Poor     TIE Pilot. This character was featured in the first Star Wars,   usually   right before getting blown up. Yet, he didn’t get a figure   until ESB.   Maybe this was a boon, since no TIE Pilot was actually   shown during  ESB.  Yet, those glory-hog Snowtroopers got a lot of face   time!  Bastards.
The  TIE Pilot came on an ESB, then ROTJ card,   and came  with a blaster  pistol that looks a lot like a phaser from  the  old Star  Trek series. His  head did not turn, like most of the   helmeted Imperial  figures, but he  still managed to look cool. Like   other pilots, he did  not get a figure  shot but a vehicle shot on the   background picture.  When will they learn  to look at the man and not   the machine!?
Now  this was a figure  that came out a film later   then the actual vehicle  he was supposed to  pilot. This happens again   with the AT-ST driver. The  least Kenner could  have done was made a  TIE  Bomber (featured in ESB)  to come out at the  same time. But ooooh,  no.  They don’t come out with  one until 2003, and  then they make it a   Wal-Mart exclusive. What? I  can’t be bothered to get  all dressed up  to  go to a Wal-Mart – who are  they kidding? Then again  in 2007: a  Target  exclusive. Well, I really  can’t afford clothes to go  in there.
Why should you own this figure? Five reasons:
1. You’ve had the TIE Fighter since it came out – finally get a pilot! Then crash it.
2. Helmet. Imperial. Automatically cool.
3. The man in black, who takes no flack. Oh, yeaaaaaah.
4. Show that frickin’ upstart from Tatooine who’s boss. Oh, wait, his X-Wing has shields. My bad.
5.     It’s really hard for one person to hold both the Falcon and a TIE     Fighter at the same time to have a dog fight. Why not just fly the     figures around instead. It’s like the same thing! Right?
Backstory:
Only     ten percent of recruits that joined the TIE pilot program actually    made  it into the TIE fighter corp. Others were dispersed to do other     military functions. TIE pilots had a full life-support system uniform,     because TIE fighters didn’t actually have life-support. Unlike a  ship    such as an X-Wing, TIEs were ferried to their location by a  supporting    ship, like a Star Destroyer, so their actual flying time  tended to be    short. However, if they were shot down, their survival  tended to be    minimal, thus they were normally not given personal  weapons or rations.
In    the subsequent novels, there were a  couple of TIE pilots that got a   few  pages, Baron Soontir Fel, and a  TIE pilot that crashed during the    original Battle of Yavin. He was  discovered years later by Han and    Leia’s kids when Luke founded a  Jedi Academy on Yavin.
Want the full story?  Wookieepedia article
79th in alphabetical order
Monday, April 9, 2012
Imperial TIE Fighter Pilot (ESB 1980-82)
Posted by
Ben
at
3:55 AM
 
 
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