A mining vessel designed, one assumes with the intent to process and crack asteroids or other large steller rocks is a war ship in all but name only.
I would hazard to guess that the Star Empire was somewhat careful about who among them got their hands on that kind of hardware, given Romulan paranoia - who needs the Scimitar when you have civilians with that kind of arsenal?
I'd actually like to see some kind of linkage either by story or design between the Scimitar and the Narada. Maybe someone can better help me grasp how a slave could build a military ship.
And it didn't truly become a super weapon until after Spock showed up on the scene with his handy red matter.
I don't buy this simplified explanation for the Narada. A ship designed to crack asteroids needs its powerful drill and low level shields to deflect debris. Most of its size would be for storage for the ore. I can understand that the Romulans might give it some weapons and shields to defend itself against raiders (assuming the Romulans have intergalactic highwaymen) but I agree that giving a 'simple' mining vessel the ability to destroy 47 Klingon ships quickly followed by 7 Federation ships the next day stretches even Trek credibility too far.
TNG Romulan warships have always been on par with the Federation's most powerful ships but TNG was very fuzzy when it came to power generation. Ships are faster because of more efficient warp engines but warheads can presumably only be more powerful because they contain more antimatter? Phasers are more powerful because... I dunno - you can sustain a powerful beam for longer thus weakening your opponents shields unless those shields have also have greater power sustaining them? I'm not sure about the notion that the beam itself could become vastly more powerful. I'm not sure that I buy the notion of vastly more powerful weapons using Trek physics. Maybe more modern phasers rotate their frequencies faster than old shields so that more of the energy gets through?
Anyway, the Narada seems to have no difficulty operating a planet-cracking drill, shields, phasers, and an unlimited supply of anti-matter warheads (anti-matter weapons replication technology on board a mining ship?) all at the same time.
I have no problem with the Narada being powerful because it comes from the future but they made it unecessarily and ridulously powerful, effectively using a sledgehammer to crack a nut. I think if you overdo it, it detracts from the excitement. It's better if there is a slight power imbalance in favour of the villain (a classic movie trick used in almost every decent climactic fist fight).
Why 47 Klingon ships? Why not 5? Why 7 Federation ships instead of 3? The latter answer is probably to leave Earth relatively defenseless but that dopey plot trick has never really worked either.
I can buy that the Romulan Empire would be fractured by the destruction of the Senate and a civil war might be inevitable but the destruction of one world would not spell the end of Romulan society any more than the destruction of one moon would lead to the collapse of the Klingon Empire.
Look at the modern parallel with the current Arab revolt. Stability is the goal. The destruction of these key planets would have a similar destablising effect to deposing a ruling government. The politics of the after-effects would be much more interesting than the Frankenstein's mining ship we got in this movie.
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