Maul on a child sized bicycle
POV you’re looking for more children to run over because you regret not succeeding the first time

izzy's playlists!
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Cosimo Galluzzi

tannertan36
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
d e v o n

★
Stranger Things

No title available

ellievsbear

shark vs the universe

Origami Around
tumblr dot com
ojovivo

blake kathryn
Show & Tell

oozey mess
we're not kids anymore.

No title available
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany

seen from Austria

seen from United States
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina

seen from United Kingdom
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Australia

seen from United States
@snowflake-shenanigans
Maul on a child sized bicycle
POV you’re looking for more children to run over because you regret not succeeding the first time
devastating: most misogynistic comic book writer you know accidentally made a really compelling female character
Back when this show was first announced I jokingly referred to Devon (before we knew her name and just knew that Maul was training a Twi'lek girl a year after Ahsoka blew him off) as "Maul is creating Ahsoka's Wario" but the thing is. That really is kinda it, conceptually.
By which I mean: the thing Ahsoka and Devon have in common in a Doylist sense is that they are both original characters created to be a legacy character's apprentice (Anakin for Ahsoka, Maul for Devon) in a show that legacy character was nominally the lead of which existed between already-set points in their established timeline.
Which means: those apprentice characters are ultimately where the real action is. Because while the elaboration on how the legacy characters get from A to B is far from unwelcome, we know how things end for them, we know where their characters ultimately end up: Anakin becomes Vader and Maul dies to Obi-Wan on Tatooine. We learn the how, the why, but we already knew the what.
But Devon in Shadow Lord is wide-open, as Ahsoka in Clone Wars was before her: she's new, she has no fixed end, anything is possible! What happens to her? Where does she end up? Who does she become? These are the questions! And so once again the apprentice girl OC is ultimately the one to watch. Ahsoka outgrew her association with Anakin as people began to care about her in her own right and I have no doubt the same will be true for Devon and her association with Maul.
The "Wario" part is still tongue in cheek but, well, not inaccurate: Devon is the dark mirror of Ahsoka's character on that conceptual level, because this is a show about, in Sam Witwer's words, bad guys versus worse guys. And where Ahsoka ultimately learned to be better at being Anakin than Anakin was and thus never fell to the dark side, I think Devon will give us the answer to what happens when someone learns how to be better at being Maul than Maul is.
din djarin, after being given a new honda civic by the cops: "come on son, gotta illegally mod the shit out of this IMMEDIATELY"
Okay, hear me out.
One of the quiet background realities of the Star Wars galaxy is that it is spectacularly bad at labor. Not just “late-stage capitalism” bad, but structurally, culturally, and institutionally allergic to the idea that workers should have enforceable protections. You’ve got child soldiers, child labor, debt slavery, corporate fiefdoms, and a Republic that can field a galaxy-spanning bureaucracy but somehow never gets around to standardizing “maybe don’t enslave people.” The Empire of course doesn’t fix this; it industrializes it.
So in that environment, formal labor law is either nonexistent, unenforced, or actively hostile. Which means if you’re operating in a sector where the state either can’t or won’t protect you, you get a classic historical pattern: workers build their own rules.
Enter the gray economies.
Groups like the Smugglers' Alliance (Legends) and the Bounty Hunters' Guild (new canon) look, at first glance, like professional associations for criminals. But if you squint at them through a labor history lens, they start to look a lot like early, proto-union structures — especially the kinds you see in maritime or extralegal industries on Earth.
Think pirate codes (yes actual ones, Pirates of the Caribbean didn't make that up). Think matelotage agreements. Think dockworker brotherhoods that predate formal unions.
Because what do these groups actually do?
They:
set norms for compensation and contracts
regulate competition to prevent destructive undercutting
provide a framework for dispute resolution
establish reputational systems (“you don’t honor contracts, you don’t get work”)
That’s industry self-governance in the absence of law.
Take bounty hunting. Without something like the Bounty Hunters' Guild, the field collapses into chaos: clients don’t pay; hunters underbid each other into oblivion; jobs get duplicated, interfered with, or sabotaged. And nobody trusts anybody!
The Guild steps in and says: here are the rules of engagement. Here’s how claims work. Here’s how you get paid. Here’s what happens if you break contract.
That’s basically a union crossed with a licensing board and a regulatory agency, just without any moral pretense.
Same with the Smugglers' Alliance. Smuggling is inherently risky, decentralized, and dependent on trust networks. If everyone is constantly betraying everyone else, the whole system stops functioning. So instead, you hash out agreed-upon routes and territories, informal protections against betrayal, mechanisms for information sharing, and consequences for breaking the code
Again: not altruism. Stability.
And the reason this emerges specifically in gray/illegal sectors is because they have to. The Core Worlds might pretend they have laws, but those laws don’t meaningfully protect the people actually doing dangerous, itinerant, high-risk work. So the margins of the galaxy — where enforcement is weakest and risk is highest — become the places where labor organization evolves first.
Which is very historically grounded.
On Earth, some of the earliest labor protections didn’t come from governments; they came from workers in dangerous, decentralized industries—sailors, pirates, miners—who literally wrote their own rules because no one else was going to save them.
Pirate codes, for example, often included:
compensation for injury
shared distribution of loot
limits on captain authority
Which is … shockingly progressive compared to a lot of contemporary working conditions (cough Amazon cough).
