Fine, you got me there-- if any one of them ever gets assigned a mission bounty-hunting on their own, then they'll be at a disadvantage to Jango Fett, because that's where Jango's superior experience lay. Fighting in an army as part of a team, however, Jango would be at a dis-advantage to the clones, due to all those years of experience working on his own, and in a different capacity; likewise, Jango didn't have the genetic alterations to make him better as part of a team, that the Clones had.Praeothmin wrote:Except that this "armchair-expert" has dome something you didn't:KirkSkywalker wrote: Well looks like we got another armchair-"expert."
If the training-sims are any good, that's experience enough.
Provided evidence that the Clones cannot have Jango's experience
More like TEN YEARS (or equivalent, with growth-acceleration)-- and if it's good training, then it does provide experience, or the equivalent. And 10 years of good training and experience does make each one of them an expert, by definition.And you've also failed to provide your "expertise" in things like simulation training, Clone trooper training, and you've failed to provide evidence that experience is worth nothing, and that a few months of "flash-training" by an expert makes you an expert too...
Add to that three years (or six, again with growth-acceleration) field-experience in war led by the Jedi themselves, and they'll each be much better-equipped to kill Jedi, than Jango would be.
Likewise, your cherry-picking example of saying "Jango is better against Jedi than the clones, mano-a-mano," is adding an artificial condition that's completely non sequitur-- as well as out of context, since Obi-Wan wasn't trying to kill Jango Fett, while Mace Windu was-- and did so.
Palpatine had the Clones turn on the Jedi suddenly and shoot them all at once, not line up and fight them one at a time, hand-to-hand, like in a kung-fu movie-- so that's what he trained them to do, and how he trained them to do it.