Does the Disney canon of Star Wars include any multiple-biome planets?












25















Star Wars is quite famous for fitting the Single Biome Planet trope to a T (warning: TVTropes link). You have the desert worlds of Tattooine and Jakku, the Forest Moon of Endor, the woodland planet of Kashyyyk, the volcanic planet of Mustafar, the ice worlds of Hoth and Ilum, the cloud-world of Bespin, the mud-drenched Mimban, etc.



Within the Disney canon of Star Wars, are there any planets that are specifically known to not be single-biome? The closest I can think of is Naboo with its underground domed cities, but there doesn't seem to be any indication that the climate is truly different there, it's more of an "oh, we built cities at the bottom of the sea because plot" thing. Ordinary seas and islands don't count unless there is a trope-breaking difference (that is, this question is about trope-breaking, not about biomes as they are formally defined in geology). Are there any planets that are either shown on-screen as having multiple biomes (e.g. desert and jungle; glacier and rain forest; grasslands, fungal forest, and tundra; etc.), or that can be shown to be multiple biome according to canon Disney works?



A canon reference could be something as simple as, "He set down his X-Wing in the tiny area near Tattooine's north pole where trees grew in abundance."










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Minban also has swamplands as well as mud fields. Does that count?

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:39











  • @Valorum if the swamplands are shown or described in a canon (non-Legends) source, then yes.

    – Robert Columbia
    Jan 22 at 19:41






  • 2





    Soldier 1: "To the southern marshlands! Move out!" (Solo: A Star Wars Story)

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:45













  • We only see small little pieces of any planet other than Tatooine. Most of the others could be extreme multi-biome and we just don't know it.

    – Joshua
    Jan 23 at 18:26











  • What about Alderaan? (Or is the source non-canon?)

    – moooeeeep
    Jan 24 at 10:23
















25















Star Wars is quite famous for fitting the Single Biome Planet trope to a T (warning: TVTropes link). You have the desert worlds of Tattooine and Jakku, the Forest Moon of Endor, the woodland planet of Kashyyyk, the volcanic planet of Mustafar, the ice worlds of Hoth and Ilum, the cloud-world of Bespin, the mud-drenched Mimban, etc.



Within the Disney canon of Star Wars, are there any planets that are specifically known to not be single-biome? The closest I can think of is Naboo with its underground domed cities, but there doesn't seem to be any indication that the climate is truly different there, it's more of an "oh, we built cities at the bottom of the sea because plot" thing. Ordinary seas and islands don't count unless there is a trope-breaking difference (that is, this question is about trope-breaking, not about biomes as they are formally defined in geology). Are there any planets that are either shown on-screen as having multiple biomes (e.g. desert and jungle; glacier and rain forest; grasslands, fungal forest, and tundra; etc.), or that can be shown to be multiple biome according to canon Disney works?



A canon reference could be something as simple as, "He set down his X-Wing in the tiny area near Tattooine's north pole where trees grew in abundance."










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Minban also has swamplands as well as mud fields. Does that count?

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:39











  • @Valorum if the swamplands are shown or described in a canon (non-Legends) source, then yes.

    – Robert Columbia
    Jan 22 at 19:41






  • 2





    Soldier 1: "To the southern marshlands! Move out!" (Solo: A Star Wars Story)

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:45













  • We only see small little pieces of any planet other than Tatooine. Most of the others could be extreme multi-biome and we just don't know it.

    – Joshua
    Jan 23 at 18:26











  • What about Alderaan? (Or is the source non-canon?)

    – moooeeeep
    Jan 24 at 10:23














25












25








25








Star Wars is quite famous for fitting the Single Biome Planet trope to a T (warning: TVTropes link). You have the desert worlds of Tattooine and Jakku, the Forest Moon of Endor, the woodland planet of Kashyyyk, the volcanic planet of Mustafar, the ice worlds of Hoth and Ilum, the cloud-world of Bespin, the mud-drenched Mimban, etc.



