what about a plot of someone trying to get their hands on the wreak of the Doomsday machine to try to build their own or at least get some reverse engineered goodies from it?
what about a plot of someone trying to get their hands on the wreak of the Doomsday machine to try to build their own or at least get some reverse engineered goodies from it?
what about a plot of someone trying to get their hands on the wreak of the Doomsday machine to try to build their own or at least get some reverse engineered goodies from it?
Starfleet restricted travel to Talos 4 for something likely a lot more vague (learning the power of illusion) than the possibilty of retro-engineering the planet killer's technology.
Starfleet restricted travel to Talos 4 for something likely a lot more vague (learning the power of illusion) than the possibilty of retro-engineering the planet killer's technology.
Oh, yeah, and that too. D'oh. Only death penalty at that.
What was Decker's relationship with his crew that their deaths drove him to near insanity?
Why did Decker choose to attack when he was out of contact with Starfleet Command?
What series of events led him to choose to beam his crew down in the presence of a machine that destroyed planets.
What then happened after the beam down that ended with left him alone and alive aboard ship while his crew perished?
What did Decker do (or not do) that resulted in his ship taking such a terrible pounding?
That's the story I'd love to see someone write....
Starfleet restricted travel to Talos 4 for something likely a lot more vague (learning the power of illusion) than the possibilty of retro-engineering the planet killer's technology.
Oh, yeah, and that too. D'oh. Only death penalty at that.
I think this was a hundred percent plot convenient. The death penalty thing only served to emphasize the risk Spock was taking in doing what he was doing, nothing else. It's almost impossible ot justify based on the elements.
what about a plot of someone trying to get their hands on the wreak of the Doomsday machine to try to build their own or at least get some reverse engineered goodies from it?
The problem with this plot and other plots involving the future adventures of the wreckage is that I can't imagine for an instant that Starfleet would just leave the wreckage alone, the wreckage of something that required the destruction of one of their top-of-the-line ships to stop. It just doesn't pass the sniff test. Starfleet restricted travel in the Mutara sector because of the Genesis planet. I'd sooner believe than not that they'd clamp down on the space surrounding L-374. Starfleet would never let something like that fall out of their control and into other hands.
Starfleet restricted travel to Talos 4 for something likely a lot more vague (learning the power of illusion) than the possibilty of retro-engineering the planet killer's technology.
Uh...he cared about them?
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Simply being there and investigating.
That's the story I'd love to see someone write....
I agree, I would love to see an episode that showed exactly what happened prior to the Enterprise arriving.
I'm so confused.... are you by any chance fond of telling people that logic is a pretty flower that smells bad?
what about a plot of someone trying to get their hands on the wreak of the Doomsday machine to try to build their own or at least get some reverse engineered goodies from it?
The problem with this plot and other plots involving the future adventures of the wreckage is that I can't imagine for an instant that Starfleet would just leave the wreckage alone, the wreckage of something that required the destruction of one of their top-of-the-line ships to stop. It just doesn't pass the sniff test. Starfleet restricted travel in the Mutara sector because of the Genesis planet. I'd sooner believe than not that they'd clamp down on the space surrounding L-374. Starfleet would never let something like that fall out of their control and into other hands.
Starfleet restricted travel to Talos 4 for something likely a lot more vague (learning the power of illusion) than the possibilty of retro-engineering the planet killer's technology.
Yeah and how well exactly did Starfleet's efforts to restrict travel to those places work out, becuase enemy ships and their own ships going rouge seemed to have no trouble getting to those places.
Meaning, it should actually provide drama. The Menagerie was better at that than STIII.Unless part of the drama is how the security around the wreckage is overcome.
I am ok with a sequel to Doomsday Machine. I am not okay with the return of either Decker or Gary Mitchell and most definitely any kind of time travel.
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