A
Amaris
Guest
It was. I thought it worked pretty well, though.Wow, that was a long intro. Must have been Discovery’s longest, maybe in all of Star Trek
It was. I thought it worked pretty well, though.Wow, that was a long intro. Must have been Discovery’s longest, maybe in all of Star Trek
I was certain that The Wolf Inside had a longer teaser, but I just checked and this actually has it beat by a few seconds. (Unless you include the recap at the start as part of the teaser, in which case it's a second shorter.)Wow, that was a long intro. Must have been Discovery’s longest, maybe in all of Star Trek
The detached nacelles idea is really stupid. And it doesn’t look cool.
Right...
More to the point if I took you and flung you in to the far future would you recognize Earth? I grew up in LA but when I travelled back after moving away for ten years it wasn't my city.
Unless you believe they already know a lot about the Galaxy and its political structure, even then the response makes no sense because in the 32nd Century neither Earth nor Nivar are members of the Federation.
Fair point. Then Discovery is doing its job.The actual far future? Likely not. The far future as imagined by Discovery writers? Sure.
Fair point. Then Discovery is doing its job.
Agree to disagree.They're doing something. They're getting a bit better each season, but the unimpressive tech of 900 years ahead of TNG isn't one of their crowning achievements.
You'll hate PIC S2E1Okay, am I the only one who's tired of the sparks falling from the ceiling?
"Early last year"? You yourself posted about Starfleet Academy being set on New Earth in this post from May 2020:
According to Wikipedia, writing of season 4 didn't begin until August 2020. So if we're to believe you, the writers had a plan to destroy Earth at least three months before writing the season even began.
I find the detached nacelles to be a really strange concept. The closest we get to an explanation as to why they detach is Saru stating that it "enhances manoeuvrability". This only makes sense if we were to see things like the ship doing extreme manoeuvres and the nacelles moving independently of the main hull, like drones; which honestly would be quite cool, especially as we know nacelles are extremely massive and account for somewhere between 10% and 25% of a starship's mass. But they don't.
The other explanation that would have made sense would be for 32nd century nacelles to be fully self-contained units with integrated warp cores and fuel sources; in the event that a second Burn were to happen the nacelles would be destroyed but the main body of the ship would survive. But we see this is also not the case, because the warp core is still in secondary hull.
It bugs me it's being done because "it looks cool" but nobody's apparently thought about a proper reason for it.
If I do it won't be because of sparks falling from the ceiling, despite how clichéd that effect looks.You'll hate PIC S2E1![]()
On the one hand, I can't imagine a series like Discovery which is so keen on making viewers happy and showing a positive future actually destroying Earth. On the other hand, it would give all the humans on the ship lots and lots of trauma. Saru, Linus and Zora would each have to take an extra job as a counsellor help Culber deal with the workload.We'll see. I wouldn't be surprised if Earth gets destroyed this season to set up Starfleet Academy.
I think there was only one true duplicate, in miri. Then there was the Roman one and the one after a USA/URSS war, but topographically they were different.If Earth is destroyed the survivors should just move to one of those duplicate earths from TOS. They wouldn't even need a new CG San Francisco![]()
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