Come on, Trek fans have been coming up with convoluted excuses for nearly fifty years! It's part of the fun.![]()
Yes. No. Maybe? But you would think self-proclaimed "superfans" would've had their shit together more than this bunch has.
Come on, Trek fans have been coming up with convoluted excuses for nearly fifty years! It's part of the fun.![]()
It's a fair point. I just feel like we tried the slavish fan service in Enterprise's last season, with less than stellar results.Yes. No. Maybe? But you would think self-proclaimed "superfans" would've had their shit together more than this bunch has.
I guess that's the bottom line. If you otherwise like the show, you'll go with it. If you don't enjoy it, the visual changes likely only increase the alienation.
For one or two things, sure. But in Discovery it's pretty much every single thing! Brief list:Come on, Trek fans have been coming up with convoluted excuses for nearly fifty years! It's part of the fun.![]()
I got that feeling with Enterprise, but not with Discovery. They've already introduced the idea of parallel universes as a key part of the narrative so there's no reason to take the suggestion it's the "prime" universe at face value. Let's see how the series ends.I think the show has had a couple of real highs, a couple of real lows and the rest is decidedly "meh". It is just the nagging feeling that nothing of real consequence can happen in the universe because they've hemmed themselves into the "Prime" narrative.
Size of Federation ships
I think the show has had a couple of real highs, a couple of real lows and the rest is decidedly "meh". It is just the nagging feeling that nothing of real consequence can happen in the universe because they've hemmed themselves into the "Prime" narrative.
The visual changes just underscore what a huge waste Discovery is in the grand scheme of the Trek universe. It is like a Pocket Books novel that has to put all the toys back the way they found them.
It could've blazed its own trail storywise, but chose to play it safe.
Meh. I could come up with a similar list for Enterprise or the Abrams films. Or even within any of the other shows. Whenever a new Trek series comes out there's a load of changes that aren't consistent with another production team's take.For one or two things, sure. But in Discovery it's pretty much every single thing! Brief list:
Holographic technology
forcefield technology
Starfleet designs
Starfleet uniforms
Size of Federation ships
Klingon makeup and costuming
Klingon ship design
Cloaking devices being common
Using insanely invasive surgery to convert Ash Tyler into a human when the Augment virus should do
total absence of Augment virus/TOS-style Klingons
Spock having a secret soul sister
a pre-TOS war with the Klingons
site-to-site beaming
spore jump technology
women captains in the 23rd century (although that is a shitty one I'm putting it in for completeness' sake)
And probably loads more. It's like trying to reconcile Jumanji with the Star Trek universe, for the amount of headcanon it requires.
Meh. I could come up with a similar list for Enterprise or the Abrams films.
Only partially, they used the convoluted explanation of the differences as a story point, which just meant fans nitpicked everything that should have been unaffected by the Narada. I'd rather they had just done a reboot, and I'd rather the DIS producers didn't even address whether their show was "Prime" or not. I guess it was contractural so Bad Robot wouldn't kick off.But the Abrams films are a reboot. Which means they can run whatever direction they want with the universe. See: destruction of Vulcan, death of Amanda. It is a shame we never got to see more of Sarek's story in that timeline.
There were forcefields in TOSforcefield technology
Visual Reboot, plus 10-15 years after the Enterprise launched, no reason to be exact duplicates of the aesthetic.Starfleet designs
Visual RebootStarfleet uniforms
Nothing wrong with that, nothing in TOS runs counter to it.Size of Federation ships
Visual rebootKlingon makeup and costuming
Visual rebootKlingon ship design
Was possible in TOS.site-to-site beaming
Will be explained according to the writers.spore jump technology
Was possible in TOS.
The Day of the Dove said:KIRK: We can't get through the Klingon defences in time, unless. Spock. Intra-ship beaming from one section to another. It's possible?
SPOCK: It has rarely been done because of the danger involved. Pinpoint accuracy is required. If the transportee should materialise inside a solid object, a deck or wall.
Lorca doesn't give a shit.And considered dangerous, twelve-years later in-universe.
Of course, now we know that Spock is pretty much wrong about everything.
Plus it was his personal lab, he could have had a receiver installed in it.
I was there for both and I'm not sure you can to this extent. ENT has the same cloaking issue and a bunch of "secret" first contacts, and the Kelvin movies are now officially their own separate thing with time ripples affecting the past and future (although in that case there was gnashing of teeth for years)Meh. I could come up with a similar list for Enterprise or the Abrams films. Or even within any of the other shows. Whenever a new Trek series comes out there's a load of changes that aren't consistent with another production team's take.
That's just a pedantic way of saying "reboot". Imagine a DSC Klingon and Worf in the same room and try and explain the differences in anatomy - Worf doesn't have ridges down his neck, for example. It doesn't work, thus they're not part of the same world. Thus Discovery is a different version of the Star Trek world.Visual reboot
explained ad nauseamHolographic technology
existed in TOS, no contradiction thereforcefield technology
I see no contradiction yetStarfleet designs
judging by the changes in uniforms during DS9, redesigns every 5 years or so seems absolutely normal for StarfleetStarfleet uniforms
I don't think we have seen Federation ship classes yet that were featured in other shows, so I really see no contradiction hereSize of Federation ships
changes quite often in universe. I don't see the pointKlingon makeup and costuming
not a fan of the new D7 either, but the rest of the ships look great and are no contradictionKlingon ship design
the whole 'they are not common' thing was a huge plot point earlier this season. Klingons were killed over that factCloaking devices being common
the less aknowledgement the Augment virus gets, the betterUsing insanely invasive surgery to convert Ash Tyler into a human when the Augment virus should do
thank Cthulhu. Nothing makes me throw my remote at the screen like that stupid shit virustotal absence of Augment virus/TOS-style Klingons
yeah, it's like Spock never talks about his family until he has to for reasons. like Sybock, who he endlessly chats about during TOSSpock having a secret soul sister
totally in-canona pre-TOS war with the Klingons
was possible in TOS, no contradiction heresite-to-site beaming
will never be mentioned again. that's part of the plotspore jump technology
really?women captains in the 23rd century
That's just a pedantic way of saying "reboot". Imagine a DSC Klingon and Worf in the same room and try and explain the differences in anatomy - Worf doesn't have ridges down his neck, for example. It doesn't work, thus they're not part of the same world. Thus Discovery is a different version of the Star Trek world.
we don't talk about it with outsidersImagine a DSC Klingon and Worf in the same room and try and explain the differences in anatomy
the whole 'they are not common' thing was a huge plot point earlier this season. Klingons were killed over that fact
That's just a pedantic way of saying "reboot". Imagine a DSC Klingon and Worf in the same room and try and explain the differences in anatomy
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