Gladly.Sure ... Tell the TNG Faithful, "Hey, guys! We're throwing your show over the side!"
Gladly.Sure ... Tell the TNG Faithful, "Hey, guys! We're throwing your show over the side!"
Sure ... Tell the TNG Faithful, "Hey, guys! We're throwing your show over the side!"
You use the past as the backdrop. You have Kirk, Spock McCoy, the Enterprise, then you blow the rest of it up and start over.
TNG is still there. The movies are still there. The “blessed” Picard season 3 is still there. It all can still be used as a backdrop for the new continuity. I don’t see the issue.
The possible trouble with this is that a good idea for a story comes along but it has to be checked against the rules, which I think can end up limiting the universe (though I really like the existence of pseudo-magic and wish they'd bring some more of TOS' fantasy elements back, which might be a minority opinion).My personal tastes would be to try and jettison some of the silliness of the setting and rebuild as something more internally consistent and grounded, if not exactly hard sci-fi. Ditch the weird things like ESP and pseudo magic powers. Maybe a better explanation of how all the races could interbreed is that the Iconians seeded them all, and they're really just genetically modified humans? Come up with more consistent rules for how things like AI, genetic augmentation, etc. are used within the setting. Then build up a story with this consistent and deep base of worldbuilding.
Do we keep the post-TOS series as a backdrop or do we blow up everything post-TOS and start over?
Which is it?
TNG cared so little for internal continuity that the first season had a 53 page world bible that only expanded from there into what was basically the various "technical manuals".Yeah, it's become a curse for sure. The hyper-insistence on canon adherence among fans baffles me given that TOS and TNG both clearly didn't care about internal continuity and just put out whatever they thought would make a good story even if it contradicted earlier episodes, which is the correct way to go with Star Trek IMO and is part of its strength as a format.

Exactly.The universe ends up feeling incredibly rich and varied precisely because it has no set of internal rules or fictional backstory it's duty-bound to follow; the only rules are loose storytelling devices like "phasers have stun" and "Spock can do mind-melds" but beyond that literally anything can happen.
Probably minority opinion but I'm with you.though I really like the existence of pseudo-magic and wish they'd bring some more of TOS' fantasy elements back, which might be a minority opinion).
That's what I liked about JMS' "Reboot the Universe" pitch he did back in 2004. Jettison everything and start over from the basics of TOS. Let the show define its own path without having a a foot in the other established canon.To me, if you're going to go full hard reboot, this is what you want. That is to say, freed from continuity, you can pick and choose which parts of the past to ignore, to embrace, and most excitingly, to reinterpret.
Of course, you can tell a good story as you wish to without nullifying pre-established facts by incorporating time travel, holodecks, "Wonderful Life"-style what-ifs, dreams, alternate realities, locations that break the rules, etc.
The possible trouble with this is that a good idea for a story comes along but it has to be checked against the rules, which I think can end up limiting the universe (though I really like the existence of pseudo-magic and wish they'd bring some more of TOS' fantasy elements back, which might be a minority opinion).
Part of the strength of an episodic series like Star Trek is that every story expands the setting in implicit ways - we know that Kirk is travelling through a dreamlike sea of godlike entities, witches, doomed planets, ancient entities, advanced energy lifeforms, ancient Greeks who torture people for fun (???), brains who bet on arena combat, etc, which largely is a result of so many different writers with varied ideas trying their hand at the show, each able to tell their own story without worrying about a wider continuity.
The universe ends up feeling incredibly rich and varied precisely because it has no set of internal rules or fictional backstory it's duty-bound to follow; the only rules are loose storytelling devices like "phasers have stun" and "Spock can do mind-melds" but beyond that literally anything can happen.
Truth is a hard pill to swallow.God. The negativity is palpable. And eye-rolling.
I think you can have serious stories without tight continuity or wider degree of worldbuilding, and TOS did it often - I guess the trick is that you have to rely on the audience to trust that each episode is an iteration of the setting/characters, rather than akin to a chapter in a wider novel, and that each individual story is free to use those characters and ideas in unique ways without an obligation to fit with past or future episodes.I get your point here, but I think this gets to a problem that speculative fiction generally falls into...
Truth is a hard pill to swallow.
I see very little truth from your naysaying.
As others have pointed out, Star Trek has been “dying” for 20 years. Yet a new show just premiered last week and seems to be doing okay. Let me know when it actually goes to hospice.
Also, if Star Trek “dies,” I will be just fine.
To give the obvious response here - Ferengi have energy whips and are cannibals, until they aren't. Humans refuse to eat non-replicated meat in the future, until they consider it a prized delicacy. Warp speed tears apart subspace and is banned, until the plot requires us to go higher than Warp 7 to signal urgency. etc. Characters' motivations and worldviews change fairly frequently too - Worf firmly says men and women are equal in "Suddenly Human", then suddenly is misogynistic in "The Outcast".TNG cared so little for internal continuity that the first season had a 53 page world bible that only expanded from there into what was basically the various "technical manuals".![]()
i've been a trek fan most of my life , since age of 11.Of course youll be just fine. Im glad for you. But others here have supported and cared about Star Trek for their whole lives its a downer. To see what the Genes and others started go out this way and with shows that bear little resemblance to older Trek from 1966 to 2005 is very sad to watch.
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