Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Character Sargent Cordal Renth


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Cordal Renth

Age40
SpeciesHuman
GenderMale
Height1.85 meters
Weight58.96 kg)
Force SensitiveNo


PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION

Tall, medium build male, caucasian skin, brown hair kept in short flattop style, Brown eyes, neatly kempt full goatee, Republic military tattoo over his right eye

INVENTORY

Republic Commando Armour, Republic Service Rifle, Republic Service Pistol, Medic kit

PERSONALITY AND BELIEFS

Cordal Renth is the kind of soldier who never wanted glory — only to do the job that mattered most.

At his core, Cordal is steady, practical, and deeply compassionate, shaped by years spent treating ordinary people long before he ever set foot on a battlefield. His upbringing in a hardworking rural family instilled in him a strong sense of responsibility and humility. He doesn’t see himself as a hero; he sees himself as someone who showed up when people needed help.

That mindset carries into his service as a Republic combat medic. While many soldiers measure success by victories and enemy casualties, Cordal measures it by the number of troopers he manages to keep breathing.



STRENGTHS

Exceptional battlefield composure

Strong empathy and bedside manner

Skilled trauma medic and triage specialist

Trusted by infantry units for his reliability

Natural mentor to younger medics

WEAKNESSES

Carries Emotional Weight
Self-Sacrificing
Not Naturally Political

HISTORY

Sergeant Cordal Renth didn’t grow up dreaming of war.

He was raised on a modest homestead on a quiet agricultural world in the Outer Rim, the kind of place where the day started before sunrise and ended when the last field droid powered down for the night. His family were hardworking people — not wealthy, not poor — the kind of middle-class settlers who believed in honest labor, community, and looking out for their neighbors.

Those values shaped Cordal early.

When accidents happened in the fields — a broken leg from a repulsor plow, burns from malfunctioning machinery, or the occasional wildlife attack — it was often Cordal who helped patch people up while waiting for the town medic to arrive. He showed a steady hand and calm mind even as a teenager, traits that led him to pursue medical training in the nearest regional city once he came of age.

For several years, Cordal worked as a civilian medic, responding to emergencies across rural communities. He treated farm accidents, transport crashes, and the occasional blaster wound when smugglers or pirates drifted too close to the frontier worlds. The work was difficult but meaningful, and it taught him the realities of trauma care far from well-equipped hospitals.

When war erupted across the galaxy, Cordal watched the casualty lists grow longer each month.

Entire units of Republic soldiers were being deployed to distant battlefronts where medics were in short supply. After seeing too many young troopers shipped home wounded — or not shipped home at all — Cordal made a decision that surprised his family but felt inevitable to him.

He enlisted.

Thanks to his years of civilian experience, Cordal was fast-tracked into the Republic Trooper Corps as a combat medic. The transition from rural clinics to battlefield triage was brutal, but his training and temperament proved invaluable. Under fire, Cordal showed the same calm focus he’d learned working emergency scenes in the Outer Rim.

Blaster bolts flying overhead didn’t stop him from dragging wounded troopers out of danger.

Explosions didn’t shake his hands while sealing arterial wounds or administering bacta.

It wasn’t long before his commanders recognized both his skill and his leadership. Cordal wasn’t just saving lives — he was keeping entire squads operational in the middle of chaos. Younger medics began looking to him for guidance, and infantry units trusted him implicitly.

Within a few campaigns, he was promoted to Sergeant, tasked with coordinating battlefield medical response for multiple squads.

Despite the rank, Cordal never lost the quiet humility of the farm kid he once was. He still speaks plainly, still prefers practicality over military bravado, and still believes that the most important job on the battlefield isn’t defeating the enemy — it’s making sure as many soldiers as possible make it home alive.

Among the troopers he serves with, Sergeant Cordal Renth has earned a simple reputation.

If you go down in a firefight…

You want Renth coming for you.

 

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