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Poll Do you consider Discovery to truly be in the Prime Timeline at this point?

Is it?

  • Yes, that's the official word and it still fits

    Votes: 194 44.7%
  • Yes, but it's borderline at this point

    Votes: 44 10.1%
  • No, there's just too many inconsistencies

    Votes: 147 33.9%
  • I don't care about continuity, just the show's quality

    Votes: 49 11.3%

  • Total voters
    434
Dude,, you are not gonna fight a war so large it united 4 powers, with 4 fleets nd have zero biological left. Even only space action you are gonna have stuff left over to look at. Ships that did not blow up, parts of ships blown off, parts of troops and crew sucked into space. You do not need a body, you simply needs parts of one. The Vulcans if no one else would have analyze the hell out of battle salavge.

You really do not think this is a super weak easy killed story issue? Really?
Why not simply "waporize" them?
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That's Star Trek. Has been for a long time. Vulcanian, Vulcan's never been conquered, Trills, Temporal Cold War, Suliban, beaming through the shields, traveling at Warp 10, Klingons, James R. Kirk, Chekov and Khan, and on and on and on.

However, some of those are little details, one-off mistakes, early installment weirdness, or were corrected. For a 50+ year franchise, the pre-DSC Star Trek timeline is extremely internally consistent and mistake free. (Not saying that there are mistakes, but the freewheeling take on continuity that DSC has adopted is not how the franchise works.)
 
"The renewal came so early on"? The show was renewed in October 2017, that's after the show began airing and after the finale was filmed.

Sorry I must have been mistaken in thinking they were still in production at the time. Looking up I see they finished filming in October 2017 as well. So there really wasn't any time to make any kind of drastic changes - you are correct. I wonder if the Enterprise scene was already filmed or they brought them back in to tack that on?
 
(Not saying that there are mistakes, but the freewheeling take on continuity that DSC has adopted is not how the franchise works.)
"Freewheeling" is a judgment call, though. I've been fascinated with the ways this series interacts with continuity, the way it re-contextualizes and adds nuance to previous series. Others, clearly, have not been.

"How the franchise works" is also a judgment call, and one that has changed multiple times over the years. The Motion Picture is a departure from Star Trek, an attempt to be less Forbidden Planet and more A Space Odyssey. The Wrath of Khan is a further departure from that, but not in the direction of Star Trek. With the exception of "Balance of Terror," Star Trek was never so naval, never so martial. The Next Generation is yet a further departure; at first it hews closer to the world of The Motion Picture (advanced by a century), but over the course of its run it changes into something very different, more concerned with its own mythology than with the messages, morals, and meanings. Individual episodes here and there still stand out as very Star Trek, but the overall course of the franchise moves away from that, until you get to the literal death of it all with the "fan fiction" season of Enterprise.

This first season of Discovery has been an experiment in "how the franchise works" now.
 
However, some of those are little details, one-off mistakes, early installment weirdness, or were corrected. For a 50+ year franchise, the pre-DSC Star Trek timeline is extremely internally consistent and mistake free. (Not saying that there are mistakes, but the freewheeling take on continuity that DSC has adopted is not how the franchise works.)
I would argue that TMP and TWOK are both major changes in line with what DISCO is doing.

Also, it is expanding upon what has gone on before.
 
Dude,, you are not gonna fight a war so large it united 4 powers, with 4 fleets nd have zero biological left. Even only space action you are gonna have stuff left over to look at. Ships that did not blow up, parts of ships blown off, parts of troops and crew sucked into space. You do not need a body, you simply needs parts of one. The Vulcans if no one else would have analyze the hell out of battle salavge.

You really do not think this is a super weak easy killed story issue? Really?
It was classified to protection the young federation. Problem solved

In the novels at least, the Romulans were trying to hide their identity from the Humans and their allies. They wore suits, and didn’t use visual communications.
 
I would argue that TMP and TWOK are both major changes in line with what DISCO is doing.

Also, it is expanding upon what has gone on before.
The difference is TMP and TWOK have the benefit of nostalgia, fond memories, and the TOS pedigree. DSC is seen as an interloper and an upstart even though it's not doing anything more or less dramatic with retcons or canon-violation than either of those two, or TNG for that matter.
 
I would argue that TMP and TWOK are both major changes in line with what DISCO is doing.

Also, it is expanding upon what has gone on before.

I still think Discovery's a bit different in just how liberal it is with canon, but you bring up an interesting point. I actually think there's been 8-9 "interpretations" of Star Trek through it's history. TOS/TAS (maybe shouldn't be together, but I see them as close enough), TMP, Movies 2-6, TNG seasons 1-2, Berman era (you could argue DS9/Enterprise S3 is separate, which is why I said 8 or 9), Enterprise season 4, Kelvin Timeline, and Discovery.

