[quote=@Sep] Would have thought you woulda went a friend of the Jedi 😉 I'm gonna have to say no to this since there's no evidence of a clone receiving order 66 and disobeying it. It made sense in legends where it was just an order but the control chip adds new depth too it. There are cases of Clones hunting Jedi after who managed to defy the order. So down the line there could be possibility for clones. If you can find a canonical (not legends) example other than legends feel free to prove me wrong. [/quote] Before I start work this morning, I got to do a bit of brief research on the topic and as it turns out, there [i]are[/i] instances in which the behavioral modification chips are circumvented in Disney's canon. Going from the [url=https://starwars.fandom.com/wiki/Behavioral_modification_biochip]SW wiki:[/url] [center] [i]It was possible in rare cases for some clones to resist the will of the chips and hesitate from executing the order, but the act was extremely difficult, and only removing the chip entirely could free a clone from the compulsion to carry out Order 66. ... The chips were durable, with malfunctions being rare: out of the millions of clones that served in the Grand Army of the Republic over the course of the Clone Wars, only one, Tup, was known to have a malfunctioning chip However, a chip malfunction could also prove lethal, as after Tup's chip malfunctioned, it not only broke down and began to rot, but his health began to deteriorate rapidly, culminating in his death shortly after the chip was removed.[/i] [/center] There's also an episode in The Clone Wars (which is one of the things made prior to Disney also explicitly deemed as "new canon") where Rex gets his inhibitor chip removed: [youtube]https://youtu.be/wHYBdc8ZDJk[/youtube] So from what i'm gathering from its sources and such, it's certainly [i]possible[/i] for a clone to exist to resist Order 66 even with the chips in Disney lore, but this would prove to be an immense feat of willpower to do so, and might very well result in some neurological/psychological damages as a result of defying the chip. There [i]could[/i] also be a very narrow time window between when the order would be given and the time for the clone trooper to get to a surgeon in order to get the chip removed, but since it's defined that the chip itself was poorly-understood throughout even most medical personnel in wider space, it wouldn't be a scenario where they could just go to the local clinic and pop the chip right out. It might make for an interesting plotline early on, though. [sup][@Sep] [@Theyra][/sup]