Why must everything be precise? People don't talk like that. They estimate.But in both Space Seed and TWOK they said that he was from 200 years ago which makes him from about the 2050's.
Unless they're Spock or Data, of course.

Why must everything be precise? People don't talk like that. They estimate.But in both Space Seed and TWOK they said that he was from 200 years ago which makes him from about the 2050's.
Thank you for the correction.TWoK ignored Space Seed's 1990s timeline.
Actually, no, it didn't. In the film, Khan specifically mentions he is from the year 1996.
For the love of God, leave the Eugenics Wars alone!
If I can buy into warp drive, transporters and most every alien looking like a human and being able to cross breed at the drop of a hat... I can buy that the Eugenics Wars took place on the late-20th century.
Trek's timeline is not our own or else we will be constantly retconning to the point that there is no way it can take place in the 23rd century.
If audiences have no problem losing themselves in a story called Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, then they really shouldn't have a problem with the Eugenics Wars taking place in 1996.
If audiences have no problem losing themselves in a story called Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, then they really shouldn't have a problem with the Eugenics Wars taking place in 1996.
One is clearly fantasy and the other is supposed to be science fiction.
Star Trek was always meant to be in our future, and to relate to contemporary audiences, that's probably how they'll intend to keep it.
Why must everything be precise? People don't talk like that. They estimate.But in both Space Seed and TWOK they said that he was from 200 years ago which makes him from about the 2050's.
Unless they're Spock or Data, of course.![]()
I was never a big fan of the wishy-washy way Abrams and Co. felt the need to explain "their Universe" by having Nero's presence change history from that point in time (the point in time around Kirk's Birth) forward. Instead, I wish Abrams would have just put his foot down and said "OK -- This a reboot and total retelling of 'Star Trek' ", and tell their own stories with no strings attached.
If that were the case, then Abrams' Khan could be a pasty-white Brit from the year 2100, rather than a vaguely Spanish Sikh from the 1990s.
That's the thing so many aren't understanding, at this point, Khan has no canon, except he's an Augment and was launched into space in Suspended Animation as a result of the Eugenics War.One thing all the differences in the last movie showed me is we should not assume any point of canon must be strictly adhered to in the Nuverse. Spock prime excepted, any strings attached were probably in homage only.
Frankly, if, god forbid, they are doing Khan then I hope they rip his 'canon' to shreds in favor of something fresh and not so dated sounding.
One is no more fantasy than the other.
Trek's timeline is not our own or else we will be constantly retconning to the point that there is no way it can take place in the 23rd century.
That's the thing so many aren't understanding, at this point, Khan has no canon, except he's an Augment and was launched into space in Suspended Animation as a result of the Eugenics War.One thing all the differences in the last movie showed me is we should not assume any point of canon must be strictly adhered to in the Nuverse. Spock prime excepted, any strings attached were probably in homage only.
Frankly, if, god forbid, they are doing Khan then I hope they rip his 'canon' to shreds in favor of something fresh and not so dated sounding.
How does the phrase "Abrams' Khan" fall into the category "tell their own stories"?
They can just sidestep the exact timeline of the eugenics war or when Khan fled earth and only mention it vaguely without mentioning a specific year or decade, like ENT’s 3-part season 4 Augment episodes.
If audiences have no problem losing themselves in a story called Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, then they really shouldn't have a problem with the Eugenics Wars taking place in 1996.
One is clearly fantasy and the other is supposed to be science fiction.
Star Trek was always meant to be in our future, and to relate to contemporary audiences, that's probably how they'll intend to keep it.
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