![]() More broadly, Attack of the Clones established that the Star Wars galaxy actually possesses at least three small satellite galaxies, never colonized and considered largely inhospitable. Unlike the Outer Rim, these sparse few systems around the galaxy's circumference were never formally charted. Wild Space – star systems located beyond the Outer Rim – because a galaxy's "edge" is not a fixed border line, but a concentration of stars tapering off in frequency.On-screen examples include Tatooine, Yavin, Hoth, Bespin, Endor, Geonosis, Utapau, Mustafar, and Kessel. As the last region that the Republic expanded into, it is relatively the least developed, a frontier more often than not exploited by the central galactic government for its resources. Outer Rim – a vast region including all of the last major star systems up to the galaxy's edge.On-screen examples include Naboo and Kashyyyk. Mid-Rim – Generally industrialized though not very important planets, but more developed than the true "frontier" in the Outer Rim.Expansion Region – nestled between the "Inner Rim" and the "Mid Rim", anachronistically named due to a new colonization wave starting again.Inner Rim – the original edge of the Galactic Republic, where expansion waves stopped for many generations.Mentioned by name in The Rise of Skywalker. comparable to how the United States or Canada could be called "the colonies" of Great Britain). The name is somewhat of a misnomer, as they have grown nearly as powerful as the "Core Worlds" themselves, though their histories aren't quite as long or prestigious (i.e. The Colonies – the first colonies founded by the nascent Galactic Republic in ancient times.On-screen examples include Coruscant, Corellia, Alderaan, and Hosnian Prime. Core Worlds – powerful and wealthy planets with millennia-long histories, many of them founding members of the Galactic Republic. ![]() Densely-packed with stars, nebulae, and other anomalies, it is therefore thinly settled due to the resulting high radiation levels and lack of stable hyperspace routes.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |