I am a little confused about something though. If the ship can sense thoughts, is it sensing all thoughts or just one at a time. What if those thoughts come in conflict, or did the ship just choose Young because Young was in a very dark place. It was a battle simulation and Young is the commander.
I'll admit, I'm going on half remembered memories, but I thought the ship was attuned specifically to Young's mind because he was the commander.
Although it is an alright episode, my problems with it have less to do with the episode itself and more to do with the pre-season buzz. Specifically, when the casting announcement was made that Robert Knepper was cast as Simeon, I remember the character description of Simeon described him as "Rush's rival and every bit his equal." And indeed, prior to the season premiering everyone from the writers, director, producers and even the other actors were talking about what a thrill it was watching Robert Carlyle and Robert Knepper filming scenes together, and that they had such "powerful performances" when playing off each other. Then the season premieres and the two of them aren't even in the same scene together until the eighth episode, and the only time they're even on screen at the same time is when Rush shoots Simeon. I sure would like to know what everyone was talking about when they were setting up this awesome dynamic the two of them allegedly had.
Granted, you were spared this, so you can evaluate the episode on its own merits meaning it probably comes off as a pretty good episode from your perspective, but for me, that just got to me when I watched it and kind of did stand in the way of my enjoying it as much as I probably should have.
Yeah, now you're seeing what we were talking about earlier. It's a damn shame the show stumbled out of the gate so badly, because season 2 was just incredible.
SGU's greatest flaw is probably that it took so damn long to do anything. Even in the second season you can see parts where they could have trimmed the fat and made a far more streamlined narrative. IMO, the second half of season 2 is when the show finally gets it shit together, a combination of actually advancing some plot points, doing some interesting storylines and realizing which characters are working best and giving them more material. Sadly, right when the show is getting itself on track, it ends.