What is the population of the Star Wars Galaxy?
I have been searching around the web for approximate numbers of sentients in the Galaxy. I found the following pages: List of Star Wars species A-E, List of Star Wars species F-J but the problem is that they do not even give estimates of the number of sentient individuals in the Galaxy.
I am unaware of any canon where the numbers are estimated except in the trillions. I am looking for a more exact number (e.g. 900 trillion). I'm especially curious because of the mention of hundreds of trillions of dead sentients in the Yuuzhan Vong war and similar discreet statements.
How many sentients are there in the Star Wars Universe?
star-wars
add a comment |
I have been searching around the web for approximate numbers of sentients in the Galaxy. I found the following pages: List of Star Wars species A-E, List of Star Wars species F-J but the problem is that they do not even give estimates of the number of sentient individuals in the Galaxy.
I am unaware of any canon where the numbers are estimated except in the trillions. I am looking for a more exact number (e.g. 900 trillion). I'm especially curious because of the mention of hundreds of trillions of dead sentients in the Yuuzhan Vong war and similar discreet statements.
How many sentients are there in the Star Wars Universe?
star-wars
More than 100 quadrillion anyway... starwars.wikia.com/wiki/The_galaxy. But if hundreds of trillions died in that war you mentioned, it might be worth narrowing your question down to an exact point in history.
– Daft
Dec 22 '14 at 15:28
Let's say during the Reign of the Galactic Empire :)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 15:31
For the record, the number who died in the Vuuzhan Vong invasion was 365 trillion.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 15:43
I didn't actually consult the wikia page. I just remembered that it was in the hundreds of trillions ;)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:02
Thanks for the edit. Sometimes I goof up and I am currently multi tasking:)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:11
add a comment |
I have been searching around the web for approximate numbers of sentients in the Galaxy. I found the following pages: List of Star Wars species A-E, List of Star Wars species F-J but the problem is that they do not even give estimates of the number of sentient individuals in the Galaxy.
I am unaware of any canon where the numbers are estimated except in the trillions. I am looking for a more exact number (e.g. 900 trillion). I'm especially curious because of the mention of hundreds of trillions of dead sentients in the Yuuzhan Vong war and similar discreet statements.
How many sentients are there in the Star Wars Universe?
star-wars
I have been searching around the web for approximate numbers of sentients in the Galaxy. I found the following pages: List of Star Wars species A-E, List of Star Wars species F-J but the problem is that they do not even give estimates of the number of sentient individuals in the Galaxy.
I am unaware of any canon where the numbers are estimated except in the trillions. I am looking for a more exact number (e.g. 900 trillion). I'm especially curious because of the mention of hundreds of trillions of dead sentients in the Yuuzhan Vong war and similar discreet statements.
How many sentients are there in the Star Wars Universe?
star-wars
star-wars
edited Dec 26 '14 at 18:40
Valorum
403k10629393162
403k10629393162
asked Dec 22 '14 at 14:58
the_OTHER_DJMethaneManthe_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
8681923
8681923
More than 100 quadrillion anyway... starwars.wikia.com/wiki/The_galaxy. But if hundreds of trillions died in that war you mentioned, it might be worth narrowing your question down to an exact point in history.
– Daft
Dec 22 '14 at 15:28
Let's say during the Reign of the Galactic Empire :)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 15:31
For the record, the number who died in the Vuuzhan Vong invasion was 365 trillion.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 15:43
I didn't actually consult the wikia page. I just remembered that it was in the hundreds of trillions ;)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:02
Thanks for the edit. Sometimes I goof up and I am currently multi tasking:)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:11
add a comment |
More than 100 quadrillion anyway... starwars.wikia.com/wiki/The_galaxy. But if hundreds of trillions died in that war you mentioned, it might be worth narrowing your question down to an exact point in history.
– Daft
Dec 22 '14 at 15:28
Let's say during the Reign of the Galactic Empire :)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 15:31
For the record, the number who died in the Vuuzhan Vong invasion was 365 trillion.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 15:43
I didn't actually consult the wikia page. I just remembered that it was in the hundreds of trillions ;)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:02
Thanks for the edit. Sometimes I goof up and I am currently multi tasking:)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:11
More than 100 quadrillion anyway... starwars.wikia.com/wiki/The_galaxy. But if hundreds of trillions died in that war you mentioned, it might be worth narrowing your question down to an exact point in history.
– Daft
Dec 22 '14 at 15:28
More than 100 quadrillion anyway... starwars.wikia.com/wiki/The_galaxy. But if hundreds of trillions died in that war you mentioned, it might be worth narrowing your question down to an exact point in history.
– Daft
Dec 22 '14 at 15:28
Let's say during the Reign of the Galactic Empire :)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 15:31
Let's say during the Reign of the Galactic Empire :)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 15:31
For the record, the number who died in the Vuuzhan Vong invasion was 365 trillion.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 15:43
For the record, the number who died in the Vuuzhan Vong invasion was 365 trillion.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 15:43
I didn't actually consult the wikia page. I just remembered that it was in the hundreds of trillions ;)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:02
I didn't actually consult the wikia page. I just remembered that it was in the hundreds of trillions ;)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:02
Thanks for the edit. Sometimes I goof up and I am currently multi tasking:)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:11
Thanks for the edit. Sometimes I goof up and I am currently multi tasking:)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:11
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
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According to the endnotes for the Star Wars : The Essential Atlas guide, the population of known space is approximately 100 quadrillion sentients, a figure they seem to have reached by factoring in around 50 million populated worlds, each with an average of two billion inhabitants as well as a few mega-populated worlds like Coruscant (1 trillion) and Geonosis (100 billion).
Assuming known space represents 25% of the galaxy, we can reasonably extrapolate the total figure for Galactic population to be in the region of 400 quadrillion, give or take.
Speaking of numbers, the basic numbers for the Star Wars galaxy have
wandered a bit too much over the years for the Atlas's take to satisfy
everybody. A galaxy 100,000 light years across containing 400 billion
stars became the baseline in the years before the Atlas - see, for
instance, the New Essential Guide to Alien Species. The 2nd Edition
Star Wars Roleplaying Book from West End Games is the most-specific
source about the extent of civilization. It says that at its peak the
Republic included "over a million member worlds, and countless more
colonies, protectorates and governorships. Nearly 100 quadrillion
beings pledged allegiance to the Republic in nearly 50 million
systems." Shatterpoint is similarly specific, stating that the
Republic has 1.2 million member worlds and the Confederacy of
Independent Systems 1/10 of that number - which would be 1.32 million
member worlds between them. But that's during a time in which Republic
authorities has broken down in much of the Outer Rim and Hutt Space
has swollen to include worlds as far coreward as Gyndine. The numbers
used in the Atlas chapter were arrived at by postulating that the
Empire reclaimed much of the lost Republic territory and incorporating
the WEG portrayal of the Empire as having dramatically stepped up
exploration and colonization.