Within the Disney canon of Star Wars, are there any planets that are specifically known to not be single-biome? The closest I can think of is Naboo with its underground domed cities, but there doesn't seem to be any indication that the climate is truly different there, it's more of an "oh, we built cities at the bottom of the sea because plot" thing. Ordinary seas and islands don't count unless there is a trope-breaking difference (that is, this question is about trope-breaking, not about biomes as they are formally defined in geology). Are there any planets that are either shown on-screen as having multiple biomes (e.g. desert and jungle; glacier and rain forest; grasslands, fungal forest, and tundra; etc.), or that can be shown to be multiple biome according to canon Disney works?



A canon reference could be something as simple as, "He set down his X-Wing in the tiny area near Tattooine's north pole where trees grew in abundance."










share|improve this question
















Star Wars is quite famous for fitting the Single Biome Planet trope to a T (warning: TVTropes link). You have the desert worlds of Tattooine and Jakku, the Forest Moon of Endor, the woodland planet of Kashyyyk, the volcanic planet of Mustafar, the ice worlds of Hoth and Ilum, the cloud-world of Bespin, the mud-drenched Mimban, etc.



Within the Disney canon of Star Wars, are there any planets that are specifically known to not be single-biome? The closest I can think of is Naboo with its underground domed cities, but there doesn't seem to be any indication that the climate is truly different there, it's more of an "oh, we built cities at the bottom of the sea because plot" thing. Ordinary seas and islands don't count unless there is a trope-breaking difference (that is, this question is about trope-breaking, not about biomes as they are formally defined in geology). Are there any planets that are either shown on-screen as having multiple biomes (e.g. desert and jungle; glacier and rain forest; grasslands, fungal forest, and tundra; etc.), or that can be shown to be multiple biome according to canon Disney works?



A canon reference could be something as simple as, "He set down his X-Wing in the tiny area near Tattooine's north pole where trees grew in abundance."







star-wars planets trope genre-trope






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 22 at 19:41







Robert Columbia

















asked Jan 22 at 19:20









Robert ColumbiaRobert Columbia

5,00762768




5,00762768








  • 2





    Minban also has swamplands as well as mud fields. Does that count?

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:39











  • @Valorum if the swamplands are shown or described in a canon (non-Legends) source, then yes.

    – Robert Columbia
    Jan 22 at 19:41






  • 2





    Soldier 1: "To the southern marshlands! Move out!" (Solo: A Star Wars Story)

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:45













  • We only see small little pieces of any planet other than Tatooine. Most of the others could be extreme multi-biome and we just don't know it.

    – Joshua
    Jan 23 at 18:26











  • What about Alderaan? (Or is the source non-canon?)

    – moooeeeep
    Jan 24 at 10:23














  • 2





    Minban also has swamplands as well as mud fields. Does that count?

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:39











  • @Valorum if the swamplands are shown or described in a canon (non-Legends) source, then yes.

    – Robert Columbia
    Jan 22 at 19:41






  • 2





    Soldier 1: "To the southern marshlands! Move out!" (Solo: A Star Wars Story)

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 19:45













  • We only see small little pieces of any planet other than Tatooine. Most of the others could be extreme multi-biome and we just don't know it.

    – Joshua
    Jan 23 at 18:26











  • What about Alderaan? (Or is the source non-canon?)

    – moooeeeep
    Jan 24 at 10:23








2




2





Minban also has swamplands as well as mud fields. Does that count?

– Valorum
Jan 22 at 19:39





Minban also has swamplands as well as mud fields. Does that count?

– Valorum
Jan 22 at 19:39













@Valorum if the swamplands are shown or described in a canon (non-Legends) source, then yes.

– Robert Columbia
Jan 22 at 19:41





@Valorum if the swamplands are shown or described in a canon (non-Legends) source, then yes.

– Robert Columbia
Jan 22 at 19:41




2




2





Soldier 1: "To the southern marshlands! Move out!" (Solo: A Star Wars Story)

– Valorum
Jan 22 at 19:45







Soldier 1: "To the southern marshlands! Move out!" (Solo: A Star Wars Story)

– Valorum
Jan 22 at 19:45















We only see small little pieces of any planet other than Tatooine. Most of the others could be extreme multi-biome and we just don't know it.

