That's why "Course: Oblivion" was so dark. Because it plays out that plunge into the galactic abyss. And when "Voyager" perishes, it's like it never existed.
In a way, I find Course: Oblivion uplifting.
That's why "Course: Oblivion" was so dark. Because it plays out that plunge into the galactic abyss. And when "Voyager" perishes, it's like it never existed.
In a way, I find Course: Oblivion uplifting.
I'm not sure Janeway ever saw 'eliminating the Borg' as a realistic option, regardless of whether she would have wanted to do so in the first place. Dealing them a crippling blow by destroying one of their transwarp hubs, yes (Endgame). Destabilizing them by encouraging a resistance movement within the Borg collective, yes (Unimatrix Zero). But eliminating them? I think that idea was only seriously considered by Starfleet in TNG's I, Borg
Reminds me of Guinan's words in Q Who.:
Q set a series of events into motion, bringing contact with the Borg much sooner than it should have come. Now, perhaps when you're ready, it might be possible to establish a relationship with them. But for now, for right now, you're just raw material to them.
I don't think we've ever seen a species the Borg were aware of they didn't consider 'raw material'. So it makes me curious what kind of species that would be.
In a way, I find Course: Oblivion uplifting.
In what way?
I find it far more real and grounded, as well as far less formulaic making it stand out compared to SG-1 and Atlantis and my favourite installment of the Stargate franchise.That garbage got axed precisely because it was far from the (lighthearted) tone of Stargate SG-1.
I find it far more real and grounded, as well as far less formulaic making it stand out compared to SG-1 and Atlantis and my favourite installment of the Stargate franchise.
I find it far more real and grounded, as well as far less formulaic making it stand out compared to SG-1 and Atlantis and my favourite installment of the Stargate franchise.
I am curious as well.
Discount the sci-fi setting and focus on how a disparate group of people, thrown together by circumstance, in a situation they aren't prepared for, don't have the resources for, facing stress and pressure on a daily basis with no let up in sight. normal people with no superhuman abilities pushed to their limits and see what happens. There is jostling for seniority, breakdowns in communication, cliques forming and standing off against one another, and just how the veil of civilisation we present falls away when our very survival is at stake and what we'll do to get by--Quark's speech on AR-558 sums up kinda what I'm getting at.Some people's definitions of realism and grounding baffles me.
those are the same humans Quark was speaking about so the claims of evolution are clearly exaggerated
I agree. Optimism doesn't mean all is well just because it ends well. It means hope in the darkest of times.VOY could've done so much to really show how the hope and optimism of the Trek future burns brightest when in the darkest of circumstances. At least, that's how it always feels to me.
I would put Discovery at the bottom of the list. Typical 21th century doom-and-gloom series.Oooo: lists are fun.
TNG
LD
TAS
VOY
TOS
SHORT TREKS
PROD
ENT
DISCO
DS9
PIC
I don't think she was pregnant: just that the treatments she got to reproduce with a Klingon were working.
Picard having fewer episodes contributes to making it darker, in my opinion. Most of the comparisons you gave between DS9 and Picard illustrate this to me: the story points you give are generally in an episode or two of a 26 episode season for DS9, but often part of the overall story that Picard is telling.
If you did choose to wipe the Borg out and were successful, how would other warp capable species such as the Klingons or Romulans and even the Vulcans view Starfleet?
Starfleet wiped out an entire species, like it it or, that would play into a much greater political issue and possible conflict or conflicts that the Federation might never recover from.
Hell, even Lexx demonstrated these things better than Voyager.Discount the sci-fi setting and focus on how a disparate group of people, thrown together by circumstance, in a situation they aren't prepared for, don't have the resources for, facing stress and pressure on a daily basis with no let up in sight. normal people with no superhuman abilities pushed to their limits and see what happens. There is jostling for seniority, breakdowns in communication, cliques forming and standing off against one another, and just how the veil of civilisation we present falls away when our very survival is at stake and what we'll do to get by--Quark's speech on AR-558 sums up kinda what I'm getting at.
RE: thread title
Nope.
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