Wow, some IDW fun news in here - and stunning cover art!
http://www.startrek.com/article/idw-trek-comics-for-this-week-and-march
http://www.startrek.com/article/idw-trek-comics-for-this-week-and-march
So, I take it this is basically IDW wrapping up the story of Spock Prime?
So, I take it this is basically IDW wrapping up the story of Spock Prime?
Or doing a tribute to Nimoy. It sounds like it's flashing back to an event that's already in the past of the comics and movies, the search for New Vulcan. So I'd speculate that it will be a frame story for flashbacks about Spock Prime's life, much like Spock: Reflections.
I thought so too, but I guess Abrams and his crew thought that starting from scratch would make a better line in the movie. How stupid.Hmm, and here I was thinking it would finally address Spock Prime's disappearance mentioned in the After Darkness story.
Meanwhile, according to this New Vulcan is actually a new planet settled on after Vulcan's destruction? Since Vulcan already had colony worlds, wouldn't it be more, well, logical to select one of those to be the new Vulcan capital?
Since Vulcan already had colony worlds...
Since Vulcan already had colony worlds...
Sounds logical, but were any ever confirmed canonically?
I recall Vulcana Regar in TNG, but fan debate ensued as to whether it was a colony planet, or simply a city or region on Vulcan itself.
Memory Alpha lists only:
- Paan Mokar
- Vulcanis Lunar colony
- Vulcan Monastery Planet (location of P'Jem)
Technically, Romulus is a Vulcan colony. Well, a Vulcan settlement.
Well, if you had to return to Vulcan every seven years or die, would you want to take the risk of living on a colony world?
I'm liberal with the movies because they're cinema-only products, but assuming a species is confined to a single planet when it's part of an interstellar multispecies nation...
I'm liberal with the movies because they're cinema-only products, but assuming a species is confined to a single planet when it's part of an interstellar multispecies nation...
Unfortunately it's a common tendency. Most characters onscreen belonging to a given species are usually assumed to be natives of that species' home planet. Only a few human regular characters in Trek have been given birthplaces anywhere other than Earth -- Beverly Crusher in Copernicus City, Luna (according to an onscreen graphic), Tasha Yar on Turkana IV, Annika Hansen/Seven of Nine on the Tendara colony. Every other human main-title regular whose birthplace was given was a native of Earth. And Spock was a native of Vulcan, Worf was a native of Qo'noS, Deanna was a native of Betazed, etc. ST writers only seem to remember colonies when they want to do stories about them.
What about Mayweather? Granted the Horizon was a ship, not a colony, but he's still someone was wasn't born or raised on his race's homeworld.
Did we ever see or hear of a Federation colony world that wasn't human in on-screen Trek?
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