

But leaving the Jedi nameless and faceless underscored just how much the status quo had changed in the Clones’ personalities. Maybe the Jedi was Rig, and maybe she was supposed to be identified. While the theory could be true, it has never been confirmed or denied. RELATED: A Book of Boba Fett Detail Reveals a Heartwarming Link to The Bad Batch More importantly, her role as a Jedi doctor might have given her cause to have been on Kamino. A Star Wars Comics YouTube video postulated that the dead Jedi could be the Halaisi Rig Nema, the Jedi doctor who tried to heal Yoda in The Clone Wars episode “Voices.” Her headdress could have looked like montrals, and her yellowish skin perfectly matched the hand that fell of the gurney with the lightsaber. There was one other theory that actually did hold some weight, however. Additionally, the lightsaber that fell from the gurney wasn't Shaak Ti’s, and the hand that was holding it wasn't red. For one, Shaak Ti was killed on Coruscant by the newly anointed Darth Vader, and that fate is now considered her only canon death. RELATED: Every Star Wars Alien in The Book of Boba Fett Trailerīut while that theory was a valiant attempt at identifying the deceased Jedi, it can not be true. And given that Shaak Ti died multiple times over the years in various media, some fans thought this was a tongue-in-cheek way for Star Wars to add to her ever-growing list of deaths.

She was stationed on Kamino for much of the Clone Wars, and the body looked like it could have some kind of montrals or head tales hidden beneath the sheet. Many people’s first reaction was that it had to have been Shaak Ti. Although there was speculation about the Jedi’s identity at the time, it was overshadowed by the changes to Caleb Dume's backstory and Depa Billaba's lightsaber.

During the episode, the Bad Batch return to Kamino after Order 66 is executed, and as they arrive, they see a dead, female Jedi being carried out on a gurney and covered by a sheet.