According the the various EU novels that follow on from Empire Strikes Back, the Vuuzhan Vong invasion is supposed to have killed around 365 trillion sentients. Although this figure sounds dramatic, it actually equates to less than .1% of the total galactic population.
Note that all of these figures are extrapolated from the Essential Atlas, Star Wars RPG and earlier atlases, none of which are now considered "canon" within the new Disney/Lucasfilm regime
3
Glad that's settled. Now we just need to know the GDP of the Star Wars Galaxy, and then we can calculate the per capita GDP. Wait, how many of those sentients are polycephalic?
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:18
@user14111 - Dunno. I'm still trying to work out where, on a planet you'd fit a trillion people. You'd have to stack them like blooming cordwood.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 18:29
2
Hmm. I figure a trillion people on a planet with the land area of the earth would give the whole planet about 150% the population density of Greater London, or about 10% that of Manhattan. I wouldn't want to live in a place that crowded, but "cordwood" is a trifle exaggerated.
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:48
3
@user14111 for the record - cubic acre is a four-dimensional unit. You shouldn't stack people in four-dimensional spaces.
– Deltharis
Dec 26 '14 at 1:12
2
400 Quadrillion beings on 50 million planets, and if some planets name is mentioned, mostly everybody knows about it and is expected to do so? "Leia (wondering) : I never heard about the Lando System" Really? Does she know all 50 Million planets so that she wonders about it?
– Hothie
Jun 10 '16 at 7:29
|
show 4 more comments
Had the same question. Star Wars has often suffered from disparities of scale and other continuity issues, which the fans do their best to reconcile.
IMO, I would assume much sparser populations, to make things manageable. Galaxies are certainly large enough to host unimaginable populations, and the spacefaring history in Legends at least ranges 30,000 years to far earlier than 100,000 years previous, so its more than possible to be >400quadrillion. Given rough estimations, exponential growth is great that, even with incredibly slow <0.1% population growth (i.e., pop doubles every 1,000 years), you can quickly find that, given no frequent vast depopulations and no physics impediments that would prevent colonizing the universe, the known universe could be completely populated with all speculated habitable planets at a density far higher than Coruscant's proposed 1Trillion within 40-80,000 years (this is one reason I think there either may well not be other sentient life comparable to ours, or the physical impediments are simply too great).
To bring back down to the level of the movies, to even conceive of the scale where fleet engagements and group actions as shown might possibly have any impact, you really need to imagine as small as you can fit within canon statements.
So I'd take the minimum number of inhabited "worlds," figure most of them just have tiny colonies or outposts. The member worlds may be larger, but still parochial, even by modern earth standards. Only a few hundred or thousand reaching into the billions. And the "unknown space" is largely unpopulated.
What limits population growth? I don't know. Often-negative cycles from little family formation, for cultural or economic reasons, maybe.
Consider that 10,000 Jedi, while they were seriously understaffed and stretched, still managed to have a meaningful impact on the galaxy. Also that an Imperial Star Destroyer cost more than the GDP of some star systems (and cost figures in Republic credits thrown out there are under 4 billion, perhaps making it similar to our most expensive aircraft carriers). It would be a pretty tiny system, population-wise, whose GDP would be less than 400 billion "credits," let alone 4 billion, if Luke and Obi-Wan on could scratch up a few thousand to pay Han for a ride. To make the economics meaningful, you'd have to say that most systems were quite sparsely populated (a few million), and still jack up the price of the ISD by a factor of 10-100 (40billion GDP would be produced by 4 million people making 10,000 credits a year).
And if you don't, suddenly even the Imperial Star Destroyer isn't that big a deal. Financed across the years, many tens of thousands of them could be zipping about -- and so could their opposition. The Battle of Endor would be a minor skirmish, and the Death Stars and Super Star Destroyers would be only somewhat more significant undertakings. (Some sources seem to recognize some of these scale problems and I've even seen that one claimed 25,000 ISDs at the height of the Empire--which only lasted some 20-30 years, btw--which comes closer to fixing the scale but sacrifices the story impact; I've more commonly seen something like 500-1,000 star destroyers mentioned.)
So, beyond the theoretical carrying capacity of the galaxy, you've got to consider the story impacts most of all, and do your best to reconcile mentions of # of worlds, economic costs, populations, etc.
And really, doesn't an average of "a few million" people in population seem right, for a single Star Destroyer to terrorize and dominate a planet, with its <30,000 crew, <10,000 ground troops, <100 fighters, and <200 turbolasers and ion cannons? And wouldn't many planets, like Jakku and Tatooine, feel more proper on the sparser end of that? Even Naboo felt sparsely populated to me. Sure, these are offset by the Core Worlds with billions to even hundreds of billions (and whose economies might be considerably more inflated).
And and btw, given that a common population statistic on Earth claims that our 7 billion or so could live on common suburban lots and only cover the state of Texas, for Earth to look like Coruscant, whose whole surface is supposedly covered in cloud-touching stacked cities, we'd probably be accommodating far more than 100 Trillion people.
I’m mostly inclined to agree (until some new canon writer decides to go with the huge numbers anyway, or unless they’ve already done so). Lots of planets are really quite sparsely populated, from what we see on-screen. Which makes sense, I suppose: we have a technologically advanced civilization with presumably good birth control. They may not have much population growth, even on further-flung worlds.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:13
However, the population of Coruscant is canonically 1 trillion, as noted here. That’s not so surprising, though: all of Coruscant is a city, not inhabited. There will be a lot of dead space, abandoned buildings that no one uses anymore, and most importantly, storage and industrial areas (they do filter their entire atmosphere, after all).
