G0-T0

"You could say I'm something of a&hellip; patriot."

- G0-T0

G0-T0, also known as "Goto", was a G0-T0 infrastructure planning system operational in c. 3,955 – 3,951 BBY. He later became head of the Exchange criminal organization on Nar Shaddaa and traveled with the Jedi Exile.

Biography
"Pazaak bores me. I often suspect my opponent of cheating. I prefer predictable games, such as galactic economics."

- G0-T0 to the Jedi Exile

To oversee and aid in the planetary reconstruction of the planet Telos IV, the Galactic Republic spent a great deal of credits to design a technical droid to handle the immense data that was produced daily: climate changes, shield management reports, et cetera. This droid was known as G0-T0. Known to few, however, was that the droid also had a secondary duty: to aid in the reconstruction of the Republic, which was wounded from the aftermath of the Jedi Civil War. To accomplish this task, it had two directives:


 * Produce options to rebuild the Republic
 * Follow all the laws of the Republic.

Working for quite a long time to accomplish its duties on Telos, the droid found itself unable to follow both of the directives for rebuilding the Republic. Every logical option ended up breaking a law of the Republic. At that moment, the droid "broke." Choosing to follow the first directive, the droid began to enact plans to save the Republic, regardless of their legality.

Eventually building a jet-black orb of a body, G0-T0 began to set up as a smuggling ring on the planet of Nar Shaddaa. Since few would believe a droid could run an elaborate smuggling operation, G0-T0 used a hologram emitter to create the identity of "Goto." Instead of being the smuggling operator itself, G0-T0 would simply be Goto's liaison. G0-T0 set up the hologram by reusing a number of holovid gangster clichés. Taken together, the illusion was so effective that few, if any, knew of Goto's true existence, although the Jedi Exile guessed it. G0-T0's actions, while illegal, did aid the Republic in rebuilding itself. Its smuggling ring caused the deaths of destabilizing persons or organizations, developed unofficial profits for entire sectors, and strengthened Republic worlds that would otherwise be poor and ignored. Believing also that the major source of the Republic's problems revolved around the Jedi/Sith conflict, it also enacted bounties for live Jedi and Sith. Many bounty hunters, who misinterpreted the bounty, simply killed Jedi and Sith instead of capturing them. The bounty hunters did not realize that they were worth nothing to G0-T0 dead. It was searching for a live Jedi or Sith to aid him in preserving the Republic.

The Jedi Exile was captured under the Jedi Bounty. Goto spoke with the Exile briefly on the bridge of his yacht, which orbited Nar Shaddaa, requesting the Jedi's help in the preservation of the Republic. They were interrupted by the ship's alarm, which had been set off by the Exile's companions, who had invaded the ship seeking to rescue the Exile. After succeeding in this and in gaining control of the droid-operated ship, they deactivated its cloaking device, allowing it to be destroyed by the many enemies of Goto, who had been unable to locate the mysterious ship before. G0-T0 presented himself to the Exile on the Ebon Hawk, but as Goto's "gift"&mdash;not Goto himself. He requested the Exile's aid in stabilizing the planets Telos, Dantooine, and Onderon. G0-T0 found himself increasingly annoyed by another spheroid droid aboard the Hawk: Bao-Dur's tiny remote droid. G0-T0, in a response, disabled the remote and reprogrammed him for his own agenda.

G0-T0 used his modifications to the remote on the planet of Malachor V. G0-T0 guessed that Bao-Dur's remote was intended to recharge the Mass Shadow Generator on the planet, destroying it entirely. The smuggling robot felt that the planet contained too many priceless artifacts to destroy, and attempted to stop the Remote from activating the weapon by locking the remote from moving due to G0-T0's modifications. However, HK-47 and his new allies, HK-50 droids, foiled G0-T0's plans and destroyed him. When the Jedi Exile gave Bao-Dur's remote the signal to activate the Mass Shadow Generator, the Exile escaped with her companions on the Ebon Hawk while Malachor V was obliterated.

Behind the scenes
G0-T0 is a character in the computer and video game Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords. He is voiced by Daran Norris.

The name "G0-T0" and the droid's alter ego of "Goto" are presumably a reference to the infamous GOTO programming command, which, if misused, can unpredictably alter a program's behavior, often resulting in an unresolvable loop. This led some fans to speculate that G0-T0's dark side alignment within the game is a reference to the "GOTO is evil" belief expressed by proponents of structured programming.

G0-T0's appearance in the game was noticeably similar to the IT-0 droid from Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope but with the red bulb on the lower half. In The New Essential Guide to Droids, G0-T0 is depicted upside-down, bringing the droid's look even closer to IT-0. Notably, G0-T0's eye is that of the HAL-9000 supercomputer from the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, only the reflections of the ceiling lights from the ship in the movie have been placed at the bottom of the eye.

Cut content
To the chagrin of some players, the result of the G0-T0/Remote conflict is not shown, rather than the event being acted out. If the player chooses to progress through the game in accordance with the light side, it is assumed that G0-T0 fails in his attempt to destroy the Remote, and thus the planet is destroyed by the Mass Shadow Generator. However, if the player chooses the path of the dark side for the Exile to walk, the planet remains intact.

Some of this outcome may have been elaborated in levels set in the HK Manufacturing Plant, which were left out of the game's final cut. G0-T0 does admit that he hired the HK-50 assassin droids to hunt the Exile, and HK-47 reveals the droids will not stop the hunt until their factory is destroyed. In the deleted levels, HK-47 was supposed to come to an agreement with HK-51 droids, the successors of the HK-50s, so that these droids would destroy G0-T0 during the finale's G0-T0/Remote standoff. Later, The New Essential Guide to Droids reintroduced this particular cutscene into canon, although HK-51s were replaced with HK-50s. It is unknown what would have happened to G0-T0 in the non-canon dark side ending of the game, except that the Mass Shadow Generator would not be activated. Many fans speculate from the sound files left in the game disk that in the non-canon dark side ending, HK-47 arrives with the HK-51 droids and they destroy the Remote instead.

Appearances

 * Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords