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The more I think about it, the more Andor stating that "The Empire caused all its biggest problems!" sticks in my craw.
I get why writers want to say "Being Evil is bad!", but the show is stating that without Death Star development, Ghorman doesn't get forcibly relocated and the Rebellion stays a bunch of scattered goons for years longer.
Without Dedra looking into Death Star material she shouldn't have had... I don't know what that changes, honestly. The show seems to be saying that this is how the Rebellion finds out about the Death Star, but Galen Erso independently sends his Rogue One message with the pilot (Bodhi?) to Saw that Tivik* then hears about and meets with Andor.
I suppose having a second source for the existence of the Death Star makes it more believable that so much of the Rebellion fleet would be willing to show up (and get hammered) over Scarif, but
1) Were there that many nerds complaining that so much of the Rebellion fleet shows up over Scarif based on hearsay?
2) That's just a Rogue One script problem, not a Star Wars problem. Rogue One also had the Death Star blow up a large chunk of Scarif (but not all of it), with most of Saw's rebels getting away, so the Rebellion not having any evidence of the Death Star frankly didn't make sense even in Rogue One on its own.
*One of the last things Luthen does is kill a troublesome informant rather than extract him; the audience is introduced to Andor doing the same thing. I see you script writers! Too bad I don't see your work on how Andor turns into a merciless killing machine one day after he's drinking and gambling in this last arc.
I get why writers want to say "Being Evil is bad!", but the show is stating that without Death Star development, Ghorman doesn't get forcibly relocated and the Rebellion stays a bunch of scattered goons for years longer.
Without Dedra looking into Death Star material she shouldn't have had... I don't know what that changes, honestly. The show seems to be saying that this is how the Rebellion finds out about the Death Star, but Galen Erso independently sends his Rogue One message with the pilot (Bodhi?) to Saw that Tivik* then hears about and meets with Andor.
I suppose having a second source for the existence of the Death Star makes it more believable that so much of the Rebellion fleet would be willing to show up (and get hammered) over Scarif, but
1) Were there that many nerds complaining that so much of the Rebellion fleet shows up over Scarif based on hearsay?
2) That's just a Rogue One script problem, not a Star Wars problem. Rogue One also had the Death Star blow up a large chunk of Scarif (but not all of it), with most of Saw's rebels getting away, so the Rebellion not having any evidence of the Death Star frankly didn't make sense even in Rogue One on its own.
*One of the last things Luthen does is kill a troublesome informant rather than extract him; the audience is introduced to Andor doing the same thing. I see you script writers! Too bad I don't see your work on how Andor turns into a merciless killing machine one day after he's drinking and gambling in this last arc.