Is it safe to assume that we will never see the prime universe again? I love Star Trek: Continues and Star Trek: Phase II, but they are fan fiction in the end and will not garner as much attention nor ever be on Memory Alpha. I honestly think that Star Trek Nemesis was our last view of current Star Trek.
I think it's unlikely that we will see a TV/movie continuation of that continuity, and unnecessary that we do, too. There's also the issue that even if they set a new show in the old continuity again, they won't do it exactly how fans expect and there will be cries of it not being the "real" Prime universe, as we saw with Enterprise and part of ST'09.
Prime continuity isn't completely dead. It is still alive through books and Star Trek Online. If both of those dry up then I would say CBS is done thinking of prime continuity as anything but a nostalgia property.
But wait, they can't both be "Prime" since they both continue on from
Nemesis in totally different ways. Which is the one true Prime universe?
The books are one thing that will never die for Star Trek. I think we have many, many years/decades with Trek novels. Sure they aren't numbered, nor are they all series-specific, but I feel like we will have them for a long time. You are correct regarding Star Trek: Online as well. I was just referring to the Star Trek that we see on television. You know, the Star Trek the general viewer watches, aka canon Trek.
Pocket almost let their rights to Trek lapse at the end of 2013. The
Cold Equations trilogy was originally planned to end with the death of Picard and be the finale to the novelverse.
That said, had that happened and when Pocket eventually does drop Trek, someone else will almost certainly buy the rights to publish Trek novels and start afresh (no doubt leading to another round of Star Wars EU cancellation angst!)
It would be cool if Star Trek: Online were canon. But, it's probably not. It's funny, because one of the creators of the failed 2013 Star Trek game, said it was canon. I guess that would refer to canon in the Abramsverse and not the Prime universe.
I can't speak for the Gorn game since I've never played it (although JJ Abrams hated how it turned out), from what I know of STO's storyline it's a constant intergalactic wargasm, and IMO that's not what Trek should be.
Well, JJ Abrams shouldn't have made it an alternate reality. He should have just gotten rid of the whole timeline changing thing and not have Leonard Nimoy in the movie. By him doing that, there'd be no question that this was a totally new universe and nothing else.
I seriously doubt that's their intent, after all the continuity porn in
Into Darkness. Of all the movies, it's definitely the one most heavily tied into the Trek mythos.
However, I could see why he bothered to include the exsistance of the prime universe. He wanted to have Star Trek '09 be a film for both old fans and garner new ones.
And IMO it worked brilliantly. I love the way the new timeline ties in with the old.
There's no such thing as "prime" Trek in the sense that fans envision. There's the source material (Star Trek) and derivative works based on Star Trek. Rick Berman's Star Trek spinoffs were simply one derivative version of the source material. Others will come and go, no more or less relevent than the Berman-verse.
True. And fans, when pointing out continuity issues in ENT and the new movies seem to forget that there are massive ones between TOS and TNG/DS9/VOY. Mainly the old Enterprise zipping around the galaxy in no time when for Voyager, it's suddenly a lifelong journey. Are they really the same continuity? And should that continuity be continued, which version should they build on and which parts should be ignored? The new movies are seemingly ignoring Voyager's idea of warp speed.