Considering Roddenberry and TNG first season, its a Star Trek tradition.As much of a fan as I am of Discovery, some of the ideas actually do sound like they were thought up while someone was on mushrooms.
Considering Roddenberry and TNG first season, its a Star Trek tradition.As much of a fan as I am of Discovery, some of the ideas actually do sound like they were thought up while someone was on mushrooms.
I can't believe people are still defending that Augment bullshit
In ENT you saw ice caves and a bit of tundra.Was Andoria seen or just named dropped?
Haha as a fan of urban design, I found the Discovery rendition of Paris hilarious.
Maybe it wasn't Paris.
Sure, we did see the Eiffel Tower, but that could just be a copy.
This is what happened when the county of Yorkshire conquered France...War of the Roses III almost thought they might have been showing Tokyo (Tokyo Tower looks quite a bit like Eiffel tower with a different paint scheme) but then the street layout, and the French writing at the Starfleet building showed it was indeed Paris. I cant imagine Parisiennes letting that happen to their city, though, especially after a rebuild.
![]()
It isn't bullshit.I can't believe people are still defending that Augment bullshit
In ENT you saw ice caves and a bit of tundra.
Paris and France said no, the Federation said yes.civilization it's not hard to imagine that the attendant demands of that role might overwhelm centuries of history and tradition
Paris and France said no, the Federation said yes.
End of story.
It sure is. Growing up with Star Trek, we never questioned the Klingon's appearances. It was simple: budget was bigger, so they changed the make-up. If TOS had the same budget and make-up skills, Klingons would have looked similar. We just went it it. No explanation needed. Never, not once did I hear anyone bitching about it. Then the infamous DS9 episode happened and the writers decided to make a joke about it. Suddenly, in universe, someone acknowledged that change. That was completely unnecessary, but at least the explanation given (we don't talk about it) was good enough Fine, something changed, the Klingons don't want to talk about. Let's respect that and move on...It isn't bullshit.
I agree it wasn't needed, but I don't think it's bullshit. It was a good couple episodes.It sure is. Growing up with Star Trek, we never questioned the Klingon's appearances. It was simple: budget was bigger, so they changed the make-up. If TOS had the same budget and make-up skills, Klingons would have looked similar. We just went it it. No explanation needed. Never, not once did I hear anyone bitching about it. Then the infamous DS9 episode happened and the writers decided to make a joke about it. Suddenly, in universe, someone acknowledged that change. That was completely unnecessary, but at least the explanation given (we don't talk about it) was good enough Fine, something changed, the Klingons don't want to talk about. Let's respect that and move on...
Whoever the braindead ENT writer was who decided we need the Augment virus, he was wrong, offering an explanation were for decades fans, who were totally fine to either live without one or make up their own head canon before, absolutely no explanation was necessary. And the one we got was so goddamn stupid, so outrageously dumb, so unapologetically nonsensical that it angered us more than it satisfied those couple of people who might have been under the impression they needed one.
The less said about the Augments, the faster this dark period of Star Trek writing gets forgotten, the better.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.