It’s odd that Discovery doesn’t have a game, even something like a Telltale game.
Telltale went out of business a while back. What is there now is a shell of what it was.
It’s odd that Discovery doesn’t have a game, even something like a Telltale game.
I meant more that type of game, which is part cartoon, part point and click.Telltale went out of business a while back. What is there now is a shell of what it was.
It's interesting to me that, in the midst of this very cynical "standard business" hot take, it doesn't seem to have occurred to you that a media conglomerate might want to hold onto a BIg Five publisher as a generator and incubator of IP which can then be vertically integrated in the opposite direction.I think they will split S&S up into two companies:
Company 1 only does licensed books for ViacomCBS brands
Company 2 does everything else
And then they will sell Company 2 off. The majority of S&S doesn't fit with ViacomCBS's goal of being a streaming giant, so if there's interest, they will sell it off. That's standard business.
But judging by this thread, Star Trek merchandise is going to be the first time the brand managers give more of a shit about canon than the fans.
If only that was how that worked.it doesn't seem to have occurred to you that a media conglomerate might want to hold onto a BIg Five publisher as a generator and incubator of IP which can then be vertically integrated in the opposite direction
If only that was how that worked.
Can you name one instance where that’s the case?
No?
Oh right, there’s a reason for that.
Because I can’t be bothered to wait for you to reply with more misinformed clumsiness, a book publisher does not and cannot have any arrangement like you suggested.If only that was how that worked.
Can you name one instance where that’s the case?
No?
Oh right, there’s a reason for that.
S&S isn’t DC Comics nor Marvel. The majority of their books aren’t going to be adapted into anything. And the books they publish that are worth adapting would be rights managed by a dedicated literary agent.I mean, wouldn't DC Comics under Warner for the last 50 years, and Marvel under Disney for the last 10, count as that? Media conglomerates are a very real part of our world these days.
But judging by this thread, Star Trek merchandise is going to be the first time the brand managers give more of a shit about canon than the fans.
Preferably with a console release. I'm a big gamer, and a new single player story driven console Star Trek game is pretty much my #1 most wanted game.Tell Stan we need a good solo player video game!
You seem to miss what everyone in this thread has been saying about canon, including the writers behind much of this tie-in fiction.
Honestly, you sound very dismissive of Star Trek fans by saying we don't care, when you clearly aren't familiar with us and how we have dealt with this stuff for more than 50 years now.
I don't know if we should get into those kind of specifics, we still don't know with 100% certainty that we won't get a Novelverse version of the Romulan Supernova at some point. I'd rather we be cautious and not potentially ruin it for ourselves.
Looks like the Voyager relaunch is the happy, Disney version of Icheb and Seven's post-Voyager life.Just started watching the new episode "Stardust City Rag."
Holy fucking shit.
...Poor Icheb. Absolutely brutal.
Here's a question, shifting tracks to the new Picard show (I thought about creating a new thread on the topic, but it kind of could apply to this one--and I'm reluctant to create new threads unless it's absolutely necessary).
It seems that the previous litverse has come to an end for the most part. We'll have one more Voyager book and I'll keep hoping against hope they'll be a DS9 finale (as unlikely as that probably is).
But does anyone think we might get any new Picard books that take place or show us what the Enterprise-E is doing during this period in the new continuity? For Discovery we did have a novel that showed us what the Enterprise was doing during the first season. We don't know what the Enterprise-E is doing after Picard gets his promotion other than it wasn't involved with the evacuation. I wonder if we might get almost an alternate timeline story of what was happening on the Enterprise under Captain Worf. Perhaps it might even be able to incorporate one or two litverse characters into this alternate timeline (assuming we don't get a lot of information from the Picard show about the Enterprise during those years--leaving things open to be filled in). I might be curious to see a novel written in the new continuity that shows us what they are up to in the new continuity, a la "The Enterprise War" for Discovery. Perhaps it might even explore what happened to the DS9 and Voyager characters in this new timeline in some fashion that aren't already part of the show (or perhaps future books might explore that as well).
And one of the minor nitpicks I have from "The Last Best Hope" was that there was no real final farewell of Picard to the Enterprise. A new Enterprise based Picard novel might incorporate that in a bit more detail, using the framework from "The Last Best Hope" to flesh that out just a bit more at the start.
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