Iden Versio

Iden Versio
Star Wars character
First appearance Star Wars Battlefront II: Inferno Squad (2017)
Created by Walt Williams
Portrayed by Janina Gavankar
Voiced by
  • Janina Gavankar
Information
Aliases Iden
Gender Female
Occupation
Affiliation
Title
  • Commander
Spouse(s) Del Meeko
Children
  • Zay Meeko (daughter)
Relatives
  • Garrick Versio (father)
Homeworld Vardos

Iden Versio is a player character appearing in the 2017 video game Star Wars Battlefront II, an action shooter developed by EA DICE, in collaboration with Criterion Games and Motive Studios. Versio serves as the protagonist of Battlefront II and is voiced and portrayed via motion capture by Janina Gavankar.

Development and design

Janina Gavankar voices and portrays Iden Versio.

Battlefront II's campaign narrative and characters, including Iden, were developed by EA's Motive Studios branch.[1] Iden Versio is voiced and portrayed through motion capture by actress and musician Janina Gavankar. On the motion capture aspect of her performance, Gavankar commented "The technology has caught up so much that you can deliver a subtle performance and it will catch your micro-expressions [...] I decided to deliver as subtle of a performance as I would on camera.[2]

During her audition process for the game, Gavanakar was not told that the project she was auditioning for was Battlefront II nor that she was auditioning for the lead role, but noted that her knowledge of the gaming industry assisted her in "[putting] two and two together."[3] She commented that "I just got an audition and it said [...] EA Motive. When you send someone like me, who is a hardcore gamer, an audition like this, I knew exactly what it was. I knew that if it was Motive that it was Battlefront."[3] Gavankar commented that the development process for Iden was highly collaborative.[2] She detailed that she "worked with the writers of the game and the writer of the book and we had access to a LucasFilm story group member every day on set. We really found out who [Iden] was together. We worked with military consultants to figure out how we moved together as a squad; all of these things took a lot of care and conversation."[3]

Steve Blank, a creative executive for Lucasfilm described Iden as a "tried and true and through and through Imperial."[4] Gavankar detailed Iden as having an "unshaking loyalty to the Empire" as a result of her early life upbringing to be "the perfect soldier, the perfect officer."[5] She commented that Iden "is a literal poster child for the Empire. Her father is an Admiral and her mother is a propaganda artist. She actually put Iden in posters."[3] Gavankar added that "all the way up until the moment [the player begins Battlefront II], [Iden's] story has been dark, dark, dark side."[5] Despite this, Iden's characterization has been described as "grey" and "complex", due to events that unfold in Battlefront II.[5] VentureBeat details that that complexity drew Gavankar to the role.[5] Gavanakar also detailed that even though Iden defects to the Rebellion, she still misses the order, cleanliness, and respect that the Empire carried itself with.[5]

Appearances

Novels

Iden Versio debuted in Star Wars Battlefront II: Inferno Squad, a tie-in novel for the 2017 Battlefront II video game.[6] The Inferno Squad novel was written by Christie Golden and released on July 25, 2017.[6] Gavankar provided the voice for the novel's audiobook version.[7] The novel's events directly precede those of the video game.[6] In the novel, the "Inferno Squad" is an elite team of soldiers led by Commander Iden Versio.[6] In-universe, the group's formation is authorized by the Empire after the Rebellion steals the plans to the Death Star and destroys the battle station.[6] The Inferno Squad is tasked with infiltrating and eliminating "the Dreamers", who were the remainder of Saw Gerrera's extremist rebel group, the Partisans.[6][8]

In Inferno Squad, the unit is established with Iden commanding Gideon Hask, a fellow pilot who graduated top of his class at Coruscant Imperial University, Del Meeko, a TIE fighter pilot and an engineering expert, and Seyn Marana, an intelligence prodigy and master cryptologist.[7][9] Iden is also noted for holding the record for most verified kills in battle.[7] In the novel, Admiral Garrick Versio serves as the squad's supervisor.[9]

Video games

Battlefront II

Iden Versio's first video game appearance was in Star Wars Battlefront II (2017), where she is portrayed by Janina Gavankar. She is the protagonist of the game's single-player campaign, and she is also a playable character in game's multiplayer mode.[10]

