Just a reddish color, yeah.
Only the front, the rear was completely different.Didn't the Exocomp look almost exactly like the earlier live action version?
Are you implying that Brikar all look alike?I love how the live action Brikar is only slightly more detailed than an animated Brikar, so they look almost identical to Rok.![]()
In TNG? The bright colours and smooth lines made it seem more "cartoony" - think SD vs HD also plays a partDidn't the Exocomp look almost exactly like the earlier live action version?
Which I myself mentioned if you had read/quoted my full post and not just one line of it.They didn't, that was just the show being wrong.
In general, this show so far has 3 different layers:
1) Student drama at a spaceship Academy
2) The search for Caleb's mom
3) Rebuilding the Federation
The 3rd one clashes pretty hard with the other two and doesn't really work at all IMO, the worldbuilding around the burn is way too nebulous, but also suffering from small-universe syndrome. Andromeda this is not.
The 2nd one is a pretty service-able overarching mystery - nothing special, but a good "hook".
The first one is the one that works the best. Ignore all the worldbuilding, treknology, canon, plotholes - just sci-fi teachers & students. That works. And it's the best that this is also the angle the show is focusing the most on tbh.
I still think this show would work better in the 24th century, where it wouldn't need to do so much worldbuilding on it's own (which is impossible with being 100% reliant on DIS' season 3 burn plotline) but could rely on the "normal" Star Trek setting.
But despite that the show works well enough for me to continue watching for now.
I hate to keep thinking about Prodigy but they're so similar and that worked because they had the kids just spend time alone together figuring things out for like 10 episodes without further complications and introducing the "destroy the Federation" plot in the next 10 episodes. It was a nice way to focus the stories so you don't have Caleb chasing after his mom be both the conflict and the resolution to all their bigger problems.In general, this show so far has 3 different layers:
1) Student drama at a spaceship Academy
2) The search for Caleb's mom
3) Rebuilding the Federation
The 3rd one clashes pretty hard with the other two and doesn't really work at all IMO, the worldbuilding around the burn is way too nebulous, but also suffering from small-universe syndrome. Andromeda this is not.
The 2nd one is a pretty service-able overarching mystery - nothing special, but a good "hook".
The first one is the one that works the best. Ignore all the worldbuilding, treknology, canon, plotholes - just sci-fi teachers & students. That works. And it's the best that this is also the angle the show is focusing the most on tbh.
I still think this show would work better in the 24th century, where it wouldn't need to do so much worldbuilding on it's own (which is impossible with being 100% reliant on DIS' season 3 burn plotline) but could rely on the "normal" Star Trek setting.
But despite that the show works well enough for me to continue watching for now.
Well... There's good reason Paramount didn't want Prodigy to keep airing anymore once they started production on Academy...I hate to keep thinking about Prodigy but they're so similar and that worked because they had the kids just spend time alone together figuring things out for like 10 episodes without further complications and introducing the "destroy the Federation" plot in the next 10 episodes. It was a nice way to focus the stories so you don't have Caleb chasing after his mom be both the conflict and the resolution to all their bigger problems.
When was the Almond Basket reference. I just rewatched Lower Decks and I don't recall that. The only connection I made was when they showed the Exo-Comp and it reminded me of Peanut Hamper.the references to Lower Decks (Almond Basket!)
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