Chicken and egg. The designs were made - then rules were created to explain them - then other designs were based on those rules.
But the rules were bolognium to begin with.
Chicken and egg. The designs were made - then rules were created to explain them - then other designs were based on those rules.
Bolognium.But the rules were bolognium to begin with.
I think RAMA means its fine not liking something on a personal level due to aesthetic tastes - we all have different tastes - but trying to say it's 'technologically wrong' is very dubious, since there is nothing in Star Trek that would forbid a ship like this technologically, or even aesthetically. I mean the Defiant is a far greater departure from Starfleet's visual style, that Matt Jefferies set down.
It actually looks really appropriate as a lost era ship IMO, with a very distinctive generational look, that sets it apart just the same way as you can immediatly identify a TNG era ship.
In many ways it looks, to me, more naturally Starfleet-like than half the stuff we get in B-canon and video games; which usually involves getting the classic shape and stretching or, or rounding it, in a really unimaginative way. It looks like a retro ship from an era between TMP or TOS - which is probably exactly what it is meant to be. I believe people used to explain the MacQuarrie designs as being an early "shuttle carrier", from the days when transporters were perhaps less prevalent - maybe the Discovery needs that huge sweeping secondary hull as a landing deck, for its shuttle-bays, launching lots of them for long range planetary survey missions in deep space?
Trek ships in the 90's weren't all that remarkable... the Defiant, the Romulan Warbird, and the Breen warships were the only ones that stood out to me in a sea of "saucer and rocket" vessels.I don't really care for the design but the concept is interesting. A little refinement can go a long way, and really stand out as an alternative to the "clean/postmodern" look of trek ships in the 80's and 90's. Since nuBSG and Firefly, the rage has been to dirty up ships and make everything nitty gritty - its the 00's and 10's look now. I want it to be regonizable as star trek, but i want it different enough that I know its something new (and hopefully better) than what came before.
I would suggest, if it wont offend anyone here, that water is wetjedman67, I would say that the Discovery design is definitely different.
Yeah, most Star Fleet designs seem to appear in bursts, or distinct generations. Designs from the same era probably appear similar, because they are based on the same technology, And because it takes time to develop new technology, these generations are likely far apart in time.It actually looks really appropriate as a lost era ship IMO, with a very distinctive generational look, that sets it apart just the same way as you can immediatly identify a TNG era ship.
Nope. Other people, like me, just say that's it's ugly.Nope. Most remarks revolve around very pre-conceived ideas and long formed opinions about how a ship "Should" look..that a ship has to look "balanced" when with fictional technology it really doesn't. Then we get a long laundry list of what's "wrong" with the ship that's based on very closely measured distances between pylon and engine nacelles, etc that were are supposed to take as religion and talked about with the same fervor
Yeah, most Star Fleet designs seem to appear in bursts, or distinct generations.
I don't understand why people are happy to see McQuarrie's work featured in Star Trek. All I see from folks are comments about his legendary status, but not actually praising the shape of the ship.
Nope. Other people, like me, just say that's it's ugly.
That was an Enterprise trope that I hope never reappears in any Trek production.I wonder if the reddish color means it originated from Vulcan?
That was an Enterprise trope that I hope never reappears in any Trek production.
My mistake.Motion Picture, First Contact, the refugee ragtags from Next Generation et al have shown more Vulcan ships as rust red than anything else before Enterprise aired.
The TMP and TNG Vulcan vessels weren't red. But the FC one, yes, and obviously that's where ENT took its cues from.Motion Picture, First Contact, the refugee ragtags from Next Generation et al have shown more Vulcan ships as rust red than anything else before Enterprise aired.
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