Imperial Droid C2 B5

2016Fictional character / viral marketing memedead

Also known as: Evil R2-D2 · R2-D2's Goth Twin

Imperial Droid C2-B5 is a 2016 black-plated astromech from Rogue One that went viral as an internet meme for being heavily merchandised despite appearing barely visible in the actual film.

Imperial Droid C2-B5 is a black-plated Imperial astromech droid from *Rogue One: A Star Wars Story* that went viral when Lucasfilm revealed it in August 2016, drawing instant comparisons to a "goth" or "evil" R2-D2. The character became an internet punchline after fans realized it was barely visible in the finished film despite receiving a full lineup of toys and collectibles, earning it a reputation as *Rogue One*'s version of the infamous Constable Zuvio.

TL;DR

Imperial Droid C2-B5 is a black-plated Imperial astromech droid from *Rogue One: A Star Wars Story* that went viral when Lucasfilm revealed it in August 2016, drawing instant comparisons to a "goth" or "evil" R2-D2.

Overview

C2-B5 is an Imperial astromech droid with the same basic dome-and-barrel silhouette as R2-D2, except finished in all-black Imperial livery. Its duties included maintaining Imperial machinery and sweeping computer networks for electronic discrepancies at the Scarif Citadel3. Unlike R2-D2, who developed a strong independent personality over decades without memory wipes, C2-B5 was routinely wiped to keep it obedient and personality-free1.

The meme around C2-B5 works on two levels. Its visual resemblance to R2-D2 immediately spawned "evil twin" jokes2. Then, after *Rogue One* arrived in theaters and the droid was nearly invisible on screen, C2-B5 became shorthand for over-merchandised characters that barely exist in their own movies.

On August 31, 2016, the official starwarsmovies Instagram account posted a photograph of C2-B5, pulling in over 27,000 likes and 320 comments within 24 hours4. That same day, Lucasfilm's weekly web series *The Star Wars Show* aired an episode on YouTube debuting the character1. Host Pete Townley introduced C2-B5 and explained that Imperial technicians subject their astromechs to frequent memory wipes to prevent any hint of rebellion2. Townley teased viewers: "How does C2-B5 fall into all this? You'll have to find out this December when Rogue One is released"3.

Origin & Background

Platform
The Star Wars Show (YouTube), Instagram (character reveal)
Creator
Lucasfilm
Date
2016
Year
2016

On August 31, 2016, the official starwarsmovies Instagram account posted a photograph of C2-B5, pulling in over 27,000 likes and 320 comments within 24 hours. That same day, Lucasfilm's weekly web series *The Star Wars Show* aired an episode on YouTube debuting the character. Host Pete Townley introduced C2-B5 and explained that Imperial technicians subject their astromechs to frequent memory wipes to prevent any hint of rebellion. Townley teased viewers: "How does C2-B5 fall into all this? You'll have to find out this December when Rogue One is released".

How It Spread

The reveal spread quickly across platforms. A Redditor submitted the photo to /r/StarWarsLeaks, and on September 1, 2016, a thread appeared on 4chan's /pol/ board where users cracked jokes about the droid's all-black color scheme. A Disney Wiki page went up the same day.

IGN's YouTube channel uploaded a first look video, and coverage hit several major outlets including Polygon, Hollywood Reporter, Yahoo!, and Looper within days. The Hollywood Reporter described the droid as "pretty much like R2-D2's goth twin".

Disney moved fast on merchandise. An Elite Series Die Cast action figure hit the Disney Store, Funko announced a C2-B5 Pop vinyl, and the droid was included in the *Rogue One* Imperial AT-ACT Playset alongside a Jyn Erso figure. Sideshow Collectibles announced a premium sixth-scale version just weeks before the film's release, with their website claiming the droid could be "seen in the trailers for Rogue One," though even dedicated fans couldn't spot it.

When *Rogue One* opened on December 16, 2016, C2-B5 was almost nowhere to be found. Some viewers reported catching a split-second glimpse of it behind troopers running through the Scarif base hallway, filmed at London's Canary Wharf tube station, but the character had zero meaningful screen time. Lucasfilm Story Group member Pablo Hidalgo commented on Twitter that C2-B5, "whoever he was," was *Rogue One*'s Constable Zuvio, referencing the heavily merchandised *Force Awakens* character who was also cut from the final film.

How to Use This Meme

C2-B5 memes typically fall into two loose categories:

1

Evil twin jokes: Place C2-B5 alongside R2-D2 to highlight how the Empire takes something beloved and makes it darker and more oppressive. Works with any "dark version of a familiar thing" comparison.

