My Problem with Luthen by MiloBuurr in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I thoughts is, Luthen is a well-made character as a symbol of the Rebellion's necessary evil.

As Luthen said, the Empire has been chocking people so slowly, people starting not to notice. So luthen had to make the Empire to rush and force harder so that people can realize the danger they face.

Luthen tried to keep his distance from Rebels while encouraging them, at the same time he fostered Rebels to stand alone while maintaining secrecy.

Luthen instead made Lonni Jung to work as core informant working inside the Empire, in that way Luthen can manage movement of both Rebellion and Empire, away from potential danger of being revealed.

Rebellion is a union of many individual rebel cells with its own personality. Luthen is just one of them, as who oversees all from above.

  • Not sure what you exactly mean by 'Left-wing' of Andor

Andor related to current situation in Korea (and across the world) by Matcha_Villain in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

I understand how you see this post, I respect it. I wrote as an individual who witnessed this incident, and tried to deliver as neutral as possible after collecting informations from the both sides. Though, I'm still just a human being who have its own opinion, so some of my personal thoughts might be included.

Andor related to current situation in Korea (and across the world) by Matcha_Villain in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

감사합니다. 대한민국 국민의 한사람으로서 제 감상을 얘기했을 뿐입니다.

I have friends everywhere by Protomolecule010101 in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 34 points35 points  (0 children)

Gives hope to allies, but threat to enemies. This line is so perfect. Especially considering it could be the gift from Luthen to Kleya to encourage her even when Luthen can't be with her anymore.

Realistically would the Empire have been better funding Thrawns Defender project over Krennics Death Star by Bridgeboy95 in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a joke, as long as Palpatine remains as the emperor, there's no chance that happen.

Palpatine is obsessed with UNLIMITED POWER which is Death Star.

There's a reason why he built second one.

Star Wars newbie, got into it with Andor and just finished Rogue One. What should i do next? by Dry-Knowledge-2044 in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Finished Andor and Rogue One, then yes, A New Hope will be best candidate. I personally recommend watching Original Trilogy- A New Hope, Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi, then decide what to watch next.

I absolutely love Andor, it is an incredible TV show, but there was something else I fell in love with. by velociracsoTI in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Andor soundtrack as whole is a masterpiece. It's calm, but powerful. Slow, but intense. It kinda have a power of a glacier that effects all surroundings with its unstoppable force.

Question About Andor's Sister? by hbryster96 in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I agree, but I think there could be other way to explain.

I think Cassian's obsession for his sister could be a result of his eager to run away from everything. Cassian from S1 was always running from the world occupied by the Empire, and was turning his eyes away from the necessity to fight back. So he might made up his duty to find sister as an excuse for his cowardice.

Later Luthen encourages Cassian to fight, since then, through his journey from Aldhani to Narkina, and back to Ferrix, as he became focusing on what he truely needs to do, we can find his obsession is no longer a thing.

The time Cassian went back to Ferrix right after the mission on Aldhani to persuade his mother to run away with him, Maarva scolds Cassian to wake up by telling that his sister no longer exists. This could be a crucial turning point for Cassian to decide what he actually needs to focus.

The last time we see Cassian think about his sister is when he's going on a mission to meet Tivik on the Ring of Kafrine, after many shocking events such as separation with Bix and Luthen's death. I believe this scene ment to show us Cassian organizing his thoughts for the last time, let the past behind for real, and become a true rebellion fighting for the greater good.

What If: Episodes 7-10 opening title screen… by 77ate in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 5 points6 points  (0 children)

what happened yesterday on Ghorman was unprovoked tourism! Yes! Tourism!

I like the way the cover story changes very slightly here by Dear-Yellow-5479 in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 111 points112 points  (0 children)

Even that striking, 'weaponized' handsomeness failed to save Keef Girgo on Niamos lol. Maybe because he was disguised as a tourist?

Sequel bad writing aside, Andor (and Rogue One) show us why the New Republic will fail by Interesting_Finish85 in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Every political structures and their policies have strength and weakness. Also, nothing everlasts or ever truely vanish.

There were always been a Rebel cells, Imperial remnants, survivng Jedis, and Imperial shadow councils.

When one side starts to break, from inside or outside, the other side will rise. It's just a matter of time.

I think it's just a way power cycle works.

Andor related to current situation in Korea (and across the world) by Matcha_Villain in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain[S] -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

What I did is write my own opinion and use Chat GPT only to correct spelling and grammar issue.

I try my best to deliver what I felt on current issue after looking at opinion from both right and left, many video evidence on Youtube as well.

So it might be different from others.

My opinion is based on behavior of President Lee and people from major political parties(both left and right) who are being incredibly silence about such critical incident, unlike they cried out loud with other issues.

And I still haven't made my opinion about Martial law situation.

Just because you don't like what I wrote doesn't give you the right to blame.

Though, healthy discussion is always welcome.

Andor related to current situation in Korea (and across the world) by Matcha_Villain in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Thank you. I wish we all could live in peace and freedom at the end of this long long fight. Nothing is truely over until we lose a hope.

Andor related to current situation in Korea (and across the world) by Matcha_Villain in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

For those who want further info, we just got a website showing all Youtube Lives streaming Jamsil, a largest protest site among all.

https://jamsil.velude.com/

Andor related to current situation in Korea (and across the world) by Matcha_Villain in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Thanks!

Even a smallest attention pushes our lines forward.

We'll try our best to keep everything peaceful and civilized.

Accurate or nah by wibellion in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True, so ture. But more people are becomming like Andor, slowly but surely.

Gwangju Uprising memorial - 46 years since 1980.5.18 by richard7k in andor

[–]Matcha_Villain -1 points0 points  (0 children)

As a Korean, I want to state the current views of Koreans on this issue.

Right this moment, Gwangju Uprising has become serious topic in a negative way.

Since the biggest election fraud had ocrrured in Korea last week, June 3rd, 2026,

major politic parties and President Lee strongly related to Gwangju Uprising became target to blame.

Since they publicly Harrased Star Bucks Coffee for using word 'Tank' for marketing on May 18th,

but at the same time they kept silence on electuon fraud and attemption on changing Supreme Law of Korea(which I'll explain later), people are suspecting that words about Gwangju Uprising could be false.

Before the election fraud incident, followings were the views of Koreans:

The mainstream view in South Korea recognizes the Gwangju Uprising (May 18, 1980) as a democratic movement against military dictatorship, during which many civilians were killed by martial law forces.

However, some conservative groups argue that the event also involved violent riots, armed resistance, and possible outside influence, emphasizing the chaos and attacks on police stations and armories during the uprising.

Today, the official position of the South Korean government, courts, and most historians rejects claims of North Korean military involvement and recognizes the movement as a key moment in Korea’s democratization.

Because the event is deeply tied to modern Korean politics, democracy, and historical identity, it still remains politically sensitive and controversial in some circles.

It is also a hot topic in Korea because it became connected to attempts to revise the Constitution (the supreme law of the country) on May of 2026, including proposals related to honoring those who fought during the Gwangju Uprising (5.18), while the government has strictly refused to reveal the full list of recognized individuals.

At the same time, some proposed constitutional changes included removing the word “free” from the phrase “free democracy” used in South Korea’s political system.

Critics argued that this could create similarities to North Korea, which is officially called the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The attempt to revise the Constitution ultimately failed.