Ghost-who-walks
Ghost-who-walks
Ghost-who-walks

That last paragraph is supposed to read "There is no higher purpose". Derp-a-derp.

I have the feeling he would've just had a quick cameo role even if he did agree; Wedge was a much more significant character in the expanded universe than in the movies themselves.

""Maybe I'm just a bad person," he said. "Maybe I'm just a bad person.""

I just...I don't know what to say to that...

So basically it's operating by the same laws as the Conservation of Ninjutsu: a single villain is a persistent and dangerous foe, a team of them are glorified mooks spending more time tripping over each other than posing an actual threat.

Don't mess with my trumpets, now.

Am I the only one seeing a lot of similarities between this and the recent Captain America 2? A military organization using advanced technology in order to battle global threats, while a guy in a business suit argues that people want control and protection rather than freedom? Hell, even the scene of a guy jumping on

"Maybe, but I'm not bad with traps myself."

Mind Control reads "Nominated for 'Spell most likely to make your opponent punch a wall'."

When he attacks, he comments "Time's up, let's do this."

The flavor text for Master of Disguise is the best; the card depicts a busty female blood elf, but the text reads "She's actually a male tauren. People don't call him 'Master of Disguise' for nothing."

...What.

Relax, I (and likely the comic as well) was speaking generally.

I know, I was speaking generally.

Abandoning your starter for some OP legendary? For shame.

Original character, do not steal.

The "hand wave" answer is that it's their story, it's their problem to figure out. Some writers at least acknowledged this issue in-story by mentioning the main character(s) trying to call upon their allies, but not being able to get through to them; for example, during Chris Claremont's 80s run on the X-Men, they

It's not the teenage witch soldiers that are the problem, but what they do. A lot of the campier aspects of the genre just don't really jive with a live-action presentation.