Very sleek and elegant looking.After some slight further tweaks (mostly indeed increasing the contrast between the two floor tones, and swapping the forward alert status indicator for a bio-neural circuitry... thing), the bridge is now done!
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Too bad we are in the 21st century nowOh, I know. I'm only commenting on my very 20th century reaction when I look at the room as a whole.
I'd assumed that whatever surfacing was being used, it only simulates wood. If I were thrown to the deck in combat, I'd certainly want something a bit more forgiving than wood or metal beneath me. Also, as you point out, you'd want a surface with more friction for ascending and descending the ramp areas of the bridge. By the 24th century they might well have some kind of micro-thin membrane that could cover a wooden surface that could provide greater surface friction for traction where needed. It might even deform to absorb kinetic energy if struck at a certain velocity (like the speed of a humanoid body hitting the deck).Not opposed to the wood floor as a concept but it needs some tweaking. For one, you would never achieve that seamless transition from level-to-ramp-to-level with wood*. And I also would expect a non-skid surface on the ramps.
*(Well, not with wood from the 20th or 21st century.)
good in-universe explanations but it still looks like a single texture slapped onto three different surfaces without any differentiation. YMMVI'd assumed that whatever surfacing was being used, it only simulates wood. If I were thrown to the deck in combat, I'd certainly want something a bit more forgiving than wood or metal beneath me. Also, as you point out, you'd want a surface with more friction for ascending and descending the ramp areas of the bridge. By the 24th century they might well have some kind of micro-thin membrane that could cover a wooden surface that could provide greater surface friction for traction where needed. It might even deform to absorb kinetic energy if struck at a certain velocity (like the speed of a humanoid body hitting the deck).
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