Knights Of The Old Republic Romance

23.08.2019
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Welcome to the Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords wiki guide.[edit]

  1. Knights Of The Old Republic 2 Visas Romance
Swtor romance

Kights of the Old Republic 2 The Sith Lords once again gives you the chance to take the role of an outcast Jedi with a shady past. Gain new force powers, meet interesting people, and decide the fate of the Republic as you blast from planet to planet in the Ebon Hawk.

This wiki was automatically converted from the Knights of the Old Republic II The Sith Lords Guide (PC) guide at https://guides.ign.com/guides/608569/ and may require cleanup. Please help improve this wiki if you can, and remove this notice if appropriate.

Mission Vao, voiced by Cat Taber, appears in Knights of the Old Republic. And in all other versions she is a romance option only for female characters.

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The Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic series consists of Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, The Sith Lords and a massively multiplayer online role-playing game called The Old Republic, with the first game being released in 2003 and set 4,000 years before the Star Wars films.[1] The series also encompasses a 2006 comic book series.

The main and player character of the first game is Revan, and the main and player character of the second game is the Jedi Exile. In both games, the main character can either be a human male or a human female, with other characters joining the player's party and becoming controllable. The player can control three characters at one time in both games.[1] HK-47, Canderous Ordo and T3-M4 appear in both of the video games as playable character, while the first game's playable characters also includes Carth Onasi, Mission Vao, Zaalbar, Bastila Shan, Juhani and Jolee Bindo. The second game's playable characters also include Atton Rand, Bao-Dur, Mical, Mira, Hanharr, Brianna, Kreia, Visas Marr and G0-T0.

The characters have overall been well-received, with the first Knights of the Old Republic winning the Academy of Interactive Art's 'Outstanding Achievement in Character and Story Development', and both Kreia and HK-47 receiving other awards.

  • 2Player characters
  • 3Other playable characters
    • 3.1Recurring characters
    • 3.2Knights of the Old Republic characters
    • 3.3The Sith Lords characters
  • 5Major antagonists

Concept and creation[edit]

Chris Avellone, the lead designer of The Sith Lords, has said that 'a core part of what made KOTOR I so great was the story and your companions, and that was our intention in the sequel as well',[2] and has also said that he thought that the characters and voice-acting were some of the key strengths of The Sith Lords, and said that they got a lot of help and support from LucasArts in the voice-acting and sound department. Avellone stated that in some cases, the characters turned out 'better than we thought they would be'. According to Avellone, while 'there was some stuff we wanted to add', overall they 'got almost everything we wanted in there'. Avellone has said he has been surprised by the positive feedback of some of the characters.[3]

Player characters[edit]

Revan[edit]

Revan is a Sith Lord whose memory has been wiped and rewritten by the Jedi as a Republic soldier. Canonically, Revan is a male and follows the light-side path,[4] but the player may choose to make Revan female and/or follow the dark-side path.

Jedi Exile (Meetra Surik)[edit]

The Jedi Exile, also known simply as the Exile, is the main protagonist and player character of the second game. The player may choose the gender and decide what path to take. Long after the game was published, the character was named officially as Meetra Surik: canonically, Surik is female and follows the light-side path.

Other playable characters[edit]

Recurring characters[edit]

Canderous Ordo[edit]

Canderous Ordo, voiced by John Cygan, is a Mandalorian who appears in both the first game and in The Sith Lords. Ordo is a veteran Mandalorian warrior who joins the player's party in Knights of the Old Republic. After the game's conclusion, he becomes 'Mandalore the Preserver', leader of the Mandalorians. Mandalore pledges himself and his warriors to the service of the Jedi Exile in The Sith Lords.

UGO Networks put Ordo among their top fifty Expanded Universe characters.[5]

T3-M4[edit]

T3-M4 is an astromech droid who appears in both games. It was constructed by a Twi'lek named Janice Nall of Taris for local crime lord, Davik Kang. The droid features code-breaking and computer 'slicing' skills in addition to being able to mount armor and weapon upgrades. If the player attempts to talk to T3 it will simply communicate in a series of bleeps, similar to R2-D2.

