Like pre "Q-Who" Guinan.

Like pre "Q-Who" Guinan.
Well, as we all know Star Trek never involved combat.
*goes and watches Where No Man Has Gone Before* That's right Kirk. Kick his ass.
Yeah, and it would be unnecessarily mannered to introduce every "gimmick" as a Chekhov's Gun - that is to say, to have some conversation or incident establish the existence of Starfleet Speed prior to the need to use it. Dramatically speaking, when would you expect the characters to talk about this stuff? When they need to use it, if at all. That's when. It's something they'd take for granted.
I loved how Picard was also made an archeologist off the cuff too (because the story in TNG S2 Contagion needed him to be one.)![]()
And what a great 10 seconds it was!Indeed. Look at DS9's The Magnificent Ferengi. Sisko featured for all of 10 seconds:
Indeed, it can be argued that one of the pleasures of watching (or reading) a continuing series is to learn more about characters, their world, and even their pasts over time.
You're not supposed to know everything there is to know about the people and places right away, or even by the end of the first episode, season, novel, or origin story.
And as for that other franchise, Luke Skywalker's mom didn't even get a name until the Prequel Trilogy, decades after the original movies.
They read books. And then Lucas pulled the rug out from under them.To go a bit further off topic, how did Star Wars fans deal with that between 1977 and 1999? Was there tons of fan speculation?
... and probably despised that it was necessary.One of M'Benga's routine assignments was dispensing it to combat troops. He used it; he kept some for "emergencies."
To go a bit further off topic, how did Star Wars fans deal with that between 1977 and 1999? Was there tons of fan speculation?
I do like how the brutal nature of the serum sort of fits in with what we knew about M'Benga in TOS. Willing to use extreme physical means to stimulate somebody (as when he repeatedly smacked Spock as hard as he could to accelerate his recovery from his life-threatening wound). M'Benga is willing to get rough and ready in 2259 or 2260 and he's still up for a good smack or five in 2267 and 2268.
I suppose it's possible that this drug showing up is supposed to be set-up for some future storyline, but I didn't read it that way at all. It just struck me as adding in character detail about M'Benga and to some degree Chapel.
It reveals something signficant about the Doctor and his wartime experiences that he and Chapel both view the drug with some revulsion, but he admit that he carries it with him all the time. That's some trauma, there. Dude's sleeping with a gun.
Likewise, folks online are speculating that it represents some secret research they engaged in - the suggestion is that this stuff is some kind of innovation or breakthrough or secret weapon or similar Big Fucking Deal.
I'd rather that were turned around: assume this kind of drugging was commonplace during the war. One of M'Benga's routine assignments was dispensing it to combat troops. He used it; he kept some for "emergencies."
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