Maybe that was why the Borg was such a memorable nemesis. They were the only bad guys that were actually bad.
+1
Maybe that was why the Borg was such a memorable nemesis. They were the only bad guys that were actually bad.
Maybe that was why the Borg was such a memorable nemesis. They were the only bad guys that were actually bad.
+1
OP's premise sounds more like an outer space version of Roddenberry's unsold Genesis II pilot, rather than Star Trek or Battlestar Galactica.
Maybe that was why the Borg was such a memorable nemesis. They were the only bad guys that were actually bad.
+1
Not entirely bad.
http://www.stillsecureafteralltheseyears.com/photos/uncategorized/hugh2.jpg
The dominion came across as all bad, though.
I always saw the Ferengi as representative of unenlightened materialistic 20th Century humans.
Yeah, I think I actually preferred them when they ate people.
Thats the thing...they went from overly-villainous trolls with eletro-whips to comically-inept space pirates.
If they would've stopped about halfway, they might have been somewhat of a menace.
Instead we have the biker gang Klingons and the uberparanoid Romulans. Maybe that was why the Borg was such a memorable nemesis. They were the only bad guys that were actually bad.
I think it was more their initial portrayal as hunched-over trolls with exaggerated movements that made them silly.But, the fact that the Ferengi were supposed to be a caricature of the evil of capitalism made their basis as a villain tenuous, at best.
Thank you, Sojourner. I appreciate that I can ramble on; in a sense, thinking out loud. I would like to conclude that still Trek has a lot of potential. This includes things that were touched on perhaps once or twice, but were definitely not done to death.
I think it was more their initial portrayal as hunched-over trolls with exaggerated movements that made them silly.But, the fact that the Ferengi were supposed to be a caricature of the evil of capitalism made their basis as a villain tenuous, at best.
Well, current state of physics does say a kind of "warp" engine would in effect move a vessel 10X the speed of light, which would still mean a voyage of a few months from here to Alpha Centauri. The energy required is fairly vast, but at least within reach. Barely.Alright Im gonna borrow from BSG, and apply the idea to star trek. Make the show a hard sci fi version of star trek, with no aliens no ftl, transporters, force shields, artificial gravity, sub space commuication or other unknown techologies and stick to ones we know likely to exist.
Huh? I'll admit I'm not up on my physics, but wouldn't reaching the speed of light require infinite mass/energy?Well, current state of physics does say a kind of "warp" engine would in effect move a vessel 10X the speed of light, which would still mean a voyage of a few months from here to Alpha Centauri. The energy required is fairly vast, but at least within reach. Barely.
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