HK-47[edit]

HK-47, voiced by Kristoffer Tabori, is an assassin droid owned by Revan, who appears in both of the games. In 2003 HK-47 won Computer Gaming World's 'NPC of the Year' award,[6] and later won the category of 'Original Game Character of the Year' in the 2004 Game Developers Choice Awards.[7]

Knights of the Old Republic characters[edit]

Carth Onasi[edit]

Carth Onasi, voiced by Raphael Sbarge, is a soldier and expert Republic pilot, and also the first character to become a party member in the first game. He is a romancing option for female Revan.During the Mandalorian wars, Carth served under Admiral Saul Karath, who would become his mentor and, later, object of revenge. He met Revan while the two were fleeing the Endar Spire, following a Sith attack on the ship. Since then, he became a party member.

Carth Onasi was considered to have been replaced by Atton Rand in the second game by IGN's Hilary Goldstein.[8] A holorecording of Carth can be heard on the Harbinger by the protaganist of the second game, as well as a holorecording discussing the fate of Revan (if specific conditions are met) later in the game.

Shiela Lewis put Carth as the 6th top male video game hotties.[9]

Mission Vao[edit]

Mission Vao, voiced by Cat Taber, appears in Knights of the Old Republic. She is a Twi'lek and friends with Zaalbar. Mission joins the player's party after encountering her in the Under City on Taris. In an interview with Comic Vine, Taber describes her character as 'in the 'scoundrel' class so I really wanted to put some Han Solo in there. Her sarcasm, her defensiveness and her bravado, all have a bit of Han as their inspiration. And oh yeah, she also travels with a wookie, but I didn’t have to add that part, the writers did it for me!'[10]

Zaalbar[edit]

Zaalbar is a character from Knights of the Old Republic. He is friends with Mission Vao and joins the player's party. Zaalbar is the brother to Chuundar, the leader of a tribe on Kashyyyk. When the player's party first arrives on Kashyyyk, Zaalbar is referred to as 'mad claw'. Through Zaalbar's and Chuundar's father, Freyyr, Revan learns why Zaalbar betrayed the tribe. Zaalbar learned that Chuundar was selling Wookiee slaves to Czerka Corporation, and attacked him. Freyyr sided with Chuundar and thus Zaalbar was exiled. When Revan and Freyyr confront Chuundar, Zaalbar sides with Freyyr and Revan and in turn kills Chuundar, freeing the Wookiees and driving Czerka off the planet. He has a life-debt to Revan. The life debt was bound when Revan assisted Mission Vao in saving Zaalbar from a group of Gammorean slavers in the Under City on Taris.

Bastila Shan[edit]

Bastila Shan, voiced by Jennifer Hale, is a Jedi who appears in the first game. The first part of the game is spent rescuing her after the Endar Spire is destroyed. She is the Jedi who defeated Revan prior to the game's beginning and joins the player character's quest. Darth Malak captures her and seduces her to the dark side. The protagonist later confronts Bastila in a lightsaber duel and has the option of killing her or allowing her to live: a dark-side character makes her their apprentice, while a light-side character helps her redeem herself by helping the Republic fleet. Bastila also has a romance option if the player is a light-sided male. Canonically, she is redeemed from the dark side by Revan, and the two fall in love, marry and have a son. She also appears in the sequel. Two of her descendants, Satele Shan and her son Theron Shan appear in the MMO follow-up 'Star Wars: The Old Republic'.

Bastila was chosen by IGN as their 62nd favourite Star Wars character.[11]

Juhani[edit]

Juhani, voiced by Courtenay Taylor, was once a padawan who believed she killed her master. She turned to the dark side and put a taint on the Grove on Dantooine where she meditated. She believed that after what she did the Jedi Council would not accept her back and that the dark side held greater power. Depending on which path the conversation is steered in by the player, Revan may either fight (and kill) her or redeem her and have her join him/her to discover the location of the Star Forge.

Juhani is the first LGBTQ character in Star Wars media: in the original PC and Xbox versions of Knights of the Old Republic, she was a romance option for both male and female player characters, but in subsequent updates and in all other versions she is a romance option only for female characters.