In the video game's campaign, she is established as the Commander of Inferno Squad, an Imperial Special Forces unit.[11] Gavankar also described Inferno Squad as a black ops unit.[4] Her Inferno Squad mates in the game are Gideon Hask and Del Meeko. Throughout the game, Iden Versio is accompanied by ID10, a seeker droid which she nicknames Dio.[12] TJ Ramini, Del Meeko's voice actor, notes that Iden and Del "have a bit of a banter, a bit of a laugh," throughout the game.[4]

After being freed from Rebel captivity by ID10, the player first controls Iden on Endor during the events of Return of the Jedi.[3] Iden leads Inferno Squad against the Rebellion in the Battle of Endor, during which they witness the destruction of the second Death Star.[5] Iden then meets with her father, Admiral Garrick Versio and the two receive orders from a now deceased Emperor Palpatine in th form of a hologram recording.[13] One of Palpatine's posthumous orders is for the Empire to perform Operation: Cinder, which involved devastating many Imperial planets in order to instill fear in the galaxy and emphasize the Empire's authority.[14][15] of the planets targeted by Operation: Cinder is Iden's homeworld of Vardos.[14] Inferno Squad is sent to Vardos to retrieve Gleb, an Imperial ally, so that she is not caught in the destruction of Vardos. Iden ideologically disagrees with Operation: Cinder, as it conflicts with Iden's belief that the Empire stands for peace and order.[11] As a result of her internal conflict with Operation: Cinder, Iden disobeys Imperial commands to not rescue civilians, and she defects from the Empire. Del Meeko joins Iden, while Hask remains loyal to the Empire.[15][16] Following her defection from the Empire, the player continues to control Iden, who briefly was unaligned, but soon joins the in-universe Rebellion movement. Toward the end of the game's campaign, Iden participates in the Battle of Jakku, the final large-scale military battle of the in-universe Galactic Civil War.[13] The player controls Iden as she assists the Rebellion in defeating the Empire. During the battle, Iden engages - and bests - Hask in a dogfight and confronts her father on his ship as it is being destroyed by Rebel fire. She pleads with him to follow her to safety, but he refuses and urges her to survive. Following the Rebellion's victory, she begins a romantic relationship with her Inferno Squad partner, Del Meeko.[13] Nearly 30 years pass, and in the campaign's epilogue, it is revealed that Iden and Del have married and had a daughter.[13] The campaign ends with a cliffhanger after Hask, now aligned with the First Order kills Del.[17]

Battlefront II: Resurrection

Iden later appears in the Star Wars Battlefront II: Resurrection downloadable content (DLC).[16] Mitch Dyer, the co-writer of Battlefront II details that "when the Resurrection DLC begins, [...] Iden is in a time of peace. The galaxy is at peace — there is no war."[16] While the initial Battlefront II campaign features chapters in which the player controls other characters like Luke Skywalker or Lando Calrissian,[11] the Resurrection DLC focuses entirely on Iden.[16] Dyer commented that this is because "one of the key pieces of feedback [the development team] got was that people really liked playing as Iden. She's an interesting and compelling new character in the Star Wars universe, so we wanted to really focus the rest of the story on her."[16] Iden and Del's daughter is revealed to be named Zay in Resurrection.[16][18] Toward the end of the Resurrection DLC, while infiltrating Hask's First Order Star Destroyer with her daughter Zay and her partner Shriv, Iden Versio steals the plans for a First Order dreadnought.[19] Iden confronts and kills Hask but is mortally wounded in the process, and dies before she can escape the Star Destroyer, although Zay, Dio and Shriv manage to get away on a stolen TIE Fighter and send the dreadnought plans to General Leia Organa's Resistance movement. Leia then sends the trio to gather the Resistance's allies in the Outer Rim.[19]

Reception

In a review of the Inferno Squad novel, Sean Keane of New York Daily News wrote that "We get POV sections from all four members of the squad, but Iden is by far the most developed. She's a great lead and the novel highlights the strengths and weaknesses of the idealized Imperial upbringing. She is a talented soldier, but struggles with emotion and attachment."[9]

In his review of Star Wars Battlefront II, Bryan Bishop of The Verge praised Janina Gavankar's performance, opining that she "delivers some real pathos with her performance."[11] Bishop added, "[Iden] may be an Imperial, but she's also a hero in the classic Star Wars tradition: she fights for the ideals that have been instilled in her from birth, and carries with her the kind of devil-may-care swagger that made Han Solo a household name."[11] Tom Hoggins of The Telepgraph wrote that Gavankar joined an "exclusive club of women leading Star Wars stories, with Iden Versio standing alongside Daisy [Ridley]'s Rey and Felicity Jones' Jyn Erso from Rogue One."[3]

