McAvoy wrote: ↑Mon Apr 01, 2024 11:06 pm
You can either subscribe that this is just in another galaxy and long ago with absolutely no connection to Earth whatsoever.
Or it's in another galaxy long ago and some humans traveled to the Milky Way to colonize Earth Ala NuBSG.
Or it is the Milky Way and Earth is long forgotten/destroyed and it's like 30,000 or more years in the future.
What about the possibility that it is 610 million years in our past? I base that on the following facts:
1. Google reportedly says our own galaxy is 13.61 billion years of age, which translates to 13,610,000,000 years old. The Star Wars galaxy (according to legends) is 13 billion, or 13,000,000,000 years old, which is not only on Wookieepedia, but again, confirmed by Google. That leaves a difference of 610 million years, or 610,000,000 years.
Source:
https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/The_ga ... ears%20old.
"The galaxy was between 100,000 and 120,000 light-years across, or 37,000 parsecs (a parsec is 3.258 light years), and
approximately 13 billion years old. The galaxy's luminous disk contained some four hundred billion stars, of which around a quarter had been properly surveyed by the galactic community by the time of the Galactic Empire. The luminous disk revolved around the Galactic Center, a supermassive black hole that massed as much as four million suns. As late as the Declaration of a New Order, only probe droids had ever visited the black hole at Galactic Center.[1] The known galaxy included nearly a billion inhabited star systems, from uncharted smugglers' settlements to planet-spanning ecumenopoleis where scarcely a meter of ground remained untouched. Under the Galactic Empire, nearly seventy million of those system were sufficiently populated to merit some form of representation."
2. According to the theory of the Big Bang, literally EVERY galaxy in the known universe started at literally the exact same time, hence why it's called the Big Bang. So if it was supposedly in our "future," where are the missing 610,000,000 years at least? For the SW galaxy would HAVE to have been at least as old as ours, possibly older.
3. I have done some math on it, using the release date of the first
Star Wars (May 25, 1977) as a reference point.
Having done all of this, my estimate is this:
1977 - 610,000,000 = 609,998,023 BC
So if this is the case, then
Star Wars IV: A New Hope specifically took place in 609,998,023 BC.
Hence why I subscribe to your second theory that it IS indeed in another galaxy long ago and some humans traveled to the Milky Way to colonize Earth Ala
NuBSG.
End of point.