Pike on Talos IV: Beep?I'm kinda bored with the idea of just pushing things into the future. Photon torpedoes aren't powerful enough? Let's make them Quantum Cutting Edge PROTON torpedoes with 92 launchers.
I'm kinda bored with the idea of just pushing things into the future. Photon torpedoes aren't powerful enough? Let's make them Quantum Cutting Edge PROTON torpedoes with 92 launchers. Phasers not good enough with 72 emitters on the ship? Let's make them Plazers! Shields don't work against these enemies? Let's make ships have hull plating AND seven layers of adaptive mutating shields that also slice, dice and make julieanne fries. Instead of 42 decks on the Enterprise-D, it needs to have SEVENTY decks! Warp 9.95 isn't good enough? Now they can go Warp a gazillion. (And yes, I get with the spore drive is kinda the same thing. Not a HUGE fan of that either.)
I mean, okay, but at the same time, the ship will still get outgunned. The shields will still fall to [insert prcentage here]. They'll still be smaller than the baddie. And the ship will still move at the speed of the plot.
Its just silly.
See, I always thought that Menagerie's framing story was mediocre, but now with a little backstory it makes more sense and has better emotional impact.While TOS is my favorite TV series, ever. I don't need to be constantly reminded of it. I really didn't find anything that made TOS more poignant? I got what Pike sacrificed when saving the cadets. I got the gulf that existed between Sarek and Spock.
I simply didn't need more explanations.
I like the sequels and Rebels well enough, but i never read any of that previous expanded universe stuff (well, other than the Solo books from the 80s, and I'm not sure if they even counted*), so had no preconceived notions to hamper my enjoyment.The prequels didn't end my lifelong fandom of Star Wars. But 7 and 8 (and Rebels, to the point I haven't even watched a minute of Resistance) did, or more accurately made me realize I was a fan of the old "Legends" universe (which included the prequels) and not a fan of this new universe that Disney created from the skeleton of the old.
Um... no offense but have you spent much time on Star Wars forums? Because I've been a member for over a decade on theforce.net's boards as sidv88, and yes they do make just as much of a fuss if not more so. Including around "children's" shows (which were actually quite violent).Clone wars was targeted towards children (even if adults watched it). These kids don't go on online forums and make the biggest fuss known to mankind because Klingons are now bald.
Depending on writers and producers to pull this off, are we? I'm hoping for the best, but am not holding my breath...I think it depends on how it is handled...... it could be interesting.
Pike on Talos IV: Beep?
Future Pike: Hi! I'm from even further in the future where the Federation stopped working on bigger and badder weapons and actually did futuristic medical research! I'm walking and talking! I came back in time to give you a heads up, tomorrow Starfleet Medical will fly over to pick you and Vina up and completely cure you both. Sound good?
Pike: Beep!![]()
I think it depends on how it is handled. If the galaxy outside of Control exists in some kind of technological dark age, it could be interesting.
The Solo movie was the breaking point for me. It's hard to see how they could get Han rescuing Chewie out of compassion wrong, but they did. And Han and Lando were actual, you know, friends in the old books, not sworn enemies like in the new movie.I like the sequels and Rebels well enough, but i never read any of that previous expanded universe stuff (well, other than the Solo books from the 80s, and I'm not sure if they even counted*), so had no preconceived notions to hamper my enjoyment.
Page 4 for first mention of Star Wars in a Trek forum. You guys are slipping, I was expecting it on page 2![]()
I would argue it's worse than Star Trek because since the start of the Trek franchise 50 years ago, Trek fans already knew ahead of time that non-filmed works weren't canon.Gee who would have thought adult Star Wars fans would go on a forum and make a big stink about a kids cartoon show. I stand corrected.
They are going to get sent to the 28th century but its not going to be the 28th century we expect from what we know from Daniels and the Temporal Integrity Commission.
Its going to be war torn, Control waging war against a hardened Federation. Discovery and its crew being thrown into the 28th century is going to radically change the timeline. Unable to absorb the sphere data Control assimilates the galaxy ship by ship, planet by planet to build its forces. The Alpha and Beta Quadrants are in ruins, there was no Borg to drive forward Federation advancement. The Romulans are gone. The Klingons are either fighting alongside the Federation or have already been wiped out. Discovery has to find a way to return to the past to fix the future.
Whether this involves Calypso, Future Guy, and Control becoming Borg I don't know. But I really don't expect them to have Discovery end up in the peachy 28th century where archaeologists use time travel to study history.
I agree with you. And I could see from season 3 on Discovery being in its own reality, at least for some time. I wish they'd hop galaxies but barring that, some completely new circumstances would be appreciated.
Exactly. Why else you think the first thing Jj did with the movies is put it in its own timeline. Prequels are super limiting.