Juhani was listed by UGO Networks as the 10th worst Star Wars Expanded Universe character, who said that while 'Juhani isn't really good or bad per se. She's just utterly pointless' and that 'she's almost a non-entity in the story. Her personality couldn't be more vanilla, her Jedi skills are inferior to others in your party... even the simple act of looking at Juhani provokes annoyance'.[12]

Jolee Bindo[edit]

Jolee Bindo, voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson, is a character in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic. Jolee is an old hermit living on Kashyyyk and a former Jedi Padawan. Bindo helped Revan get past shield generators that lead deeper into the shadowlands and remained with Revan's party. After the main character gains experience, Jolee will tell of how he was once a smuggler, and through this met his wife. Against the wishes of the Jedi Council he trained her in the Jedi ways. She was then seduced to the dark side by Exar Kun, upon failing to convince Jolee to join Exar Kun as well, she drew her lightsaber on him. Jolee won the fight, but he was unable to bring himself to kill her. She escaped and went on to kill many Jedi. Jolee expected to be punished harshly for his mistakes, but the Council said he had learned his lessons the hard way, and even considered promoting him to knighthood. Disappointed with the Jedi’s decision, Jolee left the Order and started wandering the galaxy before being stranded on Kashyyyk, where he meets the player character.

The Sith Lords characters[edit]

Atton Rand[edit]

Atton Rand, voiced by Nicky Katt, is a character in The Sith Lords.[3][8] Atton is a human pilot, trained in Echani combat styles, that the main character meets on the asteroid mining station Peragus II. Atton fought in the Mandalorian Wars as well as the Jedi Civil War. He originally fought with the Republic, and when Revan won against the Mandalorians and became Darth Revan, Atton remained under his command and became a Jedi-hunter. He can become a Jedi Sentinel during the game.

Bao-Dur[edit]

Bao-Dur, voiced by Roger G. Smith, and the Remote are characters in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords.[3][8]

Bao-Dur is a Zabrak from Iridonia, and a technician who fought under the command of the Jedi Exile during the Mandalorian Wars. Bao-Dur is the inventor of the Mass Shadow Generator that ended the battle on Malachor V by completely obliterating the Mandalorian Armada and inadvertently killing many Republic soldiers on his own side of the battle, leading to a great deal of guilt later in his life. The Exile (who much later befriended Bao-Dur) gave the command, which sent massive echoes in the Force throughout the galaxy. Bao-Dur is trainable as a Jedi Guardian.

Mical[edit]

Mical, also known as the Disciple, is a character in The Sith Lords voiced by Greg Ellis. He is a soldier and force-adept that was refused for training because of the Mandalorian Wars. He eventually tells the player character that he wishes the player to be his master. He is a playable character that joins the player's party on Dantooine if your character is female. The Disciple can be influenced by light side acts and can be trained as a Jedi Consular.

Mira[edit]

Mira, voiced by Emily Berry, appears in The Sith Lords. Mira lost her family during the Mandalorian Wars. By the end of the wars, the Galactic Republic was flooding with refugees, and many of them, including Mira, ended up in the refugee sector of Nar Shaddaa. To survive in the hostile environment, she became a bounty hunter with the sole purpose of earning credits. A rival bounty hunter, the WookieeHanharr, was employed to hunt her by an unknown person. Mira will join light-sided or neutral alignment (less than 25% towards light/dark mastery) players, and can become a Jedi Sentinel.

Hanharr[edit]

Hanharr is a Wookiee bounty hunter in The Sith Lords, and can play different roles within the game, depending on the alignment of the player character. Hanharr is encountered on the planet Nar Shaddaa, as is Mira, another bounty hunter. One of these will join the party of the Jedi Exile, as is determined by the personality of the player character. Light-side and neutral players are joined by Mira, dark-side players are joined by Hanharr.

