• 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!

What was "The Burn" and what caused it?

The new intro is up already? I thought it wasn't going to be broadcast in its entirety until tomorrow.

And if you're referring to the blue crystals in the intro from last season, those were time crystals from Boreth (used to power the Red Angel suit), not dilithium. If the crystals are now red, then that may very well be an allusion to dilithium being the source of the "Burn" problem, or at least a contributing factor. Then again, we've seen orange and yellow (and possibly purple?) dilithium over the years too, so who knows? Might be something else entirely.
 
Last edited:
The producers aren't the one's who control whether a thing is or isn't in the prime timeline.

That's the license owners.
And the producers have to pass everything through the license holders. Which means they approved of it being the Prime Timeline.
 
If the rumors of warp travel being unusable are true, then now's the time to bring in the Iconians and their gateways. Iconian rumors have haunted this show from the start, so now it's time to bring them in for real. :lol:
 
This Bustle article has a bit of clarification about The Burn (as far as I know, at least):
https://www.bustle.com/entertainment/star-trek-discovery-season-3-timelines-plot-characters

When Burnham first arrives in 3188, she's told that The United Federation of Planets no longer exists, and that all starships capable of warp drive were destroyed in something called "The Burn," an incident about 100 or 120 years prior in which all of the dilithium in the galaxy suddenly went boom, leading to millions of lives lost and the end of The Federation as Burnham knew it. But as she says, "The Federation isn't about ships and warp drive. It's about a vision and those that believe in that vision."

That just sounds awful, and like they haven't upped the game on Burnham's dialogue.
 
That just sounds awful, and like they haven't upped the game on Burnham's dialogue.
Nor the publicity stills. This one in particular shows a kind of weirdly serene "Farewell, everyone. I've given myself over to a death cult that really makes me feel good about myself" visage on Burnham's face:
dsc-s3-nycc-00002.jpg
 
This one in particular shows a kind of weirdly serene "Farewell, everyone. I've given myself over to a death cult that really makes me feel good about myself" visage on Burnham's face:
Looking at the picture with that quote in mind makes the expressions on everyone else's face more amusing if you imagine them reacting to that line. In particular Stamets, who you can see as the guy so high that you can say something downright awful but he'll just grin and say "cool."
 
Burnham: Booker, you're the kindest, most wonderful guy I've ever met and I in no way believe the widespread rumors that you're a pah-wraith single handedly responsible for the Burn.

Discovery crew: ...
 
Its been three years. Either get the fuck over it or stop watching and complaining about it.
f4zQRLU.gif


Take it down a notch. Let him have his wrong opinion.
 
So it looks as though dilithium...

...will factor into things insofar as "The Burn" is concerned.

From the New York Post:
Ajala, 34, plays Book, a strapping courier for hire who transports coveted dilithium for trade. When he first meets USS Discovery Commander Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green), his seemingly hard-hearted nature is belied by the poofy, purring furball Grudge, who has a penchant for languidly lounging on his ship’s bridge.
 
I look forward to finding out why Dilithium is actually so important given it's not really needed.

Heck, it's not even needed for Matter Anti-Matter reactors, it just makes them easier.
 
I look forward to finding out why Dilithium is actually so important given it's not really needed.

Heck, it's not even needed for Matter Anti-Matter reactors, it just makes them easier.
IIRC, it is needed in Disco. What's the source that it is not needed on Starfleet ships?
 
IIRC, it is needed in Disco. What's the source that it is not needed on Starfleet ships?
You're confusing "need" with "make things easier".

Remember, all a ship actually needs to go to warp is "power", how that "power" is generated doesn't matter.
 
and what's the source for that?
I guess Romulan Warbirds not using it.

The Dilithium crystals are used to help regulate the matter/anti-matter reaction. Romulans don’t use those kind of power sources, so logically they wouldn’t use dilithium
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top