No, that would be the NEW prime timeline, by definition.
No, it's standard practice in film and television.
Heh, I am trying to be sensitive - I don't believe in getting tactless on forums, or showing disrespect for any opinion - so forgive me if my comments are getting a little playful/facetious/jovial, but I just wanna illustrate how humorous this is when taken out of context - this thread is potentially really illustrative of the "post-truth" age we live in isn't it - where people just redefine the parameters of what is true, until whatever they want fits.
Mirror Mirror: "It's exactly in the style of a Klingon ship like the D7 or Vor'cha.... except the neck was removed.... and the warp nacelles.... and the forward bridge.... and the color is different, now that you mention it.... well, Klingon ships were always basically a triangle, weren't they.... it's where they were clearly heading".

Crazy Eddie: "A prime timeline is a universe where everything is the same as it was before.... The Original Series happened.... The Next Generation happened.... where Nero never destroyed Vulcan.... where Kirk doesn't fly around in a 700m long ship with a thousand crew.... oh, but did I mention, you can reboot it, so that specific well-known Klingon ships are replaced by something resembling a Wraith cruiser.... thats just a NEW prime timeline."
Star Trek has never used that comic book stuff before, where the DC and Marvel universe are seemingly rebooted every few years, people come back from the dead every six issues, and things have all the consistency of a post-modern experimental novel, in which the narrator suffers multiple personality disorder, with each chapter being written from their 'perspective' of what really happened. But it looks like some people want to see that style of franchise management adopted by Star Trek.
I guess at the end of the day, the writing of the Klingons is more important than what ship they drive, even if it's maybe the most famous alien ship in TV fiction, but you can't blame people for feeling as they do.
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