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:15
Anyway, if you’ve got to ignore something for the sake of consistency, I’d say throw out prices first, then population, and then military numbers. Just in terms of story impact.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:20
1
Yes. That's exactly what I was worying about. Fantastillions of Worlds and Sentients - and here our small group of heroes that fight against this small group of villians which have this terrible superwapon that could destroy one of the 50 million populated planets per day (so after 1370 years of daily planet destroying they would have destroyed 1% of all planets, and perhaps the rest 99% will notice and be freightened). The whole story we love (and in fact the whole 20-30 years empire) would be just a little footnote in some regional history books.
– Hothie
Dec 19 '16 at 9:46
add a comment |
My question is, what's the statistical likelihood of all the random encounters between original series characters in following works (video only), and of the rest of the trilogies' characters in other video media.
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According to the endnotes for the Star Wars : The Essential Atlas guide, the population of known space is approximately 100 quadrillion sentients, a figure they seem to have reached by factoring in around 50 million populated worlds, each with an average of two billion inhabitants as well as a few mega-populated worlds like Coruscant (1 trillion) and Geonosis (100 billion).
Assuming known space represents 25% of the galaxy, we can reasonably extrapolate the total figure for Galactic population to be in the region of 400 quadrillion, give or take.
Speaking of numbers, the basic numbers for the Star Wars galaxy have
wandered a bit too much over the years for the Atlas's take to satisfy
everybody. A galaxy 100,000 light years across containing 400 billion
stars became the baseline in the years before the Atlas - see, for
instance, the New Essential Guide to Alien Species. The 2nd Edition
Star Wars Roleplaying Book from West End Games is the most-specific
source about the extent of civilization. It says that at its peak the
Republic included "over a million member worlds, and countless more
colonies, protectorates and governorships. Nearly 100 quadrillion
beings pledged allegiance to the Republic in nearly 50 million
systems." Shatterpoint is similarly specific, stating that the
Republic has 1.2 million member worlds and the Confederacy of
Independent Systems 1/10 of that number - which would be 1.32 million
member worlds between them. But that's during a time in which Republic
authorities has broken down in much of the Outer Rim and Hutt Space
has swollen to include worlds as far coreward as Gyndine. The numbers
used in the Atlas chapter were arrived at by postulating that the
Empire reclaimed much of the lost Republic territory and incorporating
the WEG portrayal of the Empire as having dramatically stepped up
exploration and colonization.
According the the various EU novels that follow on from Empire Strikes Back, the Vuuzhan Vong invasion is supposed to have killed around 365 trillion sentients. Although this figure sounds dramatic, it actually equates to less than .1% of the total galactic population.
Note that all of these figures are extrapolated from the Essential Atlas, Star Wars RPG and earlier atlases, none of which are now considered "canon" within the new Disney/Lucasfilm regime
3
Glad that's settled. Now we just need to know the GDP of the Star Wars Galaxy, and then we can calculate the per capita GDP. Wait, how many of those sentients are polycephalic?
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:18
@user14111 - Dunno. I'm still trying to work out where, on a planet you'd fit a trillion people. You'd have to stack them like blooming cordwood.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 18:29
2
Hmm. I figure a trillion people on a planet with the land area of the earth would give the whole planet about 150% the population density of Greater London, or about 10% that of Manhattan. I wouldn't want to live in a place that crowded, but "cordwood" is a trifle exaggerated.
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:48
3
@user14111 for the record - cubic acre is a four-dimensional unit. You shouldn't stack people in four-dimensional spaces.
– Deltharis
Dec 26 '14 at 1:12
2
400 Quadrillion beings on 50 million planets, and if some planets name is mentioned, mostly everybody knows about it and is expected to do so? "Leia (wondering) : I never heard about the Lando System" Really? Does she know all 50 Million planets so that she wonders about it?
– Hothie
Jun 10 '16 at 7:29
|
show 4 more comments
According to the endnotes for the Star Wars : The Essential Atlas guide, the population of known space is approximately 100 quadrillion sentients, a figure they seem to have reached by factoring in around 50 million populated worlds, each with an average of two billion inhabitants as well as a few mega-populated worlds like Coruscant (1 trillion) and Geonosis (100 billion).
Assuming known space represents 25% of the galaxy, we can reasonably extrapolate the total figure for Galactic population to be in the region of 400 quadrillion, give or take.
Speaking of numbers, the basic numbers for the Star Wars galaxy have
wandered a bit too much over the years for the Atlas's take to satisfy
everybody. A galaxy 100,000 light years across containing 400 billion
stars became the baseline in the years before the Atlas - see, for
instance, the New Essential Guide to Alien Species. The 2nd Edition
Star Wars Roleplaying Book from West End Games is the most-specific
source about the extent of civilization. It says that at its peak the
Republic included "over a million member worlds, and countless more
colonies, protectorates and governorships. Nearly 100 quadrillion
beings pledged allegiance to the Republic in nearly 50 million
systems." Shatterpoint is similarly specific, stating that the
Republic has 1.2 million member worlds and the Confederacy of
Independent Systems 1/10 of that number - which would be 1.32 million
member worlds between them. But that's during a time in which Republic
authorities has broken down in much of the Outer Rim and Hutt Space
has swollen to include worlds as far coreward as Gyndine. The numbers
used in the Atlas chapter were arrived at by postulating that the
Empire reclaimed much of the lost Republic territory and incorporating
the WEG portrayal of the Empire as having dramatically stepped up
exploration and colonization.
According the the various EU novels that follow on from Empire Strikes Back, the Vuuzhan Vong invasion is supposed to have killed around 365 trillion sentients. Although this figure sounds dramatic, it actually equates to less than .1% of the total galactic population.
Note that all of these figures are extrapolated from the Essential Atlas, Star Wars RPG and earlier atlases, none of which are now considered "canon" within the new Disney/Lucasfilm regime
3
Glad that's settled. Now we just need to know the GDP of the Star Wars Galaxy, and then we can calculate the per capita GDP. Wait, how many of those sentients are polycephalic?
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:18
@user14111 - Dunno. I'm still trying to work out where, on a planet you'd fit a trillion people. You'd have to stack them like blooming cordwood.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 18:29
2
Hmm. I figure a trillion people on a planet with the land area of the earth would give the whole planet about 150% the population density of Greater London, or about 10% that of Manhattan. I wouldn't want to live in a place that crowded, but "cordwood" is a trifle exaggerated.
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:48
3
@user14111 for the record - cubic acre is a four-dimensional unit. You shouldn't stack people in four-dimensional spaces.
