The Mandalorian

Chapter 13: The Jedi - S2-E5

Stupidity: Ahsoka is fighting against the spear-wielding woman. She keeps blocking the spear using both her sabers. It would be very straightforward to block the spear with just one lightsaber (as she proves she can do just as well after she loses the smaller one) and use the second one to, for example, cut off the woman's hands.

Jon Sandys

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Suggested correction: This is opinion, not stupidity.

Chapter 8: Redemption - S1-E8

Stupidity: If Mando's parents had not wasted all that time kissing and hugging him goodbye, they could have easily (at least one of them) climbed down the same hatch they stashed him in. The doors are not even sealed/locked, so it's not like they needed to stay outside to bolt them. (00:12:00)

Sammo

Chapter 11: The Heiress - S2-E3

Stupidity: Stormtroopers absolutely do not care about bombs being thrown at them, do nothing to avoid them, in fact run towards them, and do not react (not kicking them back, but not even trying to step away a little) when they literally poke them in the toes.

Sammo

Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1

Stupidity: In Cobb Vanth's flashback, the miners are watching the Death Star blow up (evidently the Rebellion had a camera crew there to capture the moment, or they bought a neat home video version of Return of the Jedi) but the evil mining syndicate enters the bar and guns down everyone. So they are killing the...harmless and weapon-less miners they want to force to work for them? The town is minuscule, they may have killed their WHOLE workforce there. (00:20:35)

Sammo

Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1

Stupidity: Mos Pelgo has been around for decades, but nobody has ever thought before of the stratagem used at the end of the episode, which didn't need the Mandalorian or anything more than what the villagers already possessed (being a mining town they had a lot of explosives just lying around).

Sammo

Chapter 8: Redemption - S1-E8

Stupidity: Cara destroys the R2 unit, but the oar is still there, and the Mandalorian has a jetpack and freshly restored explosives. Even if we take at face value the fact that far fewer troopers than they already destroyed (and that have been treated canonically as laughingstock through the entire series as unable to aim) are a significant threat, the dramatic moment of sacrifice is still blatantly forced. Especially when during the sacrifice it is shown that the stormtroopers are not shooting at him, negating entirely the premise that the stormtrooper fire would have caught them the moment they were in sight.

Sammo

Chapter 15: The Believer - S2-E7

Stupidity: The Empire has plenty troops and TIE Fighters, and the locals are armed with sticks, but the convoys of highly volatile explosives have no armed escort whatsoever, despite the fact that they keep losing those huge trucks full of precious chemicals to those troglodytes with no body armor or special skills.

Sammo

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Suggested correction: The empire doesn't have plenty of anything, this is after the fall of the empire, this is what is left and they are hanging by a thread. It probably costs too much to have escorts, or escorts like TIE fighters are too expensive to risk, even against "troglodytes." They'd rather accept the losses they take, apparently that is more cost efficient.

lionhead

Plenty more than what the opponents have, in that very base. They have TIE fighters in the base, who provide air support at the very end. They have troops. The opponents show having no offensive weapon at all other than detonators, that they fling like stones. Losing transport convoys because you provide literally zero escort to them is no strategy in times of abundance, even less in times of scarcity. And that chemical is a strategic resource that helps their war, and the only reason the base exists.

Sammo

Chapter 13: The Jedi - S2-E5

Stupidity: Ahsoka gives the magistrate a day to surrender for no real reason - she has no advantage doing so nor it is any more honorable or humane; she is in fact giving Morgan time to organize herself with hostages as she explicitly threatens to. Had she finished her assault without this senseless ultimatum, barely anyone would have been in any danger or tortured for a full day like it happened.

Sammo

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Suggested correction: Tano doesn't know the strength of the Magistrate's forces. Djarin tells her that there are ex-military, hired mercenaries inside armed to the teeth and that he doesn't believe that even with the force she would survive. Tano agrees with this assessment and also asks if Djarin saw any hostages inside, so until then she didn't even know for sure whether or not there were. It is implied that had Tano continued her assault she would have been killed. There is indeed no stated reason why Tano gives a single day as an ultimatum, but it seems reasonable to assume that prior to meeting Djarin and The Child she would have used this time to plan her 2nd assault.

BaconIsMyBFF

I think we disagree on the idea that it is implied that if she continued her assault she would have been killed; she killed 25% of their troops in their first assault, and then in the second one, which was in the open and broad daylight, she killed or disarmed everyone else including the main villain and the henchman, who was then killed by Mando, together with 2 guards. Mando was only instrumental in saving the hostages Morgan took after her threat - which, by the way, was expressed in a way that did not even imply necessarily that she was just taking the people hostages and not kill them right away as punishment. The evil henchman says it correctly "We'll be ready when she returns"; waiting only weakens her position in every way, since the stakes and/or disparity in forces is not shown adequately.

