This article includes spoilers for Rogue One!

You’ve probably already seen Rogue One: A Star Wars Story at least once by now. The movie was released a few days ago in Europe and yesterday in the US. The movie is filled with lots of easter eggs, cameos and other bits that are really hard to spot in your first viewing. Also, there are several story elements in the movie that were a bit confusing and might need some explanation. When it comes to explaining the Star Wars lore, no one is better than Lucasfilm’s Pablo Hidalgo himself. Read on for some tweets shared by Pablo that will definitely enhance the movie and make it even better for your next viewing.

First we start with the biggest problem I had with Rogue One – no Moroff (yes I know he had 2 scenes in the background but I don’t count these). Especially considering the big promo push he got in the numerous behind the scenes footage for Rogue One:

Well, it appears some characters didn’t even get to be in the background at all.

So, has anyone spotted the black astromech droid C2-B5 in Rogue One? No? Well, that’s because he was not in the movie at all.

We had a similar situation with Constable Zuvio from The Force Awakens. C2-B5 was present in several promo materials like Moroff about the movie and was first introduced in The Star Wars Show. I doubt his absence will be missed.

If you think you saw Biggs and his moustache during the battle over Scarif, then you’re wrong. That’s Heff Tobber, a Blue Squadron pilot.

@TheBrandonc Nope. You might be thinking of Heff Tobber, a Blue Squadron pilot. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 16, 2016

It seems that we also had some Dornean ships in the battle over Scarif (more on Dornea here). More info to come.

@pablohidalgo is the BC-100x the Ghost? Sorry if you answers this and I missed it. 7days and 2 hours till #rogueOne for my son and I. Pumped pic.twitter.com/a74GRJ4q40 — Jeremy M Sandoval (@JeremyMSandoval) December 8, 2016

@JeremyMSandoval @DJDJ18 It’s the Ghost. And those are Dornean gunships. There’s more info to come. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 16, 2016

Some clarification on a certain line from the Vader comic:

This has come up a couple of times. This line in Vader #1 was never about Rogue One; it was always about A New Hope. pic.twitter.com/QkQvyg7d8D — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 16, 2016

In case there are still people who are confused with the Bothans who were involved with the second Death Star and not the first.

@thatmanwalker waiting to be mentioned in Return of the Jedi. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 16, 2016

An important tidbit in case you’re not reading the Star Wars comics:

@JohnnyCrashMLB This was revealed in a story told in Marvel’s Star Wars ongoing comic as well as Vader comic. Highly recommended. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

Many people have issues with the bit about where the Death Star plans got beamed to:

@ByAaronsBeard only if you think Vader should know better. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

While many of us agree that “Anthology” sounds much better than “A Star Wars Story”, we should indeed keep in mind that this is not a very populr word for the general audience.

@druzod1012 no idea. Maybe not enough people know what that word means? — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

Very important fact: the Rogue One re-shoots never changed the ending of the movie.

@CadTheBane the ending never changed. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

The answer to the question why the first Death Star took more than 20 years to get built can be found in the novel Catalyst. That particular problem was solved by Galen Erso.

@RonaldFoose it took 20 years to get it operational. To solve a particular problem. There’s a difference — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

A mysterious tweet:

A line from the end of season one Rebels, so long ago, was designed to point to a world seen in Rogue One. It’s a long game here. 🙂 — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 16, 2016

In case you’re wondering, this is the line in question:

And if you’re wondering which planet that is, Pablo directly confirmed that the lava planet from Rogue One is Mustafar. And not only that, but the cloaked figure bowing in front of Vader’s bacta tank is not Snoke but a character named Vanee (more on a character that had a similar name in the Original Trilogy can be found here).

Of course Vader’s castle on Mustafar was inspired by Ralph McQuarrie’s art:

Speaking about Rebels, did you get the Chopper cameo?

Good explanation on the skin color of Admiral Raddus and the rest of the Mon Calamari from Rogue One:

@Phroosh77 they turn red when you boil them. No, not really. Just come from different seas. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

Many of you heard the name of General Syndulla mentioned during Rogue One. We assume this is the now promoted Hera Syndulla from Star Wars: Rebels, but it also could be her father Cham Syndulla who is indeed a general:

@Nay_214 you definitely heard a familiar name — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

Explanation on why C-3PO act like he doesn’t know who Leia is in A New Hope:

Some bits on how Rogue One came to be:

In case you had issues with the continuity regarding the end of Rogue One and the beginning of A New Hope, you should read this:

There’s been a lot of talk about the color of the lightsabers based on the kyber crystals. Now Pablo speaks about the Deah Star beam color:

Finally, there were many fans asking Pablo about certain scenes from the trailers that didn’t end up in the final cut. Hidalgo said that he will talk about these in a few weeks time after most of the people have seen the movie.

@jonas1015119 Ask me again in about a week. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 15, 2016

@JoeWest49585101 ask me in a week — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 16, 2016

After all these cool clarifications Pablo decided to avoid tweeting more about the movie until more people see it. He changed his name to “See Ya Next Year”, so we should get some more answers next month hopefully.

To give everyone a chance to see #RogueOne, gonna avoid tweeting about it till January. This account is now devoted to Hummel figurines. — Pablo Hidalgo (@pablohidalgo) December 17, 2016

Stay tuned later today for our article explaining all the cameos from Rogue One.