It seems that Romulans have always enjoyed living on the edge.How can the Romulans taking residence inside that Borg cube be completely sure that one day it won't reactivate? I sure as hell wouldn't want to live in there. You can just never be too safe when it comes to the Borg.
How can the Romulans taking residence inside that Borg cube be completely sure that one day it won't reactivate? I sure as hell wouldn't want to live in there. You can just never be too safe when it comes to the Borg.
She may have gotten a black market upgrade to her cybernetic eye.
Either that, or TPTB retconned it.
Imagine the fleet at Dunkirk being tasked with rescuing Germans. That's similar to what the Federation was facing after the attack on Mars.
The Federation is comprised of a great many of Romulus's enemies. A great many of them may well have said, "Let the Romulans die! Why bother with them? We're better off without them!"
Well Odyssey was destroyed by the DominionFun fact, contrary to popular myth we never saw a single Galaxy Class destroyed during the Dominion War.
I think he was avoiding wearing anything that said "I'M FROM STARFLEET!"Apologies, I thought he held his comm badge to his ear but from watching it again on a larger screen, it turned out he had a ear piece in. I don’t know why he just didn’t wear his badge. He had it on at the beginning.
Except, Trek has always done that. Outer colonies are often treated as more frontier-esque, despite the presence of the technology you describe.So romulans living in the dirt fighting with swords when they had an interstellar empire where a few industrial replicators could support a planet... Its all a bit odd to me. These big sci-fi universes only work as long as the rules of them are followed and make logical steps in whatever direction they go. It can't just make irrational leaps.
It does have a Bird painted on it, we don't get any clear shots of the bottom, but there are a few frames where it's visible.I'm sorry, I'm not a ship aficionado, so revile me if you will, but why is an original Romulan Bird of Prey not painted like a giant bird? Because THAT'S super cool.
I loved this episode and the look into a new type of Romulans. The Romulans have been criminally underused in Star Trek before now so it's nice to learn more about their culture. Seven's intro was awesome. The only thing I hate about the episode is that we have to wait a week for the next one.
This episode does prove though that whatever you do, you can not please all Trekkies at the same time:
"Discovery moves too fast! I wish they let it breathe!"
"Picard is too slow! We need more action!
"Discovery is too much about the main plot, it should have more episodes exploring and visiting planets."
"Picard has too many episodes not dealing with the main plot."
That looks so cool! I need a model of this Bird of Prey.
This is Jean Luc Picard we’re talking about here, one of the most, if not the most decorated and honored Starfleet Captains of all time.
It still doesn't make sense, the borg incident was resolved with much less loss than it could have been thanks to picard. I think it was generally accepted that the federation was already building ships to deal with the borg at the time the dominion war broke out. It still has to go from that point to accepting all of the ships from 2 space empires wouldn't be able to make a reasonable effort in the time they had. So this week i'm seeing romulans living in dirt streets fighting with swords. With actual government officials living still. And i'm essentially asked to believe the romulan empire (with dozens or hundreds of worlds) fell to a point where this would occur. It just doesn't feel like the right progression to me. But maybe thats just me![]()
Picard is not a Mary Sue by definition. Picard (in this show) is the hero. A Mary Sue is someone who comes from the outside and magically fixes everything, or is the perfect officer, or .... . The star of the show can be a hero or a villain (nowadays) but not a Mary Sue.
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Old Avatar brought out for nostalgia for a few days
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He is the morally perfect officer here. He stands for all that is Just and True and Good. He always does the Right Thing. He is so noble he will atone for your sins, not just his. And he didnt even sin here.
It would have been easier if you just wrote: "never take anything I say seriously ever again."Stewart doesnt have the energy of even Bernie Sanders (about his age). He is a walking, talking fossil who slows every scene to a crawl and puts any audience to sleep. If he had HALF the energy of nearly 90 yo Shatner, this would be better. Instead we get a retirement home Bingo champ to put us to sleep as he slowly works up the energy to walk in a straight line, let alone make anything happen. Sad to see him so physically limp and flaccid. Give him some pep pills or viagra or something to wake this man UP.
If I were to think of a "Moral Mary Sue" in Trek, I think more of Janeway who was always shown to be right no matter what actions she takes. Since Picard is trying to fix what he sees as personal failings and regrets it doesn't really strike me as being a "Mary Sue" action.There is no universally accepted definition of the Mary Sue. I use Moral Mary Sue to apply to any character, including the hero. It doesnt have to be a magic person who comes to help the Hero from the outside. He is the morally perfect officer here. He stands for all that is Just and True and Good. He always does the Right Thing. He is so noble he will atone for your sins, not just his. And he didnt even sin here.
It would have been easier if you just wrote: "never take anything I say seriously ever again."
Except, Trek has always done that. Outer colonies are often treated as more frontier-esque, despite the presence of the technology you describe.
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