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Things that ALWAYS happen on Star Trek

^also, that advanced warp technology probably requires harnessing energy beyond our comprehensions, and probably weapons systems and shields are of the same magnitude. Life support should be negligible compared to that. Yet that last 0.000001% or so always makes the difference :)
 
Spiraling in from orbit the moment power is cut.
Now, I know there's such a thing as a "powered orbit" where the ship is keeping it's altitude and station in orbit using thrust. But if they're in a normal low planetary orbit like the real-life space station, or synchronous orbit like comm sats and GPS sats, losing power won't affect your orbit for months, at least.
 
^ Maybe not war but there are strong feelings and totally forgetting IDIC.

Just because (IMHO) STD looks terrible and I have extremely low expectations of it, won't make me go for the jugular of those that do like it. Each to their own.
 
A civilian, alien, criminal or whoever who should have limited knowledge of Starfleet transporter workings, breaks into the transporter anyway and uses it to beam away. The captain says 'override' to the security officer or whoever, and they always says 'I can't; I'm locked out' .

It's very easy to break into Starfleet systems.
 
"I can't get a lock"
"I'm locked out"
"They've rerouted..."
"Then try rerouting..."
"Emergency Power to..."
"Shields down to 47%"
"It looks like some kind of..."
"It's some sort of..."
"Evasive maneuvers!"
*shake camera. Toss self around
"It's a life form"
"Earth history..blah blah blah..brutal"
"Open a channel"
"Hailing frequencies"
*tugs shirt/looks pleased
"Well numbah one.."
"lay in a course"
"Engage!"
 
Episodes focusing on children are awful.

There are no episodes more tempting to skip during DVD rewatches than the ones where the crew encounters a strange child, and trouble follows. It’s an unwritten but universally acknowledged rule of Trek that children are some of the surest signs that a given episode won’t be a good one.

From those dreadful kids in “Miri” to the infamous Wesley Crusher, child characters have long been the bane of Trek fans who just want to get through 40 minutes without being irritated. They must have been pulling our leg when they wrote “Rascals”, literally transforming the crew of the Enterprise into children, or when they conspired to bring Worf’s disappointing son Alexander into the story again and again and again.

It doesn’t help that Trek traditionally struggles to find decent child actors, or to write dialogue for children that isn’t embarrassing; with Cirroc Lofton’s Jake Sisko perhaps the notable exception, their performances and lines are typically hair-raising. Granted, it’s not exactly easy to find gems like Maisee Williams in the industry, but you can save yourself all the trouble by simply not writing episodes revolving around children controlling the ship via mind-controlling fist pumps and chanting about “friendly angels”.

If they’re not somehow impeding the crew or directly responsible for the problem of the week, they’re frequently finding new ways to annoy, from mimicking more beloved characters, to throwing temper tantrums, to being granted nauseating levels of importance: remember when The Traveler compared Wesley to Mozart?
 
Make a reference to something familiar, but make it exotic with the formula alien name + ian + thing (e.g. Jimbalian fudge, Pyrithian bat). Almost every alien thing named follows the -ian naming scheme.
 
All power/systems will be down.... Except artificial gravity
And life support.
And the antimatter containment field. (Otherwise the ship would blow up.) And at least one dim bulb so we can see what's going on.

Seriously, how many times has a ship been subject to some mysterious thing that "eats energy" or literally makes powered technology stop working, but all these things are just fine?
 
1. No one needs the toilet....ever.

2. Takes seconds to travel from Earth to anywhere else, unless your Captain Janeway, then it might take decades

3. Its always a human in charge of a Starship
 
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In an emergency situation, the exact piece of technology that is needed to solve the issue always pick that precise moment to crap out.

History buffs among the various crews always choose the 20th century as their favorite era. Even Zefram Cochrane in First Contact was dancing to a song on the jukebox that was over a hundred years old in his time. That would be like us having the top hits of WWI on our juke boxes.
 
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Bad or evil aliens will almost always have fangs, sharp teeth, horns, big ridges on the forehead, scarred skin, and thick raspy voices.
 
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