Revan
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Template:Infobox Star Wars character Revan is the player's character in BioWare's Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic video game. The character may be either male or female, though Revan is canonically male and follows the game's light-side path.[1] The player's choice of a male or female Revan changes only which characters the player character can fall in love with (as well as slightly altering the way some characters act towards the player). He was voiced by Rino Romano in Knights of the Old Republic and Jeff Bennett in the 2011 MMO game Star Wars: The Old Republic.
Revan's story is further explored in Drew Karpyshyn's 2011 novella Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan. The book details the events of Revan's life after the events of Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, in which Revan attempts to recover his lost memories from the period of the Mandalorian wars and from his and Malak's travels to discover the Sith empire. The novel ends with the death of the main characters T3-M4 and the Jedi Exile, along with the imprisonment of Revan by the Emperor.[2]
Appearances
In the Knights of the Old Republic series
Revan is depicted as a former Jedi who, along with Malak, left the Order to lead the fight in the Mandalorian Wars due to the Jedi's inaction. One year after the end of the Mandalorian Wars, Darth Revan returned to Republic space at the head of a massive invasion fleet. Calling themselves the Sith, they declared war on the Republic. However his intention was to unite the galaxy under one ruler so he could attack the ancient Sith Empire, he avoided attacking key places such as Corucant, Onderon, and Dantooine. The Sith won the battle and as the Dark Lord prepared to battle with the Jedi who boarded his flagship, Darth Malak, in the hopes of destroying both Revan and Bastila Shan (as well as the Jedi accompanying her), betrayed his Master, ordering the ships under his command to fire on Revan's flagship's bridge. Though Malak believed himself to have been successful in killing Revan, they survived. Revan was severely injured from the turbolaser blasts. He was then taken by Bastila Shan and her Jedi strike team to the Jedi Enclave on Dantooine where the Jedi Council members chose to wipe Revan's memory, and imprint him with a false identity that the player creates at the beginning of the game. Knights of the Old Republic begins with Revan awaking on a starship under attack. Throughout the game, Revan learns of his forgotten history and assembles a band of followers as he searches for "Star Maps" that lead him back to the Star Forge, which Revan used to make his army. Revan encounters Malak, who tells Revan that he is the former Sith lord.
At one point Malak captures Bastila and turns her to the dark side. Her ultimate fate depends on player choices. In the game, the player can choose whether to turn Revan to the dark side or the light side of the Force. Regardless, Revan confronts Malak at the game's conclusion. According to canon, Revan returned as a Jedi Knight who stopped the Sith forces under Malak's control and destroyed the Star Forge. The last scene of the game's canonical ending shows the principal characters, including Revan, being honored by the Republic at the site of the temple on Rakata Prime; a picture of later events has emerged from subsequent games and novels.
The sequel Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords reveals that a year after the defeat of Malak, Revan recalled a threat from his time as the Dark Lord, and left known space to deal with it. Clues to the nature of the threat emerge from in-game dialogue with non-player characters (including Canderous and Kreia); this varies according to alignment and gender. It may be the remnants of the ancient Sith Empire Revan discovered, identified by Kreia as the "True Sith".
Prior to the events of the sequel, Revan bade farewell to the nine comrades who had accompanied him on his quest, knowing that none whom he loved could safely accompany him in the places he had to walk; the only NPC with certain knowledge of where and why (his navigation droid, T3-M4) won't say. Also, at the ancient tomb of Ludo Kressh in Korriban, the Jedi Exile fights a silent vision of Darth Revan, in which he appears to wield two lightsabers, one red and one violet. The game lists the color crystal of the light saber the player obtains from him as a unique red color. This is Revan's only appearance in the entire game. Additionally, the Jedi Exile can speak with several companions and non-player characters within the game to learn more about the history of Revan, and his journey into the Unknown Regions.
The Old Republic: Revan
He appears as the primary focus of Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan, released by Bioware and EA on December 20, 2011.
The Old Republic
Revan re-emerges in Star Wars: The Old Republic after a team of Republic heroes manage to rescue him from the Emperor's Maelstrom Prison with the help of the ghost of the Jedi Exile. Though thankful to the Republic for rescuing him, Revan decides to fight the Emperor on his own terms and takes control of a Rakatan installation called "The Foundry" and engineers a droid army (led by HK-47) programmed to identify and eliminate any target with Sith DNA, which represented the great majority of the Sith Empire. Revan's plan is thwarted when a group of Imperials manage to infiltrate the Foundry and destroy the droids and HK-47 before confronting Revan. After a vicious battle, Revan is defeated but disappears before a killing blow can be delivered.
