Star Wars universe does have lasers of all scales and power levels.

Yet literally no one uses them well on a personal scale.

The Jedi (and Sith for that matter) imbue it with a power of magical stone, and then…use it as a saber.

To balance this stupidity, stormtroopers, clones and droids all use slow, non-continuous energy blasters. With actual lasers, they could insta-kill any Jedi, but they cannot, because otherwise the movie wouldn’t exist.

    • Matengor@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      You can’t stress that enough. I love sci-fi, but I never really fancied Star Wars.

      Now, as a dad, I rewatch the movies and replay scenes with my son, and the similarity with fantasy action movies strikes me. For example, the beautiful display of alien species and habitats.

    • Kühlschrank@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      We don’t need to split hairs - ‘sci-fi fantasy’ or ‘science fantasy’ is a real genre and common enough term.

    • adaveinthelife@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      Laser swords and biological powers beyond our current grasp of the science behind them define it as science fiction.

      I get it’s the quirky pickme trend to argue over this and I agree about the fantasy elements but don’t be the ‘actually’ guy in the room.

        • adaveinthelife@lemmy.ca
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          30 minutes ago

          Quote the script where magic is ever mentioned in the films. A light saber is a device with a button that Luke has the knowledge to repair.

          Put it in your fantasy section if you want, I’m not even arguing it’s not fantasy, but it’s undeniably science fiction.

      • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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        15 hours ago

        Also MAGIC too, star wars strangely has magic in it, which in contradictory to what a sci-fi, aka the night sisters.

        • adaveinthelife@lemmy.ca
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          24 minutes ago

          Just because you don’t understand the science does not make it magic. The force is described as a biological phenomenon that the Jedi have some understanding of, whether the audience learns about it or not is irrelevant, it’s science fiction by definition.

      • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Not really, in LoTr, they have a magical sword that shines around orcs, another one that can stop a ghost sword, and there are being with biological powers beyond the grasp of our understanding.

        I think you are confusing setting with genre. By your logic the star wars and star trek porn parodies are also sci-fi and not porn.

        Sci-fi is only sci-fi if science plays an integral role in the story, eg. Expanse, Stargate (shows), Star trek. But these are all arguably in space, so I get your confusion, that’s the setting, shows like Black Mirror and For all mankind are also sci-fi and those are present day things.

        Well actually For all mankind plays out in an alternate past where the space race continues (though I guess this is also technically in space).

        Black mirror explores humanity through the lense of abusing technological/scientific inventions.

        So those are science based fictions, sci-fi.

        Star Wars is space fantasy, arguably if we live in an alternate universe and the original trilogy is released in the late 2000s and 2010s they could be dubbed as YA. Random teenager protagonist finds out they are indeed special and helps to overthrow an opressive regime, like Divergent, Hunger games, Maze runner

          • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            Who said Lotr is sci-fi?

            I used LotR explicitly to show that Star Wars is closer to that and therefore a fantasy than it is to any well-known sci-fi.