Star Wars' many spaceships are so unique and well-regarded by fans that they're nearly their own characters. They even have their own spectacular names, like the Millennium Falcon, the X-Wing and the ETA-2 Jedi Starfighter, to name a few. New ships are introduced in nearly every new film, television show and piece of literature, each wildly different and super cool. Clearly, Star Wars spaceships are critical to the series.

In Disney+'s The Mandalorianthe bounty hunter of title name commandeered a ship dubbed the Razor Crest, but recently fans have been disputing whether this is its actual name. On Reddit, u/LegoRobinHood proposed the idea that Mando's ship is not named Razor Crest, but rather that the name Razor Crest it is a type of ship, just as a Ford is a type of car in our world. The dispute has likely risen from an issue regarding a Star Wars toy trademark overseas.

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Germany has its own toy brand akin to our LEGO named Modbrix. The owner of Modbrix, Michael Gaßmann, had the name "Razor Crest" trademarked across Europe; however, due to the fact that Gaßmann had submitted the trademark application after The Mandalorian's release date in the US, Disney did not know the Razor Crest was trademarked, and they went forward with the name.

Once The Mandalorian released, Disney began working on its toy line, which would include a variety of LEGO sets. One of these sets was the Mandalorian's gunship, and they named the toy "The Razor Crest" since that was the name of the ship in the show. When Disney realized they did not have ownership of the name, they changed the toy's name to "The Mandalorian Bounty Hunter Transport," which created an frenzy for fans attempting to explain how this name change could be legitimized in the Star Wars canon.

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This is where u/LegoRobinHood's theory comes in -- the Mandalorian's class of ship called a Razor Crest, but it's not his ship's actual name. The theory does make sense, and can even be proven in a quote from the first episode when a Mythrol says to the Mandalorian, "I like your ship. She's a classic. Razor Crest, am I right? Pre-Empire?" The only way the Mythrol would have known the name of the Mandalorian's ship is if it was a known class of ship, not a name that he gave to the ship.

Whether or not the Mandalorian's ship is named Razor Crest, the theory is still an interesting one, and does hold up based on some evidence from the show.

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