![]() "disintegration" was just a figure of speech - Fett would have likely just blown up the Falcon, which would presumably disintegrate the bodies. The clarification was because the "dead" part of "dead or alive" would be faster and easier for Fett, and therefore without specific instructions that the bounty should be alive he'd go for the "dead" option. Commonly found together with his buddy and fellow bounty hunter Zuckuss, 4-LOM’s brief screen time in Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back - he was one of the few gathered by Darth Vader to find the Millennium Falcon -has been followed by more in-depth stories in the comic series Star Wars Adventures and Bounty Hunters. ![]() Yeah, I know, intact corpse, “no disintegrations.” Original answer: Vader may triple the bounty if I bring him the fugitive along with the droids. Tried to collect and Lord “No Disintegrations!” refused to pay without bodies. What, they thought I wouldn’t carry a weapon accelerator? Flash, boom, three tiny ash piles. He was essentially sidelined as Aurra Sings assistant and stood in as a father figure for Boba Fett. He’s still got a mad on over those rebel spies I crisped on Coruscant. Since The Empire Strikes Back, the reptilian bounty hunter was seen in The Clone Wars, but the show did not do him justice. Figured I’d collect the bounty and square myself with the headman at the same time. Announced in February, the new miniseries will be the first comic to focus entirely on Boba Fett (who appeared in a few one-shot Dark Horse and Marvel comics, but has yet to get his due) and pave. I picked up trooper buzz that Vader was looking for a couple of runaway droids. In " Added Muscle" story by Paul Dini, we learn that it was a blowback from an earlier episode when Fett crisped some rebel spies and Vader didn't like that fact and refused to pay: ![]() UPDATE: As of 2017, this was addressed in Disney canon novel " Star Wars: From A Certain Point of View" (a collection of short stories).
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