Tuvok having a piss-poor memory is far more plausible and has worked for the past twenty-seven years.Plus Valtane died in "Flashback" when he's alive at the end of STVI. Alternate timeline!
Tuvok having a piss-poor memory is far more plausible and has worked for the past twenty-seven years.Plus Valtane died in "Flashback" when he's alive at the end of STVI. Alternate timeline!
Did it? We know the "supermen" took over 40 countries. We don't know which countries. We know Khan managed to expand his control to an area covering Asia thru Middle East. We know Archer's Grandfather fought in North Africa during the wars. Presumably there were at least 40 factions among the Augments at the start. I think that's about it.Voyager arrived in 1996. The Eugenics were wrapping up by then, and it was said that it was a war that took place overseas. Previous Trek mentioned the continents where the supermen were in play.
Would day-to-day life in L.A. really be any different?
No, but if Khan ages normally, it would be in about 25-30 years or so, which fits in with everything from TNG on, i.e. taking place in the middle of the 21st century.Did (the episode named after a quote from The Scottish Play) give a time when it was set?
Perhaps not, but there is the big problem that when Voyager was sighted by the backyard barbecue guy, Neelix observed that civilian media dismissed the footage as a hoax while the U.S. military was only 'taking things a bit more seriously'. If an active war was raging for the USA, I would think the sighting of a strange craft would cause a lot of panic.Voyager arrived in 1996. The Eugenics were wrapping up by then, and it was said that it was a war that took place overseas. Previous Trek mentioned the continents where the supermen were in play.
Would day-to-day life in L.A. really be any different?
No I meant the episode itself. The time when La'an and Jim were running about in.No, but if Khan ages normally, it would be in about 25-30 years or so, which fits in with everything from TNG on, i.e. taking place in the middle of the 21st century.
The idea that a modern audience can't connect with Star Trek because it's too much to ask that Khan escaped to space in 1996 is like saying Doctor Who fans can't make a connection because the Daleks didn't invade London in the 1960s.
Have a super smart God like alen like Q state to a character on a show that there are literally trillions of alternate realities in existence.
Star Trek first speculated there would be Eugenics Wars at the end of the 20th century and WWIII at the beginning (to middle) of the 21st.
So Star Trek future is not the goal any more? But to avoid calamity through ideas shared in the inspiration?
Plus Valtane died in "Flashback" when he's alive at the end of STVI. Alternate timeline!
Yeah, that episode gives you a ready made explanation for all of its inconsistencies (And there are several: Rand being a commander, getting the elapsed time of TUC wrong, Valtine dying at the end when he's clearly seen at the end of TUC): Tuvok has a mind virus that is screwing up his memory. Therefore, practically nothing we see in the mind meld flashback of "Flashback" is "real."Tuvok having a piss-poor memory is far more plausible and has worked for the past twenty-seven years.
You're honestly not missing much. It dropped the ball in several ways.(You know, I've still never seen that episode of Voyager.)
There is a Trek novel about this, under the Myriad universe seriesIt would be fascinating to see a one off story set in that alternate universe where Kirk's Enterprise had an Andorian first officer. I wonder what other alterations would spin off of Spock's absence.
Regards to the story in question, you might be conflating the fact it was made in the 1960s with the impression it is set in the 1960s. It isn't. The Daleks invade Earth in the 22nd Century.
Curious.It's all metaphorical. The goal is to be a metaphor for the kind of future we could have.
Curious.
Yes.Why? All fiction is metaphorical.
Well, there was the Shoreditch Incident.
That was an incursion. Not an invasion. ;-)
You'd be better saying Journey's End from RTD Series 4.
The real question for me is how does this change the impact the stories. Is there really any difference between the Eugenics Wars happening in 1992 or 2042 in the terms of story? Are the plots of Space Seed or TWOK altered by that change? Is Khan different. Is his fate somehow altered? Are the events as we know them changed? How about the actions of Kirk and crew? Is there any impact on future stories? I say no. The dates are irrelevant to the story. Chosen because they are/were in our future. Now those dates are are past. So yes, lets move these fictional events up the time. When other dates cross from future into past do the same. Story over "data points".
NoIf the Eugenics Wars got pushed forward 30 years, then maybe the events of of DIS were also pushed 30 years into the future?
In the universe of the 1990s Eugenics Wars...
And that line from Georgiou of "No one had seen a Klingon in a hundred years" would also mean that all encounters with Klingons, barring in Broken Bow, would not be in the record books.
- Maybe Burnham's dad was killed in 2216, a few years before hostilities between the Federation and Klingon Empire broke out.
- Maybe Burnham is Sarek’s adoptive sibling instead of Spock
- Maybe the discovery of the Sarcophagus ship and the Battle at the Binary Stars were supposed to happen in 2226-27, instead of 2256-57.
- Maybe when DIS jumped to the future, the were supposed to be in 3158-59, instead of 3188-89. Maybe that would explain “Calypso”.
Perhaps not, but there is the big problem that when Voyager was sighted by the backyard barbecue guy, Neelix observed that civilian media dismissed the footage as a hoax while the U.S. military was only 'taking things a bit more seriously'. If an active war was raging for the USA, I would think the sighting of a strange craft would cause a lot of panic.
Did it? We know the "supermen" took over 40 countries. We don't know which countries. We know Khan managed to expand his control to an area covering Asia thru Middle East. We know Archer's Grandfather fought in North Africa during the wars. Presumably there were at least 40 factions among the Augments at the start. I think that's about it.
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