I can only imagine that such a thing will eventually happen in the pages of Star Trek Ongoing.
We definitely need more exposure to the Enterprise from the parallel alternate reality, maybe with some Kirk-on-Kirk action thrown in.
I can only imagine that such a thing will eventually happen in the pages of Star Trek Ongoing.
I can only imagine that such a thing will eventually happen in the pages of Star Trek Ongoing.
We definitely need more exposure to the Enterprise from the parallel alternate reality, maybe with some Kirk-on-Kirk action thrown in.
And according to the best 23rd century physicists in the ongoing IDW comic series set in the Abramsverse, there are infinite parallel timelines.
Great. Now we're on our way to Crisis on Infinite Treks.![]()
And don't forget all the alternate Enterprise-Ds in 2370 and all the alternate Enterprise-Es in 2380.
Have you read the MU portion of the DS9 Relaunch novels? Given how many different counterparts of the same person appears in some of them, I've heard it called "Crisis on Infinite Kiras".
seriously, there's at least four that I can count: RU Kira, the Intendant, plus both RU and MU versions of Iliana Ghemor. And perhaps others as well, since RU Iliana is, IIRC, rampaging throughout the multiverse killing every alternate Kira she can!
Isn't it even less fuss to just consider it as another Star Trek without sharing a metaphysical fictional multiverse at all? :P
Isn't it even less fuss to just consider it as another Star Trek without sharing a metaphysical fictional multiverse at all? :P
What's the diff? If it's another Trek, it's another timeline. Same thing, effectively.
I guess to me it's an extra step to go from "different pieces of fiction" to "alternate timelines within the same multiverse", and if I don't have to take that step then I don't see any reason to bother.![]()
Mostly that one presumes an in-universe connection and one doesn't bother. Babylon 5 and DS9, the 80s Flash TV show and the present Flash TV show, NCIS and CSI, ER and Chicago Hope, they aren't alternate timelines or universes, they're just different shows.
Mostly that one presumes an in-universe connection and one doesn't bother. Babylon 5 and DS9, the 80s Flash TV show and the present Flash TV show, NCIS and CSI, ER and Chicago Hope, they aren't alternate timelines or universes, they're just different shows.
If you're not considering them alternate timelines because there's no crossovers, then I can see your point. I don't agree, though, since in an infinite multiverse, literally anything is possible.
Still seems like too much effort to me; why bother putting them together in any sort of framework? Just let them be separate things, I say.How about alternate universes, then? That's not the same thing as a timeline.
As I've said before, the problem with resorting to infinite universes to explain implausible alternates is that if there's an infinite number of universes, then the odds of ever reaching a single specific one become one over infinity, which equals zero. So they effectively don't exist anyway. Which makes the argument nothing more than sophistry.
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