If Discovery jumps to the 28th century you can pretty much guarantee it will be a version of it where the Federation won't have much of a presence, otherwise it would undermine the entire point of the Discovery needing to be there to solve the over-arcing dilemma of the season (and I agree that it's probably just going to be a season long arc rather than a permanent state of affairs). If there's a super-powerful galaxy-spanning Federation that has united with the Klingons and other local empires and that routinely conducts time travel research and policing missions than Discovery would be little more than an interesting historical curiosity to them, not a savior. For the premise to work the presence of Discovery has to upset the balance of power in some way and represent a significant development in that corner of the galaxy, otherwise what's the point?
The future Federation, if it exists at all, may have become corrupted by intervening events and will eventually become the V'draysh that Craft's humans from Alcor are fighting against hundreds of years later in the 33rd Century. So it would be interesting to see Discovery as the representative of the old ways of the Federation fighting against a newer corrupted version and trying to relocate/save Craft's people's early refugees or colonists.
Perhaps they come up with some sort of modification of the Control AI that's less murdery and that becomes the framework for the Zora AI and we get an explanation for why they parked the ship in that region of space to be recovered at a later date.
Since it's all in an undetermined future it can all be re-written by future shows as needed, so there's no need for the continuity gatekeepers to get upset that the Federation has fallen or is acting corrupt or evil.
Just a bit ago you were all for the approach of trying something spectacular even at the risk of failing. Now you're doing a 180 on that. No pleasing some people!Scares the fuck out of me. When you are writing "to win awards", it often comes off as dull and preachy.
If Discovery jumps to the 28th century you can pretty much guarantee it will be a version of it where the Federation won't have much of a presence, otherwise it would undermine the entire point of the Discovery needing to be there to solve the over-arcing dilemma of the season (and I agree that it's probably just going to be a season long arc rather than a permanent state of affairs). If there's a super-powerful galaxy-spanning Federation that has united with the Klingons and other local empires and that routinely conducts time travel research and policing missions than Discovery would be little more than an interesting historical curiosity to them, not a savior. For the premise to work the presence of Discovery has to upset the balance of power in some way and represent a significant development in that corner of the galaxy, otherwise what's the point?
The future Federation, if it exists at all, may have become corrupted by intervening events and will eventually become the V'draysh that Craft's humans from Alcor are fighting against hundreds of years later in the 33rd Century. So it would be interesting to see Discovery as the representative of the old ways of the Federation fighting against a newer corrupted version and trying to relocate/save Craft's people's early refugees or colonists.
Perhaps they come up with some sort of modification of the Control AI that's less murdery and that becomes the framework for the Zora AI and we get an explanation for why they parked the ship in that region of space to be recovered at a later date.
Since it's all in an undetermined future it can all be re-written by future shows as needed, so there's no need for the continuity gatekeepers to get upset that the Federation has fallen or is acting corrupt or evil.
Daniels shows us time travelling archaeologists studying the construction of the Pyramids at Giza who are from the 28th century. That doesn't suggest a dark age. Plus the V'draysh exist in the 33rd century, Gabrielle is stuck in a lifeless 32nd century (except for Terralysium), Daniels comes from a prosperous 31st century. Also the Backup Module Doctor should be hanging around sometime here. Plus Zora explicitly stated she was waiting around for a millennium, so Discovery has to end up back in its native time period at some point so it can be set adrift.Eh. We seem to know the Federation from the 29th Century (from Voyager) and Daniel's time period is pretty bright and sunny. But there's no reason within continuity the Federation couldn't have taken a dark turn during the 28th century.
Different strokes. TOS is my favorite Trek series, ever. But, I love how Discovery has expanded and added to some aspects of TOS. Truly added value.While TOS is my favorite TV series, ever. I don't need to be constantly reminded of it. I really didn't find anything that made TOS more poignant? I got what Pike sacrificed when saving the cadets. I got the gulf that existed between Sarek and Spock.
I simply didn't need more explanations.
Daniels shows us time travelling archaeologists studying the construction of the Pyramids at Giza who are from the 28th century. That doesn't suggest a dark age.
It makes more sense, and is frankly easier to fit into canon, that this is going to be one of those stories where the time traveler needs to experience the "bad" future first in order to make the changes necessary to have the "good" future happen in the first place. Another loop.
The point of going to the future isn't about the tech. It's really about opening up the stories they can tell. They're less restricted by canon. You won't have the people saying you can't do this or that because we know it didn't happen.I'm kinda bored with the idea of just pushing things into the future. Photon torpedoes aren't powerful enough? Its just silly.
It doesn't make sense for Federation archaeologists to be gallivanting through time while the Federation is in a period of decline, especially if Control is still mucking about. See my edit, its too messy to have the 28th century that the Discovery ends up in be the "correct" timeline.What, just because it's grimderp there can't be archaeologists? People engaged in archaeology during World War 2 after all.
I would agree. Which makes this rumor all the more troubling to me.I'd argue Season 2 has a lot more time travel shenanigans than this rumour.
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