Wookieepedia:Canon policy

The goal of Wookieepedia is to be a reliable, concise guide to all readers. To this end, it is necessary for us to restrict to some extent the type of information we accept. Wookieepedia follows the canonical hierarchy established by Lucas Licensing in 2000. While some non-canon material may be covered on Wookieepedia, it should be clearly marked as such.

Canon resources
The following outlines resources that canon, those that are non-canon and those of unclear canon status. A discussion of how canon resources "rank" follows.

What is considered a valid resource?

 * All Star Wars films
 * All Databank entries and other articles on StarWars.com
 * All episodes of Star Wars: Droids, Star Wars: Ewoks, Star Wars: Clone Wars, and Star Wars: The Clone Wars television series
 * All live-action Star Wars specials/TV series
 * All Marvel and most Dark Horse (see below) comics
 * All West End Games and Wizards of the Coast roleplaying books
 * All novels, reference books, and collections of short stories published by Bantam Spectra, Del Rey and DK Publishing
 * All young reader storybooks
 * All Topps, Decipher, Inc. and Wizards of the Coast cards and web sites
 * All LucasArts video and computer games, and related manuals, official strategy guides and web sites
 * All issues of Star Wars Gamer, Star Wars Insider, The Lucasfilm Club Magazine, Bantha Tracks, The Official Star Wars Poster Magazine, and The Official Star Wars Fact File
 * All comments from Leland Chee or other VIPs regarding the content of the Holocron continuity database or official Lucasfilm decrees.

What is not considered a valid resource?

 * Anything published under the Infinities label
 * Fan-made blueprints and specifications
 * Fan fiction of any kind
 * Conjecture based our own universe (with the exception, of course, of any such conjecture officially published by Lucas Licensing)
 * Websites, unless information is clearly stated as sourced from a valid reference.
 * Game elements that appear only when triggering a non-canonical branch of the game; that means persons who appear when the Jedi Exile is male, or events happening when Kyle Katarn chooses the dark side ending of the game.

What is unclear?

 * Dark Horse Comics Tales #1 - #20
 * Unlicensed game magazines
 * Comments by Lucasfilm VIPs other than those listed above
 * Outcomes of alternative solutions to side-quests, such as the fate of the droid C8-42 in KOTOR

Conflicting canon
When two canon sources conflict, one must consider the two sources and compare their origin.


 * 1) The films and the word of George Lucas are final. They are incontrovertible. When comparing different versions of the films, the most recent are considered the highest canon, and their edits considered Lucas's original intent and final vision. Production notes are considered to be part of the films.
 * 2) Content published on Starwars.com, including the Databank and blogs by Leland Chee or other VIPs, brings any information to a near-film status of acceptability.
 * 3) Expanded Universe information and characters not included in the films, including reference books. This also includes the stories presented in games, but not the actual on-screen gameplay or stats.

In some cases, a source may be contradicted into complete non-canon. In others, only part will be contradicted by a higher source, while the rest remains canon. As long as a piece of information comes from a canon source and is not contradicted by a higher source, it is accepted as canon. For example, an EU novel may introduce a starship, but not detail its weaponry. Later, a WOTC RPG supplement may provide game statistics for the starship previously introduced, including its weaponry. So long as the weaponry detailed in the WOTC source are not contradicted by an existing source, they are considered canon. You must be vigilant, however, as Star Wars authors are prone to reintroducing obscure references from the EU, and the WOTC statistics may eventually be overridden.

Deleting invalid articles
If you believe an article contains nothing but invalid canon or non-canon information, it should be listed in Trash compactor. A discussion forum will then be held by the community regarding the article's validity and whether the article should be deleted or not. In general, the forum will last two weeks before consensus is determined by an administrator.

If an article is concerning a canon subject but contains information from a non-valid resource, the issue should be debated on the article's individual talk page, and the article should be edited as appropriate.

Except in cases of vandalism, obscenity, and other nonsense, you should not edit the article and simply delete the text.