Brianna[edit]

Brianna, voiced by Grey DeLisle, is the 'Last Handmaiden' on a Jedi Academy located on Telos IV in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords. She initially does not reveal her name to the Exile; until she mentions her name late in the game, she is referred to as the Handmaiden. Brianna joins the party after leaving Telos on the Ebon Hawk if the player's character is male. Her training before joining the Exile's party makes her a skilled close quarter combatant and, after fulfilling certain combat and conversation requirements, she can be trained to become a Jedi Guardian or a Dark Jedi Guardian. It is revealed by Kreia that Brianna takes up Atris' role as the historian of the jedi.

Visas Marr[edit]

Visas Marr appears in The Sith Lords. Initially an apprentice of Darth Nihilus, she eventually joins the player's character's party. Visas Marr comes from the planet of Katarr, which was destroyed by Darth Nihilus when she was a child. While she is considered blind, she is able to see through the Force which allowed her to find the Jedi Exile. When she confronts the Exile, she loses and in turn becomes part of the Exile's party. Eventually the player confronts Nihilus with Visas, and fights him. The player may choose to have Visas sacrifice herself to weaken Nihilus.

Brian Menze designed the character, and drew on ninjas, the look of previous Sith Lords, and G.I. Joe character the Baroness in creating her concept art. As the character was mostly covered – only the lower half of her face is visible – Menze decided to make what was shown 'as sexy as possible'. Menze deviated from the usual black Sith Lords dressed in and instead added some color to soften her, based on the written description of the character.[13]Kelly Hu was chosen to voice the character. Voice directors Will Beckman and Darragh O'Farrell wanted someone 'special' and 'maybe a little sexy' to voice the part.[14] It was Hu's first role as a voice-actress, and she has said she enjoyed the role.[15]

G0-T0[edit]

G0-T0, voiced by Daran Norris, is a droid who appears in The Sith Lords. Built to oversee and aid in the planetary reconstruction of the planet Telos, its programming included two directives: produce options to rebuild the Republic and follow all the laws of the Republic. Sadly, all options G0-T0 could think of to assist the Republic would involve breaking a Republic law. Following this, the droid 'broke'; it overrode the second directive, and set up the greatest smuggling organization in the galaxy. Eventually the droid would be destroyed, but not before the organization had helped countless systems achieve prosperity.

Comics characters[edit]

  • Zayne Carrick is a young Padawan who was trained on Taris at the Jedi Academy.
  • Marn 'Gryph' Hierogryph is a Snivvian smuggler.
  • Jarael is a young female Arkanian offshoot who also acts as Camper's bodyguard.
  • Gorman 'Camper' Vandrayk is an elderly Arkanian offshoot inventor and mechanic who fled Arkania with Jarael as he was being hunted by Adascorp, an Arkanian corporation.
  • Elbee is one of the labor droids that was used on Taris' Jedi Academy.
  • Rohlan Dyre is a Mandalorian soldier.
  • Slyssk is a Trandoshan ship thief and an excellent cook.

Major antagonists[edit]

Knights Of The Old Republic 2 Visas Romance

Darth Malak[edit]

Darth Malak, voiced by Rafael Ferrer, is the old Sith apprentice of Revan and is the main antagonist of the first game. Malak and Revan disobeyed the Jedi Council and helped the Republic defend against the Mandalorians. They fell to the dark side in pursuing the Mandalorians. Malak then betrays his master and usurps the title of Dark Lord of the Sith. However, Revan survives the attack, at the cost of his memory. Revan regains his power in the search for the Star Forge, and defeats Malak in the game's final battle. Jesse Schedeen of IGN put Malak, along with Revan, as their fifth favourite Star Wars villain, saying that '[v]isually, both Jedi are immediately memorable'.[16] IGN also put Malak as their 28th top Star Wars character[11] and their 33rd favourite videogame villain.[17]GamePro's Hugh Sterbakov listed Darth Malak as 22nd most diabolical videogame villain of all time, saying he was 'one of, if not the coolest expanded universe Star Wars character yet'.[18] UGO Networks put the character as their 19th top Star Wars Expanded Universe character.[5] On GameSpot's 'All-Time Greatest Villain' competition, Darth Malak managed to get into the top sixteen.[19] GameDaily's Robert Workman put Darth Malak as their 16th top evil mastermind of all time.[20] Robert Workman also listed Malak as one of his favourite Star Wars video game characters.[21]

