When it comes to trying to give an in-universe explanation to why things in ENT and Disco look more advanced than TOS, to me, it just makes sense to think of Star Trek as a multiverse. The TNG episode Parallels has always guided my head canon (and sanity) when it comes to these things. There's literally a Trek multiverse where everything that could have happen, did happen. So timelines A, B & C all exist concurrently, as well as the Kelvin, Mirror, and an infinite number of other timelines. (I think this might actually be the point the original poster is trying to make, but I haven't had a sufficient amount of coffee yet and my brain is only at 47% functional capacity at the moment.)
Yes, all the shows are presented to us as being in the same narrative timeline, but my head canon says, "Not so fast, my friend!" And it works for me. I enjoy TOS. But I also like Disco season 2 very much.
I think that any show that delves in to our humanity's future you are going to have that reboot. How much that reboot in the visual impacts one's enjoyment will vary. I personally struggle to have TMP and TOS in the same continuity, as it is visually jarring (especially the uniforms), and the characters don't feel in line with TOS representations.Then there's production design. That's been updated over the years. In a sense that's why I feel Discovery almost feels like a reboot. And as far as production design it kind of is.
Visually, the biggest jump is still from TOS to TMP. Not that there haven't been big jumps since then, but none were as drastic.
Indeed. And characters felt off from their TOS presentation, so there was not a solid feeling of continuity.Visually, the biggest jump is still from TOS to TMP. Not that there haven't been big jumps since then, but none were as drastic.
I think that any show that delves in to our humanity's future you are going to have that reboot. How much that reboot in the visual impacts one's enjoyment will vary. I personally struggle to have TMP and TOS in the same continuity, as it is visually jarring (especially the uniforms), and the characters don't feel in line with TOS representations.
To me, it just comes with the territory. Flexibility is more enjoyable than insisting everything must perfectly sync up and if it doesn't then it must be an alternate universe. That's too black and white for me.
YMMV.
Didn't the makers say it's in the prime universe (aka 1966 Trek)? Or are those two different things and "prime" really means "Kelvin timeline" since, being the current/active one, could then be considered "prime"?
To me, So I don’t see the need for complicated in-universe explanations to justify the differences.
I prefer the window to the stupid blank screen when the power goes out.And I hate the stupid window on the bridge. Have I said that before?That's all JJ Abrams fault. Ugh.
When I see the Enterprise with a hundred fighter craft and little robots that go out and do hull work, it is my opinion that we aren't in Kansas anymore. Why do I need to stick a guy in an ion pod when the technology is clearly there for an automaton to do it?
I applaud people that can make it work in their heads, I simply can't. So I go with the multiverse idea, which is actually more interesting to me on a story level than one continuous timeline.
But one must still be careful not to break immersion, as on the Eaglemoss chart which slots the scaled-up DSC Enterprise into the original lineage, with only vague notions of a “refit” discredited by Short Treks, which show that version pre-“Cage” also (it would require a ridiculous there-back-there or even a there-back-there-back sequence). The simpler solution is to sweep these differences under the rug, eg. by excluding that version from the overall lineage while acknowledging the history in text, then covering DSC in a separate class of tie-ins that try not to depict TOS.
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