– Joshua
Jan 23 at 18:26





We only see small little pieces of any planet other than Tatooine. Most of the others could be extreme multi-biome and we just don't know it.

– Joshua
Jan 23 at 18:26













What about Alderaan? (Or is the source non-canon?)

– moooeeeep
Jan 24 at 10:23





What about Alderaan? (Or is the source non-canon?)

– moooeeeep
Jan 24 at 10:23










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















26














Ryloth seems a pretty good fit. It has a wide range of 'biomes' seen in the canon Clone Wars series including some rugged mountain areas seemingly devoid of life as well as jungles.




TERRAIN: Jungles, Mesas, Valleys, Volcanoes



Star Wars Databank




enter image description here



enter image description here



enter image description here





You might also consider Jaresh. It appears in the (canon) book Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure.




We’re at war, Cracken had said, and Leia had accepted that. But now she wondered how much evil had been done, deliberately or not, because of that excuse.
Below the Mellcrawler hung the planet Jaresh, like a green jewel in space. As the yacht approached, Leia could see thin blue lines carved across the continents, marking a complex series of irrigation canals that brought water from enormous polar ice caps to the more temperate regions.







share|improve this answer


























  • I don't know...that's like one stand of trees surrounded by dry mesas. Though there is a big green splotch visible from space.

    – Adamant
    Jan 22 at 21:52








  • 14





    Is it just me who read "Terrain: Mesas" and heard it in a Jar Jar Binks voice?

    – Graham
    Jan 23 at 0:22



















15














Naboo



I know that you disqualified Naboo already, but I think that you failed to consider that we know that Naboo has large marshy forests (where the jedi first met JarJar), and it also has large rolling plains (where the Gungans fought the droid army).






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    They all seem to be temperate. And within a fairly close proximity

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 23:23






  • 5





    Less a rolling plain, more like a badly-textured green carpet. But then Lucasfilm were years off the pace on CGI, back then.

    – Graham
    Jan 23 at 0:25



















7














I think Parnassoss, Phasma's homeworld. We start the book in the coastal area where the Skyre Clan leaves, we see the grassy plains where the Claw clan lives, the desert, the enclosed cities. It's a rather varied world as far as most Star Wars planets seem to be. And before the devastation we know it was similar to earth. This would include a variety of biomes around the planet. You can check out this video from Star Wars Explained that gives a background on the planet itself.






share|improve this answer

























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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    26














    Ryloth seems a pretty good fit. It has a wide range of 'biomes' seen in the canon Clone Wars series including some rugged mountain areas seemingly devoid of life as well as jungles.




    TERRAIN: Jungles, Mesas, Valleys, Volcanoes



    Star Wars Databank




    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    enter image description here





    You might also consider Jaresh. It appears in the (canon) book Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure.




    We’re at war, Cracken had said, and Leia had accepted that. But now she wondered how much evil had been done, deliberately or not, because of that excuse.
    Below the Mellcrawler hung the planet Jaresh, like a green jewel in space. As the yacht approached, Leia could see thin blue lines carved across the continents, marking a complex series of irrigation canals that brought water from enormous polar ice caps to the more temperate regions.







    share|improve this answer


























    • I don't know...that's like one stand of trees surrounded by dry mesas. Though there is a big green splotch visible from space.

      – Adamant
      Jan 22 at 21:52








    • 14





      Is it just me who read "Terrain: Mesas" and heard it in a Jar Jar Binks voice?

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:22
















    26














    Ryloth seems a pretty good fit. It has a wide range of 'biomes' seen in the canon Clone Wars series including some rugged mountain areas seemingly devoid of life as well as jungles.




    TERRAIN: Jungles, Mesas, Valleys, Volcanoes



    Star Wars Databank




    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    enter image description here





    You might also consider Jaresh. It appears in the (canon) book Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure.




