If we do, he's sure to be part of an elaborate Section 31 plot (an early version of Into Darkness featured April instead of Khan)
Maybe he'll be an evil space pirate like his Kelvin universe counterpart...the comic version.
If we do, he's sure to be part of an elaborate Section 31 plot (an early version of Into Darkness featured April instead of Khan)
Only if he gets an eye patch. And wooden leg. And hook hand.
It's what we do ....Love the Trek BBS..........question answered within 3 posts........9 pages later still going! ;-)
How many different time travel tech have we seen and then its gone?Captain Janeway. Ben Sisko.
This one is orders of magnitude greater than any before, though. Instant transit anywhere in the mutliverse and possibly through time as well.
Or the modifications the Kelvans made to the Enterprise. Or met the Traveller and all the warp data from going to Warp 10. Or too bad the Medusans are no longer part of the Federation to modify engines to go outside the galaxy.Yeah, too bad Janeway knew nothing about the spore drive. Star Trek: Voyager would have just been a two-hour TV movie.
Not reallyCaptain Janeway. Ben Sisko.
This one is orders of magnitude greater than any before, though. Instant transit anywhere in the mutliverse and possibly through time as well.
By all means, tell me of an invention in Trek that comes close to this one.Not really
We also don't have the end of the story.By all means, tell me of an invention in Trek that comes close to this one.
This is the ability to appear anywhere in the universe. Cross over to other universes. Skip ahead (and probably back too) in time. All in one thing.
It makes the modifications the Kelvans made to Kirk's Enterprise into a joke. 300 years to Andromeda? Try 3 seconds. Borg transwarp and quantum slipstream? They're virtually standing still compared. They can likely jump to wherever The Traveller put the Enterprise-D and back without needing the crew to join hands and think good thoughts.
Not seeing a downside.Yeah, too bad Janeway knew nothing about the spore drive. Star Trek: Voyager would have just been a two-hour TV movie.
As fireproof said, the story isn't over yet.By all means, tell me of an invention in Trek that comes close to this one.
This is the ability to appear anywhere in the universe. Cross over to other universes. Skip ahead (and probably back too) in time. All in one thing.
It makes the modifications the Kelvans made to Kirk's Enterprise into a joke. 300 years to Andromeda? Try 3 seconds. Borg transwarp and quantum slipstream? They're virtually standing still compared. They can likely jump to wherever The Traveller put the Enterprise-D and back without needing the crew to join hands and think good thoughts.
As fireproof said, the story isn't over yet.
As fireproof said, the story isn't over yet.
I can't help but think back to the nonsensical finale to the Klingon war and wonder if they have any idea how to make their spore drive go away when the time comes.The story can only end one of two ways. Either they continue to use to spore drive, or they don’t. If this is the “prime” universe, then it’s the latter. But then there better be one hell of a good reason why.
Voyager was stuck 75 years from home and ultimately, Paul Stamets was fine. The Voyager crew would be climbing over each other to plug themselves in to risk a single jump home.What it's done to Stamets in the first season is a pretty good reason for starters. A propulsion drive that depends on a sentient being to operate it is pretty dicey. It just is. The only other Major Race that's been exposed to it are the Klingons. If the Klingons can't duplicate the technology for Bullshit Technobabble Reasons (it's not like Star Trek hasn't done that before) and Starfleet decides, after evaluating the Spore Drive, that it's more trouble than it's worth and scraps the technology, then problem solved. "We can still explore space but we'll explore it the old-fashioned way!" Cue Captain Kirk and the USS Enterprise going out there to explore strange new worlds on a five-year mission.
Voyager was stuck 75 years from home and ultimately, Paul Stamets was fine. The Voyager crew would be climbing over each other to plug themselves in to risk a single jump home.
And when the Dominion were about to overrun the Federation? They attempted genocide, yet a technology with a minor risk to one user, which would have tipped the balance of power is too much?
That was due to meddling from Lorca and damage to the spore network by Mirror Stamets. For the rest of the series, he got a little high but was otherwise fine. That was also one jump out of 130+.Paul Stamets was fine? You've got to be kidding me. The end of "Into the Forest I Go" disagrees with you.
That was due to meddling from Lorca and damage to the spore network by Mirror Stamets. For the rest of the series, he got a little high but was otherwise fine. That was also one jump out of 130+.
Imagine a Federation that would condemn Voyager's crew to a 75 year journey because one engineer getting high on sporestuff for one jump was unacceptable![]()
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