Wouldn't be the first time a Starfleet officer was off by a century about historical events. (See also: Admiral Bennett and the Eugenics Wars.)Well, maybe Captain Shumar is bad at subtraction.
I hope that I'm wrong about what they're doing with one of the characters.
I hope Voq doesn't turn out to be the Albino.
Wouldn't be the first time a Starfleet officer was off by a century about historical events. (See also: Admiral Bennett and the Eugenics Wars.)
As for Donatu V, "Tribbles" only says there was a battle; it doesn't say how big it was. For that matter, it doesn't explicitly say who the combatants in the battle were, although the context implies it's the UFP and Klingons.
By the way, there was an overt nod to Trek Lit in the episode, though not to the modern novelverse -- the Black Fleet, the Klingon afterlife from The Final Reflection, is now canonically part of Klingon beliefs.
Was it just me or is there no reason why these episodes couldn’t just as equally validly have been labeled Kelvin Timeline with no contradictions? I would have much preferred them doing that and leaving the Prime Timeline a closed canon.
Haha, yep, I posted that first message much too soon, as it turns out (right before I started watching the second episode).T'Kuvma mentions Donatu V as an occasion where the Klingons failed to properly stick it to the Federation, so it looks like Starfleet just has fairly high standards as to what counts as an "encounter" with a Klingon.
That, plus CBS would very likely have had to sign Bad Robot on as both producing-entity and physical production-pipeline for the show if they had gone that particular route, and ceded much greater ancillary legal controls over to them as well (which they first did back in 2007 with the reboot movies).Might be some legalities involved. Kelvin is Paramount/Bad Robot, Discovery is CBS. Bad Robot doesn't seem to be good at sharing, judging by the lost Kelvinverse movels.
I liked it. I can rationalize all the visual discrepancies with previous Trek, though I really wish I didn’t have to.
Was it just me or is there no reason why these episodes couldn’t just as equally validly have been labeled Kelvin Timeline with no contradictions? I would have much preferred them doing that and leaving the Prime Timeline a closed canon.
I saw that reference and was very excited by it, yet it made me wonder if it had already been brought in by an episode I hadn't seen. Now, knowing that it's something that hasn't cropped up before...what a nifty nod to literary Trek! After all these years, The Final Reflection is still going the distance for inspiring the development of Klingon culture.
Though I'm also disappointed that Discovery did not canonize the practice of considering a corpse to be immaterial (I want to say KRAD's early 2000s novels established that?) in favor of having mummification and sarcophagi.
They did. Unless they plan to explain why the old-in-2256 USS Shenzhou can project holograms and forcefields anywhere, yet the state-of-the-art in 2271 USS Voyager only had holographic emitters in sickbay.They could've created a third continuity if they'd wanted.
They did. Unless they plan to explain why the old-in-2256 USS Shenzhou can project holograms and forcefields anywhere, yet the state-of-the-art in 2271 USS Voyager only had holographic emitters in sickbay.
Look at the links in my sig. I know.Oh, come on. There's an obvious difference between a "hologram" that's just a translucent image projected in midair and a "hologram" that has solidity and can touch and manipulate things like a real person.
And it's no worse than the continuity conflicts that have existed between and within all prior incarnations of Trek. Fans have always had to squint and gloss over the differences of interpretation in order to pretend that these works of fiction created by different people with different ideas could represent a consistent reality. If you want to be that obsessively nitpicky, then you'll have to admit that "Where No Man Has Gone Before" is set in an alternate universe where Kirk has a different middle name, "Mudd's Women" is set an alternate universe where they use lithium instead of dilithium, most of TNG's first season is set in an alternate universe where Data used contractions and showed emotion, etc. Star Trek has never, ever, EVER been an actually consistent reality. We only choose to pretend it is by ignoring or rationalizing the hundreds and hundreds of contradictions it already contains. So either you're willing to suspend disbelief and play along with the pretense that there's a single universe, or you're not and you have to admit that there are countless mutually contradictory versions of Trek already. To claim that previous Trek is completely reconcilable but the newest thing is completely irreconcilable is a self-contradiction. Fandom went through this same crap when Enterprise came along, and I ran out of patience for it then.
But I genuinely believe this time, it's too much of a change to plausibly reconcile.
This is not a knock on the quality of the show - which I love so far - just CBS' bizarre repeated claims that this is the same world where Spock will summon a paper printout report on Talos IV, or that Chief O'Brien will crow about a new holographic communicator on the USS Defiant when apparently they were doing it commonplace long before.
Elsewhere, someone said Discovery is as much the same continuity as TOS as Superman Returns is the same continuity as the old Christopher Reeve-starring Superman movies. I think that's a good comparison. The strokes are broader than ever before.
Which for the purposes of this conversation I refer to as the "world" of Star Trek. And it's my belief that Discovery hasn't just changed the look of that world, but how the characters inside it interact with it - which is a step up from previous changes which were mostly aesthetic. Thus rendering it incompatible with previous incarnations and thus not the same continuity.There is no "world." These aren't broadcasts from a parallel universe, they're works of fiction interpreting a conjectural reality.
Modern Who has established (admittedly via retcon) that the look of the TARDIS to be entirely fantastical. None of the technology we see has any concrete function, those vacuum tubes change to something entirely different with the change of the "desktop theme". When the Doctor tinkers with a vacuum tube, he's not really tinkering with a vacuum tube but some magical TARDIS technology currently masquerading as a vacuum tube.I'd say it's more like how modern Doctor Who is in the same continuity as the 1960s episodes with their rickety sets and vacuum tubes in the TARDIS.
Again, that's okay. I'm enjoying Discovery just fine as a new take on the Trek universe.
Which for the purposes of this conversation I refer to as the "world" of Star Trek. And it's my belief that Discovery hasn't just changed the look of that world, but how the characters inside it interact with it - which is a step up from previous changes which were mostly aesthetic. Thus rendering it incompatible with previous incarnations and thus not the same continuity.
Modern Who has established (admittedly via retcon) that the look of the TARDIS to be entirely fantastical. None of the technology we see has any concrete function, those vacuum tubes change to something entirely different with the change of the "desktop theme". When the Doctor tinkers with a vacuum tube, he's not really tinkering with a vacuum tube but some magical TARDIS technology currently masquerading as a vacuum tube.
So...huh. From the episode:
Georgiou: "No one has seen a Klingon in a hundred years!"
EDIT: Okay, never mind, there's a bit of wiggle-room here, whenthe Starfleet admiral Georgiou contacts in the episode gets more specific and says a couple times that the Federation has "barely had any contact" with the Klingons for a century, not a total cutoff. Still, it does raise questions not only with series like the Errand of War and Errand of Fury books, but also with TOS's own canonical "The Trouble With Tribbles," both of which place the Battle of Donatu V in 2244, and the admiral makes it sound like there's yet to be any sort of major engagement between the two powers recently.
I suppose it could end up being more of a pre-"Balance of Terror"/post-Tomed Incident type of situation, where there's occasional subspace contact taking place, but no actual, physical face-to-face interactions. Also, there's a major Klingon raid on a Federation science-colony briefly seen in the episode in flashback, and it appears that the Starfleet admiral was including this in his dialogue with Georgiou, so perhaps Donatu V falls under this same assessment.
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