Pilot? What Pilot?
EA Games Soundtrack Lyrics


We have lyrics for these tracks by EA Games Soundtrack:


Lelianna's Song Hahren na melana sahlin (elder your time is come) Emma ir…
Mayzie Grobe Mobe, memzie grobe Nee fazu dwombay zybro Gwome, jepsie dome…
Oh No You Didn't Oh no! Oh no! Oh no! Yo, yo, yo Oh no you didn′t! Sucka tri…
Oh No You Didn't - Mercenaries 2 Anthem Oh no! Oh no! Oh no! Yo, yo, yo Oh no you didn't! Sucka tri…





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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

@oVoidhawko

All this talk of old Republic, new Republic. Fight against the tyranny of the Empire.

Don't buy. Never have. Those good old days the rebels preach so loudly about, you know what they are actually like? Trade Federation tariffs for shipping to the Rim. Endless pirate attacks, entire families sold into slavery to the Hutts. You ever hear these grand republics do anything against that? No. Just committee after endless committee.

When the Imps came along, I thought they were the same. Gloss on white paint. But they stopped the raids. Gave us all a chance to reach to the stars with the academy.

The empire improved everything it touched. Wasn't perfect. Nothing is.

And if any of you bastards bring up Alderaan, those snivelling cowards preached pacifism while arming pirates and mobsters an still called themselves a beacon of Republican values.

Didn't hear noise like that when they were threatened by the Seperatist war droids.



@theginger7148

As brilliant as this entire thing is, what strikes me the most are the little details. The way the Captain follows orders without any protest and abandons the attack run, it’s perfectly in character with a squadron leader. They need to enforce rigid discipline to have any chance of surviving - given the lackluster state of Imperial fighter tactics - and he probably wouldn’t want to commit any of his pilots to a run where they’ll be under fire from at least two warships the entire way. Then the captain of the Overseer (I assume that’s who she is) actually having a sensible strategy and choosing to preserve her remaining assets and retreat rather than fight against terrible odds.

And when Grey (I think that’s his name?) goes to rescue the TIE bomber, it shows the kind of bond that starfighter pilots have. The Rebels and the Empire probably had very similar ideals in that regard, considering the insanity of taking cheap fighters into space and trying to destroy warships.

The scene in the wreckage with Grey powering down all his systems is fantastic. There’s not a “power off” switch for every system, he has to individually deactivate everything and rely on what looks to be passive radar (since it isn’t constantly pinging). This is great, passive radar wouldn’t be picked up like active radar would on sensors, so it makes sense. Then the TIE Interceptor starts failing, and the pilot doesn’t seem immediately worried. He’s calm due to extensive training, experience, and the fact that his life support systems don’t require a fully-sealed cockpit unlike the X-Wing.

The descent through atmosphere is gorgeous, especially the bow wake. And the quick transition into atmospheric dogfighting is equally stunning. It’s reminiscent of modern dogfights when they’re WVR. Shows off the maneuverability advantage of the Interceptor too, as well as the speed advantage.

The water trails from the ion engines are great. They’re spiraling like trails from an actual jet engine, unlike those seen in The Force Awakens. Beautiful stuff. Finally, the way that the TIE slowly tips down when power is lost, and how it just flies to pieces upon contact with the water. And how the Captain looks like he expects to die. It’s so accurate, which is something that you rarely see from Star Wars. The TIE doesn’t just drop and start spinning, it falls forward gradually because it has to have been designed for atmosphere as well as vacuum. And without a FBW system to keep it stable, aerodynamics takes hold.

As a final note, it makes me so happy to see that the writers/CG artists chose to keep both the eyes of both the TIE and X-Wing pilots covered until the end. A lot of media will try and humanize one side while demonizing the other just by showing or not showing eyes. As an easy example, having the visors of Rebel pilots in the OT be see-through while the Imperials used fully-enclosed helmets. By putting both pilots here on the same field, the viewer is left to judge them in more unbiased way. To see them both as pilots fighting for their respective sides.

Edit: Rewatched it, forgot something. The Rebel pilot taunting/insulting the Imperial pilot - who stays silent - again makes total sense. The Captain is focusing only on keeping his Interceptor up and surviving, plus he’s been trained to essentially act without emotions in combat. The Rebel is a lot more...shall we say, open with his feelings. And obviously he’d despise his opponent, so the spite works perfectly



All comments from YouTube:

@jessecox

This was exactly the kind of hype I needed

@mikewizz1895

I agree, This makes me even more excited to play this game when it comes out.

@CasketRecords

The Imp is one hell of a space butterfly

@cyrus425

Same man

@sethzimmann9878

Can’t wait to lose to Jesse Cox on a public server 😂Space butterflies forever

@tinyfireball1311

I thought I was as hyped as possible. Nope.!

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@elmatador9086

Seeing a rebel pilot being treated as a villain was chilling. His visor hiding his eyes was a really cool visual touch.

@CouragelessOne

I've always felt like there were no "good guys" in star wars. The rebels killed millions on the death stars and on Starkiller. The Jedi became war mongers, and the Republic slowly grew corrupt.

@NordRheinWestfale

@@CouragelessOne The first two are not really a fair comparison since both the Death Star and this Starkiller were both Superweapons that killed billions,
but I totally agree with you about the Jedi and the Republic

@michaelterrell5061

@@CouragelessOne No. don’t add moral relativism to Star Wars. There are good guys and there are bad guys, that was the intent. The rebels were rebelling from a tyrannical empire ruled by a megalomaniac described as a back he of essential evil, the rebels were good the empire was bad that is it. Also the Jedi were never warmongers?

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