– Deltharis
Dec 26 '14 at 1:12
2
400 Quadrillion beings on 50 million planets, and if some planets name is mentioned, mostly everybody knows about it and is expected to do so? "Leia (wondering) : I never heard about the Lando System" Really? Does she know all 50 Million planets so that she wonders about it?
– Hothie
Jun 10 '16 at 7:29
|
show 4 more comments
According to the endnotes for the Star Wars : The Essential Atlas guide, the population of known space is approximately 100 quadrillion sentients, a figure they seem to have reached by factoring in around 50 million populated worlds, each with an average of two billion inhabitants as well as a few mega-populated worlds like Coruscant (1 trillion) and Geonosis (100 billion).
Assuming known space represents 25% of the galaxy, we can reasonably extrapolate the total figure for Galactic population to be in the region of 400 quadrillion, give or take.
Speaking of numbers, the basic numbers for the Star Wars galaxy have
wandered a bit too much over the years for the Atlas's take to satisfy
everybody. A galaxy 100,000 light years across containing 400 billion
stars became the baseline in the years before the Atlas - see, for
instance, the New Essential Guide to Alien Species. The 2nd Edition
Star Wars Roleplaying Book from West End Games is the most-specific
source about the extent of civilization. It says that at its peak the
Republic included "over a million member worlds, and countless more
colonies, protectorates and governorships. Nearly 100 quadrillion
beings pledged allegiance to the Republic in nearly 50 million
systems." Shatterpoint is similarly specific, stating that the
Republic has 1.2 million member worlds and the Confederacy of
Independent Systems 1/10 of that number - which would be 1.32 million
member worlds between them. But that's during a time in which Republic
authorities has broken down in much of the Outer Rim and Hutt Space
has swollen to include worlds as far coreward as Gyndine. The numbers
used in the Atlas chapter were arrived at by postulating that the
Empire reclaimed much of the lost Republic territory and incorporating
the WEG portrayal of the Empire as having dramatically stepped up
exploration and colonization.
According the the various EU novels that follow on from Empire Strikes Back, the Vuuzhan Vong invasion is supposed to have killed around 365 trillion sentients. Although this figure sounds dramatic, it actually equates to less than .1% of the total galactic population.
Note that all of these figures are extrapolated from the Essential Atlas, Star Wars RPG and earlier atlases, none of which are now considered "canon" within the new Disney/Lucasfilm regime
According to the endnotes for the Star Wars : The Essential Atlas guide, the population of known space is approximately 100 quadrillion sentients, a figure they seem to have reached by factoring in around 50 million populated worlds, each with an average of two billion inhabitants as well as a few mega-populated worlds like Coruscant (1 trillion) and Geonosis (100 billion).
Assuming known space represents 25% of the galaxy, we can reasonably extrapolate the total figure for Galactic population to be in the region of 400 quadrillion, give or take.
Speaking of numbers, the basic numbers for the Star Wars galaxy have
wandered a bit too much over the years for the Atlas's take to satisfy
everybody. A galaxy 100,000 light years across containing 400 billion
stars became the baseline in the years before the Atlas - see, for
instance, the New Essential Guide to Alien Species. The 2nd Edition
Star Wars Roleplaying Book from West End Games is the most-specific
source about the extent of civilization. It says that at its peak the
Republic included "over a million member worlds, and countless more
colonies, protectorates and governorships. Nearly 100 quadrillion
beings pledged allegiance to the Republic in nearly 50 million
systems." Shatterpoint is similarly specific, stating that the
Republic has 1.2 million member worlds and the Confederacy of
Independent Systems 1/10 of that number - which would be 1.32 million
member worlds between them. But that's during a time in which Republic
authorities has broken down in much of the Outer Rim and Hutt Space
has swollen to include worlds as far coreward as Gyndine. The numbers
used in the Atlas chapter were arrived at by postulating that the
Empire reclaimed much of the lost Republic territory and incorporating
the WEG portrayal of the Empire as having dramatically stepped up
exploration and colonization.
According the the various EU novels that follow on from Empire Strikes Back, the Vuuzhan Vong invasion is supposed to have killed around 365 trillion sentients. Although this figure sounds dramatic, it actually equates to less than .1% of the total galactic population.
Note that all of these figures are extrapolated from the Essential Atlas, Star Wars RPG and earlier atlases, none of which are now considered "canon" within the new Disney/Lucasfilm regime
edited Dec 25 '14 at 19:57
answered Dec 22 '14 at 15:31
ValorumValorum
403k10629393162
403k10629393162
3
Glad that's settled. Now we just need to know the GDP of the Star Wars Galaxy, and then we can calculate the per capita GDP. Wait, how many of those sentients are polycephalic?
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:18
@user14111 - Dunno. I'm still trying to work out where, on a planet you'd fit a trillion people. You'd have to stack them like blooming cordwood.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 18:29
2
Hmm. I figure a trillion people on a planet with the land area of the earth would give the whole planet about 150% the population density of Greater London, or about 10% that of Manhattan. I wouldn't want to live in a place that crowded, but "cordwood" is a trifle exaggerated.
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:48
3
@user14111 for the record - cubic acre is a four-dimensional unit. You shouldn't stack people in four-dimensional spaces.
– Deltharis
Dec 26 '14 at 1:12
2
400 Quadrillion beings on 50 million planets, and if some planets name is mentioned, mostly everybody knows about it and is expected to do so? "Leia (wondering) : I never heard about the Lando System" Really? Does she know all 50 Million planets so that she wonders about it?
– Hothie
Jun 10 '16 at 7:29
|
show 4 more comments
3
Glad that's settled. Now we just need to know the GDP of the Star Wars Galaxy, and then we can calculate the per capita GDP. Wait, how many of those sentients are polycephalic?
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:18
@user14111 - Dunno. I'm still trying to work out where, on a planet you'd fit a trillion people. You'd have to stack them like blooming cordwood.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 18:29
2
Hmm. I figure a trillion people on a planet with the land area of the earth would give the whole planet about 150% the population density of Greater London, or about 10% that of Manhattan. I wouldn't want to live in a place that crowded, but "cordwood" is a trifle exaggerated.
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:48
3
@user14111 for the record - cubic acre is a four-dimensional unit. You shouldn't stack people in four-dimensional spaces.
– Deltharis
Dec 26 '14 at 1:12
2
400 Quadrillion beings on 50 million planets, and if some planets name is mentioned, mostly everybody knows about it and is expected to do so? "Leia (wondering) : I never heard about the Lando System" Really? Does she know all 50 Million planets so that she wonders about it?
