Denobulan.which one was Neelix? that one.

Denobulan.which one was Neelix? that one.
I love the development that the Klingons received, but at the same time they were also disappointing. Like you said how could this culture of barbarians develop an interstellar empire. It would have been nice to see that they had more to their culture than Warriors. It would have been nice to see Farmers, Scientists, Priests, Teachers, Lawyers, Police, and Doctors that were equally respected and important to the empire as the Warriors.
Read KRAD's "A Burning House". This novel shows the everyday Klingon society.![]()
Yeah, they basically became either serial killers or stiff baseball players.24th Century Vulcans would be my choice, since the race didn't really get much of development in the 24th Century spin-offs that I can remember right now.
Yeah, they basically became either serial killers or stiff baseball players.24th Century Vulcans would be my choice, since the race didn't really get much of development in the 24th Century spin-offs that I can remember right now.![]()
Denobulan.which one was Neelix? that one.![]()
Read KRAD's "A Burning House". This novel shows the everyday Klingon society.![]()
Seconded.
My vote would have to be the Ferengi on TNG. Not on DS9. On TNG.
Although, it was cool to see them menacing in early-TNG in the 1st season episodes "The Last Outpost" and "The Battle," they were just generally too silly to take seriously as major adversaries.
Read KRAD's "A Burning House". This novel shows the everyday Klingon society.![]()
Seconded.
I just finished reading it last month and it was great. There were some interesting developments with Klingon farmers that I especially enjoyed.
However, on screen I would have liked some more development from Klingons who weren't in the Defense Force and didn't yearn to be warriors. Those Klingons would still be wholly important and valuable to the society, as well.
No, they were called Aenar.Were those blue antennaed people of TOS called Andorian? I didn't like them.
Yeah, they basically became either serial killers or stiff baseball players.24th Century Vulcans would be my choice, since the race didn't really get much of development in the 24th Century spin-offs that I can remember right now.![]()
The Ferengi hands down. Don't get me wrong, I LOVE what DS9 did with them, but they were supoosed to be the new big threat for the federation and they turned out to be nothing more than silly little trolls.Their failure to live up to this status is the reason the Borg were introduced.
Seconded.
I just finished reading it last month and it was great. There were some interesting developments with Klingon farmers that I especially enjoyed.
However, on screen I would have liked some more development from Klingons who weren't in the Defense Force and didn't yearn to be warriors. Those Klingons would still be wholly important and valuable to the society, as well.
B'elanna, anyone?
and Neelix was Talaxian. (yea, I suppose there was a joke about Denobulans or whatever...) I always thought of Talaxians as uglier versions of humans.
Were those blue antennaed people of TOS called Andorian? I didn't like them.
Ugh, the Breen. Not only missed potential, but they just became annoying with all the "ooh, what do they really look like?" mystery and never really revealing anything about them. They were brought into DS9's final chapter as if they were wildly interesting and important and ended up contributing nothing.
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