And you can't learn how to deal with the possibility of being dead from playing a video game. Which is why field training beats simulations.Can't learn if you're dead, which is why simulations beat field training.
And you can't learn how to deal with the possibility of being dead from playing a video game. Which is why field training beats simulations.Can't learn if you're dead, which is why simulations beat field training.
Yeah I was thinking that too. Loved the skull helmets and crowns they were wearing though. Made them look more intimidating.I will write my review tomorrow, but one thing I want to address that I noticed.
The Furies: they reminded me of the ambassador to the Drakh in BABYLON 5's "Lines of Communication". The sort of phase shifting of the face was very much like that.
So the Furies aren’t the aliens from the novels,
Non-native speaker here. Isn't there a verb missing? Like, "Come, let's get/move/go away"?Presumably from the Billy Waggledagger quote, "Come, let's away to prison ..." from Lear
It does not technically need a verb. lets's/ let us, serves the function.Non-native speaker here. Isn't there a verb missing? Like, "Come, let's get/move/go away"?
Considering how many holodeck safety protocol failures occurred in the various series, was it really safer than field training?They were very specifically using simulators and holodecks for training in the 23rd/24th century's...
So how old was that ship supposed to be? If memory serves, they said over a century old, but the crew in the comics were depicted in TOR uniforms, plus the exterior and interior of the bridge were from that era.
Stream of consciousness incoming...
Not really sure how I feel about this episode, but my problems with it stem from more logical and structural issues than anything else.
Like it's still not clear why they just let Braka go in the first episode, after they basically murdered everyone else on his ship. Obviously he needed to escape because he's the main villain so fine, but the way he was written off the pilot made no sense then and it just comes back to me now.
The conceit of the exercise is strange too... why go through all that trouble when they presumably have even more advanced holodecks than the ones we've seen in the 24th century? They go out of their way to reset the ship after every exercise? Would that be like having Navy cadet dive teams go to the USS Arizona for exercises and then having another dive team go and scrub everything just to get it ready for the next exercise?
So not only does Braka and the bat aliens speak English, they also speak French and know what "bon appetite" means and how it's meant to be a troll because they purposefully sent an easily decrypted message in two human languages. Somehow Braka knows the Sound of Music to be able to make a reference that he assumes Ake and the others would understand, and he also knows how to use a record player. Yeah, it's a nitpick, but I don't get why he needed to be an alien at that point... just make him human. What's the difference?
There's also Genesis knowing the idiom needle in a haystack, but I just try my best to ignore that stuff from the regular cast now.
As for the meat of the episode, it's interesting because I'm not sure what the A and B stories are this week. It almost feels like what happens to the cadets is pretty incidental compared to the Ake/Braka storyline. And if anything the cadet storyline felt like a bit of a letdown because of how they've depicted the whole "warring frat houses" thing. I guess it's sad that B'Avi does, but not because it's B'Avi in particular, but because it's just generally sad when someone dies. If they at least did an episode from the War College's perspective, then maybe it wouldn't feel like a red shirt death. I get you're not going to kill any of the main cast, and I get the beat of making the cadets - Braka refers to them as teens - experience death first hand... but killing two people I don't really know just makes it a bit hollow for me as an audience member.
Still, I thought the Tarima reveal of being a Tam Elbrun-esque figure was an interesting development at least. And showing how SAM is vulnerable, considering she had previously made herself basically impervious to weapons fire in the laser tag episode, at least explains why she can't just tank everything I guess. But the Miyazaki and the lore of the crew... I don't know if Tales From the Frontier is a real comic book, but without any kind of connection to it as an audience member it's similar to B'Avi's death where I guess it's sad that a crew lost their lives but oh well. They might as well be the dead people on Station J119 that all got massacred in this episode.
I think the Ake/Braka thing was more interesting, even though I don't like how it was basically two scenes where the characters monologued at each other. It reminded me of why I didn't like Shaw in Picard S3, because they just had him yell at Picard instead of doing or showing anything that would explain that relationship. So you get a lore dump of Ake letting her son die when faced with a "no win scenario". Like the idea is fine and turning it into an Eddington moment of the Federation being the Borg is fine too, especially if connected to the Klingon episode and Jay-Den's argument about how the Federation tries to force its culture onto the Klingons... I just wish it was presented better.
I *have* to assume that the "Star Trek" thing to do would be that Ake brings Braka to justice and not "end him" as the Admiral suggests at the end of the episode. Like that seems to be the only logical solution to this. Or at least it is like a classic Kirk battle where Ake offers Braka a chance to surrender but he chooses to die instead, maybe taking the secret of Caleb's mother with him. But I'm invested in seeing how that turns out, assuming they wrap it up this season.
Her mother is human as Ake is a lanthanite/human hybridNusifer Braka?
Last Starship has the crew of the Omega in uniforms practically identical to the TOS ones.
Established that Ake's father is Lanthanite, no word as to her mother.
HE WAS TWO DAYS FROM RETIREMENT!It was a lot more serious / darker than pretty much the rest of the season so far. I gave it a 9, also my highest grade of the season so far.
It does go to show you, never mention upcoming shore leave...
The usual trope of the Extra/Guest Character giving more back story leads to their imminent demise.HE WAS TWO DAYS FROM RETIREMENT!
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