Revan appears again in the "Legacy of Rakata Prime" flashpoint as the man behind the conspiracy in the "Forged Alliances" plotline. He is the primary antagonist of the fourth digital expansion to The Old Republic, entitled Shadow of Revan During the digital expansion Revan returns to try to destroy the republic and the true sith empire by changing their security routes to meet above Rishi where he could destroy their best ships with his own ships made up from Republic and Sith warships themselves, in order to go unchallenged when he fights the Emperor. However, his plan is destroyed when the "Character" is able to send a communication to both Republic and Sith to stop fighting. Revan later is cornered on Yavin where he tries to raise the Emperor but is confronted by the Player Character and defeated, after The Emperor makes a deathly entrance, Revan's light side ghost reveals that when he was defeated in the Foundry his light side part ascended the force, but his dark side, fueled by hate for the Emperor, had surpassed his light side and survived, which started the "Forged Alliances" plotline. Revan then re-connects his light and dark side and warning the Player's Character that he (Revan) must un-do what he has done or everything will be lost.
Other appearances
In Darth Bane: Path of Destruction, Revan appears as a holographic avatar for a holocron discovered by Darth Bane.
Revan was originally slated to appear in the cartoon series Star Wars: The Clone Wars. In the third season episode "Ghosts of Mortis", Revan would have appeared as a Sith Lord alongside Darth Bane as advisors to the Son, a dark side embodiment. The two characters were cut from the episode in late production since their presence would conflict with Lucas's view of the Force.[3]
Merchandising
In 2007, Hasbro toys released an action figure of Darth Revan.[4] Revan received the second-highest number of votes in a "fan's choice" poll in ToyFare magazine in 2006 for Star Wars characters to be made as an action figure. The highest number of votes was for Quinlan Vos, a Jedi who appeared in comic books and who Hasbro had already slated to be released as an action figure in 2007.
A Darth Revan figure was also released as a Mighty Mugg, a popular series of stylized figures based on characters from the Star Wars, Marvel Comics, Indiana Jones, G.I. Joe, and Transformers universes.
Lego released a Darth Revan minifigure as a free-with-purchase promotional item in May 2014.
Reception
Revan was chosen by IGN as the top 12th Star Wars character,[5] as well as also being chosen by IGN's Jesse Schedeen as, along with Darth Malak, the fifth best Star Wars villain.[6] IGN's readers chose Revan as their 7th top Star Wars character.[7] UGO Networks put the character as the ninth top Expanded Universe character.[8] Jesse Schedeen listed Revan as one of the Star Wars character that she wanted in Soulcalibur, calling him "one of the rare Expanded Universe characters that unquestionably stands alongside the best of the movie characters".[9] Robert Workman, from GameDaily, listed the character as one of his favourite Star Wars video game characters.[10]
Although Revan ultimately did not make the cut, Game Informer staff considered his inclusion in their "30 characters that defined a decade" collection, with Matt Miller saying, "in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, the looming shadow of his presence hangs over everything, and the Revan-centric twist at the heart of the story shocked the gaming world."[11]
ScrewAttack listed the moment where it's revealed that the player character is Darth Revan as the tenth "OMGWTF" in video gaming.[12] Edge also listed the moment as one of the most jaw-dropping moments in video games.[13] GameDaily's Chris Buffa listed the moment as the fourth top video game spoiler,[14] and Robert Workman listed the moment as one of the eight BioWare moments that shocked him.[15]
References
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (February 2013) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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- ^ Wallace, Daniel (25 October 2005). The New Essential Chronology to Star Wars. Del Rey. ISBN 978-0-345-44901-6.
- ^ Karyshyn, Drew. (2011) Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan. Del Ray, USA. ISBN 0-345-51134-4
- ^ Star Wars: The Clone Wars: The Complete Season Three
- ^ OAFE - Star Wars: "Knights of the Old Republic" Darth Revan review
- ^ "Top 100 Star Wars Characters". IGN. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
- ^ Jesse Schedeen (17 April 2008). "Top 15 Star Wars Villains: Episode III". IGN. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
- ^ Phil Pirrello (18 August 2008). "Who Is Your Favorite Star Wars Character?". IGN. Retrieved 12 April 2011.
- ^ Adam Rosenberg (1 July 2008). "Top 50 Star Wars Expanded Universe Characters". UGO Networks. Retrieved 17 November 2010.
- ^ Jesse Schedeen (5 August 2008). "Players Wanted: Soulcalibur's Star Wars Fighters". IGN. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
- ^ Robert Workman (11 September 2008). "Our Favorite Characters From Star Wars Video Games". GameDaily. Archived from the original on 13 October 2008. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
- ^ Bertz, Matt (19 November 2010). "The Snubbed List". Game Informer. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
- ^ "Top 10 OMGWTF Moments". ScrewAttack. GameTrailers. 11 July 2008. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
- ^ Edge Staff (2 September 2008). "Oh. My. God!!!". Edge. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
- ^ Chris Buffa (13 March 2009). "Top 25 Video Game Spoilers". GameDaily. Archived from the original on 13 May 2009. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
- ^ Robert Workman (3 November 2009). "Eight Bioware Moments That Shocked Us". GameDaily. Archived from Bioware Moments That Shocked Us the original on 10 January 2010. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
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External links
- Revan on Wookieepedia, a Star Wars wiki
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