There would have to be a good reason for it. There has to be a reason the order exists.Destruction is definitely great in Star Trek! I love watching planets blow up and be reduced to slag. Starship Troopers and Star Wars got nothing on Star Trek!
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There would have to be a good reason for it. There has to be a reason the order exists.Destruction is definitely great in Star Trek! I love watching planets blow up and be reduced to slag. Starship Troopers and Star Wars got nothing on Star Trek!
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Neutronium Hulls seem to do that.I can accept the Planet Killer and other ships being immune because technobabble shielding etc. would allow that. But in the examples I mentioned, planetary shield were either not there or not an issue (specifically the Veridian thing).
I'm glad I picked the SNW Connie as my favorite iteration of Connies.Well I guess we can accept that the Enterprise is stronger than the average Star Destroyer from Star Wars. The Enterprise can output half the power of the sun, again more than enough to destroy a planet. Han Solo claims that the entire Imperial starfleet with more power than he's ever seen wouldn't be enough to destroy Alderaan.
I guess Vader's Devastator or Executor better start fleeing if it sees the 1701 unless Vader uses the Force to gain some kind of advantage.
Fine. But almost zero foreshadowing still made it seem rushed, and definitely convoluted.Not reverse time, but a quirk of cause not having to precede effect beyond the boundaries of strict linear time. The temple where she turned into the guardian (or whatever) itself seemed to stand outside time, in some kind of extra-dimensional space. What seems like a paradox doesn't always have to be when time is looked at as fluid.
And a subplot ripped off from "The Inner Light"?
Rather than The Inner Light, the whole Pike and Batel live happily ever after bit reminded me of this:Weird they crammed a whole "Inner Light" segment in there
The continuity is still pretty bad during the Berman era, arguably even worse. In TNG's first season alone you have Data claiming to have graduated the Academy a date from fourteen years in the future, and they claim they haven't had any contact with the Romulans for fifty years a handful of episodes after it was established Starfleet and Romulan ships were engaged in battle concurrently with the events of that episode (Angel One). To say nothing of other continuity issues throughout the other shows like Sisko claiming his father was dead in DS9's second season, then his father went on to guest star in several episodes later in the series. Or hell, when they aired, many fans claimed Voyager and Enterprise were the ones that had no respect for continuity and were making a mess of Trek canon, and now you're claiming they're the ones which got things right?There are entire Generations of Trekkies whose starting point wasn't TOS
Many of my generation started with TNG > DS9 > VOY > ENT and never bothering with TOS.
So our experience with Trek Continuity is vastly different.
I mean, given how many Starfleet Captains and Admirals turn out to be evil, it's obvious Starfleet doesn't engage in any kind of psychological screening for its command officers at all.You think Starfleet would have some sort of psychological screening to watch out for this when choosing officers to lead their finest ship.
Okay, but it's true. Congrats, you watched it.And stop claiming to be of a generation that never bothered with TOS. I am of the generation which grew up in the Berman era with TNG being my introduction to Star Trek. I've still found time to watch TOS and become familiar with it. Stop using your age as an excuse for never having watched TOS.
Nah it was a different "ripoff". The what if scenario, not the live a different person's life scenario.And a subplot ripped off from "The Inner Light"?
the Inner Light /Visitor part was my favourite part of the episode. Found it touching. Perfectly Star Trek. It should have been the whole episode.I liked the episode, but mostly for the Visitor-type use of a possible future. That could have been ... that should have been the entire episode. The mythos contrivance should have been left on the cutting room floor.
TATV was its own level of badness. It was described as a love letter to the fans. Thankfully, no such association was made with this season finale.
I am not fully buying the reason for why this season didn't work. Season 2 of TNG was impacted by the writer's strike. They were working on a tighter schedule, yet they managed to make several very good episodes. I can't think of any episodes from SNW that were at the same level as The Measure Of A Man, A Matter of Honor, or Q Who.
Buffy is one of my other favourite franchises, and it does seem someone on the SNW writing staff is a Buffy/Angel fan. Musicals, puppet episodes, and now we have Chosen Ones and First EvilsBuffy was a great show but I'm not sure why they think Buffy villains are a good fit for Star Trek. Speaking of the Buffyverse, wasn't there supposed to be a muppet episode or something? Doesn't sound like a good idea but it would probably be better than this.
