u/Additional-Run-1404

The biggest wasted potential in Star Wars is the unexplored galaxies

I honestly feel like Star Wars has so much more potential than constantly revisiting the same timeline and characters through sequels, prequels, and in-between stories. Instead of always focusing on the history of the main galaxy, why not explore completely different galaxies far, far away from the original one?

Space in Star Wars is basically endless. There could be entirely different civilizations, Force beliefs, empires, species, technologies, and conflicts existing beyond the known galaxy. Imagine stories where the Jedi and Sith are just ancient myths to another galaxy, or where the Force is understood in a completely different way.

As a fan, I feel like this would bring back that sense of mystery and discovery that made Star Wars feel magical in the first place. The universe is supposed to feel massive and unknown, but most stories still revolve around the same events, bloodlines, and planets. Exploring new galaxies could make Star Wars feel limitless again.

Does anyone else think Star Wars should start exploring outside the main galaxy instead of constantly revisiting the same timeline?

reddit.com
u/Additional-Run-1404 — 1 day ago

The biggest wasted potential in Star Wars is unexplored galaxies

I honestly feel like Star Wars has so much more potential than constantly revisiting the same timeline and characters through sequels, prequels, and in-between stories. Instead of always focusing on the history of the main galaxy, why not explore completely different galaxies far, far away from the original one?

Space in Star Wars is basically endless. There could be entirely different civilizations, Force beliefs, empires, species, technologies, and conflicts existing beyond the known galaxy. Imagine stories where the Jedi and Sith are just ancient myths to another galaxy, or where the Force is understood in a completely different way.

As a fan, I feel like this would bring back that sense of mystery and discovery that made Star Wars feel magical in the first place. The universe is supposed to feel massive and unknown, but most stories still revolve around the same events, bloodlines, and planets. Exploring new galaxies could make Star Wars feel limitless again.

Does anyone else think Star Wars should start exploring outside the main galaxy instead of constantly revisiting the same timeline?

reddit.com
u/Additional-Run-1404 — 1 day ago

18M — Sharp outer knee pain keeps returning after football injury, X-ray normal

Hi, I’m an 18-year-old male. About one year ago (July 2025) I injured my left knee while playing football. After I came home, I started feeling sharp pain on the outer side of my left knee, especially when walking.

I went to the hospital after a week and they did an X-ray, but nothing showed up. They gave me painkillers. Later I went again because the pain was still there, and they told me it might be an LCL injury and advised me to rest for a month.

The pain mostly went away after rest, but ever since then, every time I play football or do sports, I get sharp pain again on the outer side of the left knee after the game. The pain usually lasts about a week and then goes away.

There’s no major swelling, but the sharp pain keeps coming back after activity. What could this actually be? Could it still be an LCL injury, or something else like meniscus or IT band issues? Should I get an MRI?

reddit.com
u/Additional-Run-1404 — 4 days ago

“Audacity Comes From Lack of Awareness”

I watched a reel the other day talking about how a woman is attracted to men who have the audacity to take risks — quitting their jobs, chasing bigger things, questioning “why should I just settle for this?” and trying to build something more out of life.

Then I saw a comment that said:

“Audacity comes from lack of awareness.”

And honestly that line stuck with me.

Because maybe people only dare to do huge things because they don’t fully understand how impossible or risky it is. If they were completely aware of every consequence, failure, embarrassment, financial risk, maybe they’d never even try.

But at the same time, almost every successful person probably looked irrational or delusional in the beginning too.

So now I can’t tell where the line is between courage, ambition, ignorance, and delusion.
idk what I'm trying to convey, but it really has been in my head for the past week

reddit.com
u/Additional-Run-1404 — 8 days ago