![]() If 50 Jedi survived, not all of whom would have been full Knights and may have been Padawan learners, that would equate to just 0.5% of all Jedi surviving. ![]() Originally mentioned in some of the Visual Dictionaries from movies such as The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones, and later made Disney Canon by Kanan in Rebels, at the time of the Clone Wars there were around 10,000 Jedi around the galaxy. Star Wars debates often rage on social media and places such as Reddit, where some wonder if the number of Jedi surviving Order 66 might be too many and somewhat waters down the impact that emotional and memorable scene in Revenge of the Sith had, with so many alive in the years since and even beyond the fall of the second Death Star.īut in reality, having even in the range of around 50 Jedi survive the purge would not be a significant number and should still be considered reasonable by all accounts. However, there is of course the tease that Leia Organa could also do so since she is Luke’s sister, whereas modern media has given fans a range of new faces that are adept force and lightsaber wielders. ![]() ![]() The original movies made it feel as if Obi-Wan, Yoda and Luke Skywalker were the only people left that could bring the Jedi Order back. ![]() It was recently revealed that Baylan Skoll, the late Ray Stevenson’s character in Ahsoka, is a survivor of Order 66 and has become a bounty hunter in the intervening years, giving Star Wars fans another former Jedi to learn about.įans of the original trilogy may have some gripes over the number of Jedi that are now gracing our screens, in various forms, with the likes of Kanan Jarrus, Ahsoka Tano, Grogu, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Cal Kestis all surviving the great Jedi purge that brought the Clone Wars to an end. With another Order 66 survivor set to appear in the upcoming Ahsoka series, a question has been raised: are there too many Jedi left in Star Wars? ![]()
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