Sammo

You seem to be ignoring the part where Djarin tells her that even with her skills she would be killed and she agrees. Whether or not that is actually true based on what we see doesn't really matter, it's their opinion based on what they know at the time. It seems fairly clear that she withdraws because she doesn't know what she's up against behind those walls.

BaconIsMyBFF

She literally laughs behind his back when he says that line, and it is contradicted in every way from what we see, so it seems to be ignored by the writers first and foremost. They say the rule of writing is "Show, don't tell", I'd be fine with "Don't show the opposite of what you are telling." You can argue that it's more alike a plot hole than a simple stupidity, but I think you can agree that for what it is shown, Ahsoka had no other reason to wait for (more than) a day other than give the main character a chance to show up, and an ultimatum considerably worsens her position. It's not even clear why she took so long to make a move on the city, Bo-Katan (who does not have a direct path of communication on her) knew where she was, but the first time we see her it is also the first time she has a contact with the Magistrate.

Sammo

No, I do not believe the writers included a laugh as an indication that Ahsoka believes the exact opposite of what Djarin states and that she agrees with his assessment that she is outmatched just to keep him happy. Yes, they do portray her as very powerful inside the city, but there are two people in there fighting at the same time which splits the enemies forces. Yes, giving yourself time to prepare also gives your enemy time to prepare. Sometimes there's no way to avoid that. This is neither a Stupidity nor a plot hole.

BaconIsMyBFF

"Splits" is an overstatement; she takes the whole force down herself. We both agree that "she regroups after a preliminary assault and then prevails through teamwork" is the general idea of what it should happen, but it's not what it is shown. Remove Mando from the episode and you would only have (assuming she adopts the same effortlessy successful strategy to attack head-on a prepared enemy: she gets inside with no problem whatsoever!) a couple prisoners as casualties, which is something that Ahsoka herself brought upon her. There's not even an indication that she was preparing any strategy, since she asks about the presence of any prisoner while she is already going back to face the Magistrate.

Sammo

Season 2 generally

Stupidity: At the end of Season 1, the armorer tasks Mando to bring the Child to "his kind", which she specifically identifies as Jedi. It's already quite a stretch that Mando never heard of Jedi before, being such an important part of the Mandalorian culture he's been taught, but during the first episodes, until he finally indeed meets some Mandalorians, he approaches people looking for Mandalorians and not Jedi, and goes through some notable verbal gymnastics to never mention Jedi.

Sammo

Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1

Stupidity: The bad guys have guns literally at the neck of Mando, but when his slow and erratic homing projectiles fly around, they don't shoot. Slowest reaction times ever.

Sammo

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Suggested correction: They may not have known what the projectiles were. Some kind of weapon would be the obvious assumption, but by the time they likely figured that, they were either panicking or simply not focused on shooting Mando, since doing so probably wouldn't save them.

Chapter 8: Redemption - S1-E8

Stupidity: Inside the building, there's a broken window behind the bar. Cara Dune has perfect cover and can shoot easily at the stormtroopers from the height she is at (it is the way they shot from outside), but she instead jumps on the bar counter, where she is entirely exposed.

Sammo

Chapter 7: The Reckoning - S1-E7

Stupidity: The Imperial sub-boss and his guards deserve to die just for the fact that they allowed a supposed prisoner to be brought in full blaster-proof armor complete with wrist guards that contain deadly weaponry. Who would sit across the table with someone who is wearing a flame throwing suit?

Sammo

Chapter 7: The Reckoning - S1-E7

Stupidity: The initial plan for Greef Karga and the three hunters was to kill Mando and whoever else he brought over, and deliver the Child to the Client. Considering this was their plan, there is no reason why they did not kill them in their sleep.

Sammo

Chapter 6: The Prisoner - S1-E6

Stupidity: The security droids appear impervious to blaster hits at the beginning of the episode, but nobody from the crew grabs one of the droid rifles, who instead easily pierce their armour. Mayfeld then one-shots them no problem when the plot requires him to towards the end of the episode.

Sammo

Chapter 4: Sanctuary - S1-E4

Stupidity: The necessity to deal with the AT walker through a complicated plan stems from the fact stated by Cara that on the planet there's nothing that can destroy the legs of the mecha. Ignoring the Ewoks' guerrilla tactics from Endor, Mando has a fully functional ship that in the next episode one-shots an enemy ship and that he has no reason not to use in here (which is a planet outside any jurisdiction, against an enemy with no anti-air capabilities).

Sammo

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Suggested correction: He means he memorized the chain code, the biometric data stored on the tracking fob. Calican already knows Fennec is headed towards the dune sea so they don't need the fob to track her location.

