Make a theory video about how the dark troopers were the reason why Dins entire clan was killed in season one. It doesn't make any other sense for imps to do it
Now hold on here, like the mechanic lady said, he’s smarter than he looks. We’ve seen him plan ahead for betrayals or take split second action that actually leads to complex plans. He doesn’t just rush the prison droids, he lets them think they have him pinned and outflanks them. He doesn’t just rush in against the other bounty hunters on that prison job, he straight up hunts them like predator, in the dark and/or from the rafters. He uses the flash grenade as a diversion to be able to flank enemies not once but twice. He uses his own ships coolant system to make a cloud so he could get his shots on greef karga. Like he might rush in often but he’s definitely not JUST a bullrusher
He's like a smart guy that is just constantly on 11, beset by situations a bit more urgent than he would like, causing him to appear reactionary and sloppy when he is a bit but mostly he's just showing the signs of yet another hours-long adrenaline dump
I agree. just look at when he rescued the Child in chapter 3. he is not a super careful planner, but he usually does not rush into situations unless he has to.
Absolutely agree. His creative problem solving is actually one of my favorite things about all the fight scenes. He knows how to use all of his gadgets to their full effect aswell as make split second decisions about his environment. I particularily love how he uses his grappling hook in that regard. Because of all that, no fight is repetitive and I really appreciate that.
What sets Din apart from mandos like Bo Katan is that he is a Hunter rather than a Warrior Edit: after much more consideration, I'd amend this to say Din Djarin is more like a warrior of old and Bo Katan is like a soldier. Soldiers have roots in warrior culture but an actual tribal warrior typically does not fight in the same places against the same foes as a soldier. Not to mention the dynamic of individual vs team.
I dont know, i get the idea, but i havent seen much evidence of an actual divergence. (Im a legends person, so if there was something in the new canon, my apologies) Personally, i dont ascribe much to it either way. Maybe his sect spent more time on the zealot side of training. Maybe they didnt have any cul'yvdar [sp] members. But most of all, maybe hes just average or a bit above (for a mando, thats maybe equal to what? Army ranger? Bad ass, but maybe not seal team six. And before anyone comments, i know they have different specialities and roles, but training time can be a good yardstick)
@@blackc1479 I see this as Din is a bounty hunter. Him getting the job done means finding his target and the opportunity to take that target "warm or cold" by himself. We see him shine by changing the odds, using the gattling gun in chapter 1, the flares in chapter 5, the security system in chapter 6, and more. The odds are usually against him, so his skill set is less combative than the mandalorians in chapter 11 we see. We see them silently communicate before emerging from cover and efficiently dispatch threats extremely quickly. This goes for a message in the episode of mandalorians are stronger together, and these mandos are clearly trained and experienced warriors that have fought with each other through many battles. Din seems like he's just there for the ride by comparison, but in the end they are cut off from the bridge by the stormtroopers and Din is in his element: the odds are now stacked against him. He charges with his beskar and clears the doorway with his bombs, claiming victory. The difference is that the mandos aside from Din Djarin stack the odds in their own favor before engaging the enemy, by being the better warrior along with their comrades. Din, as a lone hunter, has the skills to change the balance in his favor on the fly as is common if you're hunting a high value target that may have you outgunned, outmanned, and just plain outmatched. The other mandos likely have faced more traditional combat experience by comparison.
I think the one thing that is appealing about the Mandalorian is that despite his training, instincts and equipment, he is still fundamentally human. Sure he was trained by one of the most militant-mandalorian-clans, but in every single fight its made clear that he does take hits, he does make mistakes. He is not the effortless fighter of some of the series most egregious mary/marty-sues, but we do see an arc where he does make mistakes, learns from them and overcomes the challenges. Yeah sure, Mandalorian attracted us because of its cool gear and equipment - but we stayed because we get to see a character-story where an individual evolves and adapts to the environment - not a pre-packaged super-force-using-mechanic-genius.
Mandalorians in a nutshell. They're badasses but they're imperfect, they perfect their craft through combat to progress and adapt. It's part of their creed.
Flaws make the character more appealing. It's made quite clear that while he is a very strong individual, (and people do hold him in high regard because he is Mandalorian) he is not infallible. He's scarily good at what he does but it's believable when faced with multiple opponents(Like the jawas). I honestly wouldn't find it half as entertaining if he was good at everything and never failed.
His character are mostly amazing exatly because of his struggles, not because he's incapable, but for his skill and determination to overcome his weaknesses as a "mere human" through sheer willpower and fast thinking and learning
He’s the Batman of Star Wars He relies on strategy and gadgets and skill rather than pure strength. Has several ptsd flashbacks. His parents were killed
@@Phobosthemalinois if you to visually see the fuel lines coming from his jetpack to his gauntlets to help you understand that concept then why aren't you saying anything about theres no "fuel lines" on his flamethrower gauntlet either then lol
WHAT?!?! You are just gonna call it a knife? I think his vibro blade is one of his coolest weapons. It's so deadly, because it vibrates a lot and causes massive damage to droids and aliens alike.
@@Firekeyez32 Maybe bc a lightsaber and a blaster bolt are both made of energy and a vibro blade isn’t? It could also be made of beskar too bc, well, Mando.
@@zjmstrash7181 It vibrates really fast though. It’s not just a knife, that’s what the original post is talking about. It’s more than that. I thought it could be made of beskar because it is a weapon that a mandolarian owns. Not sure if it is a mandalorian weapon, but it could be a version just made of beskar. I also said that it could cut through other mando armor bc it would probably be one of the best weapons a person can carry to get past beskar. Blasters don’t work, knives don’t work, and even freaking lightsabers! That just narrows what beskar is vulnerable to so I was being creative. Also, we saw them using the knives against each other so that’s that...
He's beefing on the Razor Crest, but Din is fundamentally poor, like, he's a bounty hunter to provide for his covert and probably uses the fewest credits on himself as possible. The razor crest is kinda endearing like a beat up van you bought in college
I was thinking that too, the man lives in a sewer like... If he's the one topside he's working, not getting bells and whistles for his ship. I mean there were quite a few people to provide for 🤔
It's mentioned that the Razor Crest (RIP) was pre-Empire, which is significant in more than one episode. Like there's a strategy to having something that old. Something useful for a bounty hunter.
Honestly him falling 20 meters (65 feet) off the top of a Jawa Sandcrawler as dead weight, landing on his back, getting back up and immediately making the walk to the Razor Crest before returning to Kuiil's farm by foot is his most impressive feat to me.
Don't forget walking to the costumer dining to deliver his prey, then to the Mandalorian hideout to talk to the Mando lady with a nasty lightsaber burn wound on his tight, to the point he's wimping all the time and almost, and did, fell the stairs. Or when he has to walk long distances in a freaking desert without water or food. He's covered in dark clothes and armour, how he's not having a heat stroke is impressive. I don't think the armour would have a cooling system of some sort, but that's incredible Edit: I just remembered the episode that he's literally being frozen up slowly due to the glacial place they're and he's just "I'm fine" when you can see the actual ice forming in his armour. I believe he don't have a cooling or heating mechanism, or else the armour would not seem so frozen
One thing I really like about this show's depiction of Din Djarin's fighting technique is he actually fights like he is wearing armor. In Star Wars we are used to seeing fighters like jedi who use agility to dodge or deflect attacks like a fencer or duelist. Din on the other hand fights like an armored knight, gauging which blows he can afford let through so that he doesn't have to waste time blocking them and can instead set up his next strike. This is the big difference in real life between armored and unarmored fighting, and I was really pleased to see the show's depiction of hand-to-hand fighting acknowledge this rather than make Din fight as if he weren't wearing armor.
Plus, when you see him move, he's almost ALWAYS doing so in a way that accounts for his armor. Putting heavier plates towards incoming strikes, moving so that there's always armor interposed between him and the enemy, turning so that strikes won't hit the delicate components, etc
Ghost Recon operators from Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon game series: "This is literally not the way at all!" Because your user profile is from the game series
Generation tech: his helmet probably provides low visability. um excuse me have u not seen the shots from inside the helmet its basically an iron man helmet
@@jasomjensai-starwars2652 not really when your whole job is making star wars videos and we've seen inside dins' helmet and bo katans' helmet in season 2 bud they clearly have infared scanners and who knows what other modes.
@@theslimreaper8043 This right here. Honestly this whole video was replete with bad pronunciation, incorrect item names, and straight up errors. Unsubbed.
