I'm not going to review every page in this thread, but does anybody have an idea why the crew aboard Discovery's sister ship were all melty? I saw a whole bunch of sparklies and reforming life forms and it made me think of the Genesis effect.
I'm not going to review every page in this thread, but does anybody have an idea why the crew aboard Discovery's sister ship were all melty? I saw a whole bunch of sparklies and reforming life forms and it made me think of the Genesis effect.
They had a bad shroom trip.I'm not going to review every page in this thread, but does anybody have an idea why the crew aboard Discovery's sister ship were all melty? I saw a whole bunch of sparklies and reforming life forms and it made me think of the Genesis effect.
Yeah. This is absolutely my biggest worry about this show.Unfortunately, I also got a very nuBSG (more specifically the Pegasus) vibe from this episode, and while I loved that show, seeing it applied to the actions of the Federation, even in time of war, is kind of disconcerting. I'm not sure how I feel about it. Yes, DS9 delved into some of the same territory during the Dominion War, but it was usually through the buffer of Section 31 or individuals taking action rather than the entire Federation itself. Life sentences to hard labor on mining colonies where prisoners are allowed to frequently assault each other and dozens of them die in industrial accidents makes the Federation seem no better than the Klingons with Rura Penthe. And that's before we got on the ship where the security officers allow you to assault prisoners in custody (even if it was a test to see how Burnham would react). I don't mind a little bit of dark and gritty, but this seems to really want to wallow in it.
If I were to guess about all this advanced tech we're seeing, I suspect it is, for the most part, experimental in some stages. TOS did have a site-to-site transport once in "Day of the Dove" so it's not violation of canon completely, although I recall that it was considered a somewhat dangerous undertaking. If Enterprise had already been built by the time that Discovery was around, and since Discovery is a "science vessel" and not a deep space exploratory vessel like Enterprise was, it stands to reason that they would have some newer and cooler toys than older ships of the line. Everyone thinks that Discovery is supposed to look older than the Enterprise, but I think it's backwards - I think Discovery is newer and intentionally experimenting with innovative designs and concepts; Enterprise has been in service for a few years already and maybe even benefits later from Discovery's tech when she goes to refit for TMP. Yes, this might take place prior to TOS, but I think the ship design lineages may be offset in the opposite direction.Site to site transport is the only honest-to-God 'too advanced tech' violation I've seen so far (introduced to save the Captain a short walk, love it). Holograms must realistically have been available in TOS given our current level of tech, so we can safely retcon that without too much trouble. Shroom drive is going to have a Fatal Flaw (tm) we probably got hints of on the Glenn.
Sudden stop from going a billion miles per second, and the inertial dampeners fail.![]()
Or as I like to call,
SPLAT!
More like ripped open from the inside out, or some with their skin pulled and stretched around their body Cenobite style.
These spores really hate organic matter when they're aggitated.
I was thinking the same. The communication with Strall saying they were going to attempt something in the range of 900 (whatever it was called). Then on the boarding party mission to the Glenn, they found some pieces that were attached to the console and in the cube that Tilly called "hacks".Pretty sure they explained what happened in the episode.
It was related to the damage they saw outside of the ship. It was caused by the drive malfunction.
I prefer the technical term: "Wall Salsa".Or as I like to call,
SPLAT!
Who said The Philadelphia Experiment?
AMEN times infinity.The best part of this episode though was the almost complete lack of Conehead Klingons and their stupid captions and their slowly enunciated profound declarations. Fuck, that was tedious.
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