– Hothie
Jun 10 '16 at 7:29
3
3
Glad that's settled. Now we just need to know the GDP of the Star Wars Galaxy, and then we can calculate the per capita GDP. Wait, how many of those sentients are polycephalic?
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:18
Glad that's settled. Now we just need to know the GDP of the Star Wars Galaxy, and then we can calculate the per capita GDP. Wait, how many of those sentients are polycephalic?
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:18
@user14111 - Dunno. I'm still trying to work out where, on a planet you'd fit a trillion people. You'd have to stack them like blooming cordwood.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 18:29
@user14111 - Dunno. I'm still trying to work out where, on a planet you'd fit a trillion people. You'd have to stack them like blooming cordwood.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 18:29
2
2
Hmm. I figure a trillion people on a planet with the land area of the earth would give the whole planet about 150% the population density of Greater London, or about 10% that of Manhattan. I wouldn't want to live in a place that crowded, but "cordwood" is a trifle exaggerated.
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:48
Hmm. I figure a trillion people on a planet with the land area of the earth would give the whole planet about 150% the population density of Greater London, or about 10% that of Manhattan. I wouldn't want to live in a place that crowded, but "cordwood" is a trifle exaggerated.
– user14111
Dec 22 '14 at 18:48
3
3
@user14111 for the record - cubic acre is a four-dimensional unit. You shouldn't stack people in four-dimensional spaces.
– Deltharis
Dec 26 '14 at 1:12
@user14111 for the record - cubic acre is a four-dimensional unit. You shouldn't stack people in four-dimensional spaces.
– Deltharis
Dec 26 '14 at 1:12
2
2
400 Quadrillion beings on 50 million planets, and if some planets name is mentioned, mostly everybody knows about it and is expected to do so? "Leia (wondering) : I never heard about the Lando System" Really? Does she know all 50 Million planets so that she wonders about it?
– Hothie
Jun 10 '16 at 7:29
400 Quadrillion beings on 50 million planets, and if some planets name is mentioned, mostly everybody knows about it and is expected to do so? "Leia (wondering) : I never heard about the Lando System" Really? Does she know all 50 Million planets so that she wonders about it?
– Hothie
Jun 10 '16 at 7:29
|
show 4 more comments
Had the same question. Star Wars has often suffered from disparities of scale and other continuity issues, which the fans do their best to reconcile.
IMO, I would assume much sparser populations, to make things manageable. Galaxies are certainly large enough to host unimaginable populations, and the spacefaring history in Legends at least ranges 30,000 years to far earlier than 100,000 years previous, so its more than possible to be >400quadrillion. Given rough estimations, exponential growth is great that, even with incredibly slow <0.1% population growth (i.e., pop doubles every 1,000 years), you can quickly find that, given no frequent vast depopulations and no physics impediments that would prevent colonizing the universe, the known universe could be completely populated with all speculated habitable planets at a density far higher than Coruscant's proposed 1Trillion within 40-80,000 years (this is one reason I think there either may well not be other sentient life comparable to ours, or the physical impediments are simply too great).
To bring back down to the level of the movies, to even conceive of the scale where fleet engagements and group actions as shown might possibly have any impact, you really need to imagine as small as you can fit within canon statements.
So I'd take the minimum number of inhabited "worlds," figure most of them just have tiny colonies or outposts. The member worlds may be larger, but still parochial, even by modern earth standards. Only a few hundred or thousand reaching into the billions. And the "unknown space" is largely unpopulated.
What limits population growth? I don't know. Often-negative cycles from little family formation, for cultural or economic reasons, maybe.
Consider that 10,000 Jedi, while they were seriously understaffed and stretched, still managed to have a meaningful impact on the galaxy. Also that an Imperial Star Destroyer cost more than the GDP of some star systems (and cost figures in Republic credits thrown out there are under 4 billion, perhaps making it similar to our most expensive aircraft carriers). It would be a pretty tiny system, population-wise, whose GDP would be less than 400 billion "credits," let alone 4 billion, if Luke and Obi-Wan on could scratch up a few thousand to pay Han for a ride. To make the economics meaningful, you'd have to say that most systems were quite sparsely populated (a few million), and still jack up the price of the ISD by a factor of 10-100 (40billion GDP would be produced by 4 million people making 10,000 credits a year).
And if you don't, suddenly even the Imperial Star Destroyer isn't that big a deal. Financed across the years, many tens of thousands of them could be zipping about -- and so could their opposition. The Battle of Endor would be a minor skirmish, and the Death Stars and Super Star Destroyers would be only somewhat more significant undertakings. (Some sources seem to recognize some of these scale problems and I've even seen that one claimed 25,000 ISDs at the height of the Empire--which only lasted some 20-30 years, btw--which comes closer to fixing the scale but sacrifices the story impact; I've more commonly seen something like 500-1,000 star destroyers mentioned.)
So, beyond the theoretical carrying capacity of the galaxy, you've got to consider the story impacts most of all, and do your best to reconcile mentions of # of worlds, economic costs, populations, etc.
And really, doesn't an average of "a few million" people in population seem right, for a single Star Destroyer to terrorize and dominate a planet, with its <30,000 crew, <10,000 ground troops, <100 fighters, and <200 turbolasers and ion cannons? And wouldn't many planets, like Jakku and Tatooine, feel more proper on the sparser end of that? Even Naboo felt sparsely populated to me. Sure, these are offset by the Core Worlds with billions to even hundreds of billions (and whose economies might be considerably more inflated).
And and btw, given that a common population statistic on Earth claims that our 7 billion or so could live on common suburban lots and only cover the state of Texas, for Earth to look like Coruscant, whose whole surface is supposedly covered in cloud-touching stacked cities, we'd probably be accommodating far more than 100 Trillion people.
I’m mostly inclined to agree (until some new canon writer decides to go with the huge numbers anyway, or unless they’ve already done so). Lots of planets are really quite sparsely populated, from what we see on-screen. Which makes sense, I suppose: we have a technologically advanced civilization with presumably good birth control. They may not have much population growth, even on further-flung worlds.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:13
However, the population of Coruscant is canonically 1 trillion, as noted here. That’s not so surprising, though: all of Coruscant is a city, not inhabited. There will be a lot of dead space, abandoned buildings that no one uses anymore, and most importantly, storage and industrial areas (they do filter their entire atmosphere, after all).