@@Arcahnslight there aren't many content creators who go as deep into the lore with as much insight as gen tech. I personally find it easy to forgive his mistakes. He mispronounces regular English language as well as star wars names so its not even a lack of content understanding but rather a personal weakness.
to be fair in the times he does run into battle head first he has his reasons for it be that time constraints, but in the prison heist mission he single handily takes each of the team out one by one proving how skilled he is in taking time and planning for an encounter
Din is one of the most resourceful Mandalorians I've had the joy of watching. His armor is amazing, like you said, dude is a frickin tank. I'm already sold on his ability, i think he could best Jango and Baba in a one-on-one, he held his own against Ahsoka in Chapter 13, i watched that scene like 5 times in a row! great content guys, keep it up!
If the three fought, I'd say it'd be a tie. Boba is the best at more conventional fighting (he fights like a soldier would), Jango is the most agile (his style uses a lot of quick moves and turns), and Din is the best armored fighter (he fights by keeping the armor between himself and the enemy as much as possible)
I can appreciate that Mando isn’t the typical cliched “mowes through 10 enemies like theyre nothing and never gets hit” superhero trope. I like how he has weaknesses and isn’t OP. It’s realistic. At the same time HES A FRIGGIN MANDALORIAN! I’ve seen him take hits that he definitely shouldn’t have taken and im just like “how did he not block THAT?!
On the opposite end of the spectrum, none of his compatriots ever get hurt or killed except kuil who was kind of expendable to the plot. They killed like 100 stormtroopers with zero human casualties.
i mean they do treat stormtroopers in this show exactly like that. In fact most enemies that aren't straight up integral to the plot are literal crash test dummies that exist solely to be one hit killed whereas mando can basically survive being glassed from orbit because of beskar plot armor. not perfect by any means but damn its phenomenal
He has weaknesses? What show are you watching? Every battle he just stands in front of the enemies and tanks all the blaster bolts, he is literally invincible in small arms battles.
@Podcast - SørenCast Z the stuff you pack for a specific task. I heard it first as military slang (though videogames use it a lot), but you can consider the thing you carry in your everyday life (phone, keys, money, whatever) as your "everyday loadout" ^^
I think I read somewhere that the Mandalorian unarmed combat style was called 'Mandalorian Core', being sort of like Combatives or Krav Maga...something like that. Wouldn't mind a video on the martial arts of the Star Wars universe...
Yeah, I think his usual take downs revolve around a stealthy approach. He's a bounty hunter, his main weapon was a long range weapon and from what we've seen of him he does tend to create as much space as possible between him and his opponent. I do think Din is smarter than people give him credit for but he does have his moments where he just says fuck it like with the jawas, or taking those blasters straight on. Man knows what he's about and I can respect that.
@@dontakami most of the time, when he's rushing, like the jawas or the hallway scene, it's most likely there's no other way around or opening to exploit, nor any other way to solve the problem, beside rushing like a maniac
I think compared to other mando's like Bo Katan, he's weaker, not literally strength but his skills and all. However, he sure is one hell of a resourceful and smart thinking fella. His on the fly tactics are fun to watch and how quickly he adapts is just enjoyable. He may not be the most skilled but oh god, he's creative.
I think the Children of the watch uses a old school approach to beskar. Mostly because I'm seen Bo-Katan and Clan Wrens armour being high durable, but light.
@@kappsa5365 That doesn't mean much. His armor for sure out classes theirs. Idt other mandalorians have full beskar. They dont shrug off shots like he does. They don't have confidence in their armor like that.
Which makes sense, as he's likely trained 95% of his life under the assumption of having full armor (so he's used to having added weight and minor mobility impediments), and armor that OUTRIGHT negates a LOT of incoming damage (so he's trained to let the armor do the work)
is it just me or does anyone else want to see more about his training as a kid? Also, when do they get their helmets? When they finish training or what?
In episode one there are two kids running around in civilian clothes but wearing helmets. Probably everyone gets some training as a kid, but you reach a certain age and take the creed, and then you get the helmet and the real training begins
If it's like a religion then maybe when they swear the Creed (like getting baptized) is when they get their helmets. That's what the 'extra' beskar for the foundlings is for. I guess that if they want more armour pieces made of beskar they have to get them themselves.
He’s a quick thinker, and able to make decisions that can turn the tide of a fight in seconds. I don’t think he’s as doing something like leading all of mandalore, but he has been shown to be able to rally forces to take down enemies. For example, in season one when he and Cara trained that village to take on bandits and that giant machine thing. Or in season two, when he helped bring the tusken raiders and people of mas pelgo together to take on the Krayt dragon. He’s more in his element when fighting than leading, which makes me wonder what will happen with the dark saber
It could be that he takes up a more passive leadership role (acting less as an iron-fisted "We do this my way or else" leader, and instead acts more as a hands off regent (a style driven by his exposure to all sorts of views both within his culture (from the extremist views of the Children of the Watch, to Bo-Katan's more moderate views, to Boba's superficial disregard for the way), and without (people like Kuiil, Pelli, Cara, Ashoka, and Mayfield)).
Din follows the new canon line of "Badass but average." The new canon has making characters that are badass but in their own order their normal. Cal, Kanan, and Din are badasses but compare to others of their type and their movie counterparts their nothing special.
@@jonasgulbrandsen7816 Well, the Inquisitors were Cals main enemies, he seems to be on a similar power level than they are, maybe a little stronger but inexperienced. And it is established that the Inquisitors are not that powerfull. I really like that we get good characters with worthy opponents, who don't break the balance of power, as somebody like Starkiller would do.
whereas legends had badass but overpowered. personally, I prefer realistic over stunning. As cool as those stories are Starkiller, Luke Skywalker, Bane, and many more are all Gary Stus.
If somewhere down the line mandi relaxes his standards about always wearing his armor, I'd love to see him get captured and fight his way out of captivity without his armor (obviously he'd grab his armor on the way out) but it'd be interesting to see him adapt or even abandon his usual tactics to account for no armor.
That would be interesting. I don't know if I want the show to force him to completely give up his views, cos that feels a little disrespectful to him, (I can see Mando taking off the helmet in front of trusted people but keeping it on around everyone else). But I can see him getting captured and some enemy taking his armor away to limit his ability to break out. Would be real fun to see him beat them anyways
We saw some of that In s2 Ep 7 when he fought off the pirates while wearing storm trooper armor. He took some pretty big hits and it looked like he had trouble adjusting his fighting style with weaker armor. He's obviously skilled and I agree, an episode dedicated to seeing him fight without the armor would be amazing.
I felt like the depiction they were going for in the show is really trying to show that he isn't a Jedi or Sith, or any kind of force user at all. In a galaxy of literal space wizards, Mando is just human, but also a human with a technological advantage. He's clever, but not always. He's talented, but not impossibly so. He's concerned that certain feats are impossible, but sometimes he bravely attempts them despite his fear. He doesn't seek them out intentionally but desperate situations lead him to attempt more desperate actions, often only saved by his technological advantage. When he charges into a fight, it's because he knows it's his last option. He's decisive and acts without hesitation, a hallmark of a fighter who relies on honed survival instinct, and not one relying what is basically magic to enhance their perception and/or reactions. This is in comparison to a Jedi, whose calmness and confidence in their abilities see them act diplomatic and nonviolent until the very last moment. Also Sith, guided by their emotions, often blindly attack first regardless of their foe, and are more often caught unready or unprepared for unanticipated developments, relying solely on passion and power. (Of course that mold fits less for the conniving type Sith, but even then that kind of mentality is what defines them.) Like others have said, I don't think he's just charging on all the time, but occasionally when he has no other option he does take the most direct and decisive route. A real do or die mentality when the chips are down, but that to me speaks thematically to what and who he is, a Mandalorian. Mandalorians are great warriors and renowned bounty hunters, and Din displays those qualities, but their other most defining aspect as part of the Star Wars universe is that they are NOT force users. I think the writers/choreographers are trying to convey that fact through the action sequences.
Having made and worn helmets based on Din's, I can say that your field of view isn't actually as restricted as you would think. That horizontal slit is long enough that it doesn't affect your peripheral vision hardly at all, and the central vertical part means you can see in front of you pretty easily. Looking down and to the side can be hard, but only if you have a helmet that doesn't fit. Worn properly, your eyes should be aligned with that horizontal slit, which is wide enough that your field of view is practically unaffected. Rant over
The Razorcrest deserves more credit. Being that it's old it also tends to fly under the radar... literally since it's missing some of the systems that other ships have for tracking it, making it grate as long as he's not being pulled over. For all it's size it's pretty maneuverable, maybe that says more for his piloting skill, but having a ship that can take everything it's been through and still be easy enough to fix when it takes damage is also a plus.
