It was destroyed by the Discovery early in S1. The spore drive was always classified.Not sure if anyone else mentioned it, but, does the same rule apply to the Glenn as well? The Glenn had a spore drive. Has that ship been classified?
It was destroyed by the Discovery early in S1. The spore drive was always classified.Not sure if anyone else mentioned it, but, does the same rule apply to the Glenn as well? The Glenn had a spore drive. Has that ship been classified?
The season ended with everyone needing something of it's plot explained so it's not you. They had a basic plot and direction (red signals to future jump) and mismanaged the minor details inbetween when they starting writing the individual episodes, the finale was extended possibly to account for that and try and wrap it all up.
It seemed incredibly straightforward to me, plotholes and all. They're amateurs with complex plotting, compared with someone like Steven Moffat.The season ended with everyone needing something of it's plot explained so it's not you.
It was destroyed by the Discovery early in S1. The spore drive was always classified.
Steven Moffat.
The season ended with everyone needing something of it's plot explained so it's not you. They had a basic plot and direction (red signals to future jump) and mismanaged the minor details inbetween when they starting writing the individual episodes, the finale was extended possibly to account for that and try and wrap it all up.
It seemed incredibly straightforward to me, plotholes and all. They're amateurs with complex plotting, compared to someone like Steven Moffat.
Agreed. The seasonal arc was very straightfoward at the outset, but I felt like once Control was introduced as the threat, I was starting to get lost. The season went from an over-arching mystery to now Control being the big threat that needed to be dealt with. Plus the importance of the sphere data wasn't emphasized until two or three episodes later, which by then, wasn't in the forefront of my mind because it seemed non-important. And all of these scenes of exposition where important tidbits were either talked about or introduced all happened so quickly I couldn't keep up. That's where my frustration began to set in.
In my case, several times I would pause and go back. But then I would start getting mad that I was having to do this. But, that's more ME I guess.I certainly saw this reaction in a lot of places. Which is why I think the series will, as with many complex stories, be better appreciated upon a second watch. And this is interesting, because this is a huge complaint from TV viewers in many places, yet where it comes to books, a book that gets better the second time around is lauded. Readers will actually go back a few pages if they don't get something in what they are reading.
TV apparently is only allowed a first impression hot take with many people, even a decade into serial storytellling domination. Odd.
Only in connection with the spore drive, and its final fate. As with the Discovery.I understand that, but do the same rules apply to this ship as they do Discovery now? Would it be treasonous to talk about the Glenn?
Don't feign ignorance here, OK? An opinion that you don't like the show is fine. However, you stated that you'd have to be stupid to enjoy the show. That's not OK. Got it?Why do you feel judged? Is it something I said? I said what I felt. I am entitled to my opinion. I did not point and laugh at any one person or group of people (well maybe except the writers who put out this crap). Now, why does me having an opinion make you feel judged? Fine, you like this crap writing, and I don't. But why am I only allowed to have an opinion that you agree with?
In my case, several times I would pause and go back. But then I would start getting mad that I was having to do this. But, that's more ME I guess.![]()
Absolutely. The problem isn't that the plot is too complex to follow, the problem is that there is no plot to follow.Not sure I agree the plot is actually complex, any more than a run-of-the-mill time travel plot, it's just really patchily told with the occasional gaping hole, much like my erotic fanfic.
I didn't sit there at the screen braying like a distressed dairy cow and getting a headache trying to follow the intricate and beautiful plot laid out by the writers, I just thought basic questions like "why are we going into the future right now when there's no reason to anymore", "why aren't we trying several obvious ways to scuttle the ship", "how did the Red Angel suit move the Terralysium church through a vast distance of space", etc. None of these have actual answers that aren't fan conjecture. I could watch it a hundred times and these questions would remain.
Only in connection with the spore drive, and its final fate. As with the Discovery.
The official story is very likely that each ship was a science vessel conducting cutting edge (and mostly classified) research and each was tragically lost with all hands. The bits NOT to be discussed are the spore drive, the Discovery’s actual fate, the survival of the crew and the time suit.
There did not need to be a scene to make this explicit. The implication was clear.
Except... She is confirmed as being in Season-3 of Discovery in the 32nd CenturyI'm just going to repeat myself for fear of ridicule
Control is not dead
It has went to the future in the remnants of a human carcass, Leland
And in the invasive technology that spilled from his carcass in the Spore Chamber
Also, I believe that Georgiou, after "neutralising" Leland, secretly fucked off in an escape pod, so as not to be imprisoned in the future
She is in hiding, away from the tentacles of Starfleet, and she'll return, as duplicitous and evil as ever.
For Pike, Spock et al, simply to believe a shady Starfleet interrogator that all was well regarding Control, was also a bit of a leap of faith.
Trouble awaits.
Not sure I agree the plot is actually complex, any more than a run-of-the-mill time travel plot, it's just really patchily told with the occasional gaping hole, much like my erotic fanfic.
I didn't sit there at the screen braying like a distressed dairy cow and getting a headache trying to follow the intricate and beautiful plot laid out by the writers, I just thought basic questions like "why are we going into the future right now when there's no reason to anymore", "why aren't we trying several obvious ways to scuttle the ship", "how did the Red Angel suit move the Terralysium church through a vast distance of space", etc. None of these have actual answers that aren't fan conjecture. I could watch it a hundred times and these questions would remain.
Not sure I agree the plot is actually complex, any more than a run-of-the-mill time travel plot, it's just really patchily told with the occasional gaping hole, much like my erotic fanfic.
I didn't sit there at the screen braying like a distressed dairy cow and getting a headache trying to follow the intricate and beautiful plot laid out by the writers, I just thought basic questions like "why are we going into the future right now when there's no reason to anymore", "why aren't we trying several obvious ways to scuttle the ship", "how did the Red Angel suit move the Terralysium church through a vast distance of space", etc. None of these have actual answers that aren't fan conjecture. I could watch it a hundred times and these questions would remain.
Absolutely. The problem isn't that the plot is too complex to follow, the problem is that there is no plot to follow.
I can see that for some people need explicit dialogue as a guide.
Tell me, I when the idea of the Red Angel being able to move over vast distances and Pike appeared confused, Tilly piped in, "Eistein did point out time and space are the same thing, so that's why the Red Angel can go anywhere it wants in time-space. And that's also why the burst appear to be spread across the galaxy far from where the actual time jumps happened" would you have been happy?
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