Indeed. I understand that people have their preferences but treating as the dark thing really seems to miss the point of the whole season.there is nothing grim dark about about the 32nd century.
Indeed. I understand that people have their preferences but treating as the dark thing really seems to miss the point of the whole season.there is nothing grim dark about about the 32nd century.
It's Grim Dark for the "UFP / StarFleet"
They're a shell of their former selves.
I wanted to see the UFP when it was at it's height with members in every quadrant, all 350 members.
I wanted to see StarFleet with millions of ships in the fleet exploring all corners of the Milkyway Galaxy.
I wanted to see StarFleet prepare for exploring nearby Galaxies, Official Time-Travel, Parallel Universe Hopping, Explore other Dimensions, etc.
That's the UFP I wanted to see. The Universe is VAST and with so many things to explore.
I don't want to see the UFP / StarFleet needing to be rebuilt from what's left over.
I didn't want to see millions of StarFleet ships go Ka-Boom with millions of Officers dying when Time-Travel can save their lives.
I didn't want to see the UFP get whittled down to where it is now.
It's bad for me, great for you.Well too bad i guess.
To add to this, it's worth remembering that what the Dominion was evolved heavily over the course of Season 2, and during the break between Season 2 and 3.Robert Hewitt Wolfe said in an interview that something they wanted to address in series but never did was the fact that the Dominion had known about the Federation for a long time before the discovery of the wormhole and had projected that they would have first contact with the Federation around 2571. It's implied that they already considered the Federation a threat as again according to RHW, the Dominion had plans to deal with them when first contact happened.
I sympathetic to wanting to see the Federation at the height of it's powers and reach, but be aware where it lead: the Temporal Cold War, which lead directly to the Temporal War. And the war, which they won, still basically destroyed the Federation.It's Grim Dark for the "UFP / StarFleet"
They're a shell of their former selves.
I wanted to see the UFP when it was at it's height with members in every quadrant, all 350 members.
I wanted to see StarFleet with millions of ships in the fleet exploring all corners of the Milkyway Galaxy.
I wanted to see StarFleet prepare for exploring nearby Galaxies, Official Time-Travel, Parallel Universe Hopping, Explore other Dimensions, etc.
That's the UFP I wanted to see. The Universe is VAST and with so many things to explore.
I don't want to see the UFP / StarFleet needing to be rebuilt from what's left over.
I didn't want to see millions of StarFleet ships go Ka-Boom with millions of Officers dying when Time-Travel can save their lives.
I didn't want to see the UFP get whittled down to where it is now.
I sympathetic to wanting to see the Federation at the height of it's powers and reach, but be aware where it lead: the Temporal Cold War, which lead directly to the Temporal War. And the war, which they won, still basically destroyed the Federation.
My thought on the Temporal War based on Enterprise and Discovery was that by the 30th century, the Federation has become so powerful that the only way to defeat it (because it's vast scale invited challenge and was an existential threat to other powers) was to try and erase it from existence via manipulating time, which various groups attempted to do.
As we learned in Season 3, the Federation spent most of the 30th century fighting the war, and as we saw in Enterprise, the war was devastating. Still, the Federation won and time travel was outlawed on a galactic scale. But resources, already stretched thin, were drying up, and within a decade of winning the war (more or less), the Burn happened. And the Federation never recovered. It spent 80 years trying to recover, and then the decades after retreating to 35 worlds barely in touch with it.
Seeing the Federation at its peak would be really watching a tragedy. It's be like watching Season 1 of Game of Thrones when you know it leads to pretty much everyone dying and much of what exists being destroyed within a relatively short period of time. I think the more interesting period would be the "Age of Expansion", as I like to call it. In my head, between the 26th century and 29th century, the Federation expanded relentlessly and pushed the boundries of exploration. A large part of that was because of a 300 year "long peace" between their last major war in the 25th century and the start of the Temporal Cold War. In canon, Star Trek already has this: the 74 year "long peace" that began at Khitomer in 2293 and ended with the Battle of Wolf 359 in 2367 allowed for the Federation to advance it's technologies, explore and expand widely, and shift from a joint exploration-security mission to an almost entirely exploratory one, to the point that families started to be put on even Miranda class starships by the 2360s, and the Galaxy class was designed around it. That peace was punctuated by the Tomed Incident, the Enterprise-C incident, the minor conflict with the Tzenkethi, and the Cardassian border wars (which sound much more like infrequent skirmishes).
Now imagine of that peace was 300 years long, how far the Federation can go. With no Borg, and the Dominion being at the very fringe of the galaxy, they could do almost anything.
