You know, I just realized, we went how many years without actually talking about how the Ascendants thing turned out
They descended?

You know, I just realized, we went how many years without actually talking about how the Ascendants thing turned out
I love that your post makes sense even without the story idea - and thank you for editing it out.[redacted] Problem solved!
The bonus is afterwards books can literally say, 'After the incident that crippled the Romulan Empire,' and still be ambiguous about what incident it was.
EDIT: Sorry!
I love that your post makes sense even without the story idea - and thank you for editing it out.
I love that your post makes sense even without the story idea - and thank you for editing it out.
Oh....did that count as a story idea? I thought it was a "fix plot hole/thing that didn't make sense in the movie" idea. Hmm....I'll shift or repost in the Movies thread.@Andy Hong. Hate to be the one to point this out this time, but you can't post story ideas like that here. Better edit your post.
If I may ask a question, though? Much of this thread talks about the destruction of Romulus and how much the novel writers can - or can't - refer to it. But what of the Countdown comic book? Is that held in the same category as the '09 film itself? Will the novels have to dance around things like Data being captain of the Enterprise-E (which seems impossible) or can they just ignore those things as they didn't happen in the actual film?
Different tie-ins are never obligated to refer to each other; they only have to stay consistent with screen canon. Despite how it has sometimes been promoted and talked about, Countdown is not canonical any more than any other book or comic. The novel continuity has already contradicted Countdown in a number of ways, particularly where Data and B-4 are concerned, and it would be pretty much impossible to get Picard, Worf, and Geordi from their current 2386 status in the novels to their 2387 status in Countdown in such a short span of story time.
*insert head exploding gif*Soooo... from the preview on Amazon, Enigma Tales is set 3 years after Garak became Castellan. Which suggests 2388-9 (!!!!)
*insert head exploding gif*
Soooo... from the preview on Amazon, Enigma Tales is set 3 years after Garak became Castellan. Which suggests 2388-9 (!!!!)
After three years, Garak wore the castellanship lightly and with considerable style. He had taken to the job like a riding-hound released onto the wide Veletur plains, savoring the theatricality, the busyness, and what he called the “varied and variable reading.” He had thought when he embarked upon this project that he might like aspects of the job—certainly he believed he was duty-bound to take it on—but he had never expected to enjoy it quite so thoroughly. Moreover, people seemed to like what he was doing. His advisors—an achingly young and committed set of individuals—were constantly saying things like “Great job!” and “Stunning!” and “Castellan, you are unique!” and had a vexing habit of using slang that made him feel old. Commentators on the ’casts sometimes muttered phrases like “new Golden Age imminent,” and his popularity was high. And sometimes, sometimes Kelas Parmak said, “That was well done, Elim,” and Garak would smile and be content.
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