When exactly in previous stories would anything remotely like this have come up?This is the first time that I've heard of eggs getting ruined because of Hyper Drive.
Talk about a plot device that forces them to go STL.
When exactly in previous stories would anything remotely like this have come up?This is the first time that I've heard of eggs getting ruined because of Hyper Drive.
Talk about a plot device that forces them to go STL.
I've never heard of a situation like this until now.When exactly in previous stories would anything remotely like this have come up?
People late in pregnancy aren't supposed to fly, which I'd assume was the inspiration for this complication. On Doctor Who, Amy Pond was concerned that traveling in the TARDIS while pregnant might cause her baby to be born with a "time-head" or something (which, in fact, did happen). On Star Trek we've heard of aliens and materials that would be hurt or damaged by going through a transporter.I've never heard of a situation like this until now.
This is the first time I've heard of this excuse used in any franchise (ST or SW).
I've heard about those recommendations, but what's the medical reasoning behind it?People late in pregnancy aren't supposed to fly, which I'd assume was the inspiration for this complication.
I don't remember that, I thought it was mostly personal phobia's about transporters that gave the individual the right to go via Shuttle Craft over Transporter. Can you remind me about which scenes had that? The only thing I remember was Anti-Matter being non-Transportable, but other than that.On Doctor Who, Amy Pond was concerned that traveling in the TARDIS while pregnant might cause her baby to be born with a "time-head" or something (which, in fact, did happen). On Star Trek we've heard of aliens and materials that would be hurt or damaged by going through a transporter.
Aren't the ships shielded from radiation?Hyperspace travel exposing people to radiation or some other stress which is normally harmless, but can be dangerous to eggs, fetuses, or, I suppose, the very ill, isn't completely unreasonable.
No, you're missing the point: when have we ever in previous stories seen ANY amphibious species with a jar full of unfertilized spawn needing transport between planets? Not being able to use hyperspace is not a contrived plot device if there's no precedent. They're allowed to make shit like this up.I've never heard of a situation like this until now.
This is the first time I've heard of this excuse used in any franchise (ST or SW).
People late in pregnancy aren't supposed to fly.......
I've heard about those recommendations, but what's the medical reasoning behind it?
I don't remember that, I thought it was mostly personal phobia's about transporters that gave the individual the right to go via Shuttle Craft over Transporter. Can you remind me about which scenes had that? The only thing I remember was Anti-Matter being non-Transportable, but other than that.
Aren't the ships shielded from radiation?
Now this is a valid comparison I hadn't thought of.
Easy on the name calling..........you can make a point and not be childish. You are the one stating it was "both disgusting and horrifying" for you to watch.
Also ate that live ice spider when he saw it.Actually, what Baby Yoda eating the eggs reminded me of most was “The Shape of Water” (you know which part). I was surprised by how forgiving most people were of that, too.
Well, that, and Baby Yoda seems to just love eating things alive. He ate a whole frog that one time.
As mentioned above, Yoda and little Frogwai's species has clearly carnivorous and even predatory traits. He's acting not differently than one might expect a cat to act if you leave live rodent young where they can get at them.Also ate that live ice spider when he saw it.
I wonder if this compulsion to eat live creatures is ever going to be explained. Maybe Yoda's race consumes life in the early years as a way to tune in with the force (a rather creepy trait).
This is the first time that I've heard of eggs getting ruined because of Hyper Drive.
Talk about a plot device that forces them to go STL.
You literally just explained writing.I've never heard of a situation like this until now.
Maybe I'm wrong, but by my read Leia doesn't seem to think that's the case. When she explains why they are going to Crait, she says that "Holdo knew the First Order was tracking our big ship." But they didn't know they were being tracked at all until they came out of lightspeed. So the decision was made to stop before the reason for going to Crait was learned.since that's where they were going.
There's absolutely no reason to think that the Resistance ships didn't intentionally come out of hyperspace in the same system as Crait, since that's where they were going. What, you think they just stopped the ships in the middle of nowhere because somebody had to go to the bathroom?
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