You should see the Facebook Trek Timeliners Group...Agree, it's never bothered me that much. I enjoy the characters and the adventures; I don't spend a lot of time trying to map them out and locate every second of the chronology...

You should see the Facebook Trek Timeliners Group...Agree, it's never bothered me that much. I enjoy the characters and the adventures; I don't spend a lot of time trying to map them out and locate every second of the chronology...
Agree, it's never bothered me that much. I enjoy the characters and the adventures; I don't spend a lot of time trying to map them out and locate every second of the chronology...
I think the record might go to the comic book Star Trek Countdown, which released in the 4 months leading to the 2009 film and then was contradicted by the film itself. That comic clearly shows Spock sitting around on Vulcan when the Hobus supernova destroys Romulus, yet the 2009 movie itself shows Spock in the Jellyfish starship flying around in space trying to stop the supernova and watching his viewscreen in horror as the supernova destroys Romulus.Definitely the risk of reading tie-in fiction while the subject show is still airing, but damn, that's gotta be close to a record for how quickly a Trek book got tossed in the bin...
Even the first two issues are pretty massively contradicted by the film, since they depict a pre-existing friendship between Spock Prime and Nero prior to the Hobus detonation, whereas the movie itself shows Nero introducing himself to Spock Prime seemingly just after Romulus goes boom and right before the two ships get sucked into the singularity (“He called himself ‘Nero, Last of the Romulan Empire’...”).I think the record might go to the comic book Star Trek Countdown, which released in the 4 months leading to the 2009 film and then was contradicted by the film itself. That comic clearly shows Spock sitting around on Vulcan when the Hobus supernova destroys Romulus, yet the 2009 movie itself shows Spock in the Jellyfish starship flying around in space trying to stop the supernova and watching his viewscreen in horror as the supernova destroys Romulus.
As such, I only have issues 1 and 2 in my headcanon (up to the point where Romulus is destroyed and no clear contradiction of where Spock is).
Well we could let that slide, I mean Nero was probably unrecognizable after all those tattoos, so he had to identify himself again...Even the first two issues are pretty massively contradicted by the film, since they depict a pre-existing friendship between Spock Prime and Nero prior to the Hobus detonation, whereas the movie itself shows Nero introducing himself to Spock Prime seemingly just after Romulus goes boom and right before the two ships get sucked into the singularity (“He called himself ‘Nero, Last of the Romulan Empire’...”).
There's no such thing as hard or soft canon. Either something is canon or isn't.isn't even soft canon anymore.
There's no such thing as hard or soft canon. Either something is canon or isn't.
Heh! I'd love to, actually, but I've never personally run across it. Is it invite-only or something?...You should see the Facebook Trek Timeliners Group...![]()
There is on occasion semi-hard canon, but there are pills for that now.There's no such thing as hard or soft canon.
Definitely the risk of reading tie-in fiction while the subject show is still airing, but damn, that's gotta be close to a record for how quickly a Trek book got tossed in the bin...
I understand what happened, just said that was probably the quickest that a tie-in book had been trashed before...
There is on occasion semi-hard canon, but there are pills for that now.
This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back. You take the blue pill – the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill – you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes.
You say that almost as if … I don't know … you've been paying attention, or something.And I seriously doubt the novelverse as a whole will get any more consideration vis-a-vis The Picard Show.
One interesting thing about Discovery is that, by bringing Section 31 in as a known entity within 23rd century Starfleet (not clear how it will be reconciled with the secret group no one knows about in the 24th), it allows the Star Trek Year Four comics to more easily fit into canon.
That's the one where Kirk is giving Bashir a run for his money in trying to bring down Section 31 right? Yeah, that's just gone into the "no way it can be canon bin".Although Section 31: Cloak is pretty much screwed, I think.
It’s actually the other way round.To be fair, I think far more people read the Year Four comics by DC Fontana than the Section 31 novel, but then comics generally get wider readership than books I think?
Oh ok. I have to admit I find that surprising. Myself (and everyone I know) having a full time job and just not enough hours in the day, it's far faster to get through a comic book than a novel.It’s actually the other way round.
My personal headcanon has always gone games first, then comic books, then whatever novels can fit. Games take very high precedence in my headcanon due to the work of Trek actors (Shatner, Plummer, Warner, the entire TOS and TNG casts in 25th Anniversary/Judgment Rites/Final Unity etc.)Comics used to be very widely read when they were sold on newsstands, but the direct-market system narrowed it to pretty much just the serious fans. Although I'd assume online services like Comixology have opened the market up somewhat again.
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