Apparently both SNW and Discovery take place in the Neroverse in some way.
They don't. Inconsistencies with previous productions don't imply deliberate internal narrative divergence.
Apparently both SNW and Discovery take place in the Neroverse in some way.
Nope, they're in the Prime Universe without a couple dates smudged.
Nope.It's actually the "Prime" universe (with quotes), as "prime" is just a buzzword these days that means "we're gonna make everything look different and have the characters look and act nothing like what they looked and acted like before, and have lots and lots of continuity problems which we are very much aware of but we're making them anyway, while at the same time saying that it's all exactly the same. But don't you dare call it a reboot! It takes place in the same universe! Really, it does!"![]()
Nope.
Same timeline. Different producers' artistic approaches to the era. I mean, I don't like a LOT of things about how DSC in the mid-23rd century looked but it's the same timeline and the looks of the phasers, tricorders and food synthesizer slots in the galley demonstrate that. Bryan Fuller and the Kurtzman team just tried a different visual approach from TOS and its two pilots.
Exactly so.Same timeline. Different producers' artistic approaches to the era. I mean, I don't like a LOT of things about how DSC in the mid-23rd century looked but it's the same timeline and the looks of the phasers, tricorders and food synthesizer slots in the galley demonstrate that. Bryan Fuller and the Kurtzman team just tried a different visual approach from TOS and its two pilots.
ENT is in the same timeline as DSC which is in the same timeline as TOS which is in the same timeline as all the series and films that follow in the chronology.
No, because you're simply stating your preference and personal opinion. Someone can contradict it with confidence that they are just as correct.Yup.
No, because you're simply stating your preference and personal opinion. Someone can contradict it with confidence that they are just as correct.
It's actually the "Prime" universe (with quotes), as "prime" is just a buzzword these days that means "we're gonna make everything look different and have the characters look and act nothing like what they looked and acted like before, and have lots and lots of continuity problems which we are very much aware of but we're making them anyway, while at the same time saying that it's all exactly the same. But don't you dare call it a reboot! It takes place in the same universe! Really, it does!"![]()
AKA, what Star Trek has ALWAYS DONE with its discontinuities EXCEPT with the Bad Robot Productions films.
Except none of those things actually happened. Both the fanbase and the producers of Star Trek through the Berman years have treated all of these things as the same continuity, despite the intent of their creators. But CBSTrek is saying that DSC is also part of that same continuity (instead of intending it to be a reboot/reimagining) while going out of their way to make the show look and feel as little as possible like what came before. That's the opposite.
Was TNG supposed to invalidate TOS? I thought the intent was just to ignore it. TNG had McCoy in its first episode and referenced Kirk's Enterprise in "The Naked Now", its second ever episode, but as far as I'm aware the idea was something along the lines of "TOS kind of happened, but it was a long time ago and we're not really going to bring it up".
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.