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:15
Anyway, if you’ve got to ignore something for the sake of consistency, I’d say throw out prices first, then population, and then military numbers. Just in terms of story impact.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:20
1
Yes. That's exactly what I was worying about. Fantastillions of Worlds and Sentients - and here our small group of heroes that fight against this small group of villians which have this terrible superwapon that could destroy one of the 50 million populated planets per day (so after 1370 years of daily planet destroying they would have destroyed 1% of all planets, and perhaps the rest 99% will notice and be freightened). The whole story we love (and in fact the whole 20-30 years empire) would be just a little footnote in some regional history books.
– Hothie
Dec 19 '16 at 9:46
add a comment |
Had the same question. Star Wars has often suffered from disparities of scale and other continuity issues, which the fans do their best to reconcile.
IMO, I would assume much sparser populations, to make things manageable. Galaxies are certainly large enough to host unimaginable populations, and the spacefaring history in Legends at least ranges 30,000 years to far earlier than 100,000 years previous, so its more than possible to be >400quadrillion. Given rough estimations, exponential growth is great that, even with incredibly slow <0.1% population growth (i.e., pop doubles every 1,000 years), you can quickly find that, given no frequent vast depopulations and no physics impediments that would prevent colonizing the universe, the known universe could be completely populated with all speculated habitable planets at a density far higher than Coruscant's proposed 1Trillion within 40-80,000 years (this is one reason I think there either may well not be other sentient life comparable to ours, or the physical impediments are simply too great).
To bring back down to the level of the movies, to even conceive of the scale where fleet engagements and group actions as shown might possibly have any impact, you really need to imagine as small as you can fit within canon statements.
So I'd take the minimum number of inhabited "worlds," figure most of them just have tiny colonies or outposts. The member worlds may be larger, but still parochial, even by modern earth standards. Only a few hundred or thousand reaching into the billions. And the "unknown space" is largely unpopulated.
What limits population growth? I don't know. Often-negative cycles from little family formation, for cultural or economic reasons, maybe.
Consider that 10,000 Jedi, while they were seriously understaffed and stretched, still managed to have a meaningful impact on the galaxy. Also that an Imperial Star Destroyer cost more than the GDP of some star systems (and cost figures in Republic credits thrown out there are under 4 billion, perhaps making it similar to our most expensive aircraft carriers). It would be a pretty tiny system, population-wise, whose GDP would be less than 400 billion "credits," let alone 4 billion, if Luke and Obi-Wan on could scratch up a few thousand to pay Han for a ride. To make the economics meaningful, you'd have to say that most systems were quite sparsely populated (a few million), and still jack up the price of the ISD by a factor of 10-100 (40billion GDP would be produced by 4 million people making 10,000 credits a year).
And if you don't, suddenly even the Imperial Star Destroyer isn't that big a deal. Financed across the years, many tens of thousands of them could be zipping about -- and so could their opposition. The Battle of Endor would be a minor skirmish, and the Death Stars and Super Star Destroyers would be only somewhat more significant undertakings. (Some sources seem to recognize some of these scale problems and I've even seen that one claimed 25,000 ISDs at the height of the Empire--which only lasted some 20-30 years, btw--which comes closer to fixing the scale but sacrifices the story impact; I've more commonly seen something like 500-1,000 star destroyers mentioned.)
So, beyond the theoretical carrying capacity of the galaxy, you've got to consider the story impacts most of all, and do your best to reconcile mentions of # of worlds, economic costs, populations, etc.
And really, doesn't an average of "a few million" people in population seem right, for a single Star Destroyer to terrorize and dominate a planet, with its <30,000 crew, <10,000 ground troops, <100 fighters, and <200 turbolasers and ion cannons? And wouldn't many planets, like Jakku and Tatooine, feel more proper on the sparser end of that? Even Naboo felt sparsely populated to me. Sure, these are offset by the Core Worlds with billions to even hundreds of billions (and whose economies might be considerably more inflated).
And and btw, given that a common population statistic on Earth claims that our 7 billion or so could live on common suburban lots and only cover the state of Texas, for Earth to look like Coruscant, whose whole surface is supposedly covered in cloud-touching stacked cities, we'd probably be accommodating far more than 100 Trillion people.
I’m mostly inclined to agree (until some new canon writer decides to go with the huge numbers anyway, or unless they’ve already done so). Lots of planets are really quite sparsely populated, from what we see on-screen. Which makes sense, I suppose: we have a technologically advanced civilization with presumably good birth control. They may not have much population growth, even on further-flung worlds.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:13
However, the population of Coruscant is canonically 1 trillion, as noted here. That’s not so surprising, though: all of Coruscant is a city, not inhabited. There will be a lot of dead space, abandoned buildings that no one uses anymore, and most importantly, storage and industrial areas (they do filter their entire atmosphere, after all).
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:15
Anyway, if you’ve got to ignore something for the sake of consistency, I’d say throw out prices first, then population, and then military numbers. Just in terms of story impact.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:20
1
Yes. That's exactly what I was worying about. Fantastillions of Worlds and Sentients - and here our small group of heroes that fight against this small group of villians which have this terrible superwapon that could destroy one of the 50 million populated planets per day (so after 1370 years of daily planet destroying they would have destroyed 1% of all planets, and perhaps the rest 99% will notice and be freightened). The whole story we love (and in fact the whole 20-30 years empire) would be just a little footnote in some regional history books.
– Hothie
Dec 19 '16 at 9:46
add a comment |
Had the same question. Star Wars has often suffered from disparities of scale and other continuity issues, which the fans do their best to reconcile.
IMO, I would assume much sparser populations, to make things manageable. Galaxies are certainly large enough to host unimaginable populations, and the spacefaring history in Legends at least ranges 30,000 years to far earlier than 100,000 years previous, so its more than possible to be >400quadrillion. Given rough estimations, exponential growth is great that, even with incredibly slow <0.1% population growth (i.e., pop doubles every 1,000 years), you can quickly find that, given no frequent vast depopulations and no physics impediments that would prevent colonizing the universe, the known universe could be completely populated with all speculated habitable planets at a density far higher than Coruscant's proposed 1Trillion within 40-80,000 years (this is one reason I think there either may well not be other sentient life comparable to ours, or the physical impediments are simply too great).
