Going to go through this and try and organize all the ideas into a single idea. See what repeats.
That will be interesting.Going to go through this and try and organize all the ideas into a single idea. See what repeats.
that requires a complete revamp of the xindi arc, don't you think?I would focus more on the Xindi Arc and have no Klingons, nor would I have had any of the Temporal Cold War stuff. The Xindi Arc would be standalone without any connection to the Temporal Cold War. I would also have had more focus on the Tellarites, Andorians, and Vulcans throughout the show as well.
For the Earth-Xindi War I would have had Archer convince the Tellarites and Andorians to directly engage and help out with fighting the Xindi Reptilians and Insectoids.
The Earth-Xindi War is something that would happen in place of the Romulan War (which would take place after the founding of the federation, perhaps).
that requires a complete revamp of the xindi arc, don't you think?
so how does archer know where to look for the xindi?Yes it would. Just have the Sphere builder plot line be independent of the temporal cold war.
those are rather mean, thoughDon't have the humans, an upstart species barely capable of interstellar travel, be the ones to bring down the whole expanse. That made about as much sense to me as having the Great Wall of China knocked down by a bunch of Chihuahuas.
Meanness is a good start, but destructive capacity plays a part as well.those are rather mean, though
you didn't say how many of them are your bunchMeanness is a good start, but destructive capacity plays a part as well.
I think the ship had about sixty crew left at that point.you didn't say how many of them are your bunch
I imagine Archer would find alternate clues through some other means. Perhaps the Xindi are mislead by the Romulans to attack Earth, alternatively.so how does archer know where to look for the xindi?
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those are rather mean, though
... you may want to check why isaac asimov started to write robot stories
triggering an early war with the romulans?I imagine Archer would find alternate clues through some other means. Perhaps the Xindi are mislead by the Romulans to attack Earth, alternatively.
Sorry if this is something I already said, but I was thinking about the TCW again, because I've been reading Movieblog's reviews and he brings up comparisons in Doctor Who's War in Heaven and Last Great Time War. I'm also reading "Alien Bodies" for the first time, and it makes me think the TCW could have been a really engaging backstory if they'd just come at it with a plan. Like something. I would have said the 22nd century had been roped off by the higher powers but that a couple of agents had snuck in, ie both Daniels and Future Guy were in the present but stuck there, they had no future tech but they just had their future knowledge. And the Sphere Builders had no time travel but just had the looking at future timeline tech. I love the implication in "Cold Front" that Silik was the good guy and that Daniels was either a bad guy or incompetent (although "Shockwave" makes it clear Future Guy is a villain, you could rewrite that so the Suliban made a mistake). I probably wouldn't have said the NX-01 should have blown up in "Cold Front," because it implies to the audience that the show/ship is an aberration, but you could done stuff on a smaller scale like killed off someone that was supposed to live or something. Or Daniels wipes himself out and it's left to Archer to pick up the pieces.
Also, no, Archer as Future Guy, no. Like I will buy a bunch of stuff about Archer being out of his element and unprepared but going back in time to be a mass murderer. Fuck that.
I’d have liked a more primitive looking main starship, and one not named Enterprise… But I’ve grown to accept the NX-01 was always a going to have the name and appearance it did due to real-like marketing concerns, and I’ve grown used to the design Doug Drexler gave us. I’ve tried rewatching Enterprise as of a few weeks ago, first time I’ve seen it since it originally aired, and I appreciate the set design more, how sparse and cramped and therefore ‘period appropriate’ it looks compared to the 24th century Trek.
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