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HK-47 | |
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Star Wars character | |
![]() HK-47, fromStar Wars: Knights of the Old Republic (2003) | |
First appearance | Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic (2003) |
Created by | David Gaider |
Voiced by | Kristoffer Tabori |
In-universe information | |
Species | Droid |
HK-47 is a fictionaldroid in theStar Wars franchise. Introduced in the 2003video gameStar Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, he is an extremely efficient assassin droid constructed byRevan to assist them in huntingJedi, until both have their memories wiped and made to serve the Jedi themselves. Voiced byKristoffer Tabori, HK-47 reappears in the 2004 sequel,Star Wars Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords, theTrials of Obi-Wan 2005 expansion pack to the massively multiplayer online gameStar Wars Galaxies, and the 2011 MMORPGStar Wars: The Old Republic, as well as various other novels, short stories, comics, and video games in theStar Wars Expanded Universe.[1]
Lucasfilm rebranded the Expanded Universe works asStar Wars Legends in 2014 and declared them non-canon to the franchise; however in the 2017Chuck Wendig novelStar Wars: Aftermath: Empire's End, the recurring character ofB-1 (Mister Bones) is revealed to have been built from parts of HK-47 to help the fledgingNew Republic against the leaderlessGalactic Empire, briefly taking over the droid with their "strange, hard-angle" accent.
ABioWare developer posted to the company's forum that HK-47 is named in homage of a dropship inShattered Steel.[2] However,Knights of the Old Republic lead writerDrew Karpyshyn claimed the name derived from hisbilliards team's name, which in turn was partially derived from theAK-47;[3] the "Mister Bones"nickname provided to the character's B-1battle droid form introduced inChuck Wendig'sStar Wars: Aftermath trilogy is derived from how "B-dash-O-N-E, looks like Bone or Bones."[4]
InKnights of the Old Republic, the player's character purchases HK-47 on Tatooine. Dialogue establishes thatRevan built the bloodthirsty droid, which characteristically refers toorganic lifeforms as "meatbags".
HK-47 is disabled at the beginning ofThe Sith Lords; the player's character recovers material from damaged droids to repair HK-47. Dialogue inThe Sith Lords expands on the droid's backstory and purpose, establishing that Revan used the droid to kill people who destabilized or weakened the galaxy.
In the time frame of theTrials of Obi-Wan expansion toStar Wars Galaxies, HK-47'sartificial intelligence has transferred into a computer on a Galactic Republic cruiser that later crashed onMustafar. The droid calls on players to complete several quests to return him to a droid body.
HK-47 was included as an action figure in theChampions of the Force line ofStar Wars figures.[5]
HK-47 returns inStar Wars: The Old Republic as a boss battle in two separate flashpoints and as a mini boss in a level 60 operation.[6][7]
HK-47 is an unlockable character in the mobile gameStar Wars: Galaxy of Heroes.
The B-1battle droid known as "Mister Bones", rebuilt byNew Republic supporterTemmin "Snap" Wexley from droid parts from a scrapyard, is revealed to have been built from parts of HK-47 in the 2017Chuck Wendig novelStar Wars: Aftermath: Empire's End, with HK-47 briefly taking over Bones after they "glitch" and their voice "warps", causing their "strange, hard-angle" accent to return and say "COMMENTARY: I SAY WE BLAST THE MEATBAG AND SAVE YOU THE TROUBLE, MASTER". Following Bones' destruction at the end of the novel, their programming briefly reappears inMarvel Comics'Star Wars: Poe Dameron #13 in before being destroyed again; the character previously appeared inStar Wars: Aftermath (2015) andStar Wars: Aftermath: Life Debt (2016).
At the 2004Game Developers Choice Awards, the HK-47 character won the category of "Original Game Character of the Year".[8] The character also wonComputer Gaming World's 2003 "NPC of the Year" award.[9]GameSpot called the character one of the coolest characters of 2003, saying he was possibly the most originalStar Wars character in years.[10]GamesRadar listed HK-47 as the 3rd best conceived character in video gaming, calling him "cheerfully insane" and saying he was "[e]asily the highlight of the [Knights of the Old Republic] series".[11]IGN chose the character as the 13th topStar Wars hero.[12]GameDaily's Robert Workman called HK-47 one of his favourite characters fromStar Wars video games.[13] GameDaily's Chris Buffa also listed the assassin droid as one of their top 25 video game robots, praising its humour and in-game value.[14]UGO Networks listed the character as one of the top 50Star Wars expanded universe characters, noting his sarcastic personality made him unique among droids.[15]GamesRadar's identified HK-47 as an example ofBioWare's "Kickass Robot" character archetype,[16] and listed it as one of the 25 best new characters of the decade, stating thatStar Wars: Knights of the Old Republic and HK-47 had some of the best characterization inStar Wars history, adding that HK-47 was one of the most memorable characters in the game.[16][17]
Empire listed HK-47 as the 43rd greatest video game character, calling him "brilliantly twisted".[18] Dakota Grabowski of GameZone listed HK-47 as the second top BioWare created teammate, commenting that he delivered some of the best lines inKnights of the Old Republic.[19]Game Informer's Kimberley Wallace considered him to be one of the best BioWare characters, saying that "While BioWare's games have always had comic-relief characters, none have come close to the simple wisdom and mean-spiritedness of HK-47."[20] Matt Miller from the same magazine called HK-47 the second top AI character of the decade, commenting that if the player chose to go light-side, then "he is a perfect counter to your heroic actions".[21] In 2010,Game Informer ranked HK-47 at #15 in "The Top 30 Characters who Defined a Decade" list, who called him the best character inKnights of the Old Republic. The magazine noted that his personality and humour "[held] a mirror to Revan's dual history with both sides of the Force", saying that he highlighted the overarchingStar Wars theme of everyone having both good and evil in them.[22] HK-47 was also voted as the 18th top character of the decade byGame Informer's readers.[23]GameSpy's Mike Sharkey called HK-47 a noticeable omission from the 2011Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition's top 50 video game characters.[24] A reader's poll published by IGN in December 2014 for their top ultimate RPG party choices, drawing from characters of several disparate RPG video game franchises, placed HK-47 at #13 under the "Reserves" section.[25]Gamestm named HK-47's one of BioWare’s 8 most memorable companion characters.[26] Evan Lahti fromPC Gamer named HK-47 as his personal favorite Bioware companion, commenting "For all the well-rounded, nonarchetypal, and sensitive characters BioWare has thrown at us, I delight in the silliest, most murderous, and one-dimensional partner they've written."[27] In a 2017 article,PC Gamer staff included HK-47 in their definitive list of the best RPG squad mates around.[28] HK-47 placed second onApp Trigger's list of the 10 Best BioWare Companions.[29]