To bring back down to the level of the movies, to even conceive of the scale where fleet engagements and group actions as shown might possibly have any impact, you really need to imagine as small as you can fit within canon statements.
So I'd take the minimum number of inhabited "worlds," figure most of them just have tiny colonies or outposts. The member worlds may be larger, but still parochial, even by modern earth standards. Only a few hundred or thousand reaching into the billions. And the "unknown space" is largely unpopulated.
What limits population growth? I don't know. Often-negative cycles from little family formation, for cultural or economic reasons, maybe.
Consider that 10,000 Jedi, while they were seriously understaffed and stretched, still managed to have a meaningful impact on the galaxy. Also that an Imperial Star Destroyer cost more than the GDP of some star systems (and cost figures in Republic credits thrown out there are under 4 billion, perhaps making it similar to our most expensive aircraft carriers). It would be a pretty tiny system, population-wise, whose GDP would be less than 400 billion "credits," let alone 4 billion, if Luke and Obi-Wan on could scratch up a few thousand to pay Han for a ride. To make the economics meaningful, you'd have to say that most systems were quite sparsely populated (a few million), and still jack up the price of the ISD by a factor of 10-100 (40billion GDP would be produced by 4 million people making 10,000 credits a year).
And if you don't, suddenly even the Imperial Star Destroyer isn't that big a deal. Financed across the years, many tens of thousands of them could be zipping about -- and so could their opposition. The Battle of Endor would be a minor skirmish, and the Death Stars and Super Star Destroyers would be only somewhat more significant undertakings. (Some sources seem to recognize some of these scale problems and I've even seen that one claimed 25,000 ISDs at the height of the Empire--which only lasted some 20-30 years, btw--which comes closer to fixing the scale but sacrifices the story impact; I've more commonly seen something like 500-1,000 star destroyers mentioned.)
So, beyond the theoretical carrying capacity of the galaxy, you've got to consider the story impacts most of all, and do your best to reconcile mentions of # of worlds, economic costs, populations, etc.
And really, doesn't an average of "a few million" people in population seem right, for a single Star Destroyer to terrorize and dominate a planet, with its <30,000 crew, <10,000 ground troops, <100 fighters, and <200 turbolasers and ion cannons? And wouldn't many planets, like Jakku and Tatooine, feel more proper on the sparser end of that? Even Naboo felt sparsely populated to me. Sure, these are offset by the Core Worlds with billions to even hundreds of billions (and whose economies might be considerably more inflated).
And and btw, given that a common population statistic on Earth claims that our 7 billion or so could live on common suburban lots and only cover the state of Texas, for Earth to look like Coruscant, whose whole surface is supposedly covered in cloud-touching stacked cities, we'd probably be accommodating far more than 100 Trillion people.
Had the same question. Star Wars has often suffered from disparities of scale and other continuity issues, which the fans do their best to reconcile.
IMO, I would assume much sparser populations, to make things manageable. Galaxies are certainly large enough to host unimaginable populations, and the spacefaring history in Legends at least ranges 30,000 years to far earlier than 100,000 years previous, so its more than possible to be >400quadrillion. Given rough estimations, exponential growth is great that, even with incredibly slow <0.1% population growth (i.e., pop doubles every 1,000 years), you can quickly find that, given no frequent vast depopulations and no physics impediments that would prevent colonizing the universe, the known universe could be completely populated with all speculated habitable planets at a density far higher than Coruscant's proposed 1Trillion within 40-80,000 years (this is one reason I think there either may well not be other sentient life comparable to ours, or the physical impediments are simply too great).
To bring back down to the level of the movies, to even conceive of the scale where fleet engagements and group actions as shown might possibly have any impact, you really need to imagine as small as you can fit within canon statements.
So I'd take the minimum number of inhabited "worlds," figure most of them just have tiny colonies or outposts. The member worlds may be larger, but still parochial, even by modern earth standards. Only a few hundred or thousand reaching into the billions. And the "unknown space" is largely unpopulated.
What limits population growth? I don't know. Often-negative cycles from little family formation, for cultural or economic reasons, maybe.
Consider that 10,000 Jedi, while they were seriously understaffed and stretched, still managed to have a meaningful impact on the galaxy. Also that an Imperial Star Destroyer cost more than the GDP of some star systems (and cost figures in Republic credits thrown out there are under 4 billion, perhaps making it similar to our most expensive aircraft carriers). It would be a pretty tiny system, population-wise, whose GDP would be less than 400 billion "credits," let alone 4 billion, if Luke and Obi-Wan on could scratch up a few thousand to pay Han for a ride. To make the economics meaningful, you'd have to say that most systems were quite sparsely populated (a few million), and still jack up the price of the ISD by a factor of 10-100 (40billion GDP would be produced by 4 million people making 10,000 credits a year).
And if you don't, suddenly even the Imperial Star Destroyer isn't that big a deal. Financed across the years, many tens of thousands of them could be zipping about -- and so could their opposition. The Battle of Endor would be a minor skirmish, and the Death Stars and Super Star Destroyers would be only somewhat more significant undertakings. (Some sources seem to recognize some of these scale problems and I've even seen that one claimed 25,000 ISDs at the height of the Empire--which only lasted some 20-30 years, btw--which comes closer to fixing the scale but sacrifices the story impact; I've more commonly seen something like 500-1,000 star destroyers mentioned.)
So, beyond the theoretical carrying capacity of the galaxy, you've got to consider the story impacts most of all, and do your best to reconcile mentions of # of worlds, economic costs, populations, etc.
And really, doesn't an average of "a few million" people in population seem right, for a single Star Destroyer to terrorize and dominate a planet, with its <30,000 crew, <10,000 ground troops, <100 fighters, and <200 turbolasers and ion cannons? And wouldn't many planets, like Jakku and Tatooine, feel more proper on the sparser end of that? Even Naboo felt sparsely populated to me. Sure, these are offset by the Core Worlds with billions to even hundreds of billions (and whose economies might be considerably more inflated).
