So the Klingons go to war in DS9, using hundreds of 100+ year old ship designs, but keep all their DSC-era ships at home?
And when they go to war in DSC, they keep all their ENT/TOS ships at home?
That's merely restating the exact same fallacy twice. They're just fighting
somewhere else, either in other battles besides the ones we see, or simply off-camera. It's not like we see the entirety of either war, raging across quadrants. We only see a little slice of each. There were explicitly
at least ten separate allied fleets comprised of Gene-only-knows how many battle groups that fought in the Dominion War! Space is frickin' huge, man! I suppose you think
Norways and
Sovereigns and
Ambassadors and any number of other Starfleet designs didn't fight in the war either, just because we never saw them in any of those big fleet shots? And that there wasn't even a single
Constitution seen at the Battle of the Binaries is some sort of continuity error too, even though they're
explicitly confirmed to be around out there a few episodes later?
The episodes pointedly
don't show everything, merely the particular events that directly concern Our Heroes™ in the course of those specific stories. And often they don't actually
fully show even those, so much as
suggest them, leaving us to fill in the blanks with our own imaginations. That's how it's
always worked!
If this happens I'd wonder why, if the D7 is in fact a Transformer, why they never showed it doing that previously.
It
would be fairly in line with the movie-era Bird of Prey shifting wing configuration in different operating modes. Why did they
stop showing
that feature for decades? Real life answer: because it was too much trouble and put too much strain on the model. In-universe answer:
whatever you want it to be! Once again, just because we didn't see it doesn't mean it didn't happen. Now, do I seriously
expect to see this happen? Hell no. But if the difference bothers you so much that you can't suspend your disbelief, why not try
imagining harder instead of throwing up your hands and saying "oh well, I guess this can't be the same continuity!" I mean, you
can, no one can stop you, but that isn't going to change the fact that from the perspective of the storytellers (and most of the audience, I'd wager) it nonetheless
is.
And how will you feel when they don't acknowledge the new look in the show itself ever?
As
@zar said, the same way as about the TMP change before DS9 decided to acknowledge it, yet still leave it unexplained until ENT then decided to go ahead and outright explain it. Either we're just supposed to ignore it and imagine they always looked like that,
or there's some in-universe reason for it that as yet can only be theorized/guessed at, because they haven't thought up a story about it that they feel is worth telling, or
have, but are waiting for the right time to tell it. Neither of which would lead me to proclaim these shows to be in different continuities despite all "official" protestations otherwise.
Multiple races of previously-unseen Klingons was a lot more plausible when there were 79 episodes to draw conclusions from than 700.
The idea of multiple races of Klingons was somehow
more plausible
before we'd
actually seen multiple races of Klingons? And it's
less plausible now that we
have? Right then.
And them only ever showing up en masse, with all the other Klingons vanishing completely only to reappear a little later when those new Klingons likewise magically vanish, is plausible how?
Here we go with the same tired fallacy yet
again! Did we see every Klingon on every ship in every episode they appeared in? Why could there not simply be others of different varieties there that we just
didn't see? Maybe the different types disdain one another and segregate themselves? Or like I said before, maybe one rises to dominance for a time, subjugating and succeeding another, undertaking to enslave or drive out (or even
wipe out) and effectively replace them, only for the other to later make a resurgence and return to do the reverse? Yeah, you're right, stuff like that could never conceivably happen without...
magic! It's too implausible!
Sometimes a reimagined look is just a reimagined look.
Sure, absolutely it could be just that and nothing more. But if that's the case, then no explanation should be needed at all. It seems like
either way you just
refuse to accept that it's all meant to be the same continuity. I, on the other hand, am happy to
accept it either way. We're both entirely free to make that individual choice for ourselves, of course. But ultimately, it's neither your personal rejection
nor my personal acceptance that determines whether it actually is or isn't. It ain't up to us.
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MMoM