They have 13 years in-universe to play with and correct anything they need to make line up with the show. Right now I can only think of two things that would be hard to fix:
- Ages/names/genders of kids.
Ah, c'mon, kids' names and genders are already changeable in real life! If, say
The Picard Chronicles establishes that Picard in 2399 has an adult daughter named Marie, the novels could easily reconcile it with the post-NEM novels by saying that Rene had grown up to realize he was suffering from gender dysphoria and had transitioned into a woman. Not really a problem.
Oh, what's that? Marie's age doesn't match Rene's? Wow, it's
amazing how Marie ran into one of those child-snatching time portals from "Time's Orphan," isn't it!
A visit to the station formerly known as Terok Nor.
*coughcough retcon DS9 wasn't destroyed only severely damaged and it took two years to repair not two years to build a whole new station cough cough*
I'm not going to be devastated if they overwrite the last ten years of novels, honestly. At the same time, if the Picard show is 20 years post-Nemesis, it could be done in such a way to not overtly overwrite the novel continuity.
Though bringing the Borg in would be quite the trick.
Oh, I dunno.
A Singular Destiny already established that at least some Borg technology survived. You'd have to squint a bit, but I bet you could find a way to reconcile
Destiny with a hypothetical appearance of the Borg in
The Next-er Generation.
Just like with the Star Wars EU, no one is claiming that. But I want more stories with the Full Circle Fllet, the crew of the Titan, the crew of the Aventine, etc. I don’t want new stories in this continuity to stop.
Oh, I dunno. When "In A Mirror, Darkly" established that the USS
Defiant had been transported to the 2150s Mirror Universe rather than that it had been retrieved by the Starfleet Corps of Engineers in the 2370s, they didn't nullify the entire Litverse -- they didn't even nullify the entire
Corps of Engineers series. When the Vulcan Reformation arc in ENT Season Four established Andor as an icy moon instead of a temperate planet with a tropical zone, that didn't nullify the entire Andorian arc (nor even most of
Andor: Paradigm).
If Star Trek: The Next-er Generation nullifies Picard's arcs in the Litverse, that doesn't mean they'll necessarily throw out the whole Litverse.
Forgive my cynicism-but this seems like a way to reinvigorate the IP after the Kelvinverse didn't do so well and discovery has likely not produced the results Paramount wants.









The Kelvinverse films
saved Star Trek and proved it is still a viable franchise after Rick Berman drove it into the ground. Paramount Pictures is planning a third sequel to ST09 almost ten years later! And DSC has re-established Trek on television and made it a meaningful part of the modern Golden Age of Television!
I mean, seriously, in what universe do you live in that a giant corporation reacts to underperformance from an expensive genre I.P. by giving it
spin-offs and
sequels?!?!
Edited to add: Also, Paramount doesn't give a damn how well DSC does, because DSC isn't their show. DSC is from
CBS; Paramount only has the films.
Patrick Stewart is 78 years old and will be around 80 as I understand it when this new series starts-and his age was showing in Nemesis. I'm not sure if he can carry the show as well as he did in say season 5 of TNG.
I doubt his role will be action-oriented.