    We’re at war, Cracken had said, and Leia had accepted that. But now she wondered how much evil had been done, deliberately or not, because of that excuse.
    Below the Mellcrawler hung the planet Jaresh, like a green jewel in space. As the yacht approached, Leia could see thin blue lines carved across the continents, marking a complex series of irrigation canals that brought water from enormous polar ice caps to the more temperate regions.







    share|improve this answer


























    • I don't know...that's like one stand of trees surrounded by dry mesas. Though there is a big green splotch visible from space.

      – Adamant
      Jan 22 at 21:52








    • 14





      Is it just me who read "Terrain: Mesas" and heard it in a Jar Jar Binks voice?

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:22














    26












    26








    26







    Ryloth seems a pretty good fit. It has a wide range of 'biomes' seen in the canon Clone Wars series including some rugged mountain areas seemingly devoid of life as well as jungles.




    TERRAIN: Jungles, Mesas, Valleys, Volcanoes



    Star Wars Databank




    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    enter image description here





    You might also consider Jaresh. It appears in the (canon) book Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure.




    We’re at war, Cracken had said, and Leia had accepted that. But now she wondered how much evil had been done, deliberately or not, because of that excuse.
    Below the Mellcrawler hung the planet Jaresh, like a green jewel in space. As the yacht approached, Leia could see thin blue lines carved across the continents, marking a complex series of irrigation canals that brought water from enormous polar ice caps to the more temperate regions.







    share|improve this answer















    Ryloth seems a pretty good fit. It has a wide range of 'biomes' seen in the canon Clone Wars series including some rugged mountain areas seemingly devoid of life as well as jungles.




    TERRAIN: Jungles, Mesas, Valleys, Volcanoes



    Star Wars Databank




    enter image description here



    enter image description here



    enter image description here





    You might also consider Jaresh. It appears in the (canon) book Moving Target: A Princess Leia Adventure.




    We’re at war, Cracken had said, and Leia had accepted that. But now she wondered how much evil had been done, deliberately or not, because of that excuse.
    Below the Mellcrawler hung the planet Jaresh, like a green jewel in space. As the yacht approached, Leia could see thin blue lines carved across the continents, marking a complex series of irrigation canals that brought water from enormous polar ice caps to the more temperate regions.








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jan 22 at 22:39

























    answered Jan 22 at 21:46









    ValorumValorum

    400k10529173144




    400k10529173144













    • I don't know...that's like one stand of trees surrounded by dry mesas. Though there is a big green splotch visible from space.

      – Adamant
      Jan 22 at 21:52








    • 14





      Is it just me who read "Terrain: Mesas" and heard it in a Jar Jar Binks voice?

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:22



















    • I don't know...that's like one stand of trees surrounded by dry mesas. Though there is a big green splotch visible from space.

      – Adamant
      Jan 22 at 21:52








    • 14





      Is it just me who read "Terrain: Mesas" and heard it in a Jar Jar Binks voice?

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:22

















    I don't know...that's like one stand of trees surrounded by dry mesas. Though there is a big green splotch visible from space.

    – Adamant
    Jan 22 at 21:52







    I don't know...that's like one stand of trees surrounded by dry mesas. Though there is a big green splotch visible from space.

    – Adamant
    Jan 22 at 21:52






    14




    14





    Is it just me who read "Terrain: Mesas" and heard it in a Jar Jar Binks voice?

    – Graham
    Jan 23 at 0:22





    Is it just me who read "Terrain: Mesas" and heard it in a Jar Jar Binks voice?

    – Graham
    Jan 23 at 0:22













    15














    Naboo



    I know that you disqualified Naboo already, but I think that you failed to consider that we know that Naboo has large marshy forests (where the jedi first met JarJar), and it also has large rolling plains (where the Gungans fought the droid army).






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2





      They all seem to be temperate. And within a fairly close proximity

      – Valorum
      Jan 22 at 23:23






    • 5





      Less a rolling plain, more like a badly-textured green carpet. But then Lucasfilm were years off the pace on CGI, back then.

