Death Star II/Legends

"Now witness the firepower of this fully armed and operational battlestation!"

- Emperor Palpatine

History


The Death Star II was built as part of Emperor Palpatine's master plan to destroy the Rebel Alliance and turn Luke Skywalker to the dark side of the Force.

Unlike the first Death Star, which, as a result of supply and design problems took nineteen years to complete, this Death Star took much less time (around two years) to construct. Apparently, construction procedures had been perfected by this time.

As with the first Death Star, the initial construction site of this battle station is unknown. Following a failed Rebel mission to destroy it, the Emperor entrusted Darth Vader with the task of delivering the Death Star to Endor, where it could be completed in secret. During the move, Vader diverted the Death Star from its course to destroy the Rebel planet D'rinba IV.

Construction continued in the Endor system in Moddell Sector, where construction was overseen by the regional governor, the weak-willed and easily controlled Moff Jerjerrod. Endor was selected due to the massive concentration of strategic metals on the planets Dor, Eloggi, and Megiddo in the system, but the actual construction site was in geosynchronous orbit around the forested Sanctuary Moon, above a powerful shield generator on the surface.

Resources that could not be produced locally were secretly ferried to the distant world from all over the Galaxy along the Sanctuary Pipeline, with some of the hauliage contracted out to three hundred ships from Prince Xizor's civilian company Xizor Transport Systems. It is unclear what percentage of construction material the XTS haulers carried, or whether the outsourcing was genuinely necessary: it seems that Palpatine anticipated Xizor's decision to pass on the location of the Death Star II to Bothan spies aligned with the Rebel Alliance, and this may have been the sole reason for involving the Falleen in the first place. The Emperor even leaked his personal schedule so the Rebels would know when he would personally be aboard. This bait proved too tempting and resulted in the Battle of Endor.

At the Battle of Endor, the Death Star II was unfinished structurally, but, contrary to Rebel intelligence, the superlaser was fully operational. It was destroyed during the Battle of Endor when Lando Calrissian, piloting Millennium Falcon; and Wedge Antilles, piloting an X-wing starfighter, flew into its unfinished superstructure and destroyed the hypermatter reactor core with well placed concussion missiles and proton torpedoes.

IG-88, a droid bounty hunter, had uploaded his consciousness into a computer core which was installed into the Death Star II. When his consciousness was installed, he literally became the Death Star. When Lando Calrissian destroyed the core, he not only helped save the Galaxy from the Empire, but from the dangerous IG-88 as well.

Emperor Palpatine was the only person on the Death Star II to sense the presence of IG-88. Before the station's destruction, he noticed a series of doors in his throne room opening and closing sporadically.

Specifications
Like its predecessor, the Death Star II was made of Quadanium steel and equally divided into two hemispheres, which were in turn subdivided into 12 zones. had a monstrous diameter of over 900 kilometers&mdash;the intellectual and physical evolution of the Death Star I. If completed, the planetoid would have likely boasted a hyperdrive system similar to the original, comprised of 123 (or more, given the larger size) individual generators.

The second Death Star was designed to take into account and eradicate the shortcomings of the original battlestation which had been destroyed over Yavin IV. Tantamount in this redesign was the elimination of the two meter wide exhaust port that was the downfall of the Death Star I. Instead, excess heat and gases were exhausted to space through millions of millimeter wide tubes, with highly advanced countermeasures that would seal themselves off if the walls sensed any excess of heat or energy.

The second main advancement in the Death Star II over the Death Star I was the improvement of the superlaser. Still located in the northern hemisphere, the superlaser in the Death Star II was much more powerful, took less time to recharge, and had lowered power settings and more sensitive targeting systems to better combat capital ships. The conventional armament of Death Star II was also much greater than that of Death Star I.

''The following list of specifications is a list of intended firepower and vehicle complement, had the Death Star II been completed. As it was destroyed in the middle of construction, the full extent of these measurements remains unknown.''

Vehicular complement

 * 7,200 TIE fighters (various models)
 * 4 capital ships
 * 3,600 Lambda-class assault shuttles
 * 2,480 Skipray Blastboats
 * 1,860 drop ships
 * 13,000 support craft:
 * 1,400 AT-ATs
 * 1,400 AT-STs
 * 1,420 repulsortanks
 * 1,420 repulsorcraft
 * 4,843 Juggernauts
 * 178 Mobile Command Bases
 * 355 Floating Fortresses

Armament

 * One superlaser
 * Turbolaser batteries&mdash;30,000
 * Laser cannons&mdash;7,500
 * Ion cannons&mdash;5,000
 * Tractor beam generators&mdash;768

Behind the scenes
There are discrepancies regarding the size of the Death Star II, which has generated some controversy. The West End Games RPG claimed that the second Death Star had a diameter of 160 kilometers. The majority of Expanded Universe material since then has simply repeated this number. The recent Inside the Worlds of Star Wars Trilogy fact book, via detailed scaling of the station in the film, and statements by ILM visual effects designer Richard Edlund show that the second Death Star was actually over 900 kilometers in diameter.

The specifications above may hold some discrepancy: as these figures are for the incorrect undersized version, they would be closer to what would be carried by the first Death Star. The proper figures for the second Death Star may be several orders of magnitude higher.

Appearances

 * Forces of Corruption
 * Star Wars: The Interactive Video Board Game
 * Star Wars: Demolition
 * Star Wars: Battlefront II
 * Shadows of the Empire
 * Return of the Ewok
 * Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi