The cgi was a bit iffy sometimes. Those stupid robots looked bad as wellThe miniature remote-controlled whales that we saw in Star Trek 4 looked more convincing than those CGI whales did.
The cgi was a bit iffy sometimes. Those stupid robots looked bad as wellThe miniature remote-controlled whales that we saw in Star Trek 4 looked more convincing than those CGI whales did.
Starfleet's military. Always has been.I don’t necessarily disagree, but consider that TNG — TNG! — had a starship called the Repulse…
They convinced me.The miniature remote-controlled whales that we saw in Star Trek 4 looked more convincing than those CGI whales did.
One could make the argument that the sample size of Betazoids we have seen just coincidentally had the same eye colour. It would be the same as the southern and northern Romulan thing. It hasn't been officially stated that all Betazoids have black eyes to the best of my recollection.There are supposed to be "canon people" working as producers... like Tawny Newsome and Kirsten Beyer, both in the writers room. So can anyone tell me how they missed that Betazoids have black eyes? (Deanna and Lwaxana Troi, Tam Elbrun, Lon Suder, the delegate from "Menage a Troi", etc.) And also that they are TELEPATHS, not empaths?
The Federation runs into those all the time, The First Federation, The Voth, the various races who hide themselves away and don't want to be bothered so erase peoples memories if found.
One of the Federation's Member Races literally lives on a Ringworld.
And they have cruise ships with moons inside.
True AI's are stupidly common.
But super-intelligent AI isn't possible under the rules of the Star Trek universe because reaching that point means ascending into a godlike energy being.
Souls exists in Star Trek, so it would be different from resurrecting the dead.
Yet all the actors who played Betazoids would be given black contacts to wear for the express purpose of separating them from how humans looked. May not have been officially said on screen that all of them have black eyes, but the fact every single one we see in the Berman era had them kind of makes it canon that they do.One could make the argument that the sample size of Betazoids we have seen just coincidentally had the same eye colour. It would be the same as the southern and northern Romulan thing. It hasn't been officially stated that all Betazoids have black eyes to the best of my recollection.
And they are empaths as well as telepaths. That ones a thin defence I'll grant you. In the trailers Tarima seems to have telekinesis as well, plus their psionic wall is definitely indicative of telepathy so it's probably just a phrasing thing and not an erasure of that ability. Unless they reveal the psionic wall used up all their telepathic potential leaving them with only empathic abilities.
If I were to guess I'd say that Zoë Steiner probably couldn't handle the contacts, so they decided to just pretend that wasn't actually a thing.There are supposed to be "canon people" working as producers... like Tawny Newsome and Kirsten Beyer, both in the writers room. So can anyone tell me how they missed that Betazoids have black eyes? (Deanna and Lwaxana Troi, Tam Elbrun, Lon Suder, the delegate from "Menage a Troi", etc.) And also that they are TELEPATHS, not empaths?
Surviving races aren't common.They exist, but they aren't common compared to young races. Which is the opposite of what we should expect. Logically, when a race could exist for any period of time in space (from a few hundred years to billions) most of the races should be vastly older and more powerful than humanity.
Unless...something is clearing them out.
We're only seeing tiny snapshots of things, Lower Decks actually gave us the widest view of actual life in the Star Trek galaxy and even that was small.Like a lot of how tech is treated in Star Trek, all of these are treated as individual cases, not part of a general tend towards progress. Something like the spore drive literally getting invented only once in the entire multiverse is a great example.
It hasn't been debatable since Lower Decks and the Black Mountain.This is debatable. Star Trek 100% has Cartesian mind-body dualism, but Gene had a hard-and-fast rule that minds cannot survive without a physical substrate, and that they die for real if their consciousness hasn't been transferred to an android or something.
Well they're redesigned to have floating parts. We also saw them in Discovery's 32nd century seasons.At least the DOT robots are now in the 32nd century. They never looked nor felt right in the Pike and Kirk era.
I don't disagree that that was the intent, but the intent was also that all Romulans had forehead ridges until it just wasn't the case anymore and we saw a lot more of them than Betazoids.Yet all the actors who played Betazoids would be given black contacts to wear for the express purpose of separating them from how humans looked. May not have been officially said on screen that all of them have black eyes, but the fact every single one we see in the Berman era had them kind of makes it canon that they do.
I don’t disagree with that, either.Starfleet's military. Always has been.
Maybe... but this just stuck out like a sore thumb (errrr, I mean eye) to me.I don't disagree that that was the intent, but the intent was also that all Romulans had forehead ridges until it just wasn't the case anymore and we saw a lot more of them than Betazoids.
Given that there are multiple species out there with a range of different actual skull shapes, I think we can buy that at least some Betazoids have eye colors other than the most common one.There are supposed to be "canon people" working as producers... like Tawny Newsome and Kirsten Beyer, both in the writers room. So can anyone tell me how they missed that Betazoids have black eyes?
I noticed it immediately too. It's just one of those assumptions we have to let go of.Maybe... but this just stuck out like a sore thumb (errrr, I mean eye) to me.
I noted it and then got over it.I noticed it immediately too. It's just one of those assumptions we have to let go of.
Someone above them probably vetoed it.There are supposed to be "canon people" working as producers... like Tawny Newsome and Kirsten Beyer, both in the writers room. So can anyone tell me how they missed that Betazoids have black eyes?
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