Agreed!sorry for offtopic, actually I'm opposite-topic, but I just dislike seeing excelsiors, mirandas and oberths in the 24th century.
edit: And birds of prey. And those 2 or 3 ocasional Ktingas.
The new classes (Akira, Steamrunner, Norway, Saber) from ST:FC
...
The REAL version of the Ambassador class (not the hastily-thrown-together-at-the-last-minute hack job that appeared in "Yesterday's Enterprise")
I love this Mk-1 version! It features in the 2015 Ships of the Line calendar.Have you seen this fan version of the Saber Mk-1? http://www.phoenixium.com/galleryvehicles/saber/saber.htm
I agree, although I'd throw the Defiant and the Negh'var in as great post TNG designs along with Deep Space Nine itself.
TNG created iconic ship designs for its major races that really were never matched later on. Probably the D'Deridex and the Borg Cube are the most iconic designs from the TNG era. The new Romulan designs for Nemesis, for example, are just too busy in my opinion, over detailed. TNG did quite simple smooth surfaced ships which relied on iconic shapes and silhouettes to distinguish themselves.
Haven't seen those yet! I really actually like the New Orleans class a lot. It's like the little sister of the Galaxy Class.I really like those Wolf 359/Unification graveyard ships. The recent pics look really great.
It wasn't pretty but it was highly unusual for the time, there were very few "living starships" seen on screen before it. It was also a "sympathetic" character of it's own.I'd love to see a CGI with a Galaxy, Nebula, Intrepid, Olympic, Original Ambassador, Saber Mk-1, and maybe New Orleans, Cheyenne Class ships as part of some task-force or something in orbit over a planet. Maybe a few original creations following that design esthetic too. For me, that was the Federation at its peak.
RAMA, Gomtuu was an interesting living ship. Not exactly pretty, like the So'na battleship, but fascinating certainly. Living in it, symbiotically, would be weird.
you are not alonePossible contrarian opinion: I love the Ambassador class.![]()
And the Rutledge was a New Orleans class!Nebula-class, USS Phoenix.
Interesting ... it almost reminds me of one of the Vulcan ringships oriented that way.
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