As I wrote in my last post on this, I think in-universe, the Dominion War is the essential catalyst to this. Within the Gamma Quadrant, the Dominion is now influenced by Odo and just, very far away. Within the Alpha Quadrant, by 2390, the Klingons would just be recovering per Sloan's prediction, but they're allies of the Federation (and destined to join per-Enterprise); the Romulans Star Empire is no more thanks to Hobus (dumb luck on the Federation's part); the Cardassian Empire is no more and will take generations to recover thanks to the genocide by the Dominion, and the Breen surrendered. Even insular and burned by the Attack on Mars, the Federation stands apart as the clear victor of the Dominion War, with all of it's potential rivals either severely weakened or friendly with them. Can there be a clearer path to a good century ahead?
Of course we know in the 25th and 26th century the Federation comes into conflict with the Sphere builders, in what I think is probably the last major war the Federation faces until the 30th. But they used to the 25th and 26th centuries to get into a position to be able to build ships like the Enterprise-J, that by the 30th century would be antiques.
Doug Drexler (i think) used to say that Star Trek is best viewed as a period piece. I wholly agree with that POV. And from that POV, almost everything we've seen in Star Trek pre-Discovery S3, excluding Voyager's Temporal Cold War stuff and Voyager's USS Relativity stuff, is just a lead up to the Dominion War and defeat of the Borg which, by virtue of winning both, "made" the Federation from a regional power into a galactic-scale power. Even the conflict with the Klingon's in the 22nd century, through that lense, would just be a prologue to the alliance that won the war, eventually leading to a merging and eventually hundreds of years of peace and prosperity.
I guess we'll have to agree to disagree.Time travel is never good.
It is also a veritable Pandora's box in terms of implications and lack of use whenever it's convenient to the plot. Honestly, I think maybe two or three time travel stories really worked for me. The rest just is a means to an end to good Star Trek.I guess we'll have to agree to disagree.
I love Time Travel, it's alot of fun =D.
To each, their own.It is also a veritable Pandora's box in terms of implications and lack of use whenever it's convenient to the plot. Honestly, I think maybe two or three time travel stories really worked for me. The rest just is a means to an end to good Star Trek.
What appeals?To each, their own.
I also enjoy watching "DC's Legends of Tomorrow", despite having more Plot Holes than Swiss Cheese.
But I still think the original idea of a "Dark Federation" or "Alternative Federation" out there in the galaxy is worth doing. There are vast swathes of the galaxy unexplored that should be home to Federation-like organizations (perhaps even in scale) and anti-Federations . The Dominion wasn't the Gamma quadrant in the 24th century. It wa, perhaps, a fifth the beta quadrant. And the Borg controlled about third to half the Delta Quadrant. much of the Beta Quadrant beyond the Klingon empire and Alpha Quadrant beyond Breen Space is entirely unexplored.
So when looking at those 32nd century ships the first time, sure some of them with their saucer shapes show traditional Federation design going back to the NX-01. Both others, like the USS Nog, I can't help but speculate "did the Federation absorb some other major spacefaring design tradition?". It would be cool, I think, if "tall ships" like the USS Nog's clas came as a result of the Federation merging with a near-peer in some part of Galaxy unknown in the 24th century. That way it shows that as the Federation spread over 1000 years, it changed far beyond what we saw by the late 24th, which by the 32nd century, would be the dawn years.
I won't speak for @KamenRiderBlade but I love that I can *never* guess what's going to happen next and I really like the characters.What appeals?
The character interactions, the familial like bonds, the rotating cast of characters every season where some leave and some stay which drastically change the dynamic, the fact that it isn't ever predictable despite being a Time Travel show, the expanded DC EU where normally B-Rated Super Heroes & some villains gets to be part of the main cast.What appeals?
Was more curious about the appeal of time travel stories but fair enough.The character interactions, the familial like bonds, the rotating cast of characters every season where some leave and some stay which drastically change the dynamic, the fact that it isn't ever predictable despite being a Time Travel show, the expanded DC EU where normally B-Rated Super Heroes & some villains gets to be part of the main cast.
So normally a character like "Black Canary" wouldn't get her own show, but in DC's Legends of Tomorrow, she is the lead of the show.
Time Travel allows you to explore the Past, Present, & Future in Legends of Tomorrow.Was more curious about the appeal of time travel stories but fair enough.
Strange...if only other shows went to alien planets without time travel.Time Travel allows you to explore the Past, Present, & Future in Legends of Tomorrow.
Hell they even get to go to space and go onto Alien Planets every now and then.
The Alien Planet travel isn't the primary focus, it's just a side bonus.Strange...if only other shows went to alien planets without time travel.
I disagree (sort of) - the primary focus is the characters. This may be splitting hairs, but my hubby often says there are plot-driven shows and character-driven shows. There is certainly crossover, but this is kind of a "primary thrust" thing. I tend to like character-driven stuff and will forgive plot holes, as long as they aren't bad enough to take me out of my suspension of disbelief while watching. My hubby isn't quite as forgiving.The Alien Planet travel isn't the primary focus, it's just a side bonus.
The Time travel is the primary focus.
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