Kreia[edit]

Kreia, voiced by Sara Kestelman, is the teacher and mentor to the Jedi Exile in The Sith Lords.[8][22] Near the end of the game, she is revealed to have been Darth Traya, the Lord of Betrayal, all along. Her character received mixed reception since the game's publication, but is generally thought to be one of the most well developed backgrounds and characterizations. IGN chose her as the 81st top Star Wars character[11] and Kreia, along with the other Sith Lords, was put as the 2nd top Star Wars villain that was left out of the original list by Jesse Scheedeen based on reader's comments.[23] IGN's Hilary Goldstein said that 'Kreia offers some truly fantastic dialogue in KOTOR 2'.[8] GameSpy praised Kreia as 'Best Character' in their 'Game of the Year' awards for 2005, saying that 'Kreia was easily the most intriguing, complicated, enigmatic, well-designed and nuanced character in a video game [in 2005]' and that she made 'a trip full of heavy-duty thought a whole lot of fun'.[24] Darth Traya is ranked 7th among Game Informer's 'Top Ten Female Villains in Video Games' by Liz Lanier (issue #247, November 2013), saying that 'Kreia is one of the few female Sith Lords of the Star Wars universe, but she represents women of the dark side relatively ruthlessly. She's also one of the few villains who still wants to kill the player's character even after an olive branch is extended... though she appreciates the offer.'[25]

Darth Sion[edit]

Darth Sion, voiced by Louis Mellis, is an antagonist in The Sith Lords. Darth Traya trained both Sion and Nihilus, who in turn betray her. He holds his ravaged body together with the dark-side of the Force. The player's character eventually defeats Sion, and upon doing so, can return him to the light before he dies. Sion, along with the other Sith Lords, was put as the 3rd top Star Wars villain left out of the original list based on reader's comments by IGN,[23] and was chosen by IGN as their 73rd favourite Star Wars character.[11]

Chris Avellone, lead designer of The Sith Lords, was inspired to create Sion by Tessai's death scene in Ninja Scroll.[26] In contrast to other characters, Sion's design took much longer to hone down. Brian Menze, creator of the concept art and in-game model, had difficulty finding a design that Avellone was satisfied with, and the two had many conversations on how he should appear.[26] It was planned that Sion would have small parts of him orbiting around him. Engine troubles, however, made that difficult, ultimately resulting in a character looking far more 'human'.[26] Voice directors Will Beckman and Darragh O'Farrell originally sought to hire someone with an English accent, rather than the Scottish one found in the game. Problems arose due to most English actors lacking deep voices, though afterwards they wished to avoid making Sion 'too Scottish', wishing to avoid creating a caricature to American ears.[14] They called Sion's voice one of their favorites in The Sith Lords.[14]

Darth Nihilus[edit]

Darth Nihilus appears in Knights of the Old Republic II as one of three Sith Lords featured in the game, and is the self-described Lord of Hunger. Prior to the game's events, Darth Traya found and trained Nihilus on Malachor V. With Sion, Nihilus betrayed Traya and drove her into exile. Nihilus then used the might of the Sith Armada not to conquer planets, but to contain them so that he could 'feed' off the Force energy of each planet's lifeforms, wiping planets of life. Nihilus is defeated in the game after being drawn out and tricked into launching an attack on Telos, believing it to contain the last Jedi. The Exile confronts Nihilus on his ship, and Nihilus is slain either after his former slave Visas sacrifices herself due to their shared link in the Force, or after his attempt to feast on the Exile's connection to the Force backfires and weakens him.

