Quillara Adeen

"Ah, a challenger! At last I can once again quench my hunger for battle. Come and prove yourself."

- Quillara Adeen

Quillara Adeen was a Human female Dark Jedi who lived during the time of the Galactic Civil War. By the time following the Battle of Yavin in 0 BBY, she guarded a Dark Jedi Statue on the jungle moon of Yavin 4. During her time on Yavin 4, she encountered and battled a Jedi dispatched by Matarmeno Krahnn, a Human Jedi adventurer hailing from the city of Tyrena on Corellia. Despite being a skilled practitioner of the Force, and making talented use of her single-bladed red lightsaber, Adeen was bested by her Jedi adversary, and transformed into a Force ghost shortly after her death.

Biography
"You must venture forth and complete this undertaking to fulfill your destiny and achieve the rewards that it offers."

- Matarmeno Krahnn instructing a Jedi to defeat Quillara Adeen

During the time following the Battle of Yavin in 0 BBY, a Human male Jedi adventurer by the name of Matarmeno Krahnn hid within the riverside city of Tyrena on the Core World of Corellia. During his time in Tyrena, Khrahnn encountered yet another Jedi, a rare sight during the reign of the Galactic Empire, as most Jedi had been wiped out by the end of the Great Jedi Purge. As a sort of trial, Matarmeno Krahnn urged the Jedi to look within, and embark on a dangerous undertaking to discover various Jedi artifacts throughout the galaxy, and defeat two Force users; the Mon Calamari Jedi Bre'ano Umakk, and the Dark Jedi Quillara Adeen.

Quillara Adeen, a practitioner of the Dark side of the Force, was no stranger to battle. During the time of the Galactic Civil War, Adeen dwelled on the jungle moon of Yavin 4, where she guarded a Dark Jedi Statue near the Wayward Jungle region.

Behind the scenes
Quillara Adeen was a non-player character in the 2003 video game Star Wars Galaxies: An Empire Divided, a massively multiplayer online role-playing game developed by Sony Online Entertainment and published by LucasArts, prior to its closure on December 15, 2011.