2

Merchandising fail jokes: Reference C2-B5 (often alongside Constable Zuvio) when mocking situations where hype wildly outpaces delivery. Good for any "heavily promoted but barely exists" situation.

Cultural Impact

C2-B5 became a minor case study in how toy production timelines and film editing operate on completely different schedules. Licensees begin work on products months or years before a movie's final cut is locked, meaning characters can receive full toy lines despite being trimmed to near-invisibility in post-production.

The *Rogue One: The Ultimate Visual Guide* by Pablo Hidalgo confirmed that C2-B5 was designed to patrol the Scarif Citadel's vault, probing for maintenance needs and sweeping for electronic anomalies. Despite fan speculation about the *Rogue One* reshoots being responsible for the character's absence, insiders confirmed C2-B5 was always intended as a background element on Scarif. The merchandise was simply too far along to cancel.

The droid's story mirrored the earlier Constable Zuvio debacle from *The Force Awakens*, where toy store pegs filled with unsold figures of a character that never actually appeared in the movie. Zuvio earned the nickname "Constable peg warmer," and C2-B5 raised the same uncomfortable questions about how much money gets lost on merchandise for characters that don't make the final cut.

Fun Facts

The Disney Store's action figure packaging described C2-B5 only as a "daring droid," despite its total lack of on-screen daring.

Pete Townley's *Star Wars Show* reveal hinted that memory wiping could factor into the Rebellion's data theft plot. That thread never materialized in the film.

Sideshow Collectibles claimed C2-B5 appeared in the *Rogue One* trailers, but nobody could actually find it.

The AT-ACT playset pairing C2-B5 with Jyn Erso hinted at a possible plot where the Rebels co-opted the Imperial droid during the Scarif heist. No such scene exists in the movie.

The other new droid introduced in *Rogue One*, K-2SO (voiced by Alan Tudyk), was described as passive aggressive, sarcastic, and highly opinionated. K-2SO actually got screen time.

Derivatives & Variations

Constable Zuvio comparisons:

Fans grouped C2-B5 with Constable Zuvio as part of a running joke about Star Wars characters that exist more as action figures than as movie characters. Pablo Hidalgo himself drew the comparison on Twitter[3].

4chan /pol/ edits:

The original 4chan thread spawned race-based humor around the droid's all-black color scheme, following /pol/'s usual pattern of injecting racial commentary into pop culture reveals[4].

Frequently Asked Questions

Imperial Droid C2 B5

2016Fictional character / viral marketing memedead

Also known as: Evil R2-D2 · R2-D2's Goth Twin

Imperial Droid C2-B5 is a 2016 black-plated astromech from Rogue One that went viral as an internet meme for being heavily merchandised despite appearing barely visible in the actual film.

Imperial Droid C2-B5 is a black-plated Imperial astromech droid from *Rogue One: A Star Wars Story* that went viral when Lucasfilm revealed it in August 2016, drawing instant comparisons to a "goth" or "evil" R2-D2. The character became an internet punchline after fans realized it was barely visible in the finished film despite receiving a full lineup of toys and collectibles, earning it a reputation as *Rogue One*'s version of the infamous Constable Zuvio.

TL;DR

Imperial Droid C2-B5 is a black-plated Imperial astromech droid from *Rogue One: A Star Wars Story* that went viral when Lucasfilm revealed it in August 2016, drawing instant comparisons to a "goth" or "evil" R2-D2.

Overview

C2-B5 is an Imperial astromech droid with the same basic dome-and-barrel silhouette as R2-D2, except finished in all-black Imperial livery. Its duties included maintaining Imperial machinery and sweeping computer networks for electronic discrepancies at the Scarif Citadel. Unlike R2-D2, who developed a strong independent personality over decades without memory wipes, C2-B5 was routinely wiped to keep it obedient and personality-free.

The meme around C2-B5 works on two levels. Its visual resemblance to R2-D2 immediately spawned "evil twin" jokes. Then, after *Rogue One* arrived in theaters and the droid was nearly invisible on screen, C2-B5 became shorthand for over-merchandised characters that barely exist in their own movies.

On August 31, 2016, the official starwarsmovies Instagram account posted a photograph of C2-B5, pulling in over 27,000 likes and 320 comments within 24 hours. That same day, Lucasfilm's weekly web series *The Star Wars Show* aired an episode on YouTube debuting the character. Host Pete Townley introduced C2-B5 and explained that Imperial technicians subject their astromechs to frequent memory wipes to prevent any hint of rebellion. Townley teased viewers: "How does C2-B5 fall into all this? You'll have to find out this December when Rogue One is released".

