Toy companies seem almost lost right now. Playmates is doing recreations of 90s TMNT line, and Hasbro is trying a less articulated 4" line for Star Wars and Marvel.
It's strange.
It's strange.
No it wasn't.
At the very least it wasn't the primary reason.
Kids are just not into toys that much anymore, they'd rather have electronic games.
What do you have against collectibles?Yeah. My son is ten now. We stopped buying him new toys about a year ago. He still asks for them periodically, but we know that most of his free time is going to be spent on his tablet playing Minecraft or something, with much of the remainder spent on things like Pokémon cards. It's just not worth wasting the money on buying something that will sit on a shelf unused.
Toy companies seem almost lost right now. Playmates is doing recreations of 90s TMNT line, and Hasbro is trying a less articulated 4" line for Star Wars and Marvel.
It's strange.
Toy companies seem almost lost right now. Playmates is doing recreations of 90s TMNT line, and Hasbro is trying a less articulated 4" line for Star Wars and Marvel.
It's strange.
What do you have against collectibles?![]()
As a former collector of ‘80’s Star Wars action figures
Admittedly, I'm not that kind of nerd. I'm not into...things. Purged all my toys when I turned 13, happily throwing them all away. Most of the practical objects I own I maintain pretty poorly, so they get scratched, rusted, broken, etc.
My son seems to like collecting things (got that from my wife) but he's also really clumsy and breaks stuff a lot (got it from me).
"There's a lot of different kids from a lot of different places. Some of them want to be there, some of them don’t want to be there. It’s gonna be a fundamental reinforcement of all the things we love about Starfleet, in general. You always want to ask yourself, 'Why this show now?' I think that one of the big things that certainly my 17-year-old son is facing, which is kind of a fundamental 'Star Trek' question, is, 'How did we get here? How has this generation inherited the mistakes from previous generations? And what are we gonna do to fix it, to build that optimistic future that is Roddenberry’s essential vision?' That is very much going to be at the heart of Starfleet Academy ."
The series aims to cater to a new generation while welcoming back long-time fans, but it may not air until 2026.
Well, wouldn't Legacy be more what you wanted?
To me that actually sounds really interesting and promising. I’d really like to seem them succeed with this, because I agree with Kurtzman that these are some very interesting questions to ponder. And the far future timeframe* and the “Burn” backstory make for an interesting setting to look at young people who’ll inherit this world. If done right this could wonderfully explore some age-old and yet still very timely questions."There's a lot of different kids from a lot of different places. Some of them want to be there, some of them don’t want to be there. It’s gonna be a fundamental reinforcement of all the things we love about Starfleet, in general. You always want to ask yourself, 'Why this show now?' I think that one of the big things that certainly my 17-year-old son is facing, which is kind of a fundamental 'Star Trek' question, is, 'How did we get here? How has this generation inherited the mistakes from previous generations? And what are we gonna do to fix it, to build that optimistic future that is Roddenberry’s essential vision?' That is very much going to be at the heart of Starfleet Academy ."
What exactly do you think I want?
Discovery is in 2024, SNW in 2025, SFA and S31 in 2026.Wait, what? 2026? Paramount+ might be dead and buried long before then. Not to mention two years of waning interest in a show premise that nobody asked for to begin with. Are they now taking cues from the Kelvin timeline films?
And even if P+ does survive, the next two years will be just, what? SNW and LDS?
So much for 'Star Trek: Legacy," all you Matalas-worshippers.
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