I wouldn't say he lacks strategy. I'd say he normally doesn't waste the time on strategizing because experience has taught him that all the planning in the world rarely pans out
I mean, Millenium Falcon and Han are all pronounced differently by different characters. There are great amounts of names that are pronounced differently throughout Star Wars and nobody mentions that.
@@chrismarple I mean, yes. There accents throughout the series, Bo Katan had been pronounced 3 different ways, Han two different ways, Falcon three different ways. Just how it is.
I can't believe that you, Allen, the most thorough of the thorough, didn't bring up the fact that Din's knife is a **vibroknife**, far superior to the standard steel dagger. After all, he killed a mudhorn with it. Seriously, these are wicked weapons that I was thrilled to finally see in live action.
Bro Dins stealthy as shit too, when he was on that republic prison ship he managed to sneak up and get the drop on those mercenaries that betrayed him, may as well call him Din Fisher
He thinks on the fly and adapts to every situation and battle with his variety of weapons and equipment and he scrapes by. But I like that, it shows he’s not invincible like some 😉and that shows his humanity. My favourite Star Wars character for sure.
3:15 well yes armor are passed down generations to generations, but not literally give ur kids the same damaged armor u wore Sabine said it in Rebels, old inherited armors are smelted down and reforged into new ones for the young so itll be as durable as new
I think my favorite scene in season 1 was mando fighting the deathtrooper in hand to hand combat, it shows that he is actually pretty skilled as death troopers are basically the best of the best with a few augmentations aswell
Honestly I dont think Boba could teach him much considering dudes not even a real mandalorian. The most he could teach him would be some tips for shooting. Bo on the other hand..
@Don homer what is Boba's greatest feat. Din took out a Krayt Dragon, defeated eight New Republic droids at once, and rescued the Child from an Imperial bunker. Boba, on the other hand, shot at Luke once on cloud city, wrapped Luke up in a grapple line for a second before Luke escaped, and survived a Sarlacc Pit. Boba is impressive, but he is overrated.
@@jasomjensai-starwars2652 Boba also fought somebody on par with Asaaj Ventress in close quarters combat, at the age of fifteen, and managed to come out of it unscathed. Plus he was trained by, and was the clone of Jango Fett, the greatest bounty hunter of his time. Comparing the feats of somebody who has an entire show dedicated to them, and the feats of somebody with a few minutes of screen time in two trilogies, is nonsensical. We can infer based on the favoritism that both Darth Vader, AND Jabba the Hutt showed Boba, that he was unrivaled in terms of skill. He was good enough to survive a Sarlaac pit without the use of his jet pack.
I quibble a bit with the description of Din's tactics. While he is very aggressive generally, I've noticed he likes to come from unexpected angles and wrong-foot his enemies when he can. For example, when he goes to rescue baby Yoda he actually sets up a pretty clever breaching situation by luring the Storm Troopers out of the front entrance, then blowing a hole in a side wall and entering that way. He then proceeds to ambush the troops sent to investigate, and makes a lot of good use of darkness. He pulls a similar maneuver against the criminals in the episode on the prison ship. So while I'd say Din is very much an ATTACK! kind of guy and makes a fair number of mistakes, he still uses his head when he's in a fight. I wonder if this ties into Mandalorian culture in some way, maybe their traditional fighting style is based on always trying to seize the initiative and attack opponents as aggressively as possible.
Din Djarin is also.mostly effective against human size opponents. Large Animals aren't really his forté unless he has a sizeable support force and time to prepare (Krayt Dragon)
It's not really reckless. It's actually closer to traditional armored combat. He's never just taking the shots directly, he's positioning himself so that they hit the parts of the armor they'll do the least damage, and he conserves the most energy.
Obviously filmed before episode 4 of season 2 where we see the might of the Razor Crest against the Tie fighters. Not bad for and old beat up unmanoeuverable and slow ship!
What other ship would you recommend for someone like the Mandalorian and his type of work? He needed the storage space of the Razor Crest for bounties, so wouldn't something more maneuverable cut down on his room?
It depends on what kind of money you put into your ship. I can guarantee you that there were some Imperials at Endor thinking: „We are flying TIE Interceptors and we can‘t loose this freighter that keeps shooting us down.“ Just before the Millennium Falcon Shot them down. And the Falcon still had Space for Cargo and passengers. Ok, it is also a Hangar Queen, constantly needing maintenance.
i think saying that he rushes head first in is fair enough but i feel you you undersold his quick thinking, Din has been shown many times to know the limits of his armor and use it to his advantage, headbutting punches to ruin peoples hands or using many of his tools in many ways to deal with opponents, he even uses his environment to fight like when he was fighting the hulking figure of mister cra- i mean Clancy Brown devaronian (can't remember their name) he used the doors to knock them out after a fight that didn't go that well for him in hand to hand so he switched it up to win, even that hallways part with all the storm troopers, they were blasting down the hallways so there wasn't really any other way down, so much like a medieval knight he trusted his armor and took more than a few hits to make an opening so they could go on. he uses flanking tactics (like in the prison when he runs up behind the droids while the rest of the group is distracting them) and is very good at thinking on the spot, seeing opening and things he can use as weapons, such as the gun in the first episode that he used to just destroy everyone. Sometimes he is a little hotheaded and should really think things through a bit more (like with the jawas) but he really is a smart fighter that knows his own limits and knows when to switch things up
Depends on the location hit or what you hit when you land. Because the standard "i throw a person" if focused on the head rather than the chest like it's clearly almost always been, would immediately snap a neck.
The children of the watch's tradition of martial arts seems based on maneuver, equipment and quick thinking. Specifically the back street brawler's focus on savagery and surprise over MMA's focus on leverage and positioning. If Djin meets Thrawn he will have his but handed to him. Edit: a good real world example of the ancient Mandalorian would be ancient Germany. I would think their evolution matches pretty well. And the Neo crusaders would be Germany under Fredrik the Great.
@@Aidan-zc8wx Revan learn war through the school of hard nocks. Ender Wiggin eat, sleep and breathed war his entire life. Ezra is a street punk who didn't understood the empathy that Thrawn showed him, which honestly went against Ezra's character.
@@Aidan-zc8wx I'm personally looking forward to when they release what happen to the two of them. If they survived I don't think Ezra well remain the type of Jedi Kannan was. Imagine a Thrawn trained Ezra. I would like to see a slower and more thoughtful Ezra, a warrior who wars because they carry the weight of civilization on their backs. So, basically Ender.
@@AdmiralStoicRum I was talking about him saying that the razorcrest wasn't good in a dogfight which it proved to be (in the hands of a good pilot that is).
He clearly needs to learn how use a spear as a *spear*, and maybe find Ahsoka again to get some tips on how to not cut his face off wielding the darksaber.
Jurassic Kaiju King depends on which era of gar saxxon I think clone wars era sax would have a better variety of weapons while imperial sax has a more standardized load out he has experience on his side. I think in both cases this fight ends in the mid to late fight unless mando lands a lucky shot with his rife in the early rounds. Also the matter of the whistleing birds, the show hasn’t shown any counter measures to them so if sax gets to close its game over. I think mando only slightly edges out in that case, but if you takes those off the table in a hand to hand situation, I’d say about equal clone wars sax and imperial sax being more skilled due to experience
@@issaicx Din would no doubt overtake year one Ashoka. Ashoka in her early days failed to fully block the fire from Aurra Sing. Din has proven some very fast fire rate with his handgun, along with great accuracy. Din also has his jetpack as a solid movement option to help counter her force mobility edge. His flamethrower is also a problem, being 1 of many anti-jedi tools that mando's had. Din also has that crazy taser on the end of his rifle, though melee is not something he should be active in against a jedi. These generally would allow him to overtake an early Ashoka for a solid majority: if they were to encounter each other. Her passive behavior also does her no favors against an opponent like Din.
BigPapa N.G the only reason I say maybe is because the force is the wild card in this situation. Din has not gone up against a force user only witness a small fraction of its use, and definitely not the way it was used in the clone wars. Plus Ashoka is also a creative thinker like din himself. I say a 60/40 spilt with din winning most fights . I do see Ashoka winning some in the early fight due to some force moves. Din can easily score in all three stages of the fight with mid fight being his sweet spot , I only see Ashoka making it to the late fight if she plays defensively the entire time and using some cheeky maneuvers to stay alive but I don’t think she could finish the fight. Year two Ashoka would be 55/45 split still in dins favor, year three I’d say 65/35 in Ashokas favor.
