This is were you and I disagree. I think that the Klingon War enriched the Trekverse. Similarly, I think the Earth-Romulan War would make more sense and enrich the Trekverse if it had been done instead of the Xindi.I take the showrunners of Discovery at their word that the show takes place within the prime universe. However, some of the most controversial decisions - such as the Klingon redesign (which, if nothing else, didn't work from a performance standpoint) and the Federation-Klingon war in general - were also the ones which stretched established canon the most. Was the Trekverse really enriched in any way by adding them? I don't think so.
Personally, I think DISCO was worth it for the Klingon designs alone.
It wouldn't. Unfortunately.If the writers would clarify "we're sticking to the story canon of Prime yet updating the look for a 2018 show" I wonder how that would help.
Except when Trek tries to reinvent itself to suit contemporary tech and history. So, there have been instances of trying to have the cake and eat it to. Trek isn't always treated as being separated from our current world history, and I have heard it argued that it diminishes Trek's value of optimism for our world because it has its own history.Conversely, I think operating within the parameters established before makes more sense than increasing Trek tech based on contemporary knowledge, because I don't see how your conclusion follows from your premise here. After all, it's fiction — none of the tech is real, and it's not supposed to be an extrapolation from real-world 2018. Our present is not the past of Trek's setting. Its own established history is. If you want an in-story explanation, how about decades of global war in the mid-21st century (and heck, as far back as the 1990s!) throwing Earth's technological developments onto a different track from what's familiar to us IRL?...
Yes, I would prefer its own history remain its own, but that's not what has been done consistently.
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