Do you mean the runabout is as ugly as the defiant is pretty?Not sure what consistent look means in this context because the runabout is about as ugly a standout as the Defiant.
Do you mean the runabout is as ugly as the defiant is pretty?Not sure what consistent look means in this context because the runabout is about as ugly a standout as the Defiant.
Neither. Both are hideous.Do you mean the runabout is as ugly as the defiant is pretty?
Not saying that its embodient is of functionality. I'm just saying that seeing it among TNG era ships doesn't feel like a through line of similar designTo me, the Defiant aesthetic suggests an embodiment of the principle that function determines form. It's intended to be a bleeding-edge prototype. All of that is communicated perfectly by the model.
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I'm no artist, and this is super-crude, but you get the idea. The DS9 Defiant has always looked to me like a bunch of pieces that don't really go together all that well.
Unpopular opinion among Trekkies, but I honestly really hate the late 24th century ship design trend.
Voyager, Enterprise E, Defiant, Prometheus. They all start to take this weird "aerodynamic" and ultra-aggressive look.
It wasn't, and they said as much when it was introduced. For me, it was a welcome and expansive departure from Connie derivatives.Not saying that its embodient is of functionality. I'm just saying that seeing it among TNG era ships doesn't feel like a through line of similar design
I think you mean, 75% USS Kelvin, 15% USS Vengeance, 5%TMP and 5% TOS.and the Discos interiors were about 70 percent VOY, 20 percent TMP and 10 percent TOS.
I think you mean, 75% USS Kelvin, 15% USS Vengeance, 5%TMP and 5% TOS.
I'm not convinced...Nah. Kelvin and vengeance barely made an impression, and were derivative of the the TMP era anyway (or Khan Era.) All those brushed steel surfaces? The galley? Owed more to Voyager.
Intrepid and the Warp Delta are the only Starfleet designs that are all that original for Enterprise
We are discussing "consistency" and the fact that the producers of Discovery are not actually borrowing designs from previous incarnations of Star Trek in part or in whole.
And this is the confusion we have with this "design language" business. All of these ships were designed from scratch and introduced in the very first episode. Where 1980s and 90s Trek would have just given you 20 modified AMT kits of of the Enterprise-A, -D and Excelsior, where Voyager would have just used the CG models from "First Contact" plus one or two new designs, where even Enterprise would have given you two original ships and three recycled ones that you aren't meant to clearly see, Discovery starts out with a dozen completely new designs that don't borrow architecture or designs from past ships. The "design language" we're used to seeing disappears because the designs aren't loosely or indirectly based on anything we've already seen.
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