If nothing else, I'll probably get myself a 3D printer in the 30s and see if I can make decent models of comparable size.It was on the books as being planned before "the Great Fall", but I don't ever recall seeing prototypes, or if they ever even started that project.![]()
Are they running out of ideas or something?
The PIC Neo-Connie/Titan/Sangri La thing has been mentioned, but that's not the only one. There's also the whole Buckner/Centaur (DS9/PRO) thing and Connie-vs-Sombra (SNW) business as well, following this trend. I guess they're taking a page from the multi-scaled BOP for these things now. No longer is it chalked up to a simple difficulty for the post-production crew maintaining scale during the final compositing process, but a fully codified canonical phenomenon as it applies to in-universe starship design.
Starship looking too small?
Kinda silly, IMO, but it is what it is...![]()
Eh? They did.and I'm glad later episodes of TNG didn't follow it.
The design wasn't canon until now, so they can make it any size they want.Size is just weird.. The romulan ship looked TINY, its suppose to be Ginormous!
I like it small, we already have the "MASSIVE" D'Deridex.The design wasn't canon until now, so they can make it any size they want.
I'm glad they made it small, not every Romulan ship needs to be gigantic.
Eh? They did.
Looking at the expanded universe, Star Trek: Armada II has the Kestrel-class assault ship (troop transport), which is the Romulan shuttle writ large.In regards to the smaller vertical Romulan ship, I thought it was a nice touch that instead of simply being shrunk, the front section got swapped out for one that (arguably) combines elements with the Romulan shuttle from In the Pale Moonlight. Smooshed together for a ship that's smaller the the first, bigger than the second.
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I think the spelling on the Twitter post was intentional.Okay, I'm convinced.
But can "Sabrerunner" really be the official, in-universe name for the class? I'm not a native Anglo - would "saber runner" be a term that can make sense?
Probably not. I don't expect we'll be getting a "proper" name for the class anytime soon, though.But can "Sabrerunner" really be the official, in-universe name for the class? I'm not a native Anglo - would "saber runner" be a term that can make sense?
But can "Sabrerunner" really be the official, in-universe name for the class? I'm not a native Anglo - would "saber runner" be a term that can make sense?
You're going to have to explain the etymology of why the "Galaxy-class" is named after milk.The Galaxy-class is named after milk
Okay, I'm convinced.
But can "Sabrerunner" really be the official, in-universe name for the class? I'm not a native Anglo - would "saber runner" be a term that can make sense?
Probably not. I don't expect we'll be getting a "proper" name for the class anytime soon, though.
You're going to have to explain the etymology of why the "Galaxy-class" is named after milk.
I'm completely lost on how that came to be.
IC, I thought classes were going by size of Stellar Objects:https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/word-history-of-galaxy
from M-W:
The idea of milk is in fact present in both Milky Way and galaxy: the ultimate root of the English word galaxy is Greek gála, meaning "milk."
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