And if he declined Geogiou’s offer to take him away, would that be a failed abduction?well, Saru was 'abducted', even though he willingly went along. So, DSC is the series you're looking for

And if he declined Geogiou’s offer to take him away, would that be a failed abduction?well, Saru was 'abducted', even though he willingly went along. So, DSC is the series you're looking for
I meant the landing party didn't notice them.
I took away from their expressions that they did realize it as the dematerialization process had just begun. While it shouldn't be possible to do that while being broken down to one's subatomic components, Star Trek has played fast and loose with that for years. I assumed that they did see the villagers witness them leaving.Are we sure of that, though? Just as the High Priestess and the others see the transport beam in effect there's a closeup of Pike's or Burnham's face as it dematerializes. It's possible that in the final moments before they rematerialized aboard Discovery that Pike or Michael noticed that they'd seen them beaming.
They showed a Selat on ENT S4 - "The Forge" that looked exactly the way it was depicted in TAS. Also, T'Pol mentioned doing her own version of the Vulcan "Kahs-wan" trial (that traditionally Vulcan males undertake as a test of manhood) <--- And the "Kahs-wan" was only previously mentioned in TAS.Wait, when did this happen? I know about things like Uhura and Sulu's names first appearing in books, and the first Kelvinverse movie taking a tiny bit of inspiration from the young Kirk books that came out back in the '80s, but I haven't come across any specific plot points from the books that have been added to the canon.
CBS collaborates just as closely with all of the tie ins, and they've never done this before, I don't see any reason to believe they would do it now.
When have we seen the First Federation do this kind of thing?
I took away from their expressions that they did realize it as the dematerialization process had just begun. While it shouldn't be possible to do that while being broken down to one's subatomic components, Star Trek has played fast and loose with that for years. I assumed that they did see the villagers witness them leaving.
Yep. That said, I hated "Realm of Fear."Yeah, and we know from "Realm of Fear(TNG)" that Reg Barclay could see while suspended inside a transporter beam and even see outside the beam into the surrounding transporter room. So Pike or Burnham seeing the reactions on their faces just as they begin transporting back up to the ship wouldn't be out of line for the way the technology has been portrayed over the years.
I liked it as a return to warmth and light, a sign of hope for the village and its future.What is everyone's thoughts on the final scene of the church lighting up? Symbolic of the return of science and echnology to Terralysium?
"Finally, I can cook these two hundred year old hot pockets!""Where did you get this power generator?"
"It came with the First Saved."
"No, it didn't. This entire community has known the contents of their belongings for over two hundred years."
"I built it then."
"Whatever. Just send some of that juice over to my home, will you? The wife wants to try a new...device."
I’ve always laughed (in an MST3K way) at the idea in that TNG episode that people on the pad are aware of what’s going on around them while their molecules are being taken apart. Part of me says “how in the hell can that happen, even in-universe?!”Yeah, and we know from "Realm of Fear(TNG)" that Reg Barclay could see while suspended inside a transporter beam and even see outside the beam into the surrounding transporter room.
"Where did you get this power generator?"
"It came with the First Saved."
"No, it didn't. This entire community has known the contents of their belongings for over two hundred years."
"I built it then."
"Whatever. Just send some of that juice over to my home, will you? The wife wants to try a new...device."
"Finally, I can cook these two hundred year old hot pockets!"
Yes.What is everyone's thoughts on the final scene of the church lighting up? Symbolic of the return of science and echnology to Terralysium?
Which makes me wonder what Terralysium would be like later in its history, during the TOS Movie Era or even the TNG Era. They're deep inside the Beta Quadrant and even the starships of Picard's, Sisko's and Janeway's time would take decades to travel 51,000+ light years without a wormhole, transwarp conduits or other similar technology, so I wouldn't expect any Starfleet crews to ever again stumble on their planet unless there's an accident or pure happenstance.
That said, at some point Terralysium might develop space travel of its own. Even a warp engine. Who knows? They're at worst in a 19th century state of technology in this episode. Add two or three centuries to that and you could have a viable faster-than-light spacecraft that goes out into space in search of Earth.
5 to me is: it does nothing for me, good or bad. It's dead neutral. 6 is: "I kind of liked it, it killed some time." 7 is the first solid rating that I consider good or there's no "kind of", I liked it. By that guide: I liked all the episodes from Season 1 of DSC, so they're all 7 or above.
But they already have 21st Century Knowledge up to the point of the war.Which makes me wonder what Terralysium would be like later in its history, during the TOS Movie Era or even the TNG Era. They're deep inside the Beta Quadrant and even the starships of Picard's, Sisko's and Janeway's time would take decades to travel 51,000+ light years without a wormhole, transwarp conduits or other similar technology, so I wouldn't expect any Starfleet crews to ever again stumble on their planet unless there's an accident or pure happenstance.
That said, at some point Terralysium might develop space travel of its own. Even a warp engine. Who knows? They're at worst in a 19th century state of technology in this episode. Add two or three centuries to that and you could have a viable faster-than-light spacecraft that goes out into space in search of Earth.
That was a pitched as an idea for DS9's TOS 30th Anniversary episode, the Iotians would have been imitating the Enterprise crew similar to how they were imitating gangsters in TOS.Hell, we never even went back to visit Sigma Iotia II and that was a world that one book on 20th century mobsters turned into a giant Godfather cosplay.
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