BaconIsMyBFF

Beyond the dune sea, is what he says, yes, which is an enormous desert on the vaste planet. Memorizing the biometric data does not help at all without the tracking device. I took it that he memorized the positional data, but if I know someone's last known location, and that they are headed "beyond the Sahara desert" it is not really helping me find them, is it? You can make a guess, of course.

Sammo

The chain code is what is used to identify the target, when they are turned in to collect the bounty. You don't need the tracking fob if you already know all the numbers in the chain code. That's the part that he memorized. It doesn't appear that the tracking fob gives you precise location data, so "In the Sahara dessert" is all you get. If the tracking fob did give more precise location data then every idiot in the galaxy would be a bounty hunter.

BaconIsMyBFF

To identify the target he has the puck already. My point is that "Got it all memorized" is a plot device that works when your target is stationary (like The Child in the first episode), not a moving target. He smashed a -tracking - device (which took it where he is now) and then says he's "got it all memorized." You can't memorize tracking, and the chain code simply includes data like the age that are of no use for a target already well known like Fennec. What he memorized was her last known location at most... which if the fobs are as vague as you mention (one hopes that they are not just beeping dowsing rods) would make even less sense, because he wouldn't have a clue about her position and course and could be off by hundreds of miles.

Sammo

The chain code contains identifying information that proves what target you've brought in. In another episode a character worries that if his chain code is scanned he will go to prison because he's a wanted man. Yes, the tracking fob is used to hunt down your target but that's not why Mando wants it and why the other bounty hunter destroys it. Without the fob, even if Mando catches Fennec he won't be able to collect the bounty because he doesn't know the chain code.

BaconIsMyBFF

If we go with this theory, it sounds like Mando wants the money (and recognition) to bring Fennec in, but he does not care about that nor he was asking for it; the fob has a different use, and the chain code is memorized separately from that anyway (he was given in the first episode tracking The Child a fob without a chain code). The chain code is simply a code with the essential information about the subject, like a personal document. If that what he memorized, it's as if he said "Don't worry, we'll find her in the desert, I got her social security number." And if he captured Fennec, which was needed alive, he would have gotten the recognition no matter what.

Sammo

I tend to agree with the mistake that the tracking fob is receiving updated biometric coordinate data, so there's no way memorize updated data, at most it would be memorizing last known coordinates. However, I would advise using terms like "Baby Yoda" if you want to be taken seriously, otherwise it looks like you haven't watched the show. There's no need to use incorrect terms just because you think people won't know who "The Child" or "Grogu" is.

Bishop73

Chapter 7: The Reckoning - S1-E7

Stupidity: In this episode, Mando tells Kuil to go to the ship and enable "ground security protocol", saying that nothing on the planet will breach the doors. That begs the question; if the ship has such a function, why on Earth Mando did not enable it in the first episode, leaving the ship entirely vulnerable? He's been on the run ever since so it's pretty unlikely to say the least that he'd have such a function enabled just lately, in particular since he has always worked on worlds with Jawas and other kinds of raiders. In the rest of the show, Mando leaves his ship wide open all the time, causing all sorts of problems.

Sammo

Chapter 12: The Siege - S2-E4

Stupidity: The Razor Crest has a massive bulky center; spinning on its axis does not make it a smaller target, especially against a TIE fighter that is smaller and has two cannons that concentrate fire centrally.

Sammo

Chapter 9: The Marshal - S2-E1

Stupidity: Mando needs to find the settlement. Asks for information and goes there by...speeder bike that he borrows from Amy Sedaris. Why, it is unexplained. He could more easily spot the settlement from the sky, cover greater distance, and be safe from threats.

Sammo

More mistakes in The Mandalorian

Chapter 8: Redemption - S1-E8

Greef Karga: He missed!
The Mandalorian: He won't next time.
Cara Dune: Our blasters are useless against him.
Greef Karga: Hey, let's make the baby to the magic hand thing. Come on, baby! [Waving his fingers] Do the magic hand thing. [The Child coos.] I'm out of ideas.

Bishop73

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More trivia for The Mandalorian

Answer: In (non-canon) Legends, Thrawn was the central character of a trilogy of novels by Timothy Zahn. He was a Chiss officer in the Imperial Navy, who rose to the rank of grand admiral despite being non-human. Thrawn was brought into canon in the Star Wars Rebels series, where he commanded the Empire's Seventh Fleet and led the occupation of Lothal, which was opposed by the series' protagonists including Ahsoka Tano. In the final episode of Rebels, the Jedi and Rebel Ezra Bridger commands Purrgil space whales to drag Thrawn's Star Destroyer into hyperspace, jumping to an unknown location with himself and Thrawn on board. The final scene of the series shows Ahsoka Tano and Sabine Wren leaving Lothal to search for Bridger, and presumably Thrawn.

Sierra1

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