10 out of 10? I'm truly surprised at how anyone would rate this episode a perfect score. Madness.
Personal choice? Isn't that your reasoning for continuing to watch a show you hate?
10 out of 10? I'm truly surprised at how anyone would rate this episode a perfect score. Madness.
By all meansPersonal choice? Isn't that your reasoning for continuing to watch a show you hate?
Next time we wait for you to tell us what score is acceptable before we vote.10 out of 10? I'm truly surprised at how anyone would rate this episode a perfect score. Madness.
What score did you rate it, Guy?The end is stupidly vague.
I'd like to know what sort of mirror universe they are in.
For Prime, from TOS, we'd see a TOS Klingon corpse in the debris.
For Prime, from Ent/TNG, we'd see an Ent/TOS klingon in the Debris, or a corpse in a Starfleet TOS uniform.
For Mirror, from Mirror Mirror, we'd see a corpse in the debris wearing a Mirror Starfleet uniform.
For Kelvin, we'd see a kelvin Klingon corpse in the debris field or a human corpse in the debris field wearing a Kelvin uniform.
Something new.
Oh don't be sad, you rate it exactly the standard you feel it has earnedNext time we wait for you to tell us what score is acceptable before we vote.
What score did you rate it, Guy?
-The population numbers are all over the place. A few episodes ago they said only 10,000 people had died in the war, which was already kind of odd. Now Lorca is saying that "Trillions" of lives are on the line. Even if he meant more than just UFP citizens, that goes to show the scale of casualties in this war is absolutely miniscule.
-The Klingon language and the Universal Translator. Star Trek has always been all over the place when it comes to the Klingon language and if the normal UT even works on it, but the Klingons REALLY should be aware of Universal Translators at this point, especially given they communicated with humans in ENT like it was no big deal.
I missed that, good catch! I guess I didn't look too closely at the scene... Will have to rewatch it.The end is stupidly vague.
I'd like to know what sort of mirror universe they are in.
For Prime, from TOS, we'd see a TOS Klingon corpse in the debris.
For Prime, from Ent/TNG, we'd see an Ent/TOS klingon in the Debris, or a corpse in a Starfleet TOS uniform.
For Mirror, from Mirror Mirror, we'd see a corpse in the debris wearing a Mirror Starfleet uniform.
For Kelvin, we'd see a kelvin Klingon corpse in the debris field or a human corpse in the debris field wearing a Kelvin uniform.
Something new.
The map on Lorca's wall shows the front lines moving. When planets change ownership, do people die? Hard to tell; we never heard of "bombardment", and while certain Klingons seem to like eating at least a select few opponents, I doubt they are interested in eating all the colonists whose turf they conquer.
The end is stupidly vague.
I'd like to know what sort of mirror universe they are in.
The USN lost more ships in the years after the first few weeks of the war then they did in the first few weeks of the war. Here is a list from Wikipedia:
The Japanese did not, as you put it, managed to slaughter all the Western naval forces in the region.
(The map in Lorca's ready room has not altered its boundaries much, if at all. The Klingons conquered four systems, all close to their space, yet they have not made great strides towards conquering systems closer to the Federation core. And, we know from earlier Trek, that at least three of these systems - the Sherman's Planet system, the Organia system, and the Ardana system - did not stay Klingon long. There was still disputes over the first two in the 2260s. A third system, the Gasko, according to the Star Trek: Star Charts, also did not stay Klingon long. This became a Romulan system.)
There was a lot of space ship debris? Be funny if they got stuck there in their own timeline, all by themselves forever, not connected to the rest of Trek. Stamets no longer operational. Could happen.
You know, I think that's actually the best theory yet for what Lorca's plan might end up being (if there is one). His idea might be to jump to an alternate universe, where the Buran is still intact, and somehow save the crew. “Infinite permutations” and all that jazz. It's certainly more interesting a theory than the persistent Section 31/Mirror Universe/Klingon agent theories.
An interesting observation! On an unrelated note, am I the only one who though Kol's “Lock her up!” towards Burnham wasn't accidental?
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