Again, another death of a random extra via means that shouldn't have been fatal if the AI / crew did their parts on trying to beam him back the moment that Vacuum was detected sucking the officer out of the ship.Agreed.
Though, this has kinda been on my mind ever since we saw the 24th century... and even 23rd century.
Why aren't crews that get accidentally sucked out automatically beamed back to the ship?
A few seconds of exposure to space won't (exactly) be fatal... certainly not with the technology they had in the 23rd and 24th centuries.
In the 32nd... it really didn't make sense the crew would be in danger of a hull breach.
Zora herself could have simply beamed the crewman the moment she had to erect the force field to the other side of it so he'd be saved.
Even if he was sucked out, his commbadge would have kept the lock on him. Or Zora would probably be able to detect his biosigns... or a tricom would have been programmed to detect the sudden change in environment and beam the crewman to safety.
In the 23rd and 24th centuries... I can understand if transporters went down due to damage... but in a lot of the situations we saw, the sucked out crew should have simply been beamed back aboard instantly.. and in the 24th... the shuttles could have been brought online in dangerous situations only for the purpose of using their transporters as 'lifelines'.
Michael Burnham literally survived Vacuum a few episodes ago when the Helmet formed around her a few seconds after exposure.
She survived Vacuum by jumping between two sections of Discovery during Season 1 with the computer releasing the force field and opening it on the other end.
Jonathon Archer survived Vacuum and was beamed to safety.
This death of random extra felt cheap, unearned, and unwarranted.
All it tells me is that StarFleet OSHA protocols are WORSE than the Tal Shiar's OSHA protocols for their assassins in Star Trek: Picard Season 1.
Remember, those guys were going to fall and have their spinal columns crushed by impacting the ground head first.
They were beamed to safety.
Yet the AI / Zora or Discovery's computer couldn't be bothered to save that random crew man?
He didn't lose his combadge.
Talk about cheap danger / sympathy points out of negligence or gross incompetence.
This is what people talk about when there's "Plot Armor".
Instead of a well earned death for a "Extra", they go the cheap route that should be easily avoidable and where the main character, Michael Burnham, has survived on 2x occaisions.
They could've beamed back his corpse and resurrected him via Borg Nano Probes.
But nope, let's leave his body in the void and spend ZERO effort to beam it back and fix him.
Just declare random extra dead because you didn't bother trying to save him.
Last edited: