Cal Kestis regains all of his lost Force abilities by the end of Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, and at the start of Star Wars Jedi: Survivor he is a competent warrior. The sequel doesn’t have Cal endure another amnesiac period and instead allows his abilities to flourish in gameplay while he acquires an ascension cable grappling hook as another exciting means of traversal. The ceiling for where his Force abilities may be taken in Star Wars Jedi’s final chapter is now incredibly low, and while Star Wars Jedi: Survivor teased a decline toward the dark side of the Force it is unlikely that’s where he’ll find himself by the end of the trilogy.
Cal will almost assuredly be retiring his endlessly customized lightsaber by the time credits roll on the next Star Wars Jedi game, but at that point it’s uncertain whether he’ll have adopted new dark side powers or simply learned new tricks. Cal Kestis’ Psychometry hasn’t been hugely significant since Fallen Order, for instance, and Survivor’s last moments hint at a particular means of Force communication. Cal is obviously in tune with Cere from beyond the grave and while she would be neat to see and hear as a recurring Force ghost in the third and final Star Wars Jedi game the same opportunity could and should also be granted to Cal’s fallen master, Jaro Tapal.
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Star Wars Jedi’s Cere Junda May Be Dead, But She’s Not Gone
Star Wars Jedi’s Cere Junda began her journey in Fallen Order as a rogue plagued with guilt. Putting aside her attunement to the Force and swapping her lightsaber for a blaster, Cere never wavered in her goal to seek out the Jedi holocron and discover the locations of Force-sensitive children, but she couldn’t do so as a Jedi anymore out of shame for the actions she committed that led to her Padawan becoming an Inquisitor.
Indeed, Trilla Suduri being captured, poisoned, and molded to become the Second Sister is Cere’s biggest regret and downfall, especially since Trilla met her untimely demise at the hand of Darth Vader before Cere could make things right. In Survivor, Cere has now embraced being a Jedi again fully and is dedicating herself to the preservation of Jedi archives as well as protecting and harboring the Hidden Path anchorites.
She perishes in doing so during a climactic rematch with Darth Vader, and though she won’t be taking a seat on the Stinger Mantis as flesh and blood anymore she has already made herself known to Cal Kestis as a Force ghost and will likely make intermittent appearances in Respawn’s upcoming Star Wars Jedi game if he ever goes looking for sage advice. Thus, conversing with spirits being a newfound Force attunement Cal hasn’t exhibited before, it would be excellent to see the story end where it began with Cal’s first Jedi Master.
Star Wars Jedi’s Cal Kestis and Jaro Tapal Need Closure Before Curtains Close
Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order is quickly entrenched in a holocron fetch quest across multiple planets, but along the way Cal Kestis is guilt-ridden and grief-stricken about the loss of Jaro Tapal. A flashback sequence aptly illustrates that Cal, as a young Padawan, witnessed the Jedi Purge’s inception.
It’s debatable that Jaro should’ve been able to defend himself and Cal from a mere handful of stormtroopers, yet obviously he needed to die for the purposes of the story. Cal encounters Jaro again during spiritual spells on Fallen Order’s Dathomir when he confronts his past trauma, and that was his way of earning closure. Still, if Cal is able to communicate with Cere, it would make sense that he could communicate with Jaro, too.
Only time will tell if Survivor’s sequel bothers to rehash Jaro or not. However, bringing Jaro back would put a lovely bow on the trilogy as his death is the inciting incident that catalyzed Cal’s whole adventure in a galaxy far, far away.
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