Slightly more stronger than a normal human, I mean he is not born in Mandalore but his physique is much more stronger than a normal human he can carry heavy stuff and travel miles and miles. And Beskar are heavy means that he is literally carrying a full plate 13th century heavy plate armor and never takes off if necessary like in the disguise ep. Maybe under that shiny armor is a muscular beast.
One defense for his combat prowess is he is only as skilled as the scene demands him to be. When it showed two imperials at a console who had the obligatory destroy it before they come it shows the protagonists who up to that point had competent aim blatantly missing so the bad guys could shoot the computers then be dropped by suddenly accurate fire. The rest of said episode had nothing but accurate shots, when the plot demands someone misses, they miss.
5:18 "The mandalorians became obsessed with beating jedi and now are completely overprepared for normal enemies" Paraphrased I know but that is hillarious.
That's one I thing I didn't like from the episode. The TIEs used zero of their speed/turning advantage after the initial surprise. He should have had to trick them, or get his ass saved again by Captain Teva.
@@pyRoy6 He did manage to outmaneuver 2 X-wings 2 episodes ago, so it makes sense that the Razor Crest can outfight 3 TIE's, which are weaker in comparison to the X-Wing.
@@spiderboy43 That's what I mean. He did that wild gravity trick to get out of that mess against the X-Wings, and they weren't even wanting to kill him. Against the TIEs, he won a straight-up dogfight. No tricks, or anything. The TIEs just didn't bother to use their advantages.
@@spiderboy43 Speed, maneuverability...the typical advantages a fighter would have over a gunship or transport. This is based on the description of the Razor Crest in this video (and also, I guess, Wookieepedia).
I don't want him to get an entirely new ship, but I would want to see him give it and overhaul with some nice upgrades, like a turret, some missiles/bombs in that huge cargo hold and a nice paint job :D
Am i the only one that wants Din Jarin to get a new, better ship? It has iconic features but seeing a mando come out of it is the equivalent of seeing bill gates come out of a 1996 Ford Taurus
Big thanks to Ridge for sending me this wallet and supporting our channel. Here's their site if you wanna check them out:
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Cool but prefer firearms, lol😂
ok
Is there a beskar Ridge wallet? That would be great just in case.
Make a theory video about how the dark troopers were the reason why Dins entire clan was killed in season one. It doesn't make any other sense for imps to do it
Is his knife a viro blade?
"his beloved razor crest" well that didn't age well
@City Watch Guard the only ship I could see is the imperial escort ship that he and Boba took for the attack against Gideon.
@City Watch Guard it has a skeleton crew of a hundred. 5 people aren’t doing much with it for very long
@@claytondavis6835 100 people can fit in that????
He can afford a new ship with the beskar staff he got, especially since he doesn't need it anymore.....
Oof yeah. u_u R.I.P. Razor Crest. You were a tough bucket of bolts.
Now hold on here, like the mechanic lady said, he’s smarter than he looks. We’ve seen him plan ahead for betrayals or take split second action that actually leads to complex plans. He doesn’t just rush the prison droids, he lets them think they have him pinned and outflanks them. He doesn’t just rush in against the other bounty hunters on that prison job, he straight up hunts them like predator, in the dark and/or from the rafters. He uses the flash grenade as a diversion to be able to flank enemies not once but twice. He uses his own ships coolant system to make a cloud so he could get his shots on greef karga. Like he might rush in often but he’s definitely not JUST a bullrusher
He's like a smart guy that is just constantly on 11, beset by situations a bit more urgent than he would like, causing him to appear reactionary and sloppy when he is a bit but mostly he's just showing the signs of yet another hours-long adrenaline dump
“His ship lacks speed but can outrun a pair of X-wings
I agree. just look at when he rescued the Child in chapter 3. he is not a super careful planner, but he usually does not rush into situations unless he has to.
@@jonsnow947 Also those were stormtroopers XD he probably wasn't to worried about such shitty fighters
Absolutely agree. His creative problem solving is actually one of my favorite things about all the fight scenes. He knows how to use all of his gadgets to their full effect aswell as make split second decisions about his environment. I particularily love how he uses his grappling hook in that regard. Because of all that, no fight is repetitive and I really appreciate that.
What sets Din apart from mandos like Bo Katan is that he is a Hunter rather than a Warrior
Edit: after much more consideration, I'd amend this to say Din Djarin is more like a warrior of old and Bo Katan is like a soldier. Soldiers have roots in warrior culture but an actual tribal warrior typically does not fight in the same places against the same foes as a soldier. Not to mention the dynamic of individual vs team.
Exactly my thoughts. Different skillset but still a great fighter.
Almost like Boba
@@christianjacobson4560 boba is in a whole other class than din
I dont know, i get the idea, but i havent seen much evidence of an actual divergence. (Im a legends person, so if there was something in the new canon, my apologies)
Personally, i dont ascribe much to it either way. Maybe his sect spent more time on the zealot side of training. Maybe they didnt have any cul'yvdar [sp] members. But most of all, maybe hes just average or a bit above (for a mando, thats maybe equal to what? Army ranger? Bad ass, but maybe not seal team six. And before anyone comments, i know they have different specialities and roles, but training time can be a good yardstick)
@@blackc1479 I see this as Din is a bounty hunter. Him getting the job done means finding his target and the opportunity to take that target "warm or cold" by himself. We see him shine by changing the odds, using the gattling gun in chapter 1, the flares in chapter 5, the security system in chapter 6, and more. The odds are usually against him, so his skill set is less combative than the mandalorians in chapter 11 we see.
We see them silently communicate before emerging from cover and efficiently dispatch threats extremely quickly. This goes for a message in the episode of mandalorians are stronger together, and these mandos are clearly trained and experienced warriors that have fought with each other through many battles. Din seems like he's just there for the ride by comparison, but in the end they are cut off from the bridge by the stormtroopers and Din is in his element: the odds are now stacked against him. He charges with his beskar and clears the doorway with his bombs, claiming victory.
The difference is that the mandos aside from Din Djarin stack the odds in their own favor before engaging the enemy, by being the better warrior along with their comrades. Din, as a lone hunter, has the skills to change the balance in his favor on the fly as is common if you're hunting a high value target that may have you outgunned, outmanned, and just plain outmatched. The other mandos likely have faced more traditional combat experience by comparison.
I think the one thing that is appealing about the Mandalorian is that despite his training, instincts and equipment, he is still fundamentally human. Sure he was trained by one of the most militant-mandalorian-clans, but in every single fight its made clear that he does take hits, he does make mistakes. He is not the effortless fighter of some of the series most egregious mary/marty-sues, but we do see an arc where he does make mistakes, learns from them and overcomes the challenges.
Yeah sure, Mandalorian attracted us because of its cool gear and equipment - but we stayed because we get to see a character-story where an individual evolves and adapts to the environment - not a pre-packaged super-force-using-mechanic-genius.
Mandalorians in a nutshell. They're badasses but they're imperfect, they perfect their craft through combat to progress and adapt. It's part of their creed.
yeah i agree, im glad they didnt make him overpowered
Flaws make the character more appealing. It's made quite clear that while he is a very strong individual, (and people do hold him in high regard because he is Mandalorian) he is not infallible. He's scarily good at what he does but it's believable when faced with multiple opponents(Like the jawas). I honestly wouldn't find it half as entertaining if he was good at everything and never failed.
His character are mostly amazing exatly because of his struggles, not because he's incapable, but for his skill and determination to overcome his weaknesses as a "mere human" through sheer willpower and fast thinking and learning
He’s the Batman of Star Wars
He relies on strategy and gadgets and skill rather than pure strength. Has several ptsd flashbacks. His parents were killed
He also takes in an orphan. Robin=Grogu
He’s like a gunslinger type of mando. You don’t see him do melee combat that much.
wow i never realized that before 😂😂
Only better, 'cause he's willing to kill and doesn't bullshit about it.
But batman had training for several life times
"Has a flame thrower that draws fuel from his jet pack." I don't know, he used both flame throwers long before he got a jet pack.
@Dizi Editleri no fuck off
@Dizi Editleri sucks to be you.
@Joseph Douek that makes sense.
@Joseph Douek there is no proof of that there arent any fuellines from his jetpack to his gaunlets...
@@Phobosthemalinois if you to visually see the fuel lines coming from his jetpack to his gauntlets to help you understand that concept then why aren't you saying anything about theres no "fuel lines" on his flamethrower gauntlet either then lol
0:05 “My name is...What’s my name again?”