And and btw, given that a common population statistic on Earth claims that our 7 billion or so could live on common suburban lots and only cover the state of Texas, for Earth to look like Coruscant, whose whole surface is supposedly covered in cloud-touching stacked cities, we'd probably be accommodating far more than 100 Trillion people.
edited Oct 14 '16 at 4:01
answered Oct 14 '16 at 3:54
Stuart MillerStuart Miller
512
512
I’m mostly inclined to agree (until some new canon writer decides to go with the huge numbers anyway, or unless they’ve already done so). Lots of planets are really quite sparsely populated, from what we see on-screen. Which makes sense, I suppose: we have a technologically advanced civilization with presumably good birth control. They may not have much population growth, even on further-flung worlds.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:13
However, the population of Coruscant is canonically 1 trillion, as noted here. That’s not so surprising, though: all of Coruscant is a city, not inhabited. There will be a lot of dead space, abandoned buildings that no one uses anymore, and most importantly, storage and industrial areas (they do filter their entire atmosphere, after all).
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:15
Anyway, if you’ve got to ignore something for the sake of consistency, I’d say throw out prices first, then population, and then military numbers. Just in terms of story impact.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:20
1
Yes. That's exactly what I was worying about. Fantastillions of Worlds and Sentients - and here our small group of heroes that fight against this small group of villians which have this terrible superwapon that could destroy one of the 50 million populated planets per day (so after 1370 years of daily planet destroying they would have destroyed 1% of all planets, and perhaps the rest 99% will notice and be freightened). The whole story we love (and in fact the whole 20-30 years empire) would be just a little footnote in some regional history books.
– Hothie
Dec 19 '16 at 9:46
add a comment |
I’m mostly inclined to agree (until some new canon writer decides to go with the huge numbers anyway, or unless they’ve already done so). Lots of planets are really quite sparsely populated, from what we see on-screen. Which makes sense, I suppose: we have a technologically advanced civilization with presumably good birth control. They may not have much population growth, even on further-flung worlds.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:13
However, the population of Coruscant is canonically 1 trillion, as noted here. That’s not so surprising, though: all of Coruscant is a city, not inhabited. There will be a lot of dead space, abandoned buildings that no one uses anymore, and most importantly, storage and industrial areas (they do filter their entire atmosphere, after all).
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:15
Anyway, if you’ve got to ignore something for the sake of consistency, I’d say throw out prices first, then population, and then military numbers. Just in terms of story impact.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:20
1
Yes. That's exactly what I was worying about. Fantastillions of Worlds and Sentients - and here our small group of heroes that fight against this small group of villians which have this terrible superwapon that could destroy one of the 50 million populated planets per day (so after 1370 years of daily planet destroying they would have destroyed 1% of all planets, and perhaps the rest 99% will notice and be freightened). The whole story we love (and in fact the whole 20-30 years empire) would be just a little footnote in some regional history books.
– Hothie
Dec 19 '16 at 9:46
I’m mostly inclined to agree (until some new canon writer decides to go with the huge numbers anyway, or unless they’ve already done so). Lots of planets are really quite sparsely populated, from what we see on-screen. Which makes sense, I suppose: we have a technologically advanced civilization with presumably good birth control. They may not have much population growth, even on further-flung worlds.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:13
I’m mostly inclined to agree (until some new canon writer decides to go with the huge numbers anyway, or unless they’ve already done so). Lots of planets are really quite sparsely populated, from what we see on-screen. Which makes sense, I suppose: we have a technologically advanced civilization with presumably good birth control. They may not have much population growth, even on further-flung worlds.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:13
However, the population of Coruscant is canonically 1 trillion, as noted here. That’s not so surprising, though: all of Coruscant is a city, not inhabited. There will be a lot of dead space, abandoned buildings that no one uses anymore, and most importantly, storage and industrial areas (they do filter their entire atmosphere, after all).
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:15
However, the population of Coruscant is canonically 1 trillion, as noted here. That’s not so surprising, though: all of Coruscant is a city, not inhabited. There will be a lot of dead space, abandoned buildings that no one uses anymore, and most importantly, storage and industrial areas (they do filter their entire atmosphere, after all).
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:15
Anyway, if you’ve got to ignore something for the sake of consistency, I’d say throw out prices first, then population, and then military numbers. Just in terms of story impact.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:20
Anyway, if you’ve got to ignore something for the sake of consistency, I’d say throw out prices first, then population, and then military numbers. Just in terms of story impact.
– Adamant
Oct 14 '16 at 4:20
1
1
Yes. That's exactly what I was worying about. Fantastillions of Worlds and Sentients - and here our small group of heroes that fight against this small group of villians which have this terrible superwapon that could destroy one of the 50 million populated planets per day (so after 1370 years of daily planet destroying they would have destroyed 1% of all planets, and perhaps the rest 99% will notice and be freightened). The whole story we love (and in fact the whole 20-30 years empire) would be just a little footnote in some regional history books.
– Hothie
Dec 19 '16 at 9:46
Yes. That's exactly what I was worying about. Fantastillions of Worlds and Sentients - and here our small group of heroes that fight against this small group of villians which have this terrible superwapon that could destroy one of the 50 million populated planets per day (so after 1370 years of daily planet destroying they would have destroyed 1% of all planets, and perhaps the rest 99% will notice and be freightened). The whole story we love (and in fact the whole 20-30 years empire) would be just a little footnote in some regional history books.
– Hothie
Dec 19 '16 at 9:46
add a comment |
My question is, what's the statistical likelihood of all the random encounters between original series characters in following works (video only), and of the rest of the trilogies' characters in other video media.
New contributor
add a comment |
My question is, what's the statistical likelihood of all the random encounters between original series characters in following works (video only), and of the rest of the trilogies' characters in other video media.
New contributor
add a comment |
My question is, what's the statistical likelihood of all the random encounters between original series characters in following works (video only), and of the rest of the trilogies' characters in other video media.
New contributor
My question is, what's the statistical likelihood of all the random encounters between original series characters in following works (video only), and of the rest of the trilogies' characters in other video media.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 26 mins ago
Kaiser BasileusKaiser Basileus
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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More than 100 quadrillion anyway... starwars.wikia.com/wiki/The_galaxy. But if hundreds of trillions died in that war you mentioned, it might be worth narrowing your question down to an exact point in history.
– Daft
Dec 22 '14 at 15:28
Let's say during the Reign of the Galactic Empire :)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 15:31
For the record, the number who died in the Vuuzhan Vong invasion was 365 trillion.
– Valorum
Dec 22 '14 at 15:43
I didn't actually consult the wikia page. I just remembered that it was in the hundreds of trillions ;)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:02
Thanks for the edit. Sometimes I goof up and I am currently multi tasking:)
– the_OTHER_DJMethaneMan
Dec 22 '14 at 16:11