They did that in the comic Double Time where in the story they went back in time and when they returned to the "present" they overshot by 6 months to after the end of the war.Did NF skip ahead in time because of the Dominion War?
They did that in the comic Double Time where in the story they went back in time and when they returned to the "present" they overshot by 6 months to after the end of the war.Did NF skip ahead in time because of the Dominion War?
I think time jump happened because there change in editors, and the new editor wanted all of the books lined up, and since at the time DS9 was years behind everyone else, the had to do the time jump to catch up.From what I understand there was something behind the scenes about the fact DS9 had a huge epic multi-book plotline about there being a third group of Prophet worshipers who are a horrifically evil bunch and a threat to everyone. Then someone put the kibosh on it and it was resolved by someone saying, in-book, "Wow, glad that was all resolved."
So someone used the time skip to get rid of a plot they didn't like (or something).
I admit, sadly, I tend to follow stand alone series and single books versus the entirety of relaunches so I don't know as much about that as possible or whether I'm wildly misrepresenting it.
Specifically, it happened because PAD was writing in "comic book time," where the story advances at its own pace, but references current events as they happen. Which meant that when one book came out just as the Dominion War was beginning and referenced that, then, three books of nearly-continuous action later, they referenced the war being over because, in the real world, it had been two years, that created a problem for all the timeliners. So the comic one-shot was done as a retcon where, between two books, they have a brief adventure that ends with them having skipped over almost the entire war.They did that in the comic Double Time where in the story they went back in time and when they returned to the "present" they overshot by 6 months to after the end of the war.
The Excalibur trilogy was really good.
I just wish when they'd commissioned the Excalibur-A they had gone for something other than yet another Galaxy-Class (especially at the loss of one of my all time favourite starship classes).
It wasn't so much that it caused a problem "with the timeliners," but rather that it meant that Selar was pregnant for three years.........................Specifically, it happened because PAD was writing in "comic book time," where the story advances at its own pace, but references current events as they happen. Which meant that when one book came out just as the Dominion War was beginning and referenced that, then, three books of nearly-continuous action later, they referenced the war being over because, in the real world, it had been two years, that created a problem for all the timeliners. So the comic one-shot was done as a retcon where, between two books, they have a brief adventure that ends with them having skipped over almost the entire war.
I'd have been happier with that, be interesting to see what the ship really could've done (other than just MVAM). I was never a huge fan of the Galaxy-Class, really far too big and misshaped to be a really good looking ship.I assumed the Excalibur-A would have been a Prometheus-class because, as far back as 1998, John Ordover was talking about replacing the Excalibur with a Prometheus-class ship.
I'd have been happier with that, be interesting to see what the ship really could've done (other than just MVAM). I was never a huge fan of the Galaxy-Class, really far too big and misshaped to be a really good looking ship.
I thought stage five was "You mean he's still alive?" But sums it up...The nature of typecasting according to Ricardo Montalban (who I recall did SOMETHING in Star Trek) was that it was actually desirable to a point because it meant you had made an impression in the minds of executives that they thought of you for a role.
I also love his "five stages of an actor."
- Who is Ricardo Montalbán?
- Get me Ricardo Montalbán.
- Get me a Ricardo Montalbán type.
- Get me a young Ricardo Montalbán.
- Who is Ricardo Montalbán?
I liked all of the hero ships being classes, so I was a little annoyed when we ended up with two Galaxy classes in New Frontier.By contrast I was really excited to find out the Excalibur was a Galaxy class. I always felt they were underused in the Star Trek universe with the Enterprise being the only one of note (barring the one blown up by the Dominion). I was giddy with excitement when I first saw the Galaxy-class bridge in Bridge Commander and it lended a gravitas to Calhoun's missions just because he was flying around the same kind of vessel as Captain Picard.
In a very weird, entirely 14 year old me mindset, it was a way of illustrating he was in the big leagues.
I suspect this was my RPG mindset as West End Games Star Wars always used "Victory" Star Destroyers rather than "Imperial" Star Destroyers in their adventures as if they were saying you were in the Minors compared to Han, Luke, and Leia.
I never felt as strongly about the Sovereign class.
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