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The weirdly small and empty universe of Discovery

You can see a map in a few episodes, it’s a few hundred light years it seems
I don't know that we've seen anything on the map that gives clear indications of scale, but that's just me.

Discovery has a crew of 134. If they operate 3 shifts, that's 45 people on duty per shift and 34 if they operate 4 shifts.

Big (750m vs TOS' 300m), empty (134 vs 430) ship.:shrug:
You're assuming the scientists on board would also operate in shifts. That is not a safe assumption. Astronauts and science specialists in oceanographic ships pretty much schedule their tasks around when their experiments need to get done vs. when they need to eat, sleep, rest, exercise and poop.
 
Oh whatever. My point is it's larger than the Constitution with nearly three hundred less people aboard. Empty hallways shouldn't be much of a surprise. At all.

Ah, the Thermian Argument. The showrunners could easily have set the crew compliment at 1000 and filled the sets with extras if they wanted to, but for some reason they didn't. Why? Does it serve the show in any way besides saving money?
 
I've never been a known a show that is this divisive lol.
The way I see it is, they have a dense plot that, even with a 15 episode season necessitates very fast paced storytelling.

This has left little room for elements that we are used to in Star Trek. That being said, I have personally been impressed with the breadth, variety, and even downright weirdness of this incarnation's depiction of the trek universe. There are a broad variety of aliens, many of them not remotely humanoid (the spore network being Exhibit A).

Likwise, the few planets that have been depicted have been quite different from each other.

And finally the amount of new starship types introduced... I have a good sense of USS Discovery being part of a much larger fleet.
With only eleven episodes aired, I've been quite happy with the way the Star Trek universe has been depicted. After what I hope will be many seasons of Discovery, I have a lot of confidence that the galaxy will seem broad/complex enough to satisfy most Star Trek fans - and this is coming from a natural pessimist haha.
 
Regarding the Discovery vs Connie classes, we don't know what role the Discovery is supposed to fit. Connies are multi-function vessels. They serve a multitude of roles. The Discovery (and her sister ship which was destroyed and I forgot the name already), might only be experimental. Obviously they're armed to the teeth and may be capable of carrying out the multipurpose roles of the Connies, but Starfleet's mission for them immediately was to only prove the spore drive technology.

If Discovery's mission is only to prove the spore drive and operate close to home, then Starfleet probably didn't see a reason to staff her with a full crew, just enough to do the job. Furthermore, fewer crew members means fewer people aware of this top secret research project.

Lorca may be exceeding Starfleet's mandate by directly engaging the Klingons.
They are experimental; but in the third episode, it was stated these Class ships are mostly Science Vessels with a number of science labs aboard. Also, I don't think they've been shown as "Armed to the teeth" per se - their use of the Spore Drive allowed them to pop in - do a quick strike - and pop out before the Enemy could bring it's full firepower (often with multiple ships) to bear on the Discovery.

If the Discovery only had standard Warp Engines - it likely would have been destroyed multiple times already trying to escape such a situation VS multiple foes.
 
All valid observations I believe. Having said that I also believe, and this will probably anger everyone, this incarnation of Star Trek is fundamentally different from all that came before. This is serialized, "Peak-TV" made for an audience that knows what Game Of Thrones is. That is all they care about. That focus. This isn't TNG and they're not going to show the Bynars hijack a galaxy-class starship out of a starbase. It's just not the same Star Trek. The same rules do not apply anymore, for good or ill. Whether that pisses people off or they embrace this change is up to them.
 
Outside of some issues with writing, one of my biggest issues with Discovery is pretty simple: Where is everyone??? This is basically two related issues. The "small universe" issue and the "empty universe" issue.

Despite being a series which takes place in the vastness of space, Discovery seems to be quite a confined series. We spend the vast majority of our time on Discovery or other ships. Absent flashbacks, there have been only four occasions where we have even seen a planet's surface to date, and in two of those cases it was for less than a minute.

Space travel is also shown as being really, really fast. Sure, Discovery has a Spore Drive which allows it to get anywhere more or less instantaneously, but other ships are shown to be able to arrive in a system within a manner of hours. Subspace communications seem to be much easier than in other Trek series. Sarek can have an instantaneous telepathic link across hundreds of light years. Hell, the pilot episode even had mention of the beacon being seen parsecs away, even though light can only travel at the speed of light.

We also keep running into the same small cast of recurring characters again and again. To an extent all latter-day Treks did this, but the serialized nature of Discovery means it's been taken to the next level. So, for example, we meet Mudd in the fifth episode, and then see him again in the seventh. Or admiral Cornwell just happens to be on the Klingon Ship of the Dead in just the right location to be rescued. And of course, the same thing is now happening in the Mirror Universe, but that is part of the trope, so it's more forgivable here.

Discovery's backdrop doesn't just seem weirdly small though, it seems oddly empty. Discovery always seems curiously understaffed, with few crew ever seen outside of the mess hall or the bridge. Often Culber was shown working totally alone in sick bay, with no sign of the CMO. One of the planets we have visited was uninhabited except for CGI energy beings. The most recent planet in the MU seemed to have a small rebel base, but no civilian inhabitants. We've seen briefing rooms in starbases, but not the actual starbases themselves. Did the showrunners blow all their money on effects, so that enough wasn't available for extras?

Anyway, I just wondered if anyone else was a bit bothered by this.
It is very ship oriented and very core cast oriented. That seems rather at odds with the concept of 'discovery' until you realise the discovery (mycelial network/spore drive) is also in ship. Even now in another universe the brief moment on a planet was confined mainly to a meeting, otherwise we are back safely to the ship sets. Costumes have really defined the difference between the two universes.

