No, not referring to the magazine. Of course it's the Gamma Quadrant.
When DS9 began, a modest attempt was made by the show's writers to develop new species in the Gamma Quadrant for us to get to know, but then something happened. As soon as the Dominion became an important story arc, all meaningful attempts at species development stopped (from the writing perspective). It became about the Big 3: the Founders, the Vorta, and the Jem-Hadar. How many GQ species can you name (without looking it up) outside of those 3, and how much attention did they receive?
I understand why that was more or less inevitable with the war, but it's an unfulfilled promise from the premise of the show: to *explore* another part of the galaxy. If anyone could provide me with a breakdown of what percentage of DS9 took place in the Alpha Quadrant versus the Gamma Quadrant, I'd be forever grateful.
Again, I know - the war. But it makes me wonder whether "the Gamma Quadrant" was ever a necessary part of the storyline to begin with. The Dominion could've been an AQ species, the wormhole could've led to their part of the Quadrant. It would've required tweaking of the plotlines, but with the same end results.
Instead, by making the Dominion the dominant factor in the GQ, we came away with the sense that we already knew the Gamma Quadrant, because the Dominion WAS the Gamma Quadrant, reigning supreme, unopposed, unchallenged. In another forum here, we've been talking about the over-familiarity with the galaxy that ST rushed to explore in the '90s and early 2000s, leaving few stones unturned between Alpha, Gamma and Delta Quadrants all getting their moments in the spotlight.
Obviously there was tons of potential to move beyond that perception, but part of me wishes the DS9 producers never would've bothered with the GQ part of the show because it was ultimately underdeveloped in a big way. They could've come back to it differently, whether in DS9 or something else that would've allowed for a worthwhile exploration of a new part of the galaxy that encompassed a lot more than the Big 3.
I liked the Big 3, but there's a big universe to explore. Beta Quadrant, anyone?
When DS9 began, a modest attempt was made by the show's writers to develop new species in the Gamma Quadrant for us to get to know, but then something happened. As soon as the Dominion became an important story arc, all meaningful attempts at species development stopped (from the writing perspective). It became about the Big 3: the Founders, the Vorta, and the Jem-Hadar. How many GQ species can you name (without looking it up) outside of those 3, and how much attention did they receive?
I understand why that was more or less inevitable with the war, but it's an unfulfilled promise from the premise of the show: to *explore* another part of the galaxy. If anyone could provide me with a breakdown of what percentage of DS9 took place in the Alpha Quadrant versus the Gamma Quadrant, I'd be forever grateful.
Again, I know - the war. But it makes me wonder whether "the Gamma Quadrant" was ever a necessary part of the storyline to begin with. The Dominion could've been an AQ species, the wormhole could've led to their part of the Quadrant. It would've required tweaking of the plotlines, but with the same end results.
Instead, by making the Dominion the dominant factor in the GQ, we came away with the sense that we already knew the Gamma Quadrant, because the Dominion WAS the Gamma Quadrant, reigning supreme, unopposed, unchallenged. In another forum here, we've been talking about the over-familiarity with the galaxy that ST rushed to explore in the '90s and early 2000s, leaving few stones unturned between Alpha, Gamma and Delta Quadrants all getting their moments in the spotlight.
Obviously there was tons of potential to move beyond that perception, but part of me wishes the DS9 producers never would've bothered with the GQ part of the show because it was ultimately underdeveloped in a big way. They could've come back to it differently, whether in DS9 or something else that would've allowed for a worthwhile exploration of a new part of the galaxy that encompassed a lot more than the Big 3.
I liked the Big 3, but there's a big universe to explore. Beta Quadrant, anyone?