The Stepfather:"Wait a minute! Who am I here?" :P
I think the dolphins may be back...
Blink 182?
@Dizi Editleri eat shit. Begging like this will not work. Just go make good material, promote it on your social media, like a normal fucking person
@@captainkiwi77 exactly
WHAT?!?! You are just gonna call it a knife? I think his vibro blade is one of his coolest weapons. It's so deadly, because it vibrates a lot and causes massive damage to droids and aliens alike.
They probably have it to cut through other Mando armor
@@clausdaboss3220 if lightsabers can deflect beskar what makes you think a vibroblade will cut through it lol
@@Firekeyez32 Maybe bc a lightsaber and a blaster bolt are both made of energy and a vibro blade isn’t? It could also be made of beskar too bc, well, Mando.
@@clausdaboss3220 That makes no sense, if it was beskar it would just bounce off, that's like saying rock breaks rock.
@@zjmstrash7181 It vibrates really fast though. It’s not just a knife, that’s what the original post is talking about. It’s more than that. I thought it could be made of beskar because it is a weapon that a mandolarian owns. Not sure if it is a mandalorian weapon, but it could be a version just made of beskar. I also said that it could cut through other mando armor bc it would probably be one of the best weapons a person can carry to get past beskar. Blasters don’t work, knives don’t work, and even freaking lightsabers! That just narrows what beskar is vulnerable to so I was being creative. Also, we saw them using the knives against each other so that’s that...
He's beefing on the Razor Crest, but Din is fundamentally poor, like, he's a bounty hunter to provide for his covert and probably uses the fewest credits on himself as possible. The razor crest is kinda endearing like a beat up van you bought in college
I was thinking that too, the man lives in a sewer like... If he's the one topside he's working, not getting bells and whistles for his ship. I mean there were quite a few people to provide for 🤔
yeah, he gave everything he got in the first bounty right back to the covert- what's he pay gas with?
It's mentioned that the Razor Crest (RIP) was pre-Empire, which is significant in more than one episode. Like there's a strategy to having something that old. Something useful for a bounty hunter.
@@tonibourlon896 I think they said it's significant because it couldn't be detected or traced by newer ships, so it's like a "ghost" in a way
Honestly the razor crest is like the rich van to me.
0:08 "dinjerin" I am convinced that this man makes an effort to mispronounce every single name in Star Wars
lmao he probably does
This is bugging me and I want to yell at someone
@@ohmygoshitscole here’s a suggestion yell at yourself
Yeah, that was cringy.
I ain't even mad
You forgot one of his abilities, he makes anything cinematic af
Honestly him falling 20 meters (65 feet) off the top of a Jawa Sandcrawler as dead weight, landing on his back, getting back up and immediately making the walk to the Razor Crest before returning to Kuiil's farm by foot is his most impressive feat to me.
Don't forget walking to the costumer dining to deliver his prey, then to the Mandalorian hideout to talk to the Mando lady with a nasty lightsaber burn wound on his tight, to the point he's wimping all the time and almost, and did, fell the stairs.
Or when he has to walk long distances in a freaking desert without water or food. He's covered in dark clothes and armour, how he's not having a heat stroke is impressive. I don't think the armour would have a cooling system of some sort, but that's incredible
Edit: I just remembered the episode that he's literally being frozen up slowly due to the glacial place they're and he's just "I'm fine" when you can see the actual ice forming in his armour. I believe he don't have a cooling or heating mechanism, or else the armour would not seem so frozen
One thing I really like about this show's depiction of Din Djarin's fighting technique is he actually fights like he is wearing armor. In Star Wars we are used to seeing fighters like jedi who use agility to dodge or deflect attacks like a fencer or duelist. Din on the other hand fights like an armored knight, gauging which blows he can afford let through so that he doesn't have to waste time blocking them and can instead set up his next strike. This is the big difference in real life between armored and unarmored fighting, and I was really pleased to see the show's depiction of hand-to-hand fighting acknowledge this rather than make Din fight as if he weren't wearing armor.
Plus, when you see him move, he's almost ALWAYS doing so in a way that accounts for his armor. Putting heavier plates towards incoming strikes, moving so that there's always armor interposed between him and the enemy, turning so that strikes won't hit the delicate components, etc
“I’m a Mandalorian. Weapons are part of my religion.”
I'm an American, guns are part of my religion
yeah I was about to say we already have that irl in America hahaha
No weapons are my religion
this is the way
I'm a Navajoan from an AU, swords are part of my religion
Random Thug: Hey this guy is wearing a helmet made of the strongest material in the known galaxy, Imma punch it.
Crikey!
Let's mug'em!
CLANG! Ow that broke my hand I’m gonna try again it should work now because I now have twice as many bones in my hand
@@matthewdominguez4350 that is some compelling math
@@Raeinok pemdas or some shit
Beskar is amazing armour. But do you know what is the most invincible armour of all? Rey's plot armour.
This is the way
Can we just leave the sequel movies behind us Pls 😭
Understatement of the millennium.
@@blackduncan9812 not until Disney leaves them in the garbage can.
What about Anakin's plot armor in episode 1? 😭
Din Djarin: "This is the way."
Mandalorian: "This is the way."
Ghost Recon operators from Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon game series: "This is literally not the way at all!" Because your user profile is from the game series
@@ClayandPapyrus r\wooooosh
@@zachallan7545 that was a joke kind of like Palpatine is a sith lord so you were r/wooshed lol
@@ClayandPapyrus sorry... sarcasm or satire is hard to pick up on, online
This is the way
Generation tech: his helmet probably provides low visability. um excuse me have u not seen the shots from inside the helmet its basically an iron man helmet
Most helmets lower visibility, so it is an understandable mistake.
@@jasomjensai-starwars2652 not really when your whole job is making star wars videos and we've seen inside dins' helmet and bo katans' helmet in season 2 bud they clearly have infared scanners and who knows what other modes.
@@theslimreaper8043 This right here. Honestly this whole video was replete with bad pronunciation, incorrect item names, and straight up errors. Unsubbed.
@@Arcahnslight grow up mate
@@Arcahnslight there aren't many content creators who go as deep into the lore with as much insight as gen tech. I personally find it easy to forgive his mistakes. He mispronounces regular English language as well as star wars names so its not even a lack of content understanding but rather a personal weakness.
to be fair in the times he does run into battle head first he has his reasons for it be that time constraints, but in the prison heist mission he single handily takes each of the team out one by one proving how skilled he is in taking time and planning for an encounter
“Hopefully he can upgrade his ship”...
Well, THAT aged well!
My ship is already destroyed, I hope so.
Allen: He's (Din Djarin's) pretty much impossible to defeat.
Thumbnail: Mando electrocuted by 1 foot brown-black scrappers
Me: *Ironic*
@@droneant7602 Really? didn't look like it lol
Grogu is closer to 1 foot... The Jawas, about 3.
Din is one of the most resourceful Mandalorians I've had the joy of watching. His armor is amazing, like you said, dude is a frickin tank. I'm already sold on his ability, i think he could best Jango and Baba in a one-on-one, he held his own against Ahsoka in Chapter 13, i watched that scene like 5 times in a row!
great content guys, keep it up!
If you think Din can best Jango and Boba you’ve obviously don’t know anything about Jango and Boba
If the three fought, I'd say it'd be a tie. Boba is the best at more conventional fighting (he fights like a soldier would), Jango is the most agile (his style uses a lot of quick moves and turns), and Din is the best armored fighter (he fights by keeping the armor between himself and the enemy as much as possible)
I can appreciate that Mando isn’t the typical cliched “mowes through 10 enemies like theyre nothing and never gets hit” superhero trope. I like how he has weaknesses and isn’t OP. It’s realistic.
At the same time HES A FRIGGIN MANDALORIAN! I’ve seen him take hits that he definitely shouldn’t have taken and im just like “how did he not block THAT?!
On the opposite end of the spectrum, none of his compatriots ever get hurt or killed except kuil who was kind of expendable to the plot. They killed like 100 stormtroopers with zero human casualties.
@@jackfarns6448 RIP IG-11. You will be forgotten by most, but not all.
@@spiderboy43 notice I said human. Rip IG-11 I agree
i mean they do treat stormtroopers in this show exactly like that. In fact most enemies that aren't straight up integral to the plot are literal crash test dummies that exist solely to be one hit killed whereas mando can basically survive being glassed from orbit because of beskar plot armor. not perfect by any means but damn its phenomenal
He has weaknesses? What show are you watching? Every battle he just stands in front of the enemies and tanks all the blaster bolts, he is literally invincible in small arms battles.
