Some tidbits -
There are at least four reasonably intact Federation starship wrecks, based on the "artwork" by Voq. Yet, only the Shenzhou has a functional dilithium processing unit.
The Klingons, because of purity, subsisted on rations from wrecked bird-of-preys and scavenged whatever technology they could from these wrecks. Considering how easy it is for Federation starships to blast these small ships apart, I can not imagine there being many of these small ships left as wreckage. What about the larger starships? (What do we call those?) There are at least one or two reasonably intact models of this class around. Did they scavenge those?
It is a horse beaten dead many times - yet, it must be stated. No warrior culture would sacrifice an advantage, like the cloaking device, so easily. I am not surprised nor shocked about the eating of Yeoh's character by the Klingons.
The battle in the still unspecified binary star system - its end game is murky. I think we are supposed to assume that the Klingons left the flagship for reasons, that the telescope was recovered from the wreck of the Shenzhou, and that Starfleet, again for reasons, did not destroy what was left of the starships I mentioned earlier.
Knowing Corvan II had rainforests, I think the visuals of the bird-of-preys swooping over a forest, firing their weapons at the colony, and retreating would have been far more aesthetically pleasing than a drab gray hilly landscape.
One of the things previous Star Trek got right was deveoping a visual aesthetic for the main alien ships. Based on one glance, someone could tell a Klingon ship from a Romulan ship. It got a little murky in Enterprise. With this new series, I do not feel that they have developed a visual aesthetic for the Klingon ships. It feels like a hodgepodge of ship types with differing origins.
It's funny in the captions for the distress call that the message ends with an "inhuman scream".
The major issue I see with this show is that we won't learn more about the rest of the ship. This is a problem with having a lower deck character. They are limited in what they can know. We can see this in the real world. A lower ranking individual will have a far less clear picture of the bigger scene. Lower deck episodes work as fillers, like what happened with TNG and VOY. I have a feeling we have learned as much as we will about the bridge crew - I could be wrong. I think by season's end we won't know more about them, unless Burnham interacts with them more.
There are at least four reasonably intact Federation starship wrecks, based on the "artwork" by Voq. Yet, only the Shenzhou has a functional dilithium processing unit.
The Klingons, because of purity, subsisted on rations from wrecked bird-of-preys and scavenged whatever technology they could from these wrecks. Considering how easy it is for Federation starships to blast these small ships apart, I can not imagine there being many of these small ships left as wreckage. What about the larger starships? (What do we call those?) There are at least one or two reasonably intact models of this class around. Did they scavenge those?
It is a horse beaten dead many times - yet, it must be stated. No warrior culture would sacrifice an advantage, like the cloaking device, so easily. I am not surprised nor shocked about the eating of Yeoh's character by the Klingons.
The battle in the still unspecified binary star system - its end game is murky. I think we are supposed to assume that the Klingons left the flagship for reasons, that the telescope was recovered from the wreck of the Shenzhou, and that Starfleet, again for reasons, did not destroy what was left of the starships I mentioned earlier.
Knowing Corvan II had rainforests, I think the visuals of the bird-of-preys swooping over a forest, firing their weapons at the colony, and retreating would have been far more aesthetically pleasing than a drab gray hilly landscape.
One of the things previous Star Trek got right was deveoping a visual aesthetic for the main alien ships. Based on one glance, someone could tell a Klingon ship from a Romulan ship. It got a little murky in Enterprise. With this new series, I do not feel that they have developed a visual aesthetic for the Klingon ships. It feels like a hodgepodge of ship types with differing origins.
It's funny in the captions for the distress call that the message ends with an "inhuman scream".
The major issue I see with this show is that we won't learn more about the rest of the ship. This is a problem with having a lower deck character. They are limited in what they can know. We can see this in the real world. A lower ranking individual will have a far less clear picture of the bigger scene. Lower deck episodes work as fillers, like what happened with TNG and VOY. I have a feeling we have learned as much as we will about the bridge crew - I could be wrong. I think by season's end we won't know more about them, unless Burnham interacts with them more.