It's all out there. I'm not going to "pretend it never happened."
You can "accept" whatever you like. I think the whole concept of "personal canon" is petty and immature.
Is ENT part of all that is live-action on-screen Trek? Yes. Is it part of the Star Trek universe I daydream about in my imaginings? Not most of it.![]()
No, it just doesn't fit with what was previously established. I disregard it.
Yes, it does. Voyager was worse for continuity problems than Enterprise was.
Such as?
They might ignore continuity, but canon? Dont think so. Everything they write becomes part of the canon, even if it contradicts what some other guy wrote. Classic example: Jame R. Kirk and James T. Kirk are both canon, but only James T. Kirk is part of continuity.The writers ignore canon whenever it suits them. Why shouldn't the fans?
Is ENT part of all that is live-action on-screen Trek? Yes. Is it part of the Star Trek universe I daydream about in my imaginings? Not most of it.![]()
First contact with the BorgYes, it does. Voyager was worse for continuity problems than Enterprise was.
Such as?
Survivors from Wolf 359 being assimiliated and taken back to the Delta Quadrant ? Funny, I only remember seeing one ship and I'm pretty sure Data blew that up.
Tuvok's age changing randomly ?
The Yridians being thought to be extinct ?
In case anyone wonders (as I did): the episode is "Unity".Survivors from Wolf 359 being assimiliated and taken back to the Delta Quadrant ? Funny, I only remember seeing one ship and I'm pretty sure Data blew that up.
In case anyone wonders (as I did): the episode is "Unity".Survivors from Wolf 359 being assimiliated and taken back to the Delta Quadrant ? Funny, I only remember seeing one ship and I'm pretty sure Data blew that up.
In case anyone wonders (as I did): the episode is "Unity".Survivors from Wolf 359 being assimiliated and taken back to the Delta Quadrant ? Funny, I only remember seeing one ship and I'm pretty sure Data blew that up.
And "Infinite Regress" where it is clearly stated that Seven of Nine personally assimilated a Starfleet officer.
Such as?
"Flashback" for one.
Dark Frontier came instantly to my mind. It managed to retcon a number of things from first contact with the Borg, to technology and ship design, the number of crewmembers on the ship... Oh and apparently Janeway's commbadge twiddling, which she never does before or after.
In general, you never knew where you were with regards to number of crewmembers, shuttles or torpedoes on Voyager as it would miraculously top-up every now and then for no reason
To my knowledge, Enterprise didn't manage to make any continuity bloopers on such a large scale in one episode.
Apologies for digressing off the main topic tho...
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