Honestly, there's nothing to complain about, so they're complaining about the reflection of blue light on the set.User interfaces and other light sources on Discovery are primarily blue, yes. When will this stop to be a thing worth pointing out?
I must of missed this one. That is most certainly not blue.
I'm guessing the darker lighting we've been seeing is combat/alert lighting levels.
I'm more or less the same. I don't necessarily *love* blue for sci-fi, but I'm not bothered by it in the slightest. It's the artistic choice they went with, low contrast on consoles or current lighting trends be damned. No amount of “OMG, it's all blue!” every time another set image debuts will change that now.Even if the dominant tone is blue, it is because the production designers and producers dig that color, simple as that. It was an artistic choice. I love a blue hue in sci-fi, so for me, this whole critique about it being 'all blue' (which it even isn't) really doesn't bother me at all..
there could be a technical reason why that specific console has buttons.
We might finally do away with the 'gonna breach' drama every few episodes.
I disagree.Discovery's design feels driven by committee, not technical justification.
The term 'Warp Core' was never used in TOS - nor the TOS films. It was the 'Matter-Anti-Matter Reactor'. "Warp Core" was a TNG era term.Obviously it would be a failure. Because we are back to things breaching ten years later. And for the next hundred-plus years.
The term 'Warp Core' was never used in TOS - nor the TOS films. It was the 'Matter-Anti-Matter Reactor'. "Warp Core" was a TNG era term.
The term 'Warp Core' was never used in TOS - nor the TOS films. It was the 'Matter-Anti-Matter Reactor'. "Warp Core" was a TNG era term.
[And yeah, if we hear 'Warp Core' in ST: D - the writers never paid much attention to the TOS episodes they saw, or give much of a dawm about the Trek era they close to set the series in (IMO)]
Yes, the term "warp core" was first used on TNG. ENT was produced after TNG.IIRC Enterprise called it a Warp Core and Reactor
Well, to be fair - I don't recall Scotty ever saying 'The M-A-M Reactor' is going to breach/explode in ANY TOS episode or film.I was talking about the whole idea of it breaching every other week (if the show is Prime). Whatever they are doing, can't fix that as Starfleet engines are pretty fragile all the way through the TNG movies.
And ENT was set in the TOS era? I must have missed that.IIRC Enterprise called it a Warp Core and Reactor
IIRC Enterprise called it a Warp Core and Reactor
Star Trek: First Contact said:RIKER: Okay, let's bring the warp core on-line.
Obviously it would be a failure. Because we are back to things breaching ten years later. And for the next hundred-plus years.
And ENT was set in the TOS era? I must have missed that.
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