The Kirk Spock Mind Meld Synchronicity might be the most lamely shoehorned contrivance I've ever seen in any form of media ever, not to mention the general disgustingness of it.
And LMAO at Pike's line, but at least it prompted a rewatch of:
Had to give it a 1. It was maybe a 3 if they just cut out the Kirk/Spock thing, but that sullies the whole franchise and the people involved should be ashamed.
Voyager and Enterprise have become fan darlings, suddenly beloved. Retconning is not just for TV shows it seems.Or hell, when they aired, many fans claimed Voyager and Enterprise were the ones that had no respect for continuity and were making a mess of Trek canon, and now you're claiming they're the ones which got things right?
Clearly.mean, given how many Starfleet Captains and Admirals turn out to be evil, it's obvious Starfleet doesn't engage in any kind of psychological screening for its command officers at all
Eh. They didn't settle on "mind meld" until Spectre of the Gun. It was always called something different up until then: the mind touch, the mind fusion, the "ancient technique of the joining of two minds." No matter what, it's still this:Even then fans are able to wring together continuity fixes. Even here, the mind meld with Kirk wasn't a retrieval of information, so Spock's claim in Dagger of the Mind that he never performed an 'ancient Vulcan technique' on a human before (he didn't actually call it a mind meld) could still fit if we assume that Vulcans have more specific definitions for types of mind melds.
Kirk and Spock WERE established as being close though early on. I believe in the Man Trap (could be wrong though but it was a S1 episode), which was literally the first episode aired, Uhura tells Spock that Kirk is "the closest thing you have to a friend" (a line which punches harder now that it's canonically established that Uhura knew Spock far longer than Kirk did).
Since Trek started all ship's shields and weapons (Federation, Klingon, Romulan, et. al.) are as stong, or work in whatever way heightens the drama/is part of a plot point for the story they're telling that week.The bigger implication is "How Strong are your frigging Shields"
If your Phasers are that strong, and you're shrugging multiple blasts off of standard Phasers, how much more power did they just increase the SNW ships by?
It's not just "Bigger Ships", but also Bigger Power Output in Weaponry & Shields.
Remember in the end of Discovery S2, they were shrugging off tons of Phaser Fire from Drones and Capital Ships for how long during the final battle?
There are some serious implications to what they just did.
Don't you find it fascinating how things have changed and basic things like "the Shields are @ ###%" is now the standard way to report Shield info.Since Trek started all ship's shields and weapons (Federation, Klingon, Romulan, et. al.) are as stong, or work in whatever way heightens the drama/is part of a plot point for the story they're telling that week.
And it's interesting to note for that all the ship battles portrayed in TOS (and there were a number of them) - the ONLY time 'percetage of shield power -m IE 50%, 25%, etc.) was ever mentioned was in TOS S2 The Changling.
Unlike the TOS Teature films and the Berman Era and Kurtzman Era stuff that often mentioned remaining shield power in percentages, TOS used:
"Deflector slields are holding..."
"The shields are still up..."
"The shields are gone/down..."
"Deflector shields are strained..."
"Deflector Power won't last much longer..."
">Deflector Facing< will not withstand another full charge..."
So, overall they never got too technical about them or 'shield power' in general during TOS' run.
Depends on what you mean, I suppose.Maybe everything after Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (where the Eugenics Wars were shifted) really is an alternate timeline (or a "close enough" timeline).
So it's all "Prime Timeline", but "timeline" is a bit of a flexible term. "Redemption" is generally considered part of the same timeline as "Encounter at Farpoint", but Tasha Yar's going back in time definitely shifted things a bit. So you can arguably have a changed timeline that's not an alternate timeline (as with the changes described in "T&T&T", at least depending on how you're using the terms.https://www.tvguide.com/news/star-trek-strange-new-world-harry-mudd-episode-william-shatner/ said:"I think continuity is the devil we know," said Goldsman. "And so we're always trying to, as you saw in [Season 3's "Terrarium"], we do a lot to then do some resetting of awareness of the Gorn and how we can start to drive towards the time of 'Arena' [The The Original Series episode that introduced the alien race] and nobody having seen a Gorn, apparently, before Kirk in that moment. So we are always aware of that, despite that there are folks on the internet who are like, 'Just acknowledge it's an alt-timeline and stop worrying about it!' But we don't. We like to try to stay in the Prime Timeline in our imaginations."
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