So in the galaxy far, far away, you end up with this ironic inversion:
The “legitimate” systems — Republic, Empire, megacorporations — are exploitative, inconsistent, or indifferent.
The “illegitimate” systems — smugglers, bounty hunters — are the ones building functional labor frameworks, because they need to survive.
And that feeds back into why the galaxy feels so unstable overall. There’s no universal baseline of rights. Everything is hyper-local, network-dependent, and contingent on whether you’re inside a system that has rules you can rely on.
If you’re a clone trooper? You are literally property.
If you’re a factory worker on a corporate world? Your protections are whatever your employer feels like offering.
But if you’re a smuggler or a bounty hunter?
You might actually have clearer expectations about your pay, your risks, and your recourse — because your “union” is the only thing standing between you and total chaos.
So yeah: the Smugglers’ Alliance and the Bounty Hunters’ Guild aren’t just flavor. They’re a glimpse of what labor organization looks like in a galaxy where the state has fundamentally failed to provide it.
Which is both deeply funny and a little too real.
I’ve talked more broadly about the fatal flaw that drives Devon’s fall but I want to dig a little more deeply into the inherent subtext of gender going on with it because it’s really juicy and is a huge amount of what makes her character hit so well for me.
Devon has that streak of pride that develops into a superiority complex centering on her skill in the Force—and what is such a consistent theme of the things Maul says to her, especially in episode 3 where he is explicitly reading her thoughts out of her mind and giving voice to them, as his discovery of her name without her giving it to him reveals to us at the end?
“The Jedi were once revered protectors of the galaxy, but now they are considered traitors. Oh, how that must bite. To live as a fugitive, hand to mouth.” “Training vigorously to achieve something that few could, only to be denied. You crave that unfulfilled destiny.” “Crushed under the heel of those who are, in truth, inferior to you.”
As a Jedi, Devon’s skill and talent gave her station and respect, but Order 66 ripped that away. The destruction of the Jedi Order forced her to hide that power and that skill and pretend to be just like any other teenage civilian Twi’lek girl to survive—and that’s the thing, right? The GFFA is, for the most part, a very patriarchal place to live, just like our world. (Please do not make me cite sources for “the GFFA is misogynistic on the Watsonian level”, the sources cited are All Of Star Wars.) So: the egalitarian nature of the Jedi Order elevated Devon—and the Empire cast her down. Every Jedi survivor experiences this loss of status, but she has it worse than many because of who and what she is without her abilities or the prestige they once gave her: a teenage girl. She and Daki spent a year begging on the streets to survive; the humiliation of that and how she must have been treated in the process could not drive her loss of status in any deeper. Is it any wonder she is so full of resentment when we meet her? That she is so seething with wounded pride she has no outlet for that she won’t even give a false name when she’s arrested?
Look at how stridently Devon pushes back against being considered a peer of Rylee’s in every scene they share, how every interaction she has with him is flavored with, at best, a graciously condescending noblesse oblige—she knows that if the galaxy she lives in considers her a peer of Rylee’s then that means it actually considers her less than him, and she ultimately thinks he is nothing compared to her. Hell, go a level more abstract with the subtext: a different kind of narrative than this one about a Jedi girl falling to the dark side would take that useless boy/hypercompetent girl setup to ultimately reduce Devon to a reward for Rylee, who that narrative would deem a more deserving main character—and the specter of that concept makes Devon want to kill everyone in sight.
This is why, of our darksiders in play in this era, it had to be Maul who turned her. A Dooku type would never get to her. The Palpatine wine-and-dine that Anakin got would not work on her. But when she was cast down into the gutter by Darth Sidious she met his former apprentice who he abandoned to the same fate—who spent a decade scraping to survive in a literal trash heap and who has continued to cling stubbornly to life despite being consigned to that fate. Maul is scrappy and devastatingly honest when he needs to be and in order for someone to successfully sway Devon Izara to the dark side they needed to understand the loss of status she experienced and the resentment it festered in her long before they met. She needed someone who truly understood what was taken from her—thus, the shadow lord, the king of the gutter himself.
I must stress: this never would have been a problem for her without Order 66. Devon was a good person, Devon was happy to use her powers to help people. She would have been a great Jedi. Devon also enjoyed being praised and respected for her powers and—and is that a bad thing? Doesn't she deserve to be? Of course she does. Dark side falls in Star Wars are all about how things can be two things at once and how the line between them is so much thinner than we like to think. Sidious took that praise and respect away from her and she deserves it back, and she feels she can't get it back in her new reality by being a good person and using her powers to help people. So it is ultimately so easy for Maul to use Devon’s resentment to demolish her altruism, so that she becomes willing to reclaim her lost prestige by becoming someone who doesn’t care about who she has to hurt to get what she wants.
Because it really was such a monstrous crime that was done to her.
I’m seeing that one invincible meme everywhere so I had to make the maul version
And now, happy revenge of the 5th! Another long-awaited piece I painted in tandem with my previous Ezra painting .✦ ݁˖ ☾︎
hellooooo [taps mic] hellooo is anyone else still here
Guys we didn’t explicitly see brander’s death or body SO HE COULD STILL BE ALIVE HES ALIVE I SWEAR
They all have beef with it
im glad that we've established that day one of inquisitor training is How To Look Really Cool
(commission info // tip jar!)
he is the most lost anyone has been. maybe ever.
ahsoka doods
(commission info // tip jar!)
AHSOKA: THEN & NOW