Agreed. They definitely do appear to possess a Disco design aesthetic, but they thankfully don't resemble giant spiked dildos with warp engines.
It’s been a while since I’ve watched The Cage, but is it explicitly stated that there *wasn’t* some wibbly wobbly timey wimey anomaly that hurled the ship to Talos?because the expedition could never have gotten to the Talos Star Group in the first place if they hadn't had warp drive
That’s so cool! I love that explanation! I mean I know we’re only talking about one line of dialogue but that explanation borders on genius!I once read a suggestion from Doug Drexler that the "time barrier" was actually a timing problem that kept the warp coils from generating a dedicated symmetrical warp field without a separate governor. The module between the nacelles on Enterprise NX-01 was intended by Drexler to be that governor, and he saw the "breaking of the time barrier" to refer to the technological advance that eliminated the need for the governor and allowed warp engines to break warp 6.
There’s a similar story in one of the Myriad Universe collections as well - there are androids everywhere and Data and Lore run an android colony called Turing. It’s a good storyI touched on it in Department of Temporal Investigations: The Collectors.
It’s been a while since I’ve watched The Cage, but is it explicitly stated that there *wasn’t* some wibbly wobbly timey wimey anomaly that hurled the ship to Talos?
I know I’m reaching![]()
That’s so cool! I love that explanation! I mean I know we’re only talking about one line of dialogue but that explanation borders on genius!
They resemble the Kelvin Timeline D7 battle cruisers(JJ's "Klingon Warbirds")seen in the Kobayashi Maru training simulation in Trek 2009, just with more of a DSC flavor. I don't mind them so far, and if you look closer at the picture there appears to be at least one redesigned Bird-of-Prey in the fleet that looks a lot like the ones seen in both ENT and Star Trek III.
Klingon warships are finally starting to look the way they should have from the very first episode.
Well, Tyler's records know that the Columbia disappeared "in that region", instead of the trail going cold at region X and now resurfacing here at Talos.![]()
It may be telling that the records are aware of the disappearance 18 years ago, yet absolutely nothing has been done about it. If the Columbia were particularly slow by the standards of the day, a faster ship would have done a Terra Nova style check as soon as the schedule allowed. In Kirk's days, it took half a year or so to check on a missing fellow starship. Would schedules have been different back in the days of Dr Haskins' mission? Or would all ships simply have been as slow as the Columbia?i
... and trying like Hell, to at the very least, attempt to move slightly in the direction of a more "Enlightened" Society.Humanity concentrated it's efforts into greater things. Smartphones, Twitter and Facebook!
Though looking around today, one could imagine that it'll take a lot more than just the "Two Centuries" Star Trek would have us hope for.
... and trying like Hell, to at the very least, attempt to move slightly in the direction of a more "Enlightened" Society.
Though looking around today, one could imagine that it'll take a lot more than just the "Two Centuries" Star Trek would have us hope for.
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This is interesting, but doesn't make sense if you include ENT in the timeline.
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Quick way to reuse a mesh.So in STO, they made the bussards spin on all the DSC ships, except the Crossfield
I wonder if that was something on the show models we just couldn't see, or just a creative choice on the part of the game's artists.
Eh?Quick way to reuse a mesh.
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