Obi-Wan Kenobi didn't kill Darth Vader because he saw remnants of Anakin Skywalker within him, felt pity and love for his fallen friend, and recognized that Vader was still too powerful and conflicted; crucially, he believed that it wasn't his place to end Vader's life, but rather Luke's destiny to bring balance by confronting his father, making killing Vader a failure of his duty as a teacher and a violation of Jedi principles.
Obi Wan couldn't kill Vader because he always thought of him as a brother and someone he cared about. Also him not taking his life is in line with what the jedi believe. If he had taken his life he wouldn't be any different than Vader.
So at the end of the show, Obi-Wan leaves Vader alive because he no longer tries to bend the Force to his whim. He gives into a greater power and trusts the prophecy will still transpire.
Obi‐Wan Kenobi didn't kill Anakin on Mustafar because of a mix of moral code, Jedi doctrine, emotional bonds, and practical considerations -- all filtered through a catastrophic, rapidly unfolding situation. Jedi are taught to avoid killing when possible and to favor restraint and capture, even for fallen members.
In canon it was Kirak Infil'a , Cere Junda, Obi-Wan and Lord Momin . All messed him up quite badly with Kirak winning round 1 but losing round 2 and Momin cutting off his arm. Obi-Wan actually beat Vader. In Legends it was Shaa Koon, An'ya Kuro, a clone of Maul and Galen Marek.
In a study published in the journal Psychiatry Research, French psychologists and psychiatrists determined that Darth Vader had six of the nine criteria used for a BPD diagnosis, as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM): Impulsivity. Rage and anger management issues.
The saddest Star Wars deaths often involve tragic heroism, lost potential, or poignant goodbyes, with popular choices including Duchess Satine (Obi-Wan's lost love), Clone Force 99's Tech (self-sacrifice for family), Kanan Jarrus (heroic sacrifice for Hera and Ezra), Padmé Amidala (fading hope for Anakin), Han Solo (betrayed by his son), and Clone Trooper 99 (innocent, selfless heroism). These deaths resonate due to their emotional impact, the characters' significance, or the broken promises they represent.
Arguments might be made that he suffers from dysthymic disorder (mild but persistent and intrusive depression) because he does not openly demonstrate his suffering at the story's beginning, or posttraumatic stress disorder because these problems follow the traumatic events of Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith.
No, Darth Plagueis is not Anakin Skywalker's father; Anakin had no biological father, being born of the Force itself in response to Plagueis's dark side manipulations, with Palpatine's tales of Plagueis's power over life being a manipulation to turn Anakin to the dark side, though Plagueis's attempts to create life did inadvertently cause Anakin's conception.
It kicks off right after the end scene of ROTS and shows Vader beginning his hunt for Jedi in his new body. His very first target is a Jedi Kirak Infil'a, a Jedi who lived for combat who nearly kills Vader.
Though there was some debate among the fans that Anakin Skywalker's son, Luke Skywalker, was actually the Chosen One since he caused his father to destroy Darth Sidious, the debate was settled when George Lucas himself confirmed in an interview that Anakin, even after becoming Darth Vader, was still officially the ...
It is widely speculated that Palpatine deliberately ensured the suit would be agonizing, keeping Vader angry, dependent, and subservient—turning pain into a tool of control.
His brief joy at finally killing Obi-Wan instantly changed to shock and disbelief. Vader thought he knew everything Obi-Wan did, but clearly that was not the case.
The conflict between Anakin and Obi-Wan
Anakin's fear of losing Padme and being manipulated by Palpatine led him to make a choice, and he betrayed the Jedi Order. When Anakin confronts Obi-Wan on the planet Mustafar, his thoughts are clouded by the Dark Side.
Obi-Wan Kenobi (at peak, Mustafar era) - Already beat Vader at his prime (Anakin) once. Post-suit Vader is even slower and less versatile. Luke Skywalker (post-ROTJ Legends or Canon TLJ era) - Becomes one of the most powerful Jedi in history. By TLJ, he's surpassed Vader by a wide margin.
Most of it is centered around Anakin Skywalker, whom conventional wisdom would suggest is Star Wars' most tragic character. Anakin brings all that bad juju on himself though, so it's hard to feel overly bad for him. He chooses his bed and he gets to writhe in it, limbless and burnt, like an overcooked hot dog.
he saw Vader finally unite with his children, knowing it would bring back Anakin... . When you realise why Obi-wan smiles before his death..he . he saw Vader finally unite with his children, knowing it would bring back Anakin...
Anakin Skywalker, one of the main characters in the "Star Wars" films, meets the criteria for borderline personality disorder (BPD).
In Star Wars lore, Order 37 was a grim Clone Trooper contingency plan to capture a wanted individual (often a Jedi) by taking a civilian population hostage, locking down the area, and threatening mass execution if the target wasn't surrendered, making it a horrific tactic used by the Empire to force Jedi compliance. It was considered more brutal than Order 66 because it targeted civilians directly, forcing Jedi to often turn themselves in to save innocent lives, as seen on planets like Bellassa.
Revenge of the Sith
Palpatine explains that Plagueis was so powerful and wise, he had mastered the dark side of the Force to such an extent that he could cheat death (mostly saving people he cared about from death) and create life; unnatural abilities which are unknown to the Jedi.
Every time he felt that sense of relief, his dark side connection would weaken because the dark side uses suffering as an ingredient. His experiment in "dark side healing" would collapse, and his lungs would instantly regress back.
Luke's auditory hallucinations and grandiose beliefs that he is saving the galaxy might also point to diagnosis of “prodromal schizophrenia”, later confirmed by his full-blown visions of his deceased mentor Obi-Wan Kenobi, the authors suggest.