Honestly, I could do with less super powered alien beings claiming to be gods. TOS was bad enough but TNG made it worse.
Refresh my memory...when did TNG do it outside of Q claiming to be God in Tapestry? I don't recall anyone else claiming to be gods.Honestly, I could do with less super powered alien beings claiming to be gods. TOS was bad enough but TNG made it worse.
Q was the worse.Refresh my memory...when did TNG do it outside of Q claiming to be God in Tapestry? I don't recall anyone else claiming to be gods.
Yes, I dislike god like beings in Trek. Q makes it worse. I know TOS started it but it's less appealing as it went on.Okay, you mean to say you dislike the presence of an being with "god-like" powers. Q showed up only eight times in all of TNG.
I actually thought you could of used some of them to create interesting interactions, since it's possible the Organians and Q have different agendas. It might be interesting if some of the "god-ish" level races came into conflict, and Starfleet was caught in the middle. One of the most interesting scenes in season 2 of TNG is when Guinan and Q interact, and Q (who claims to be omnipotent) did not detect Guinan until she comes out from behind the bar, and Guinan seems to indicate she's capable of defending herself from Q. It's never explained or followed-up on, but it's interesting to speculate about something like that. Or how would the Prophets react to it if Q really started screwing around with Sisko and their plans for him?Honestly, I could do with less super powered alien beings claiming to be gods. TOS was bad enough but TNG made it worse.
The Shapers are fixing that.Yes, I dislike god like beings in Trek. Q makes it worse. I know TOS started it but it's less appealing as it went on.
I actually liked that about TOS, there was a sense that mankind was more of a middling race and you were just as liable to come across someone more advanced as more primitive.I never counted them, but I have the feeling in TOS the crew met more 'god-like' races (or at least races that seemed millennia ahead of the Federation) than in later series. The Organians, Trelane, Greek Gods, Arretans, to name just a few.
I actually liked that about TOS, there was a sense that mankind was more of a middling race and you were just as liable to come across someone more advanced as more primitive.
That actually reminds me of the old Alan Dean Foster story "Glory Lane". For most of the book, the human protagonists keep running into more and more advanced species, until they reach ones with practically godlike capabilities... but these last ones declare that humanity may be underdeveloped, but there's something special about us for all that. I think that's us in Trek in a nutshell... the Vulcans, Andorians, and Tellarites are all more advanced than us, but we were the glue that put the Federation together.I actually liked that about TOS, there was a sense that mankind was more of a middling race and you were just as liable to come across someone more advanced as more primitive.
^ Well, they had to address Picard's Irumodic Syndrome somehow. Either it kills him, or he gets a new body. Seems simple enough.![]()
I think once they’ve encountered a superior race it isn’t too much of a stretch to just avoid that territory, but the small local galactic space everyone is crammed into from TNG onwards sort of precludes that.But having our heroes meet a god-like race limits the number of narrative options significantly. So it's a trope that can grow tired if not used wisely and sparingly. I think TNG recognized this and turned the dial down a bit.
They probably should have just ignored the Irumodic Syndrome as something Q dreamed up for “All Good Things”.^ Well, they had to address Picard's Irumodic Syndrome somehow. Either it kills him, or he gets a new body. Seems simple enough.![]()
Definitely, nix time travel. TOS did it to save money and/or to joke it up. For obvious reasons they've dated the worst. TNG avoided it. VOY turns the trope into a caricature, all while managing to get from the delta quadrant to Earth and then back to where they started.
They explored Data way too often and oversimplified issues. On top of that, Picard threatens Data's "life" with disassembly in more episodes than he does threatening to kill a crewmember in any episode that isn't in the 1996 movie when he spouts how killing Borgified crew is somehow in their best interests... (I suppose the idea is to show Picard's obsession clouding his judgment to an extreme since he was saved, but at best the notion falls flat.)
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