I think it's hilarious that Tilly was talking Saru into being in charge of Stamet's care. Now keep in mind he is not only a valuable crew member but he is the key to the ship's drive system. Heaven forbid we see the CMO. I mean excuse my language, but for f**k's sake, what kind of skeleton crew idiocy is that?? When those two other medical officers ran in like extras I was shocked. Did they get the actors off the street or something? One is not used to seeing fresh faces. (I wonder if they'll put different uniforms on those two and use them in other scenes, lol).
 
It felt really small in the last two episodes when we hear from other ships, see weapons fire from their ships but don't see the ships themselves.
 
Blame JJ and limited millennial attention-spans for that one.
No. JJ is not the reason for every bad thing in Star Trek!

But back to the OP's point, as has already been mentioned the Federation is at war and the Spore Drive is ebing used to aid that effort, other ships like the Enterprise might be doing exploring but the Discovery is on the front lines. As for the samll crew size, you might want to keep it as small as possible due to the highly classifed nature of the spore drive the more people work on a project the high the chance o leak occuring even if it's an accidental leak.
This. They are on the frontier and dealing with highly classified tech (There are only two like her in the fleet! Sorry, Kirk).
 
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I don't even understand the complaint that Cornwell was on the ship of the dead. Where else was she supposed to be after being captured and delivered to the guy flying around on the ship of the dead? Similarly, we see Mudd a second time because he was after revenge, just like he told Lorca when he was abandoned. This isn't TNG where the "captured admiral" plot gets wrapped up in 44 minutes, or where an adversary is in one episode and then might show up in another season.

It also seems odd to complain that we see the same crew members again and again, or that we only see them in the places that the characters spend time like the mess and bridge. Having a stable set of minor bridge characters makes a lot more sense than the usual random nameless extras we get.
 
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It's more like 100 or so less, as the crew of the ENT was only around 200ish around this time as per "The Cage"
One hundred. The Pike era Connie only had 200-odd personnel.
The size of the Enterprise itself stayed the same in the rest of TOS as it was in The Cage. in the rest of TOS it had a crew of 400. 130 is nearly three hundred less than 400.

Sometimes, people clearly just want to be nitpicky for nitpicking sakes. And yes, I do realize the irony of that statement coming from me.


 
I'll admit guys that some of my critiques about the same recurring characters implausibly showing up over and over again is a bit unfair, since most shows do this. On the other hand, most shows take place in a city or town, not an area spanning tens of light years.

Similarly, even though I hate it, I didn't talk about how the main characters do everything, because every Trek has had that stupid trope. Although I have noticed that after the third episode, Discovery did stop sending expendable extras (red shirts, without the red shirt) on the away missions.

To be fair, a more accurate sci-fi series in some ways should feel "small". In a real space travel scenario, most of your time would be spent with a pretty small group of people, relatively speaking.

True. But it would also take weeks to months to get to your destination.

All valid observations I believe. Having said that I also believe, and this will probably anger everyone, this incarnation of Star Trek is fundamentally different from all that came before. This is serialized, "Peak-TV" made for an audience that knows what Game Of Thrones is. That is all they care about. That focus.

This is a dumb reason to have a tiny cast, few guest actors, and limited extras though. Game of Thrones is well known for having loads and loads of characters, extras numbering in the hundreds in many shots, and on-location shooting. It feels epic. Even a much lower budget show like The Expanse has a much more "full" seeming world than Discovery.

I'm less informed about "Peak TV" outside of speculative fiction (I don't watch much non-genre fictional TV, it bores me) but to the extent I know about it, extended casts with lots of recurring characters are more the norm now than a half dozen characters who do virtually everything.

But the discussion of Game of Thrones also gets back to another issue with the show - the showrunners couldn't decide what they wanted it to be.

On one hand, they seemed like they wanted to set it up to be a tight character study on Micheal Burnham - focusing the show on a small cast, keeping it mostly confined to the ship, etc. The show could have been amazing if they kept it to these limited stakes - just following one disgraced former XO as she works towards redemption during a Klingon-Federation war. After all, all compelling stories are ultimately about the characters - get that right, and "small stakes" are big enough to care.

But at the same time, they felt the need to make the series "epic" and wide ranging. They gave Burnham a unique backstory of not only being raised by Vulcans, but Spock's adoptive sister. They made her the first mutineer in Starfleet history. They made her the cause for the war - or at least, had her widely believed to be the cause. And then once she hit bottom, they gave her a berth on the most advanced ship in the Federation, which was testing an advanced drive system never used by the Federation before (and never heard of after). Discovery became integral to turning the tide of war. All of this suggests a swashbuckling space opera.

But for all we're told about how special Burnham and the Discovery are, we aren't really shown all that much on the screen that seems epic. The show is actually very limited - almost claustrophobic feeling - in its view on the Klingon war. It's just this weird in-between space, at least for me.
 
The size of the Enterprise itself stayed the same in the rest of TOS as it was in The Cage. in the rest of TOS it had a crew of 400. 130 is nearly three hundred less than 400.

Sometimes, people clearly just want to be nitpicky for nitpicking sakes. And yes, I do realize the irony of that statement coming from me.


TOS is set 10 years later than the show for all we know in 10 years time the Discovery could have a crew similar in size to Kirk's Enterprise. All we can do to be fair is compare the size of the crews to known figures for the time period the show is set in. i.e circa Pike's Enterprise
 
The size of the Enterprise itself stayed the same in the rest of TOS as it was in The Cage. in the rest of TOS it had a crew of 400. 130 is nearly three hundred less than 400.
Wasn't the bridge module replaced with a smaller one, and a second row of windows added to the saucer to indicate a bigger ship?
 
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