It's not the case that all works in a given franchise must be either mainline or tie-in. That's the format many franchises use, but certainly not all of them. There are franchises that instead just have parallel active continuities that support one another thematically rather than some tieing into a central core.
It's not the case that all works in a given franchise must be either mainline or tie-in. That's the format many franchises use, but certainly not all of them. There are franchises that instead just have parallel active continuities that support one another thematically rather than some tieing into a central core.
My point is, you're using an incorrect definition of the word "tie-in." It isn't limited to a specific version of the continuity. It isn't about continuity at all -- it's about copyright and intellectual property. Any work that is a licensed adaptation of a property belonging to a different entity is a tie-in -- whether it's a direct adaptation of the same story, a new story set in the same reality, or a story set in a variant reality. It's a marketing term, so it's about copyright and licenses and such, not about specific story content. Any book, comic book, computer game, action figure, Halloween costume, greeting card, baseball cap, or whatever that uses Star Trek characters, concepts, or other trademarks under license from CBS is a Star Trek tie-in.
No, because if a new series did end the unfortunate mess that the 24th century books have become, that could only be a good thing.
The books in the current novel-verse continuity are the only Trek books I buy and are the only Trek books I have any desire to buy. They're the only real Star Trek left.
I just can't see it turning out well.
I don't know if they're still up anywhere, but if you want some fun, check out posts from the Trek newsgroups back during the premiere of Encounter at Farpoint.![]()
And remember the resistance to DS9?
"But they're not even on a spaceship? They're boldly going stay in one place!"
Related to that, Kurtzman works with Abrams/Bad Robot
I just can't see it turning out well.
...Said fandom about every new Star Trek project immediately after it was announced.
I just can't see it turning out well.
...Said fandom about every new Star Trek project immediately after it was announced.
And 3 out of 6 times, they were right.
50/50 odds on the new show, then?
I just can't see it turning out well.
...Said fandom about every new Star Trek project immediately after it was announced.
And 3 out of 6 times, they were right.
50/50 odds on the new show, then?
And 3 out of 6 times, they were right.
Dunno how you count, there have been 17 new post-TOS projects Star Trek projects by my count.
And I'd put the number at about 3 bad, 3-4 mediocre to okay, and 10-11 good to great.
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