Boz Pity
Boz Pity is known as the graveyard planet, marked by death since the Old Republic's Ductavis Era. The Hutt exploratory missions attempted to subjugate the Gargantelles but failed. Today, it is an empty world of rock plateaus and broken gravestones left by the Gargantelles' extermination.
Planets | Type | Moons |
---|---|---|
Bruss | Scorched rock | 0 |
Boz Pity/Mourn | Terrestrial | 1 |
Pine | Airless rock | 0 |
Nyss | Frozen rock | 0 |
Kith | Asteroid belt | 0 |
History
Hung with the notorious label of the graveyard planet, Boz Pity has been a marker of death since the Old Republic's Ductavis Era. Locked in synchronous orbit with the black rock called Mourn, Boz Pity was once home to a species of colossal humanoids called Gargantelles. With six beefy arms and statures that topped twenty meters, the giants attracted the attention of the Hutt overlords on nearby Nal Hutta. A string of Hutt exploratory missions, designed to rope the Gargantelles into kajidic servitude, ended in failure. The one-eyed giants thwarted seven Nikto attempts at enslavement by eating the invaders, then rejected four Uanda Til attempts at diplomacy by eating the negotiators.
Culture
The Hutts, furious at Boz Pity’s defiance, finally turned their attention to Mourn, where the electric caliphs of Sultan Nastuondon had lain forgotten for more than ten millennia. A legal team of Nimbaneles successfully argued to the gargantuan soldiers the case of their own obsolescence, and extended the range of their newfound nihilism to encompass neighboring Boz Pity. The rest played out tragically, but predictably. The droids waged war against the Gargantelles, depopulating Boz Pity within a decade. The electric caliphs then immolated themselves by igniting Mourn’s slow-burning crust.
Economy
Today Boz Pity is an empty world of rock tableaus and sand-filled gullies, broken by patches of towering gravestones erected by the Gargantelles during their ten-year extermination. The smoke-shrouded orb of Mourn, still glowing from surface fires, fills the sky overhead.
References
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