A mando's loadout MUST be insane.
Look at their opposition xD
so true
Wym?
Look at what they usually fight.
Trained soldiers, big beasts, Force users, multiple opponents at once, etc
@Podcast - SørenCast Z the stuff you pack for a specific task.
I heard it first as military slang (though videogames use it a lot), but you can consider the thing you carry in your everyday life (phone, keys, money, whatever) as your "everyday loadout" ^^
Plus they used to fight jedi
I think I read somewhere that the Mandalorian unarmed combat style was called 'Mandalorian Core', being sort of like Combatives or Krav Maga...something like that. Wouldn't mind a video on the martial arts of the Star Wars universe...
I WOULD LOVE THAT!
Teras Kasi, anyone?
I think its like boxing
There were two episodes [ep. 1 & 6] where he demonstrated how he could sneak up on someone like a ninja.
Yeah, I think his usual take downs revolve around a stealthy approach. He's a bounty hunter, his main weapon was a long range weapon and from what we've seen of him he does tend to create as much space as possible between him and his opponent. I do think Din is smarter than people give him credit for but he does have his moments where he just says fuck it like with the jawas, or taking those blasters straight on. Man knows what he's about and I can respect that.
@@dontakami most of the time, when he's rushing, like the jawas or the hallway scene, it's most likely there's no other way around or opening to exploit, nor any other way to solve the problem, beside rushing like a maniac
I think compared to other mando's like Bo Katan, he's weaker, not literally strength but his skills and all.
However, he sure is one hell of a resourceful and smart thinking fella. His on the fly tactics are fun to watch and how quickly he adapts is just enjoyable. He may not be the most skilled but oh god, he's creative.
I think the Children of the watch uses a old school approach to beskar. Mostly because I'm seen Bo-Katan and Clan Wrens armour being high durable, but light.
Din got them to the bridge of the ship before it crashed, not Bo.
well the problem with that is bo katan and most of the other Mandalorians are way more experienced and older than him
@@kappsa5365 That doesn't mean much. His armor for sure out classes theirs. Idt other mandalorians have full beskar. They dont shrug off shots like he does. They don't have confidence in their armor like that.
@@WhatsTheWordHipHop dude bo katan has been fighting since before he was a foundling im pretty sure it means alot
I wouldn't call him a " rather weak individual" he's definitely an above average physically capable fighter, although he doesn't have much grace.
Which makes sense, as he's likely trained 95% of his life under the assumption of having full armor (so he's used to having added weight and minor mobility impediments), and armor that OUTRIGHT negates a LOT of incoming damage (so he's trained to let the armor do the work)
Alan: On with the video.
UA-cam: Nah, let's stick an unskippable add right here.
Unskippable DOUBLE ad
LeT’s PlAy RaId ShAdOw LeDgEnDs
StArT nOw FoR fReE
i hate double 15 second unskipable ads.
@@beevstew1896 yes, and it takes forever for them to load
@@doglover334 Why no adblock?
is it just me or does anyone else want to see more about his training as a kid? Also, when do they get their helmets? When they finish training or what?
In episode one there are two kids running around in civilian clothes but wearing helmets. Probably everyone gets some training as a kid, but you reach a certain age and take the creed, and then you get the helmet and the real training begins
If it's like a religion then maybe when they swear the Creed (like getting baptized) is when they get their helmets. That's what the 'extra' beskar for the foundlings is for. I guess that if they want more armour pieces made of beskar they have to get them themselves.
That pistol he’s got is like a space .44 magnum. Slow firing and heavier bolt but damn it’ll put you on your ass.
He’s a quick thinker, and able to make decisions that can turn the tide of a fight in seconds. I don’t think he’s as doing something like leading all of mandalore, but he has been shown to be able to rally forces to take down enemies. For example, in season one when he and Cara trained that village to take on bandits and that giant machine thing. Or in season two, when he helped bring the tusken raiders and people of mas pelgo together to take on the Krayt dragon. He’s more in his element when fighting than leading, which makes me wonder what will happen with the dark saber
It could be that he takes up a more passive leadership role (acting less as an iron-fisted "We do this my way or else" leader, and instead acts more as a hands off regent (a style driven by his exposure to all sorts of views both within his culture (from the extremist views of the Children of the Watch, to Bo-Katan's more moderate views, to Boba's superficial disregard for the way), and without (people like Kuiil, Pelli, Cara, Ashoka, and Mayfield)).
Din follows the new canon line of "Badass but average." The new canon has making characters that are badass but in their own order their normal. Cal, Kanan, and Din are badasses but compare to others of their type and their movie counterparts their nothing special.
Agreed, but i have a feeling we think cal is average cuz we sucked at the game
That's a good way to put it
@@jonasgulbrandsen7816 Well, the Inquisitors were Cals main enemies, he seems to be on a similar power level than they are, maybe a little stronger but inexperienced. And it is established that the Inquisitors are not that powerfull. I really like that we get good characters with worthy opponents, who don't break the balance of power, as somebody like Starkiller would do.
whereas legends had badass but overpowered. personally, I prefer realistic over stunning. As cool as those stories are Starkiller, Luke Skywalker, Bane, and many more are all Gary Stus.
I like that a lot actually, like not having some sort of superhuman as the protagonist. I wish more fictions (and games) were like this.
If somewhere down the line mandi relaxes his standards about always wearing his armor, I'd love to see him get captured and fight his way out of captivity without his armor (obviously he'd grab his armor on the way out) but it'd be interesting to see him adapt or even abandon his usual tactics to account for no armor.
That would be interesting. I don't know if I want the show to force him to completely give up his views, cos that feels a little disrespectful to him, (I can see Mando taking off the helmet in front of trusted people but keeping it on around everyone else). But I can see him getting captured and some enemy taking his armor away to limit his ability to break out. Would be real fun to see him beat them anyways
We saw some of that In s2 Ep 7 when he fought off the pirates while wearing storm trooper armor. He took some pretty big hits and it looked like he had trouble adjusting his fighting style with weaker armor. He's obviously skilled and I agree, an episode dedicated to seeing him fight without the armor would be amazing.
Kentucky Rifle was a nice reference.
4 reals looking at the rifle with a new found awww
🤔
🤔
I felt like the depiction they were going for in the show is really trying to show that he isn't a Jedi or Sith, or any kind of force user at all. In a galaxy of literal space wizards, Mando is just human, but also a human with a technological advantage.
He's clever, but not always. He's talented, but not impossibly so. He's concerned that certain feats are impossible, but sometimes he bravely attempts them despite his fear.
He doesn't seek them out intentionally but desperate situations lead him to attempt more desperate actions, often only saved by his technological advantage. When he charges into a fight, it's because he knows it's his last option.
He's decisive and acts without hesitation, a hallmark of a fighter who relies on honed survival instinct, and not one relying what is basically magic to enhance their perception and/or reactions. This is in comparison to a Jedi, whose calmness and confidence in their abilities see them act diplomatic and nonviolent until the very last moment. Also Sith, guided by their emotions, often blindly attack first regardless of their foe, and are more often caught unready or unprepared for unanticipated developments, relying solely on passion and power. (Of course that mold fits less for the conniving type Sith, but even then that kind of mentality is what defines them.)
Like others have said, I don't think he's just charging on all the time, but occasionally when he has no other option he does take the most direct and decisive route. A real do or die mentality when the chips are down, but that to me speaks thematically to what and who he is, a Mandalorian.
Mandalorians are great warriors and renowned bounty hunters, and Din displays those qualities, but their other most defining aspect as part of the Star Wars universe is that they are NOT force users. I think the writers/choreographers are trying to convey that fact through the action sequences.
Having made and worn helmets based on Din's, I can say that your field of view isn't actually as restricted as you would think. That horizontal slit is long enough that it doesn't affect your peripheral vision hardly at all, and the central vertical part means you can see in front of you pretty easily. Looking down and to the side can be hard, but only if you have a helmet that doesn't fit. Worn properly, your eyes should be aligned with that horizontal slit, which is wide enough that your field of view is practically unaffected. Rant over
The Razorcrest deserves more credit. Being that it's old it also tends to fly under the radar... literally since it's missing some of the systems that other ships have for tracking it, making it grate as long as he's not being pulled over. For all it's size it's pretty maneuverable, maybe that says more for his piloting skill, but having a ship that can take everything it's been through and still be easy enough to fix when it takes damage is also a plus.
