'The High Republic: Cataclysm' - review by Spalanz
『マンダロリアン』のキャラがブラインドボックスに!童友社「BLOKEES スター・ウォーズGVシリーズ『01.マンダロリアン』」が2026年1月発売予定
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Star Wars: Legion - Customizable Jedi General and Knight Unboxed
Thomas Newman will compose the score for Shawn Levy's "Star Wars: Starfighter"
Custom trooper
What is the Retirement Age of a Jedi? by João Pedro de Magalhães

Imagine a story set in a future of abundance, with flying cars and brain implants, yet people still casually die of smallpox. Or a tale of interstellar travel where characters don laser guns yet also call each other on wired telephones. When I read or watch stories taking place in high-tech futuristic societies with space travel and intelligent robots, and yet characters still age, it feels as if they could still catch smallpox. A cringe-inducing anachronism, like an astronaut on Mars listening to music from a cassette player. While aging is currently inevitable, advances in biomedical research and our understanding of aging processes point towards a future where we can design our own biology and define how long we live. Aging Fast and Slow (and Not at All) We can already slow the aging process in animals. For example, in the microscopic roundworm C. elegans, tweaking a single gene can extend its lifespan more than tenfold, allowing animals that normally only live for a few weeks to live for more than six months. If we could apply such discoveries to humans, it would mean people living for over one thousand years. Of course, worms are simple organisms whose adults are mostly composed of nondividing cells, yet scientists can also slow aging in more complex mammals. In the workhorse of biomedical research, the house mouse, dietary and genetic manipulations can extend lifespan by up to fifty percent, postponing age-related diseases and allowing animals to be healthier for longer. …
Sith drawing I made