• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Case dismissed! Discovery and Tardigrade game "not similar"

Status
Not open for further replies.
I've always thought it was not the tardigrade per se, but the combination of the tardigrade and the characters that indicated Discovery borrowed some ideas from the game.

Either way, Star Trek would've been better off without tardigrades, spore drives and such, IMHO.
 
The characters in Discovery are nothing like the ones in the game though. Completely different roles, their personality, how the act etc. All the have in common is visual similarities.
 
This was an interesting analysis of the ruling (skip to 24:08, the first 28 minutes is just him reading the entire document with no commentary)
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Very concise and thorough explanation of how the judge arrived at her decision. It should be noted (by some) that at about 8:05 or so, one of the judge's findings is that Ripper was NOT blue in color as so many in this thread have been pointing out, and with whom others have disagreed.

This is pretty much the slam dunk most of us were expecting after following the case and the presentation of Abdin's "evidence". I would feel sorry for him if I thought he had been wronged, but he was not.
 
Should they utilise the warp ten salamanders too?
Certainly, if they can make an interesting story out of it. Certainly, that example illustrates that Star Trek is no stranger to odd choices and the spore drive is no exception. In fact, it might provide insight in to realms like the Q, and the Interphasic aliens that attacked the Equinox.

I get that many would like to toss it in the trash bin of Trek tech, but I am of the opinion that if you can tell an entertaining story with it then explore it.
 
I've always thought it was not the tardigrade per se, but the combination of the tardigrade and the characters that indicated Discovery borrowed some ideas from the game.

Either way, Star Trek would've been better off without tardigrades, spore drives and such, IMHO.

The characters in Discovery are nothing like the ones in the game though. Completely different roles, their personality, how the act etc. All the have in common is visual similarities.

Even the visual 'similarities' are totally pathetic. The one is supposedly similar to Burnham based on nothing other than the fact that its a black woman. Another one happens to bear a casual resemblance to Mary Wiseman with her hair down (while looking a lot less like Wiseman with her hair up, which is the look Tilly wears almost for the entire show). The rest are pure bs that look nothing like the DSC characters at all.
 
Should they utilise the warp ten salamanders too?

Count me as someone who actually thought the Salamanders were cool and people getting mutated by hitting warp 10 was fun. Star Trek often takes itself too seriously and I think sometimes it needs to be weird and space needs to be scary.

I'd take a season long arc about the warp salamanders over a single episode of Picard going to some boring conference or learning how to get his groove back on risa.
 
"Case dismissed" is a fact.

But the court decided there is no "substantial similarity" between the two Tardigrade. The thing is: This is still just a decision.

It is entirely possible to accept the judge decided that way, and still disagree with the decision.

As I said: The judge was entirely correct in dismissing the case, simply based on the production timeline of both properties. Nevertheless, I do think both Tardigrades are "substantially" similar, in both concept and execution.

That's why I think putting a quote of this decision in the title is not a great way of handling things. It would be a good title for a new thread. But very much misses the point of what this whole discussion had been about the last 105 pages.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Yeah, why adding anything insightful when you can MEME!:rolleyes:
And here I thought it was just a Sing-A-Long Song.

I guess it's about as insightful as seeming to continue to decry the fact that a 'Tardigrade is a Tardigrade' no matter the use and CBS is guilty.

But that kinda-sorta puts it smack dab in the area of law, in which no one is able to Copyright it for their own personal use.

And is essentially what the decision from the Judge included.
Funny that.
(though apparently, not as funny as a meme)
:cool:
 
Yeah, why adding anything insightful when you can MEME!:rolleyes:
Your post got exactly the level of insight it deserved. You've been running out the clock on this thread for ages, and now that the case is over you're shifting goalposts to arguing semantics and complaining about the title change, which you've mentioned three times already despite cultcross giving you an explanation and quoting the judge directly for the sake of precision. Move along. You can discuss the case and keep dragging this thread out indefinitely, but enough about the title change, at least. It's settled.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top