
After two decades since Revenge of the Sith , there’s still one untold angle from Order 66 that fans—and even longtime Star Wars writers—haven’t seen. It’s not just about the fall of the Jedi or the rise of the Empire. It’s about the clones who were forced to do it.
Order 66 was first introduced in George Lucas’s Revenge of the Sith back in 2005, and while we’ve revisited its aftermath through countless shows and movies, a key perspective is missing. Yes, we know now that the clones weren’t acting of their own free will—they were controlled by inhibitor chips planted deep in their brains. But what if we could see this moment through the eyes of one of those clones?
We’ve had close calls. Captain Rex’s struggle with his own chip was heartbreaking. So was watching Crosshair nearly kill Kanan Jarrus in The Bad Batch . But those stories always came from the outside looking in. What about the clone who didn’t escape? The one who actually pulled the trigger?
Why This Story Matters
The retcon around the inhibitor chips was one of the most important additions to the Star Wars universe. It turned the clones from villains into victims. It made them human. And yet, we’ve never really seen the full horror of what they went through.
Imagine being a loyal soldier, fighting for peace, only to wake up one day and be told to kill your closest friends. That’s what Order 66 was for many of them. Some did it. Some fought it. But no one has shown us the moment a clone truly understood what they’d done.
Would they feel guilt? Anger? Betrayal? Would they turn on the Empire—or would they stay silent forever?
A New Angle, A New Hero
Enter Wolffe.
In The Bad Batch Season 3, Wolffe finally crosses paths with Captain Rex again. It’s a tense reunion. Rex is alive, which shouldn’t be possible. Wolffe, once a trusted comrade, now serves the Empire. He doesn’t hesitate to chase down Rex and his team. But he hesitates when it matters most—he lets them go.
It’s subtle, but it’s telling. And it opens the door to something bigger. What if Wolffe becomes the central character in a new story? One where he slowly realizes the truth of what he did. One where he grapples with the weight of his actions and starts to question everything he’s been told.
That’s the kind of story Star Wars needs right now. Not just another battle or lightsaber duel. A story about redemption. About memory. About identity.
The Time Is Right
Star Wars is evolving. Shows like Obi-Wan Kenobi and Andor have proven that audiences are ready for darker, more complex narratives. The galaxy is moving into a new era—one that isn’t afraid to explore the gray areas between good and evil.
Telling the story of a clone who obeyed Order 66 could be the next big step. It could help bridge the gap between the Old Republic and the Rebellion. It could give us a deeper understanding of how the Empire truly rose—and at what cost.
So here’s hoping Disney+ is listening. Because after all these years, the world is still waiting for a story it hasn’t seen yet.
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