I would not call that the general consensus at all. People who have a beef about something (legitimate or otherwise) tend to be a good deal more vocal than those who don't.Maybe it’s just self selection in postings, but here and elsewhere I’ve noticed that the consensus seems to be “thanks for the wrap up, but not like this” basically.
Haven't the slightest idea. I've heard of Blake's 7, but what little understanding I have of what it's about, I just now obtained from Wikipedia, and it doesn't give me much interest in finding out any more about it.
I wonder: could Blake's 7 and the Liberator be the reason (or at least a reason) why Roddenberry had such an aversion to 3-nacelle ship designs?
the long-since-deprecated-with-extreme-prejudice TMP tie-in "Spaceflight Chronology"
I wonder: could Blake's 7 and the Liberator be the reason (or at least a reason) why Roddenberry had such an aversion to 3-nacelle ship designs?
The difference between Coda and the last battle is the universe of Narnia’s destruction is meaningful for everyone involved. History comes to a triumphant end and the good guys go to the “real” Narnia.I find myself thinking of Ecclesiastes. No, not the "for everything there is a season" stuff; rather the "everything is vanity" stuff.
And (as I may have mentioned) also of The Last Battle, by C. S. Lewis.
I read destiny twice. I honestly don’t think I’ll be able to do so again now.Well, based off it being mentioned in another thread, I just reread the "Destiny" trilogy. Knowing the ultimate fate of all the characters made it a................somewhat different experience this time around.
Saying customers are in the grieving process because they legitimately don’t like a writing/product decision is an extremely degrading and patronizing thing to say. It reeks of both shilling and tone deafness.I totally understand the real world need for the litverse going away, and was on board for a last stand send-off where some characters died, but I would have much rather had some characters survive and live on never to be visited again. I understand the appeal of the idea of undoing everything as a writing experiment but I personally don’t think that made for an enjoyable finish. I heard an interview where readers were referred to as being in the denial or bargaining stages of grief if they weren’t happy with how this ended, but as a consumer I think we are allowed to just not like the decisions made here.
The difference between Coda and the last battle is the universe of Narnia’s destruction is meaningful for everyone involved. History comes to a triumphant end and the good guys go to the “real” Narnia.
The equivalent would be in Coda Q intervening at the last minute and evacuating everyone in the litverse to a personal paradise(or I suppose judging humanity worthy and uplifting them to Q-dom or something).
But that’s not what happens in Coda, everyone dies without any reward or consequence.
That the Devidians are prevented from eating all of existence (presumably eventually eating each other until the last one eats itself) is not a "reward or consequence"?But that’s not what happens in Coda, everyone dies without any reward or consequence.
I’m not sure how this would be a problem? Q or maybe some even higher ranking being takes/uplifts everyone to some higher dimension. The good guys get a happy ending. There is no need to acknowledge this or reference it in future books aligned with Picard and Discovery. Maybe an eschatological “they all went to heaven” sort of ending is not very Trekkian either, but it would be a far more deserving send off than “everyone dies”. The readers at least get a sense of satisfaction that these characters got a triumphant ending, not a nihilistic one.They didn't really have the "Narnia" option here, since the idea was to set up the new canon as the "real" timeline, and since future canonical productions will not acknowledge the books, they couldn't have the Litverse versions of the characters move there or retain their memories. They had to do what they could within the limitations that exist on tie-in fiction. So the characters can only live on in the sense that their alternate-history selves, from whom they diverged about 14 years earlier, are still alive (most of them, anyway). They're still essentially the same people, just with different memories. So it's more like Crisis on Infinite Earths than The Last Battle.
(And by that analogy, I keep wanting to believe that Quark is the one person who remembers the novel timeline, because Armin Shimerman played Psycho-Pirate in Batman: The Brave and the Bold.)
Problem with this is no one is invested in the Devidians, at least not for themselves. They exist quite clearly as a plot mechanism to end the novelverse, everyone knows they aren’t going to eat the Picard timeline. There’s no stakes there. No impact. The novelverse characters’ sacrifice is only impactful if one cares about the Picard timeline.*That the Devidians are prevented from eating all of existence (presumably eventually eating each other until the last one eats itself) is not a "reward or consequence"?
I think where we differ is how we define "atrocious slap in the face." Whether we define "the Novelverse never happened" as an "atrocious slap in the face," or we define "the Novelverse sacrificed itself to prevent The End Of Everything" as an "atrocious slap in the face."The effect would be the same(nothing for the novelverse, nothing for the new shows) but we wouldn’t have this atrocious slap in the face.
I’m not sure how this would be a problem? Q or maybe some even higher ranking being takes/uplifts everyone to some higher dimension. The good guys get a happy ending.
There is no need to acknowledge this or reference it in future books aligned with Picard and Discovery. Maybe an eschatological “they all went to heaven” sort of ending is not very Trekkian either, but it would be a far more deserving send off than “everyone dies”. The readers at least get a sense of satisfaction that these characters got a triumphant ending, not a nihilistic one.
The novelverse characters’ sacrifice is only impactful if one cares about the Picard timeline.*
Which, is a bold assumption to make of the fans. (I personally am not into Picard, others might be).
Even more than that, you could just end the novelverse on a dangling note and the Picard timeline would continue the same. The effect would be the same(nothing for the novelverse, nothing for the new shows) but we wouldn’t have this atrocious slap in the face.
Damn straight!How in the world is it nihilistic that they sacrificed themselves to save every other timeline in the multiverse? The whole point is that their sacrifice does serve a very real purpose. It made a difference.
"I know you love them, but it's over, mate.I’m not sure how this would be a problem? Q or maybe some even higher ranking being takes/uplifts everyone to some higher dimension. The good guys get a happy ending. There is no need to acknowledge this or reference it in future books aligned with Picard and Discovery. Maybe an eschatological “they all went to heaven” sort of ending is not very Trekkian either, but it would be a far more deserving send off than “everyone dies”. The readers at least get a sense of satisfaction that these characters got a triumphant ending, not a nihilistic one.
Problem with this is no one is invested in the Devidians, at least not for themselves. They exist quite clearly as a plot mechanism to end the novelverse, everyone knows they aren’t going to eat the Picard timeline. There’s no stakes there. No impact. The novelverse characters’ sacrifice is only impactful if one cares about the Picard timeline.*
Which, is a bold assumption to make of the fans. (I personally am not into Picard, others might be).
Even more than that, you could just end the novelverse on a dangling note and the Picard timeline would continue the same. The effect would be the same(nothing for the novelverse, nothing for the new shows) but we wouldn’t have this atrocious slap in the face.
*or rather it’s only impactful if one cares about the novelverse and the Picard timeline as part of a unified trek multiverse. Which again is assuming a lot from the readers.
we're all going to die one day
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