Origin & Background

Platform
The Star Wars Show (YouTube), Instagram (character reveal)
Creator
Lucasfilm
Date
2016
Year
2016

On August 31, 2016, the official starwarsmovies Instagram account posted a photograph of C2-B5, pulling in over 27,000 likes and 320 comments within 24 hours. That same day, Lucasfilm's weekly web series *The Star Wars Show* aired an episode on YouTube debuting the character. Host Pete Townley introduced C2-B5 and explained that Imperial technicians subject their astromechs to frequent memory wipes to prevent any hint of rebellion. Townley teased viewers: "How does C2-B5 fall into all this? You'll have to find out this December when Rogue One is released".

How It Spread

The reveal spread quickly across platforms. A Redditor submitted the photo to /r/StarWarsLeaks, and on September 1, 2016, a thread appeared on 4chan's /pol/ board where users cracked jokes about the droid's all-black color scheme. A Disney Wiki page went up the same day.

IGN's YouTube channel uploaded a first look video, and coverage hit several major outlets including Polygon, Hollywood Reporter, Yahoo!, and Looper within days. The Hollywood Reporter described the droid as "pretty much like R2-D2's goth twin".

Disney moved fast on merchandise. An Elite Series Die Cast action figure hit the Disney Store, Funko announced a C2-B5 Pop vinyl, and the droid was included in the *Rogue One* Imperial AT-ACT Playset alongside a Jyn Erso figure. Sideshow Collectibles announced a premium sixth-scale version just weeks before the film's release, with their website claiming the droid could be "seen in the trailers for Rogue One," though even dedicated fans couldn't spot it.

When *Rogue One* opened on December 16, 2016, C2-B5 was almost nowhere to be found. Some viewers reported catching a split-second glimpse of it behind troopers running through the Scarif base hallway, filmed at London's Canary Wharf tube station, but the character had zero meaningful screen time. Lucasfilm Story Group member Pablo Hidalgo commented on Twitter that C2-B5, "whoever he was," was *Rogue One*'s Constable Zuvio, referencing the heavily merchandised *Force Awakens* character who was also cut from the final film.

How to Use This Meme

C2-B5 memes typically fall into two loose categories:

1

Evil twin jokes: Place C2-B5 alongside R2-D2 to highlight how the Empire takes something beloved and makes it darker and more oppressive. Works with any "dark version of a familiar thing" comparison.

2

Merchandising fail jokes: Reference C2-B5 (often alongside Constable Zuvio) when mocking situations where hype wildly outpaces delivery. Good for any "heavily promoted but barely exists" situation.

Cultural Impact

C2-B5 became a minor case study in how toy production timelines and film editing operate on completely different schedules. Licensees begin work on products months or years before a movie's final cut is locked, meaning characters can receive full toy lines despite being trimmed to near-invisibility in post-production.

The *Rogue One: The Ultimate Visual Guide* by Pablo Hidalgo confirmed that C2-B5 was designed to patrol the Scarif Citadel's vault, probing for maintenance needs and sweeping for electronic anomalies. Despite fan speculation about the *Rogue One* reshoots being responsible for the character's absence, insiders confirmed C2-B5 was always intended as a background element on Scarif. The merchandise was simply too far along to cancel.

The droid's story mirrored the earlier Constable Zuvio debacle from *The Force Awakens*, where toy store pegs filled with unsold figures of a character that never actually appeared in the movie. Zuvio earned the nickname "Constable peg warmer," and C2-B5 raised the same uncomfortable questions about how much money gets lost on merchandise for characters that don't make the final cut.

Fun Facts

The Disney Store's action figure packaging described C2-B5 only as a "daring droid," despite its total lack of on-screen daring.

Pete Townley's *Star Wars Show* reveal hinted that memory wiping could factor into the Rebellion's data theft plot. That thread never materialized in the film.

Sideshow Collectibles claimed C2-B5 appeared in the *Rogue One* trailers, but nobody could actually find it.

The AT-ACT playset pairing C2-B5 with Jyn Erso hinted at a possible plot where the Rebels co-opted the Imperial droid during the Scarif heist. No such scene exists in the movie.

The other new droid introduced in *Rogue One*, K-2SO (voiced by Alan Tudyk), was described as passive aggressive, sarcastic, and highly opinionated. K-2SO actually got screen time.

Derivatives & Variations

Constable Zuvio comparisons:

Fans grouped C2-B5 with Constable Zuvio as part of a running joke about Star Wars characters that exist more as action figures than as movie characters. Pablo Hidalgo himself drew the comparison on Twitter[3].

4chan /pol/ edits:

The original 4chan thread spawned race-based humor around the droid's all-black color scheme, following /pol/'s usual pattern of injecting racial commentary into pop culture reveals[4].

Frequently Asked Questions