See you later then? Personally I'm confused how people who hate the show keep on watching it.
Also you are over-reacting
All these



See you later then? Personally I'm confused how people who hate the show keep on watching it.
Also you are over-reacting
He moved the chair himself in The Menagerie. He turns around by himself the very first time we see him.
Thanks, it's been awhile since I saw it.Oh, he could move it forwards; backwards slightly.
ETA:
Something something quantum.I don't mind the time crystals too much, there's some thing 50s/60s about them which seems to fit the prequel motif better - whereas in Berman Trek the Macguffin would be some time particle-of-the-week generator.
That sword only exists in the minds of (some) fans.The Control fight was a bit unnecessary and really didn't add much. And my enjoyment of that whole aspect is greatly hindered by the sword of Damocles of the Borg origin story looming over it.
That sword only exists in the minds of (some) fans.
I don't mind the time crystals too much, there's some thing 50s/60s about them which seems to fit the prequel motif better - whereas in Berman Trek the Macguffin would be some time particle-of-the-week generator.
I cast a defiant 2 vote. Not 1 (because my reasons have nothing to do with DSC not being the “Trek I’m loyal to” wtf) but because, although it was a decent episode, TIME. CRYSTALS. ARE. SHIT.
Thank you LLAP
I like chronitons far more than outright magic crystals. "Chroniton" sounds like something that, while not present in our world, could be a legitimate scientific object in universe with different physics, where time has field-like qualities separate from space. In the real word, particles are really just excitations of various fields.
Time crystals were goofy anti-technobable plot devices at first, but now we've seen where they come from they're AWESOME.
Along with the fairy-filled enchanted forest of the spore network, Boreth is one of my favourite locations thus far in Discovery. It's a welcome return to the no-fucks-given-this-is-fantasy worlds of TOS and TAS. I can imagine it being somewhat jarring if you were raised exclusively on Berman-Trek, which drowned its fantasy elements in technobabble.
That's why the term is a problem. They're using a real term to describe a thing that is nothing like it. Not a huge issue, but it you want a fantastic magic thing that can have any properties the writers might need, then better use made up terms.But 'time crystals' is exactly the term that 21c physicists actually use to describe an real worldl newly discovered state of matter that has weird time-space properties!
Damn those legitimate real world physicists living in their own fantasy world and not using respectable terms for their discoveries!!
Damn those legitimate real world physicists living in their own fantasy world and not using respectable terms for their discoveries!!
That's why the term is a problem. They're using a real term to describe a thing that is nothing like it. Not a huge issue, but it you want a fantastic magic thing that can have any properties the writers might need, then better use made up terms.
It's a problem in Berman-trek, too. IDGAF about TOS, so I wouldn't know about that.Discovery is the first Star Trek series where this sort of thing is somehow a 'new' problem and 'separates' it from the rest of the franchise.
It's a problem in Berman-trek, too. IDGAF about TOS, so I wouldn't know about that.
Why should they die? Whoever is in charge of the training will save them and might come up with a better rescue plan. Pike knows an accident will happen, just prevent the accident from happening, it's what Captain Kirk 'I don't accept fate/or no win set ups' would do. Pike is being fatalistic about himself.
I didn't say anything of the sort.Discovery is the first Star Trek series where this sort of thing is somehow a 'new' problem and 'separates' it from the rest of the franchise. Weird.
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