Also, I have to say it's a bit humbling to have this thread get so big, as someone who's been on forums for over 20 years, I don't think I've ever made a thread with this many posts.
 
To me, what is canon is the basic mythology of Star Trek. To me, THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY is about the last adventure of the TOS crew paving the way for a new era that will be seen in TNG's time, it's not about CRT monitors somehow making a comeback in the 23rd century.
Yeah I care about big stuff. Like, if DSC said Kirk was never captain of the Enterprise, that would raise my eyebrow. But Klingon foreheads, tech upgrades, assorted visual aesthetics, and who knew about cloaks and when....I just can't care about that.
 
Yeah I care about big stuff. Like, if DSC said Kirk was never captain of the Enterprise, that would raise my eyebrow. But Klingon foreheads, tech upgrades, assorted visual aesthetics, and who knew about cloaks and when....I just can't care about that.

That's about where I'm at. Star Trek doesn't need to feel like a universe that I could live in some day. Because, it's not real.It's fiction. As long as I can suspend disbelief and not have any major tenets violated (like you said, Kirk never commanded the Enterprise, or the Enterprise is a giant purple rectangle, or McCoy was a 23 year old female Edoan) then I'm pretty indifferent.

I don't know how some people make it to the shower in the morning without getting pissed about things given how they seem to think about this shit.
 
I think people were actually on a whole more cool with a visual update back then with the Klingons because you had a 80 year gap between TOS and TNG and I think a 50 year one between Enterprise and TOS...

Jason
ENT 2151 - 2155 (finale in 2161)
ST: D 2256 -??
TOS 2265 (Where No Man Has gone Before) - 2269 ["The Gage" takes place circa 2254)
(So about 110 years between ENT and TOS on average - 100 years before ST: D)
TOS Feature Films (2279 -228?)
TNG 2264 - 2271
(So again about 100 years from TOS - 75-78 years from the TOS end of the Feature Films)
 
I would argue that TMP and TWOK are both major changes in line with what DISCO is doing.

Those do fit in continuity, though.

Also, it is expanding upon what has gone on before.

Good for them.

"Freewheeling" is a judgment call, though. I've been fascinated with the ways this series interacts with continuity, the way it re-contextualizes and adds nuance to previous series. Others, clearly, have not been.

"How the franchise works" is also a judgment call, and one that has changed multiple times over the years. The Motion Picture is a departure from Star Trek, an attempt to be less Forbidden Planet and more A Space Odyssey. The Wrath of Khan is a further departure from that, but not in the direction of Star Trek. With the exception of "Balance of Terror," Star Trek was never so naval, never so martial. The Next Generation is yet a further departure; at first it hews closer to the world of The Motion Picture (advanced by a century), but over the course of its run it changes into something very different, more concerned with its own mythology than with the messages, morals, and meanings. Individual episodes here and there still stand out as very Star Trek, but the overall course of the franchise moves away from that, until you get to the literal death of it all with the "fan fiction" season of Enterprise.

There is a difference between tonal differences and themes and factual differences.

This first season of Discovery has been an experiment in "how the franchise works" now.

Not according to the rules the DSC team put in place (set in prime universe, part of canon, etc.).
 
They fit as well as DISCO does. The changes that DISCO has done are similar to the changes TMP did and was supposed to be canonically within 3 to 10 years.

The few oddities with TMP were reconciled. DSC has shown no indication of doing that. (Also, TMP changed the Klingons after a only a handful of stories; DSC changes thing after years of materials have set things up so that we know it doesn't work from day one.)

Yes, very good for them. None of us have to like it, watch it or accept it.

They have the right to do what they will, just as we have the right to point out when things don't add up, like how they're talking out of both sides of their mouths when it comes to handling Star Trek continuity on the show.
 
The few oddities with TMP were reconciled. DSC has shown no indication of doing that. (Also, TMP changed the Klingons after a only a handful of stories; DSC changes thing after years of materials have set things up so that we know it doesn't work from day one.)
We didn't have that for TMP. Didn't get an explanation for decades. DISCO is showcasing the Klingon Empire in TOS that was never seen before.

They have the right to do what they will, just as we have the right to point out when things don't add up, like how they're talking out of both sides of their mouths when it comes to handling Star Trek continuity on the show.
One, there are explanations that can be used, and have been bantered about for years, including GR's own about the Klingons in TMP.

Two, continuity is important in broad strokes, but the details are more fluid, like @Balok's Decoy and @MakeshiftPython alluded to for themselves. That the world continuing forward is important but some details will change, and I've mentioned several before.

The degree that it "doesn't fit" will vary from person to person.

Sweet Gods are we still whining on the Klingon 's 4th or 5th make up change?
Oh, please. If people still bash on Abrams after nearly nine years, do you think the latest makeup change will escape unscathed?
 
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