anakin Skywalker / Darth Vader (Legends) Legends: Age according to pre-2014 sources | -42* | 46 |