Nihilus was written so players would identify him less as a 'human' and more a 'force of nature'; Avellone described him as without personality beyond 'just a feeling of hunger' due to having succumbed so far to the dark side. Avellone felt beating such a force seemed 'more heroic' or 'far more epic' than taking on an individual person.[27] The character's visual look was quick to define; Eurogamer describes him as 'a concept created and greenlit in all of 15 minutes'.[26] Character modeller and lead concept artist Brian Menze was asked to create a Sith Lord 'based on' No-Face from Hayao Miyazaki's Spirited Away (2001).[28] One idea behind Nihilus's design was that there should be nothing behind the mask – representative of him being a void. A 'pet peeve' of Avellone's is Nihilus art with him having a visible nose; Menze had drawn a nosed Nihilus for a magazine cover and Avellone had 'let it go', to Menze's now regret.[26]

Nihilus went on to appear in the 'Unseen, Unheard' story in the final issue of Star Wars Tales, which recounts his destruction of Visas's planet and his enslavement of her. Nihilus is mentioned in a few other stories in the original Star Wars Expanded Universe, and makes another, short appearance in Star Wars: Legacy. He was later introduced to the Galaxy of Heroes mobile game as a playable character in a 2017 update.[29]

Revan aside, Eurogamer's Robert Purchese described The Sith Lords' villains as 'far more memorable' than those of the first game, and described Nihilus as the most recognisable of them.[26] Nihilus, along with the other Sith Lords, was put as the 2nd top Star Wars villain who didn't appear in an earlier list based on reader's comments by IGN's Jesse Schedeen, Schedeen commenting '[a]t the very least, Nihilus probably wins the award for coolest-looking Star Wars villain ever'.[23]IGN also put the character as their 56th top Star Wars character.[11]Glixel listed him as one of twenty 'awesome' Star Wars characters originating in games, and considered him 'terrifying' and 'more of a malevolent ghost than a typical self-serving Sith'.[30] When developing the character Menze earned lasting prestige, stating: 'That character has gone on to be bigger than the game we created, and I'm very thankful for that'.[26]

Other characters[edit]

  • Atris was a Jedi historian who held great contempt towards the Jedi Exile supposedly because she followed Revan to war, when in actuality she was jealous of the Exile, for she was all she could not be. She appeared in the second game. If the Exile is male it is implied she has feelings for him.
  • Darth Bandon was a sith apprentice of Malak who attacks the player, and is defeated. He appears in the first game.
  • Calo Nord was a bounty hunter in the first game. Nord was originally a slave, until he murdered his captors and escaped when he was 16.[31]
  • Zax the Hutt was a Hutt found on Taris in the video game Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic. Players go to him to obtain bounties.
  • Ajuur the Hutt was a Hutt who worked in the Upper City cantina who ran the dueling ring in KOTOR I. He can arrange the player's character to fight the Mandalorian death-match champion Bendak Starkiller, which can be redeemed for a bounty to Zax.
  • Davik Kang was the Exchange leader of Taris, and used elite mercenaries such as Canderous Ordo and Calo Nord. He was killed in the orbital bombardment of Taris. He appeared in the first game.
  • Saul Karath was Carth Onasi's old teacher who betrayed him to join the Sith. He appeared in the first game. He was voiced by Robin Sachs.
  • Queen Talia is a descendant of the ancient Sith Lord Freedon Nadd and the ruler of Onderon who is at odds with her cousin Vaklu when the Exile comes to the planet. She appeared in the second game.
  • Azkul is a battle-scarred mercenary who served under Malak and later settled on Dantooine, attempting to destroy the local community of Khoonda but was thwarted by the Jedi Exile. He appeared in the second game.
  • General Vaklu is the power-crazed cousin of Queen Talia who seeks to overthrow his young cousin and take the royal throne.
  • Chuundar is a Wookiee character in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic. Zaalbar was exiled for attacking Chuundar, his brother, with his claws after discovering his brother was selling fellow Wookiees into slavery. Chuundar then later took over his tribe and exiled his own father, the former Wookiee chieftain, Freyrr. Once the player comes with Zaalbar to Kashyyyk in search of a Star Map, Chuundar imprisons Zaalbar and tells Revan that he must kill their father, Freyrr, in the lower levels of the planet to free the Wookiee. If Revan chooses to kill Freyrr, the player leaves with the gratitude of Chuundar. Chuundar keeps enslaving the Wookiees and the player can no longer return to the Wookiee village. If Revan spares Freyyr, he kills Chuundar and the slavers, frees the Wookiees, frees Zaalbar, and leaves with the gratitude of Freyrr, able to return to Kashyyyk at any time.
  • Bendak Starkiller is a Mandalorian Neo-Crusader who was famous for his proficiency in the Taris dueling ring. Refusing to leave an opponent alive, Bendak retired from the ring after the Sith outlawed death matches. During the Jedi Civil War, he remained on Taris, watching matches in the cantina and hoping for the day he could return to the arena for another death match with a worthy opponent.

