It seems that they got the Romulan War novels wrong, according to the novels made by Michael A. Martin.
Exactly. The recent KHAN comic books from IDW presented the Eugenics Wars completely differently from how they were presented in my novels fifteen years ago. And that's fine; as Christopher pointed out, only the onscreen stuff is set in stone, more or less.
And why would he consider those two more worthy of mention than Khan, when "Space Seed" later established that Khan was the most infamous of the Eugenics Wars' conquerors?
Plus, the IDW Khan series portrayed the ENT augment Malik as a loyal follower of Khan in the 1990s.
Also, Khan and his contemporaries were grown children kidnapped from poor regions and then genetically modified, not modified from before birth, which would be much easier and more realistic in the late 20th century.
I'm somewhat disappointed that Federation: The First 150 Years chose to call NX-03 the Excalibur and not match the portrayal of the Challenger from the novels.
I never realised that.That surprised me for reasons that have nothing to do with the novels. As soon as NX-02 was named Columbia, it was clear that the NX-class ships were being named in honor of the American Space Shuttle orbiters, so it stood to reason that they would be followed by Challenger, Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavour in that order. The novels just continued the pattern that was already established.
Possibly, and cloning would make sense for army-building, but Archer's conversation with Udar made it seem like his biological parents had donated his single embryo to the augment program, no cloning involved.Oh, yeah, that too. Well, I suppose the Malik that Arik Soong raised from an embryo in the 22nd century could've been a clone of the original...?
Possibly, and cloning would make sense for army-building, but Archer's conversation with Udar made it seem like his biological parents had donated his single embryo to the augment program, no cloning involved.
Also, Khan and his contemporaries were grown children kidnapped from poor regions and then genetically modified, not modified from before birth, which would be much easier and more realistic in the late 20th century.
Honestly, both are equally unrealistic, given that the first laboratory creation of a transgenic organism wasn't until 1973, and that was a bacterium.
My opinion on this is that the Star Trek universe is not our universe, and the Star Trek universe has always been more technologically advanced in the 20th century than our real one. (Interplanetary sleeper ships in the 1990s, anyone?) So I have no problem believing that their biological sciences were more advanced than ours at any given point in that century, either.
My opinion on this is that the Star Trek universe is not our universe, and the Star Trek universe has always been more technologically advanced in the 20th century than our real one. (Interplanetary sleeper ships in the 1990s, anyone?) So I have no problem believing that their biological sciences were more advanced than ours at any given point in that century, either.
See also the transporter device in the THE FLY back in the fifties...
, the artificially intelligent computers in 2001 and Colossus: The Forbin Project,
But, yes, it does take a plenty of suspension of disbelief to accept that genetically-engineered babies were being created early enough for Khan and his people to rise to power in the 1990s . . . .
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