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However, “Han shot first” is a debate about what is ultimately a minor re-characterization of a major character. Star Wars has gone much further than that, at times retconning the entire franchise storyline with later changes. No era of Star Wars has been free of big retcons: as you will see below, in fact, the 3 biggest Star Wars retcons come from the original trilogy, prequel trilogy, and sequel trilogy, respectively.
Honorable Mention: Rey Is Someone

Star Wars: The Last Jedi and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker are a pair of films that need to be studied: Never before have we seen creative and executive hopes collide so chaotically. The result was a retcon that has arguably upset the balance of the franchise, forever.
Director Rian Johnson took a bold swing with the major theme of The Last Jedi, which was that anyone had the Force potential to be a great Jedi. It was revealed that sequel trilogy heroine, Rey (Daisy Ridley), was not connected to some great Force user bloodline: she was just an average orphan who rose to be a great hero. It was a perfect echo of how Luke Skywalker’s story originally played out in A New Hope, before the sequel films came (see below), but the powers at Lucasfilm couldn’t let it stand. TRoS took a wrecking ball to the entire concept of Rey being remarkably unremarkable, instead retconning her origin into a story that was steeped in previous franchise lore. And yet, it didn’t really make a lick of sense. Rey was part of the Palpatine bloodline because one castaway clone of Palpatine fell in love? Like what?
Then again, with everything that TRoS dumped into Star Wars lore, this big change seemed like small potatoes. All it did was stomp on the notion that an average Star Wars fan could imagine themselves as a great Jedi hero, or that Star Wars could escape the Skywalker shadow. Now, the franchise is on the hook for that ‘New Jedi Order’ movie to provide more purpose to Rey’s muddled story.
3) Palpatine Lives! (The Rise of Skywalker)

“Somehow Palpatine returned,” is now one of the most infamous quotes in blockbuster cinema. When Star Wars made the reveal that Darth Sidious/Emperor Palpatine had returned from the dead, the fandom went into uproar. It was entirely on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker to not only explain this major retcon to Return of the Jedi‘s ending, but make Palpatine a compelling villain all over again. And as we all know now, the movie failed miserably on both counts.
Palpatine transferring his essence into a clone body wasn’t even an original idea: Rise of Skywalker committed one of the most blatant rip-offs of the Star Wars “Legends” stories we’ve ever seen, and still managed to botch it. Palpatine lost all of his muster as the ultimate Sith Lord, and it was almost sad to see him so decrepit, with his Machiavellian scheming reduced to an armada attack and a vampiric power snatch.
The retcon didn’t hit at all like Lucasfilm hoped that it would: in fact, it was a major signal that the Star Wars franchise was running on creative fumes. It’s not a coincidence that we haven’t had a Star Wars movie since The Rise of Skywalker (2019). The connection between Palpatine, Kylo Ren, and Rey (as explained above) was so flimsy that it has caused more confusion than anything. In fact, the franchise has had to use its other content lanes (comics, TV series) to backfill the explanation of how and when Palpatine started cloning himself; who helped him achieve the goal of preserving his life; the “strancasting” process that created Palpatine avatars like Snoke, and how it all led to Rey. That’s a lot of work to fix one bad retcon.










