Noname Given said:
And while B&B can be blamed for a lot in the later decline of the Star Trek franchise; modding the Akira design to make the NX-01 wasn't one of them.
Forbin said:
*shrug*
FalTorPan said:
I still don't see why the resemblance between the Akira and NX is a big deal. They look very similar -- so what?
Cyke101 said:
Well, if you want to get down to the deals OF the show itself, the NX-01 was supposed to be a brand new ship. New ship, new show, new life. Yet the Powers That Be rejected all those designs and said, "eh, just tweak this one up a bit."
At least from my opinion, that's like waiting for a brand new model car receiving tones of visual upgrades, only to find that it's just a rehash of a car that, really, was never that much of a front runner of any kind to begin with.
A ship, especially the primary one, is supposed to have its own personality. It embodies the show and is a character in every bit a right as there is a Scotty, Troi, T'Pol, Bashir, or Kim. With very few exceptions, I doubt anyone can argue that any main character is a rip of a previous one. Save for now.
It's like... waiting for years and years to see the Enterprise-E, only to see that it's just a slightly different version of the 1979 Battlestar Galactica. Especially when you have a budget as huge as First Contact or S1 of Enterprise.
Venardhi said:
The back end was feeble looking and the design seemed terribly out of place. It is an ugly ship that doesn't fit the time period at all. Others may have a different opinion but from an artistic pov I hated it.
Nerys Myk said:
The phase pistol is the predecessor to phasers. It is less powerful and less versatile. It is the repeating rifle to the phaser's machine gun.
BTW, reapeating firearms like the Winchester are quite prominant in Westerns. It wasn't call ""The Gun that Won the West" for nothing. I loved watching Chuck Connors in the "Rifleman" as a kid.
Unwrapped said:
Nerys Myk said:
The phase pistol is the predecessor to phasers. It is less powerful and less versatile. It is the repeating rifle to the phaser's machine gun.
They're fairly powerful, as seen in "Regeneration" when Archer and Reed took out eight Borg drones with what should be a peashooter to them. Contrast this with "Q Who" and other TNG eps, where it took two full hits to kill a non-adapted drone and the next one to appear was automatically adapted.
To use another example, can you imagine George Lucas making a new Star Wars movie and saying it's now okay for non-Jedi and non-Sith to use lightsabers expertly? It's been pretty well established that those weapons are unique to Force users, and while a non Force user could wield one, they couldn't construct a lightsaber or wield it nearly as effectively.
BTW, reapeating firearms like the Winchester are quite prominant in Westerns. It wasn't call ""The Gun that Won the West" for nothing. I loved watching Chuck Connors in the "Rifleman" as a kid.
That's true, but a Winchester was not the same as the repeating gatling guns that were developed then and became the basis for the machine gun. I forget the exact model, but they use such weapons in "Young Guns" and "The Last Samurai."
Maybe in the end we'll just have to agree to disagree. I've been slow to reply cause I've got a head cold.
starburst said:
Well I like it, I like the NX and the Akira...and I like the idea that the Akira was based on a retro starship the same as I like that the NuMini is based on the old Mini (but I dont consider them the same car)
Some people like it some people dont...funny thing is it dont keep me awake at night thinking that people dont like it but it obviously keeps those who dont like it awake
Unwrapped said:
To clarify my Star Wars analogy, lightsabers have always been restricted to individuals who are Force-sensitives. Always. You can't build a lightsaber without a connection to the Force, nor can you train in it effectively as a Jedi or a Sith can. You can't do this anymore than a human can pick up a Klingon bat'leth and wield it perfectly. Now, George certainly has the power to change that, as he can set the rules for canon, but it's extremely unlikely that he would because it would upset the continuity of the series and piss off a lot of fans. He would not allow any other producer to do so either.
Star Trek unfortunately doesn't have that kind of quality control, not in the past few years anyway. For all the blame that Bermaga get, and they're certainly guilty of some of it, the suits at the studio are probably more guilty. They favor money over quality, and both ENT and VOY suffered as a result. Hence we get designs like the "Akiraprise" and weapons that have similar names and abilities to more advanced ones, when there should be some distinction.
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