I wonder how many broken ribs he's gotten from the pure impact power of some of the laser bolts to his armor
Probably 30
What Din Djarin lacks in strength and strategy he makes up in intelligence and skill. Not to mention hes exceptional pilot.
I wouldn't say he lacks strategy. I'd say he normally doesn't waste the time on strategizing because experience has taught him that all the planning in the world rarely pans out
Why you say “Din Djarin” like that
I am still not over Ahsoka Tanilalala
Because the d is silent in Djarin
I mean, Millenium Falcon and Han are all pronounced differently by different characters. There are great amounts of names that are pronounced differently throughout Star Wars and nobody mentions that.
@@rootintootinnewton no
@@chrismarple I mean, yes. There accents throughout the series, Bo Katan had been pronounced 3 different ways, Han two different ways, Falcon three different ways. Just how it is.
Din Djarin: "I will protect my child at all cost"
*Meanwhile*
Baby Yoda: *Uses Djarin's credit card to create an account on PorgHub*
and ordering all the food with it
Imagine if boba ends up with him and they become a team, and use bobas ship instead of the razor crest
Hehe...... hehe..... the foreshadowing is real
A prophet
hehe hehe this aged very well
Wow, hello nostradamus
That would be crazy.
I can't believe that you, Allen, the most thorough of the thorough, didn't bring up the fact that Din's knife is a **vibroknife**, far superior to the standard steel dagger. After all, he killed a mudhorn with it. Seriously, these are wicked weapons that I was thrilled to finally see in live action.
He's literally a walking Swiss army knife
Bro Dins stealthy as shit too, when he was on that republic prison ship he managed to sneak up and get the drop on those mercenaries that betrayed him, may as well call him Din Fisher
Din Djarin is a favorite of mine, so much that I’ve published a fanfic with a massive AU premise that has him fighting as a commando for the Empire.
He's pretty powerful but I like the fact he's not overpowered and invincible
He thinks on the fly and adapts to every situation and battle with his variety of weapons and equipment and he scrapes by. But I like that, it shows he’s not invincible like some 😉and that shows his humanity. My favourite Star Wars character for sure.
"Beloved Razor Crest"
Me, two weeks later: "Whyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy?!!!!!!!"
One thing that make him dangerous, he thinking fast as a precise
Error. You said that he uses his flamethrower and draws fuel from his jet pack but how he used his flamethrower before he had the jet pack.
Meanwhile, in the most recent episode, Mando just absolutely caused havoc on the Juggernaut with those pirates with mainly hand to hand combat.
3:15 well yes armor are passed down generations to generations, but not literally give ur kids the same damaged armor u wore
Sabine said it in Rebels, old inherited armors are smelted down and reforged into new ones for the young so itll be as durable as new
I think my favorite scene in season 1 was mando fighting the deathtrooper in hand to hand combat, it shows that he is actually pretty skilled as death troopers are basically the best of the best with a few augmentations aswell
Honestly, I hope he gets some training from Boba Fett or Bo Katan to really enhance his martial arts or weapons skills.
Honestly I dont think Boba could teach him much considering dudes not even a real mandalorian. The most he could teach him would be some tips for shooting. Bo on the other hand..
@@Dezzyyy yep, I think so too.👍
@Don homer oh yeah boba would whoop them, hes the most feared bounty hunter for a reason
@Don homer what is Boba's greatest feat. Din took out a Krayt Dragon, defeated eight New Republic droids at once, and rescued the Child from an Imperial bunker. Boba, on the other hand, shot at Luke once on cloud city, wrapped Luke up in a grapple line for a second before Luke escaped, and survived a Sarlacc Pit. Boba is impressive, but he is overrated.
@@jasomjensai-starwars2652 Boba also fought somebody on par with Asaaj Ventress in close quarters combat, at the age of fifteen, and managed to come out of it unscathed. Plus he was trained by, and was the clone of Jango Fett, the greatest bounty hunter of his time.
Comparing the feats of somebody who has an entire show dedicated to them, and the feats of somebody with a few minutes of screen time in two trilogies, is nonsensical. We can infer based on the favoritism that both Darth Vader, AND Jabba the Hutt showed Boba, that he was unrivaled in terms of skill. He was good enough to survive a Sarlaac pit without the use of his jet pack.
The razor crest was (when it still existed) a bit like a favourite broom that hasn’t broken before. It has had 6 new handles and 8 new heads.
That's awesome, can't wait to see those skills tested against the Dark Troopers.
Dinn's flamethrower does /not/ draw fuel from his jetpack. He spent all of season 1 without a jetpack entirely, it has it's own fuel reserve.
Absolutely!
I quibble a bit with the description of Din's tactics. While he is very aggressive generally, I've noticed he likes to come from unexpected angles and wrong-foot his enemies when he can. For example, when he goes to rescue baby Yoda he actually sets up a pretty clever breaching situation by luring the Storm Troopers out of the front entrance, then blowing a hole in a side wall and entering that way. He then proceeds to ambush the troops sent to investigate, and makes a lot of good use of darkness. He pulls a similar maneuver against the criminals in the episode on the prison ship.
So while I'd say Din is very much an ATTACK! kind of guy and makes a fair number of mistakes, he still uses his head when he's in a fight. I wonder if this ties into Mandalorian culture in some way, maybe their traditional fighting style is based on always trying to seize the initiative and attack opponents as aggressively as possible.
Din Djarin is also.mostly effective against human size opponents. Large Animals aren't really his forté unless he has a sizeable support force and time to prepare (Krayt Dragon)
He is getting more reckless after getting them Beskar armour. Taking shots directly.
It's not exactly reckless, since he knows what the armor can take, he's just added a subset to his toolkit that only works because of the armor.
It's not really reckless. It's actually closer to traditional armored combat. He's never just taking the shots directly, he's positioning himself so that they hit the parts of the armor they'll do the least damage, and he conserves the most energy.
Obviously filmed before episode 4 of season 2 where we see the might of the Razor Crest against the Tie fighters. Not bad for and old beat up unmanoeuverable and slow ship!
You had me at “Kentucky rifle”
6:35 “he has a flamethrower which draws fuel from his jet pack”
*proceeds to show several clips of him using flamethrower without a jetpack*
What other ship would you recommend for someone like the Mandalorian and his type of work? He needed the storage space of the Razor Crest for bounties, so wouldn't something more maneuverable cut down on his room?
People also forget about the carbonite freezer in it too.
Yeah. I seriously don't get why Allen doesn't like the Razor Crest, it's amazing. It's actually my favorite Star Wars ship.
@@danielfranklin7742 I also like the v wings for some reason. I think the clone wars ships in general look better.
It depends on what kind of money you put into your ship.
I can guarantee you that there were some Imperials at Endor thinking: „We are flying TIE Interceptors and we can‘t loose this freighter that keeps shooting us down.“
Just before the Millennium Falcon Shot them down. And the Falcon still had Space for Cargo and passengers.
Ok, it is also a Hangar Queen, constantly needing maintenance.
@@grayscribe1342 That corellian freighter was also highly modifiable and had many many variants.
Lmao “din djarians fighting skills” then you got the thumbnail, 😂 doin him dirty
I feel mando really loves his flamethrower
wouldnt you love it if you had one?
@@villekuronen6242, well yes who wouldn't?
That's his panic weapon. You know he's going "Oh shit, oh fuck" when he pulls that out
i think saying that he rushes head first in is fair enough but i feel you you undersold his quick thinking, Din has been shown many times to know the limits of his armor and use it to his advantage, headbutting punches to ruin peoples hands or using many of his tools in many ways to deal with opponents, he even uses his environment to fight like when he was fighting the hulking figure of mister cra- i mean Clancy Brown devaronian (can't remember their name) he used the doors to knock them out after a fight that didn't go that well for him in hand to hand so he switched it up to win, even that hallways part with all the storm troopers, they were blasting down the hallways so there wasn't really any other way down, so much like a medieval knight he trusted his armor and took more than a few hits to make an opening so they could go on. he uses flanking tactics (like in the prison when he runs up behind the droids while the rest of the group is distracting them) and is very good at thinking on the spot, seeing opening and things he can use as weapons, such as the gun in the first episode that he used to just destroy everyone. Sometimes he is a little hotheaded and should really think things through a bit more (like with the jawas) but he really is a smart fighter that knows his own limits and knows when to switch things up
I will erase the sequel trilogy and bring back all legends
This is the way
You will try.
Great rundown on Mando's capabilities! Glad you came back on my feed. It's been awhile..now that I'm subscribed maybe that will help.
