Looks like a Jem'hadar battlecruiser to me.It's basically Destiny with the longer nose cut off and the linear engine replaced with retro thrusters.
Looks like a Jem'hadar battlecruiser to me.It's basically Destiny with the longer nose cut off and the linear engine replaced with retro thrusters.
I am enjoying watching the nitpick TOS diehards cry and squirm that their beloved cardboard props are being replaced with high quality designs.
Call the waaahhhhmbulance. I'll sit back and enjoy the show.
I am enjoying watching the nitpick TOS diehards cry and squirm that their beloved cardboard props are being replaced with high quality designs.
Call the waaahhhhmbulance. I'll sit back and enjoy the show.
Nope, CBS owns the rights to it.
Or else Star Trek Online and several other CBS licensed products wouldn’t have been able to use it.
Though maybe Paramount reserves the rights to use it in a live action movie. Who knows, we don’t have access to their contract
Did you read my post? I gave example of a CBS only licensed project using Kelvin Timeline material.
That does not fit. Paramount owns the movie rights, everything in the kelvin movies is theirs. That was why they went with a reboot and redsign or near everything. They had rights to only those things mentioned and shown in the movies, nothing more. So they own the design of the JJ prise. Which is good, let them keep that fugly thing.
Not just you.There is no point in rationalising it. They said D7 on purpose. And then showed a ship that doesn't even remotely look like classic D7. I really don't know what the fuck they're doing. Sure, this is a silly thing to be upset about, but then again it feels like the producers are intentionally trying to piss me off.
And yet, CBS publishes/licenses products with Kelvin Timeline material.
The KT Movies are listed on CBS's website as their products.
Paramount probably has the right to make the movies, but CBS owns everything that comes out of those movies under the Star Trek Banner.Likely a licences thing as they do not own the movies. Who knows, it could be some odd thing in how the split was done and they get merch rights.
That D7 looked similar in shape to a Vor'cha class.You can make high quality designs without completely changing the shape of the ship, look at the K'Tinga, the unused battlecruiser design for Enterprise, or the Kelvin-Timeline D-7.
Hell, T'Kuvma's ship looked closer to a D-7 then what we got this episode.
No.That D7 looked similar in shape to a Vor'cha class.
T'Kuvmas ship looked like a Negh'Var class.
Add that to the death glider like Birds of Prey.
Don't know if it helps but the book Desperate Hours (which was worked on with input from the show staff) state that Cage-type uniforms are only used on Constellation class ships. It even mentions a lot of the design styles and quirks (no ready room, etc) are pretty specific to the Connie class.
Sorry. my mistake.What’s up with the Constellation-class you keep mentioning on every single post? The Enterprise is a CONSTITUTION class starship.
You've been warned about this kind of behavior too many times to count.I am enjoying watching the nitpick TOS diehards cry and squirm that their beloved cardboard props are being replaced with high quality designs.
Call the waaahhhhmbulance. I'll sit back and enjoy the show.
Several possibilities:
1. It was a D-7, but it was dark and close-up so we didn't really get a good look.
2. The ship shown later on in the show is NOT the D7. It's a Klingon prison ship. Unless I missed where they identified them as the same?
3. The database is incomplete on Klingon ship design, so the computer simply made the best visual match it could given the available information. The computer "identified" it as a D7, but that doesn't mean it was a D7. Have you ever played around with image recognition software?
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