Reception[edit]

IGN's Aaron Boulding said that in the first game there was 'tons of character development' and the 'original characters and story are interesting enough, but being in a Star Wars setting just makes them like family'.[32]GameSpot said that 'many of the game's characters are well defined'.[33]

The first Knights of the Old Republic game was given the 'Outstanding Achievement in Character and Story Development' award by the Academy of Interactive Arts in their annual Interactive Achievement Awards.[34] HK-47 won two awards, one being the 2003 Computer Gaming World 'NPC of the Year' award,[6] and also the 'Original Game Character of the Year' category in the 2004 Game Developers Choice Awards.[7] Kreia also won the 'Best Character' award in GameSpy's Game of the Year awards.[24]

References[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Interview: Bump in the Old Republic Knights'. ComputerAndVideoGames.com. 14 November 2002. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  2. ^'Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords Wrap Report, Part 1'. RPG Vault. IGN. 23 December 2004. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  3. ^ abc'Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords Wrap Report, Part 2'. RPG Vault. IGN. 27 December 2004. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  4. ^Wallace, Daniel (25 October 2005). The New Essential Chronology to Star Wars. Del Rey. ISBN978-0-345-44901-6.
  5. ^ abAdam Rosenburg (1 July 2008). 'Top 50 Star Wars Expanded Universe Characters'. UGO Networks. Archived from the original on 7 August 2008. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  6. ^ ab'Ziff Davis Media : Press Release'. Ziff Davis Media. 3 February 2004. Archived from the original on 7 June 2004. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  7. ^ ab'GDC 2004: Best Game Ever'. IGN. 25 March 2004. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  8. ^ abcdeHilary Goldstein (30 November 2004). 'KOTOR 2: Meet Your Team'. IGN. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  9. ^Sheila 'Jube' Lewis (11 May 2009). 'Rebuttal: Top 10 Male Video Game Hotties'. VE3D. IGN. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  10. ^Guerrero, Tony (16 September 2010). 'Interview: Catherine Taber, Padme On Star Wars: The Clone Wars'. Comic Vine.
  11. ^ abcde'Top 100 Star Wars Characters'. IGN. Archived from the original on 17 February 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2011.
  12. ^Adam Rosenburg (6 December 2008). 'The Worst Star Wars Expanded Universe Characters'. UGO Networks. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  13. ^Ben Kuchera (29 October 2012). 'Behind the scenes with Fallout, KOTOR, Project Eternity artist Brian Menze'. Archived from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  14. ^ abc'Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords Designer Diary #4 - Voices'. GameSpot. 31 January 2005. Archived from the original on 16 June 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  15. ^'Kelly Hu of TMNT: She Loves Playing Tough Chicks'. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  16. ^Jesse Schedeen (17 April 2008). 'Top 15 Star Wars Villains: Episode III'. IGN. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  17. ^'Top 100 Videogame Villains'. IGN. Archived from the original on 13 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  18. ^Hugh Sterbakov (5 March 2008). 'The 47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time'. GamePro. Archived from the original on 18 October 2010. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  19. ^'All-Time Greatest Villains'. GameSpot. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  20. ^Robert Workman (26 November 2008). 'Top 25 Evil Masterminds of All Time'. GameDaily. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  21. ^Robert Workman (11 September 2008). 'Our Favorite Characters From Star Wars Video Games'. GameDaily. Archived from the original on 15 October 2008. Retrieved 10 May 2011.CS1 maint: Unfit url (link)
  22. ^Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords Developer Interview 2. GameSpot. 8 May 2004. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
  23. ^ abcJesse Schedeen (25 April 2008). 'Top Star Wars Villains: Fan Favorites'. IGN. Retrieved 8 March 2011.
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