Hey Generation Tech, how powerful does a force push need to be to kill someone instantly like in the battlefront games (EA)?
Enough to snap your neck or cause internal bleeding
Depends on the location hit or what you hit when you land. Because the standard "i throw a person" if focused on the head rather than the chest like it's clearly almost always been, would immediately snap a neck.
Yoda
Physics nerd here, a safe estimate would be anything that breaks the speed of sound with sufficient air volume would definitely do the trick.
Jet packs arent just used for mobility. They are used to get THE HIGH GROUND
The children of the watch's tradition of martial arts seems based on maneuver, equipment and quick thinking. Specifically the back street brawler's focus on savagery and surprise over MMA's focus on leverage and positioning. If Djin meets Thrawn he will have his but handed to him.
Edit: a good real world example of the ancient Mandalorian would be ancient Germany. I would think their evolution matches pretty well. And the Neo crusaders would be Germany under Fredrik the Great.
Im pretty sure if anyone meets Thrown they will have their butt handed to them. With exceptions of Revan, Ender WIggin, and Ezra
@@Aidan-zc8wx Revan learn war through the school of hard nocks. Ender Wiggin eat, sleep and breathed war his entire life. Ezra is a street punk who didn't understood the empathy that Thrawn showed him, which honestly went against Ezra's character.
@@cypher4783 yes but somehow Ezra beat Thrown
@@Aidan-zc8wx I'm personally looking forward to when they release what happen to the two of them. If they survived I don't think Ezra well remain the type of Jedi Kannan was. Imagine a Thrawn trained Ezra. I would like to see a slower and more thoughtful Ezra, a warrior who wars because they carry the weight of civilization on their backs. So, basically Ender.
Sparta
Power effective. Being able to take advantage of a weeekness is what makes a good fighter.
I see what you did there - nice nod to Sabine.
When you have Beskar armor you no longer need plot armor
Realistically Mando should've drowned when trying to save the child. Metal armor does that.
This is the way
@@kingnothing5678 lol full plate armor a knight would wear lol
I noticed he used his jetpack to keep himself surface-level, but yea
@@kingnothing5678 not with jetpack
The razor crest performed pretty well against those tie fighters after the latest repairs. I think it would hold its own with a few mods/upgrades.
I like the ship. It just needs a major overhaul and few upgrades.
Great video, Alan!
8:27 seems like the fourth episode hasn't been out at the time of recording...
Trailer footage
@@AdmiralStoicRum I was talking about him saying that the razorcrest wasn't good in a dogfight which it proved to be (in the hands of a good pilot that is).
@@sheevone4359 i must have misunderstood then. Ha.
@@sheevone4359 that’s what I noticed, Din completely annihilated three TIE Fighters with relative ease with the Razorcrest refined.
Given the events of Chapter 12, you should do a video about the Dark Trooper Project
Love your videos Gen Tech. Keep spreading the joy. This is the way
“On to the rest of the video”
Or a double ad, that too
He clearly needs to learn how use a spear as a *spear*, and maybe find Ahsoka again to get some tips on how to not cut his face off wielding the darksaber.
Compared to the average bounty hunter or thug, Din is pretty good, but against warriors from like say the Clone Wars...he'd get his ass wrecked.
The Fan Without a Face I wouldn’t say wrecked I’d think he could hold his own against Rex or Cody and maybe year one Ashoka
Gar Saxon vs Din Djarin, who’d win?
Jurassic Kaiju King depends on which era of gar saxxon I think clone wars era sax would have a better variety of weapons while imperial sax has a more standardized load out he has experience on his side. I think in both cases this fight ends in the mid to late fight unless mando lands a lucky shot with his rife in the early rounds. Also the matter of the whistleing birds, the show hasn’t shown any counter measures to them so if sax gets to close its game over. I think mando only slightly edges out in that case, but if you takes those off the table in a hand to hand situation, I’d say about equal clone wars sax and imperial sax being more skilled due to experience
@@issaicx Din would no doubt overtake year one Ashoka.
Ashoka in her early days failed to fully block the fire from Aurra Sing. Din has proven some very fast fire rate with his handgun, along with great accuracy.
Din also has his jetpack as a solid movement option to help counter her force mobility edge. His flamethrower is also a problem, being 1 of many anti-jedi tools that mando's had. Din also has that crazy taser on the end of his rifle, though melee is not something he should be active in against a jedi.
These generally would allow him to overtake an early Ashoka for a solid majority: if they were to encounter each other. Her passive behavior also does her no favors against an opponent like Din.
BigPapa N.G the only reason I say maybe is because the force is the wild card in this situation. Din has not gone up against a force user only witness a small fraction of its use, and definitely not the way it was used in the clone wars. Plus Ashoka is also a creative thinker like din himself. I say a 60/40 spilt with din winning most fights . I do see Ashoka winning some in the early fight due to some force moves. Din can easily score in all three stages of the fight with mid fight being his sweet spot , I only see Ashoka making it to the late fight if she plays defensively the entire time and using some cheeky maneuvers to stay alive but I don’t think she could finish the fight. Year two Ashoka would be 55/45 split still in dins favor, year three I’d say 65/35 in Ashokas favor.
We see his battle skill in the episode 15 when he’s vulnerable and he doesn’t have his true armor and he shows his skill in hand to hand combat.
Well . . . the Ship portion is gonna need an update.
Between his armor and the child's healing force power makes him unstoppable🛡⛑
Slightly more stronger than a normal human, I mean he is not born in Mandalore but his physique is much more stronger than a normal human he can carry heavy stuff and travel miles and miles. And Beskar are heavy means that he is literally carrying a full plate 13th century heavy plate armor and never takes off if necessary like in the disguise ep. Maybe under that shiny armor is a muscular beast.
Well, I think the Razorcrest issue has been sorted...
One defense for his combat prowess is he is only as skilled as the scene demands him to be. When it showed two imperials at a console who had the obligatory destroy it before they come it shows the protagonists who up to that point had competent aim blatantly missing so the bad guys could shoot the computers then be dropped by suddenly accurate fire. The rest of said episode had nothing but accurate shots, when the plot demands someone misses, they miss.
i was laughing so hard at that scene, like there are 4 of you, 2 of you, some of the best soldiers in the galaxy
@@prabeshgurung1067 and then in the next scene they make arguably harder shots against moving targets with partial cover....
One could argue that they weren't wanting to shoot the console if they could help it since they needed to use it
5:18 "The mandalorians became obsessed with beating jedi and now are completely overprepared for normal enemies"
Paraphrased I know but that is hillarious.
Hi Generation Tech please do a 10 flaws on the C-9979 droid carrier thingy. Seriously what is it classified as?
It's a landing craft.
Best intro so far. I was only listening and actualy came to check if it's paused, then i hear is Alen 😂😂😂. Best videos, def. turning on notifications!
Theory: the Mandalorian is set in a video game
Every episode is basically a main or side mission
Congrats you unlocked tracer missles congrats you unlocked beskar congrats you unlocked jetpack congrats you unlocked darksaber
@@Zealch_ Congrats you unlocked Beskar Spear
What did the Empire do with all that beskar?
He outflew and outfought three TIE fighters. (Yes, he did cause Baby Yoda to throw up but sometimes there’s collateral damage. 😄)
That's one I thing I didn't like from the episode. The TIEs used zero of their speed/turning advantage after the initial surprise. He should have had to trick them, or get his ass saved again by Captain Teva.
@@pyRoy6 He did manage to outmaneuver 2 X-wings 2 episodes ago, so it makes sense that the Razor Crest can outfight 3 TIE's, which are weaker in comparison to the X-Wing.
@@spiderboy43 That's what I mean. He did that wild gravity trick to get out of that mess against the X-Wings, and they weren't even wanting to kill him. Against the TIEs, he won a straight-up dogfight. No tricks, or anything. The TIEs just didn't bother to use their advantages.
@@pyRoy6 What advantages?
@@spiderboy43 Speed, maneuverability...the typical advantages a fighter would have over a gunship or transport. This is based on the description of the Razor Crest in this video (and also, I guess, Wookieepedia).
I don't want him to get an entirely new ship, but I would want to see him give it and overhaul with some nice upgrades, like a turret, some missiles/bombs in that huge cargo hold and a nice paint job :D
Am i the only one that wants Din Jarin to get a new, better ship? It has iconic features but seeing a mando come out of it is the equivalent of seeing bill gates come out of a 1996 Ford Taurus
Doesn't Bill Gates drive an old beater?
@@eldorados_lost_searcher yeah which only further proves my point😂💀