as I mentioned in the other CBS merger thread - I think a series based off the destruction of Romulus and the implications of the empire being broken up could lead to a lot of federation border tension and changes within the federation itself and its alliances.
Never heard of that. Is it about finding beauty in simplicity?
It's hard to recapture the mood of TOS it suited the decade it was created in. Discovery has set its own mood and I get that. The result visually is reflective of our times. Must admit I like the corny, colourful staged feel of The Original. Even the cardboard props and that soap opera acting style of the actors and actresses. Not sure if I'm meant to see it that way but that is the affect it has on me. Discovery has gone for a darker aesthetic with more dramatic less melodramatic acting. The feel is entirely different. With their budget it would've been hard for the producers not to want to exploit that. It's like the timeline they have fitted into is less about the Trek one and more about current production values, with fitting into present TV and visual trends. Again it makes sense the competition takes priority.
I don't know? Put a century between the end of the Berman-era and the start of Discovery and I could easily see the Klingons going back to being bad guys.
Aren't they bad guys in the 25th century in Star Trek Online?
I like this idea, personally. I also like the idea of new territory to explore as well.as I mentioned in the other CBS merger thread - I think a series based off the destruction of Romulus and the implications of the empire being broken up could lead to a lot of federation border tension and changes within the federation itself and its alliances.
Never played it, but my impression from the backstory I've read is that everyone is fighting everyone all the time.Aren't they bad guys in the 25th century in Star Trek Online?
I'm not going to lie. Watching the Klingon and Federation relations deteriorate that much and seeing such a radical change in the Empire back toward Imperialism would not be something I'd have been too thrilled to see. Could it have been possible? Yes.
But. While Human Society is shown to be constantly progressing, I'd like to see Klingon Society also continually progressing. Seeing the Klingons regress to such an extreme would be depressing beyond the extreme for me to see.
For those reasons, I prefer all-out war with the Klingons being something pre-Star Trek VI.
In "The Way of the Warrior", there was context. We saw not all Klingons were on board with Gowron during the fourth season of DS9, and even with hostilities renewed, it still wasn't back to the way it was during the TOS Era. Or the DSC Era, where it looks like things were even more hostile than in TOS.
I'm confused. If no one is making that claim, why do you assume it's about that?And there doesn't seem to be anyone making the argument that labeling it "Prime" somehow improves its quality. If anything I think the "Prime" labeling debate seems to be about people wanting to give themselves permission to dismiss it or people not wanting to let people dismiss it.
I could see a major threat to the Klingon Homeworld or a violent coup and revolution within the Empire leading to a return to imperialist expansion and fascism on the part of many Klingons. If, say, a military coup toppled Chancellor Martok or the entire High Council were overthrown by an ambitious house with designs on reviving the old Klingon ways of conquest and interstellar tensions I could very well see the Empire devolving to what it was during the DSC and TOS timeframe.
Because the user I was responding to said something to that effect a couple pages ago.I'm confused. If no one is making that claim, why do you assume it's about that?
Only for about a year, they’re allies again.Aren't they bad guys in the 25th century in Star Trek Online?
as I mentioned in the other CBS merger thread - I think a series based off the destruction of Romulus and the implications of the empire being broken up could lead to a lot of federation border tension and changes within the federation itself and its alliances.
I’m not a fan of progressive Klingons to be honest, and a future where everyone is nice to each other is dramatically dull.
To paraphrase Churchill, if you have no enemies, you’ve never stood up for anything. That Klingons, romulans, ferengi, cardassians etc are all on some evolutionary path to converge with humans and spend eternity taking recreational art classes in the federation? That’s the insidious repressive federation Quark was talking about.
As long as that future comes with Galaxy-X then I say bring it on!Of course in "All Good Things" look at the future we saw the Klingon / Federation treaty fall apart. While that is an aborted timeline - it still showed the possible general direction of things to come.
To paraphrase Churchill, if you have no enemies, you’ve never stood up for anything. That Klingons, romulans, ferengi, cardassians etc are all on some evolutionary path to converge with humans and spend eternity taking recreational art classes in the federation? That’s the insidious repressive federation Quark was talking about.
The thing is, TOS is even more self-contained than Voyager and TNG, and had fewer episodes, looser world building and a LOT less background material (e.g. "none"). On the other hand, the series that immediately followed Voyager was set in the 22nd century and basically used First Contact as part of its background.You know, post-VOY, there are no fixed events. But "OH NO!!!! Late-24th and 25th Century!!!!!" TNG and VOY were largely self-contained. All the "HUGE MASSIVE CONTINUITY!!!!" is really from DS9. And who says a series that takes place later on -- especially 20 years later -- even has to reference it? It doesn't.
"But Gene's Perfect Humans!!!!" They'd been moving away from that ever since he died.
On the other hand, I like the 23rd Century, so I don't mind Discovery being there. And, as they say, "art thrives on limitation."
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.