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:25
















    15














    Naboo



    I know that you disqualified Naboo already, but I think that you failed to consider that we know that Naboo has large marshy forests (where the jedi first met JarJar), and it also has large rolling plains (where the Gungans fought the droid army).






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2





      They all seem to be temperate. And within a fairly close proximity

      – Valorum
      Jan 22 at 23:23






    • 5





      Less a rolling plain, more like a badly-textured green carpet. But then Lucasfilm were years off the pace on CGI, back then.

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:25














    15












    15








    15







    Naboo



    I know that you disqualified Naboo already, but I think that you failed to consider that we know that Naboo has large marshy forests (where the jedi first met JarJar), and it also has large rolling plains (where the Gungans fought the droid army).






    share|improve this answer













    Naboo



    I know that you disqualified Naboo already, but I think that you failed to consider that we know that Naboo has large marshy forests (where the jedi first met JarJar), and it also has large rolling plains (where the Gungans fought the droid army).







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Jan 22 at 23:19









    Arcanist LupusArcanist Lupus

    1,568521




    1,568521








    • 2





      They all seem to be temperate. And within a fairly close proximity

      – Valorum
      Jan 22 at 23:23






    • 5





      Less a rolling plain, more like a badly-textured green carpet. But then Lucasfilm were years off the pace on CGI, back then.

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:25














    • 2





      They all seem to be temperate. And within a fairly close proximity

      – Valorum
      Jan 22 at 23:23






    • 5





      Less a rolling plain, more like a badly-textured green carpet. But then Lucasfilm were years off the pace on CGI, back then.

      – Graham
      Jan 23 at 0:25








    2




    2





    They all seem to be temperate. And within a fairly close proximity

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 23:23





    They all seem to be temperate. And within a fairly close proximity

    – Valorum
    Jan 22 at 23:23




    5




    5





    Less a rolling plain, more like a badly-textured green carpet. But then Lucasfilm were years off the pace on CGI, back then.

    – Graham
    Jan 23 at 0:25





    Less a rolling plain, more like a badly-textured green carpet. But then Lucasfilm were years off the pace on CGI, back then.

    – Graham
    Jan 23 at 0:25











    7














    I think Parnassoss, Phasma's homeworld. We start the book in the coastal area where the Skyre Clan leaves, we see the grassy plains where the Claw clan lives, the desert, the enclosed cities. It's a rather varied world as far as most Star Wars planets seem to be. And before the devastation we know it was similar to earth. This would include a variety of biomes around the planet. You can check out this video from Star Wars Explained that gives a background on the planet itself.






    share|improve this answer






























      7














      I think Parnassoss, Phasma's homeworld. We start the book in the coastal area where the Skyre Clan leaves, we see the grassy plains where the Claw clan lives, the desert, the enclosed cities. It's a rather varied world as far as most Star Wars planets seem to be. And before the devastation we know it was similar to earth. This would include a variety of biomes around the planet. You can check out this video from Star Wars Explained that gives a background on the planet itself.






      share|improve this answer




























        7












        7








        7







        I think Parnassoss, Phasma's homeworld. We start the book in the coastal area where the Skyre Clan leaves, we see the grassy plains where the Claw clan lives, the desert, the enclosed cities. It's a rather varied world as far as most Star Wars planets seem to be. And before the devastation we know it was similar to earth. This would include a variety of biomes around the planet. You can check out this video from Star Wars Explained that gives a background on the planet itself.






        share|improve this answer















        I think Parnassoss, Phasma's homeworld. We start the book in the coastal area where the Skyre Clan leaves, we see the grassy plains where the Claw clan lives, the desert, the enclosed cities. It's a rather varied world as far as most Star Wars planets seem to be. And before the devastation we know it was similar to earth. This would include a variety of biomes around the planet. You can check out this video from Star Wars Explained that gives a background on the planet itself.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jan 23 at 13:57









        Rand al'Thor

        96.7k41461645




        96.7k41461645










        answered Jan 22 at 21:00









        Scott.BellScott.Bell

        3137




        3137






























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