In a negative review of Resurrection, Hayden Dingman of PCWorld opines that the setup to the DLC is promising due to the believability of Iden's stakes in comparison with the main campaign and the built-in emotional hook of Del Meeko's death, "compounded by Iden fighting alongside her daughter Zay."[17] Dingman, however, added that "Battlefront II's campaign, proper ending included, is anemic start to finish. Just so much wasted potential. I don't know whether blame lies with Disney or with EA and DICE, but the developers had an amazing character in Iden Versio and did nothing with her."[17] Samuel Roberts of PC Gamer had similar sentiments, commenting that "most of the tension is removed from the story" once "Iden Versio and her comrade, Del, basically join the Rebellion."[20] Roberts criticized the lack of exploration of Iden's Imperial perspective, commenting that "in the opening, [the player gets] the sense that Iden and company believe in the sense of order that the Empire brings—but their perspective isn't explored with much greater depth than that. When they turn against the Empire, as the Empire turns on its own people, they make the snap decision to change sides with very little ambiguity."[20]

References

  1. Thomas, Alexander (October 19, 2017). "5 Things You Need to Know About Battlefront II's Iden Versio". COGconnected. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  2. 1 2 Abrams, Natalie (November 15, 2017). "Star Wars: Battlefront II's Janina Gavankar previews game's new antiheroine". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hoggins, Tom (November 13, 2017). "Star Wars Battlefront 2 | Janina Gavankar on playing Iden Versio, Star Wars' newest 'hero'". The Telegraph. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  4. 1 2 3 Star Wars Battlefront 2: Behind The Story. EA Star Wars. YouTube. July 15, 2017. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Takahasi, Dean (December 4, 2017). "Star Wars: Battlefront II's Janina Gavankar straddles being a fan, an actress, and a gamer". VentureBeat. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Faller, Patrick (April 17, 2017). "Star Wars: Battlefront 2's Campaign Is Set Up In A New Novel". Gamespot. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  7. 1 2 3 Hayman, Amanda (July 18, 2017). "Star Wars Battlefront II Prequel Excerpt: Meet the Empire's Finest". Screen Rant. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  8. Silliman, Brian (December 15, 2017). "Watch: Reading is good with these 7 essential Star Wars books". Syfy Wire. Syfy. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  9. 1 2 3 Keane, Sean (July 25, 2017). "'Star Wars Battlefront II: Inferno Squad' introduces elite Imperial team in tense thriller: book review". New York Daily News. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  10. Gordon, Rob (October 12, 2017). "Star Wars Battlefront 2: Iden Versio Added as Playable Hero for Multiplayer". Game Rant. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 Bishop, Bryan (November 13, 2017). "Star Wars' Battlefront II's single-player campaign is a great new story with a nostalgia problem". The Verge. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  12. Lane, Carly (December 26, 2017). "Chosen One of the Day: ID10, Iden Versio's little droid buddy from Battlefront II". Syfy Wire. Syfy. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Plante, Corey (December 5, 2017). "8 Ways 'Battlefront II' Changed 'Star Wars' Canon Forever". Inverse. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  14. 1 2 Schmidt, Joseph (September 30, 2017). "Star Wars Battlefront II Scene Details The Emperor's Plan After Death". Comic Book. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  15. 1 2 Whitbrook, James (December 1, 2017). "A Timeline of Everything We Know Happened After Return of the Jedi, Up to The Last Jedi One". iO9. Gizmodo. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kane, Alex (December 15, 2017). "Star Wars: The Last Jedi comes to Battlefront II". StarWars.com. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  17. 1 2 3 Dingman, Hayden (December 14, 2017). "Star Wars: Battlefront II - Resurrection review: A disappointing end to Iden Versio's story". PCWorld. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  18. Grubb, Jeff (December 14, 2017). "Star Wars: Battlefront II's 'The Last Jedi' update introduces 'old' Iden". VentureBeat. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  19. 1 2 Ramos, Jeff (December 23, 2017). "Star Wars Battlefront 2 connection to The Last Jedi feels small but significant". Polygon. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
  20. 1 2 Roberts, Samuel (November 22, 2017). "Battlefront 2's brief campaign doesn't really show you the Empire's perspective". PC Gamer. Retrieved December 31, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.