![]() A livery of new ships and vehicles also awaits you, ready to be included in your Age of Rebellion campaign. It also presents me with some challenges for this review. It is unique in the Fantasy Flight Games Star Wars Roleplaying line in that it is a sourcebook for all three of their game lines ( Edge of the Empire, Age of Rebellion, and Force and Destiny ). It includes detailed rules for vehicle and starship construction as well as sample campaigns that emphasize the role Engineers play in the Galactic Civil War beyond being simple background support. Dawn of Rebellion is a sourcebook for this era of Star Wars storytelling. Featuring three new specialization talent trees and new races to populate your campaigns, Fully Operational is an essential addition to your collection. Weapons, droids, vehicles, and gear of all varieties are more than just plasteel and bolts they represent the will of the free people of the galaxy made corporeal in defiance of the Emperor.įully Operational is a 96-page sourcebook for Engineers in the Star Wars™: Age of Rebellion Roleplaying Game™. No war can be carried on without the tools to wage it, and Engineers serve the Rebellion and their comrades by designing, building, and maintaining all the equipment necessary to end the Empire's reign of terror in the galaxy. The struggle against the Empire isn't only for those who carry the biggest blasters or fly the fastest starfighters. The colors have a subdued palette that ground the story keeping it as cool as Lando himself.Fully Operational is a sourcebook for Fantasy Flight Games' Star Wars: Age of Rebellion roleplaying game offering new rules, locations, gear, and adventure scenarios for the Engineer class.ĭesign. You respect the character because the art makes him a wild card you can’t help but admire. Lando is drawn confident and in a way that makes him seem to be always thinking. This is a book centered around Cloud City and it doesn’t skimp on scenes with many people (and aliens) in the frame. Speaking of which, Lando’s main mission here seems too good to be true and ends in a positive light that will make you like the character even more.Īrt by Buffagni and Bonvillain, with letters by Travis Lanham, is exceptional. Lobot has zero sense of humor which plays well against Lando’s sometimes shady questions and dealings. It’s fun to see how Lando asks Lobot a question, gets the info he needs and carries on. So canceling out all the failures and all the threats while having surplus successes and advantages is obviously rare. The two are a good team and trust each other implicitly. Titled “Cloud City Blues,” this story plays out to show how Lando thinks quickly on his feet and doesn’t let a good city and its troubles bring him down.Īs the story unfolds Pak utilizes Lobot quite well which harkens back to Charles Soule’s excellent Lando miniseries. He just does it a little differently than a typical politician. How can a guy who is basically a gangster become the ruler of a people? (He says, as an American, in 2019.) That said, this story reveals a softer, more heroic side to Lando as he attempts to keep his city by getting enough scratch to pay the people and any loans that are outstanding. Disney should seriously consider making a Lando TV show set in Cloud City.
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