Sideways is my character is a Star Wars: Edge of The Empire TTRPG campaign, he’s an ageing Clone Trooper who went AWOL in the wake of Order 66, using his training as a “Tactical Battlefield Data-Warfare Specialist” to alter the records to fake his death in the chaos that followed Order 66, and abscond with a shuttle.
Sideways spent the next eighteen years roaming the fringes of the galaxy, trying to piece together the web of conspiracy that led to the Separatist Crisis and the downfall of the Galactic Republic. (The Clone Trooper specialist rapid training modules emphasised certain personality traits to enhance the clone’s abilities, the Data-Warfare package had the side effect of making troopers paranoid, data hoarding, conspiracy theorists; though none of these personality flaws were realised until long after the Clone army was in the field.)
As he travelled the galaxy, Sideways realised that it wasn’t just the original news reports of the Separatist Crisis that were being suppressed, edited, or erased; but historical and religious texts as well as part of what seemed to be an Imperial effort to suppress and discredit the very concepts of the Jedi in particular, and The Force in general.
Sideways began seeking out remote shrines, temples, libraries, and holy sites to work with their guardians to create electronic copies of their texts, forming what he started to refer to as The Sidereal Collection. Somewhere along the way he began to find solace in The Force, though through a piecemeal accumulation of concepts from a dozen religions and philosophies.
Along with copies squirrelled away in a variety of hidden data stores around the galactic rim, Sideways carries a copy of the Sidereal Collection with him in the form of a holobook.
The holobook exists as a diegetic reason for Sideways’ Lore skill to increase without him having to go on a quest for knowledge, he’s got a whole host of reference works with him, he’s just been having a hard time reading them because they’re all either written in the Star Wars equivalent of middle-English, or they’re describing direct experience of The Force for which he has no context.
The book being displayed in the renders is “Ye Principia of Ye Guardians of Ye Whills” a ‘modern’ translation of a core text for the kind of Force aware, but not Force sensitive monks like Chirrut from Rogue One. It’s an example of the ‘middle-English’ problem, in that it’s technically in the modern language of Aurebesh but the writing style is a few thousand years out of date.
Towards the end of the last adventure we played Sideways encountered his former commanding officer, a Jedi Agent who used to be codenamed Compass, who Sideways was convinced he had killed as a result of Order 66 by venting her into space. But she had been rescued by the soon to be Darth Vader, and turned to the Dark Side as a weapon for use by the Inquisitorius in the Jedi purge.
This shrine model that I had already been making to represent Sideways’ growing religious side, became rather poignant as he failed to get her to turn back from the Dark Side, and was forced to watch her die for a second time, only being able to recover her lightsaber as the team fled the exploding vessel where the confrontation had taken place.
The shrine is designed to look like Sideways has constructed it out of materials that could be found in the spares of a transport ship, so it’s made from galvanised metal taken from an old shipping container, industrial resin streaked with some gold paint, and metal that he’s cut and heat treated to make symbols representing the Force.
The symbol on the left is a cannon symbol of the Light side of the Force, and the symbol on the right is a cannon symbol for the Dark side. The central symbol is my take on a combined Force symbol that I’m calling The Harmonious Force, representing becoming greater through balance.
The lightsaber is an attempt at creating something a touch different, agent Compass was from a large species and used a strength based lightsaber style, so this is designed to be a great-sabre with a forward grip for power strikes like on a claymore. I also wrapped the grips in blue alien leather instead of the metal flanges that many of the film sabres favour.
I also put the adjustment controls for blade length and intensity, that all lightsabers apparently have, somewhere more useful than the weird sticky out knobs the film one all have.