• 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!

Spoilers Star Trek: Discovery 3x07 - "Unification III"

Rate the episode...


  • Total voters
    247
DS9 didn't explain a thing. It just lampshaded a change - and nonsensically so, since it would have had to mean that Bashir and O'Brien had never seen a single image of a TOS-era Klingon or ever heard in passing that they once looked different.

Apparently lampshading 15 years later, and clumsy explanation 25 years later is sufficient - I guess we have another decade or so before a future show needs to address Disco's changes.

Still waiting on an explanation for why Romulans have forehead ridges in every series other than TOS, in direct contradiction to a TOS plot point.
They were from the north.
 
DS9 didn't explain a thing. It just lampshaded a change - and nonsensically so, since it would have had to mean that Bashir and O'Brien had never seen a single image of a TOS-era Klingon or ever heard in passing that they once looked different.

Apparently lampshading 15 years later, and clumsy explanation 25 years later is sufficient - I guess we have another decade or so before a future show needs to address Disco's changes.

Still waiting on an explanation for why Romulans have forehead ridges in every series other than TOS, in direct contradiction to a TOS plot point.


Enterprise ended up explaining it and basically showed us Bashirs theory was basically on target. The romulan forehead ridges are an easy explanation since they are an offshoot if the Vulcans. Some romulans just still look Vulcan.
 
It was bizarre; the only thing which would have salvaged it is if Linus transported into the middle.
They should've done that XD
"This is not the bathroom... sorry... badge still new."

Honestly, I even find it hard to watch the show live and enjoy it, because I find myself thinking “oh...THIS is going to make people bitch and moan” or “oh boy, all the usual suspects are gonna have a field day with THAT” or whatever...instead of just happily enjoying the story like I usually would.

It’s one of the reasons I find myself posting in this forum far less than I usually do this season. It just feels like Groundhog Day sometimes.
Some people just go out of their way to hate things, and if they can’t find anything to hate they’ll make something up. It’s sad. Fans suck the joy out of things these days. Maybe they always did, I dunno.
The ignore function is bliss.
 
Still waiting on an explanation for why Romulans have forehead ridges in every series other than TOS, in direct contradiction to a TOS plot point.

We see smoothie Romulans in TOS, the TOS movies, the Kelvin movies, and Picard. We see Northerners in TNG, DS9, Voyager, Enterprise, Lower Decks, and Picard. Picard shows us both, with an explanation that implies the Northerners are a different race or subset of Romulans, so the assumption is that there are two main groups of Romulans seen across the series. The slight ridges on Selok that were removed or masked when she was Ambassador T'Pel shows us that they had no qualms at removing their ridges if need be, and this may have been a common practice in the 23rd century from some Northerners.

I don't know why you have such a problem with explanations. The DS9/Enterprise explanation is enough to explain away Discovery and its varying portrayal of Klingons who clearly tamper with their genetic makeup on a whim. Genetic engineering is rampant in Star Trek and that's been the case since the first season of TOS. That you people choose to ignore that and say there must be some larger explanation is frustrating and a lack of imagination, really. Half of the fun with Star Trek is working out the details that are implied but not quite stated.
 
We see smoothie Romulans in TOS, the TOS movies, the Kelvin movies, and Picard. We see Northerners in TNG, DS9, Voyager, Enterprise, Lower Decks, and Picard. Picard shows us both, with an explanation that implies the Northerners are a different race or subset of Romulans, so the assumption is that there are two main groups of Romulans seen across the series. The slight ridges on Selok that were removed or masked when she was Ambassador T'Pel shows us that they had no qualms at removing their ridges if need be, and this may have been a common practice in the 23rd century from some Northerners.

I don't know why you have such a problem with explanations. The DS9/Enterprise explanation is enough to explain away Discovery and its varying portrayal of Klingons who clearly tamper with their genetic makeup on a whim. Genetic engineering is rampant in Star Trek and that's been the case since the first season of TOS. That you people choose to ignore that and say there must be some larger explanation is frustrating and a lack of imagination, really. Half of the fun with Star Trek is working out the details that are implied but not quite stated.
hBgp5q2.gif
 
I don't know why you have such a problem with explanations. The DS9/Enterprise explanation is enough to explain away Discovery and its varying portrayal of Klingons who clearly tamper with their genetic makeup on a whim.
I'm not sure you even need to go as far as Enterprise. Trials and Tribble-ations perfectly modeled how we should approach these discontinuities that have evolved between the individual series.

  • Speculate
  • Joke
  • Avoid
  • Move on
 
I don't know why you have such a problem with explanations. The DS9/Enterprise explanation is enough to explain away Discovery and its varying portrayal of Klingons who clearly tamper with their genetic makeup on a whim. Genetic engineering is rampant in Star Trek and that's been the case since the first season of TOS. That you people choose to ignore that and say there must be some larger explanation is frustrating and a lack of imagination, really. Half of the fun with Star Trek is working out the details that are implied but not quite stated.

Er...I wasn't the one making an issue of different appearances. I was sarcastically responding to someone who was suggesting that previous series had explained it properly. "You people" indeed. :shrug:
 
Last edited:
I think that people are really missing the point if they are looking to Trials and Tribble-ations as a grandiose, continuity saving explanation for the Klingons. All the writers wanted to do was to create an episode in which their characters could be like fans caught in a Star Trek episode. It's full of fun in-jokes and humor. Even the moment when O'Brien thinks the guy at the bar is Kirkis funny because it was indeed Kirk--it was the actor who was Shatner's body and stunt double. The speculation about the Klingons is just a throwaway, reflecting fan discussions about the same topic.
 
Last edited:
I think that people are really missing the point if they are looking to Trials and Tribble-ations as a grandiose, continuity saving explanation for the Klingons. All the writers wanted to do was to create an episode in which their characters could be like fans caught in a Star Trek episode. It's full of fun in-jokes and humor. Even the moment when O'Brien thinks the guy at the bar is Kirk because it was indeed Kirk--it was the actor who was Shatner's body and stunt double. The speculation about the Klingons is just a throwaway, reflecting fan discussions about the same topic.
Humor, it is a difficult concept.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top