From ENT's "Borderland":But pretty much everything since TNG has gone with the Eugenics War/WW3 being a 21st century conflict
PHLOX: (examining the DNA of the augments) "This is extremely sophisticated work for twentieth-century Earth."
From ENT's "Borderland":But pretty much everything since TNG has gone with the Eugenics War/WW3 being a 21st century conflict
Huh.From ENT's "Borderland":
PHLOX: (examining the DNA of the augments) "This is extremely sophisticated work for twentieth-century Earth."
The kid "T&T&T" grows up to be the guy in TWOK. He's still a a "superman" from the past who was placed in suspended animation and revived by Kirk and company. "T&T&T" tells us that the 1996 version happened.Explain to me how SNW's "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" and Wrath of Khan fit together.
We're not talking about a vague reference on a screen in the background that gets changed, but the very nature of the character and his backstory DOES NOT FIT with entire scenes of TOS and Wrath of Khan.
KHAN: Do you mean he never told you the tale? To amuse your captain? No? Never told you how the Enterprise picked up the Botany Bay, lost in space from the year 1996, myself and the ship's company in cryogenic freeze.
T&T&T tells us that the 1996 version NEVER happened, and that this one, did, instead.The kid "T&T&T" grows up to be the guy in TWOK. He's still a a "superman" from the past who was placed in suspended animation and revived by Kirk and company. "T&T&T" tells us that the 1996 version happened.
Same way we explain all the other TATI stuff. "Space Seed" claims Khan has been asleep for 200 years,
KIRK: How long have you been sleeping? Two centuries we estimate. Landing party to Enterprise. Come in.
Does TOS now take place in 2196 because of that line? How do we square that with all of the other data points that contradict that? Did all those references "erase' all of "Space Seed" and TWOK? Or just the couple of contradictions?
Fiction is mutable.
Even in PIC Season 2 the genetic engineering research file marked "PROJECT KHAN" came from 1996. So even if the Eugenics Wars themselves are no longer in the 1990s the research that created the Augments is still from the 20th century.
I mean, I just plain don't care for PIC Season 2 and at least it has that.
It had to have happened for that one to have happen instead. Someone went back in time and changed things.T&T&T tells us that the 1996 version NEVER happened, and that this one, did, instead.
Given Khan's apparent age in "Space Seed" the first experiments would have to be from the 1930s or earlier.That fits with SNW though - the file in 1996, creaetd the kid after 1996, that we see in the 2020s.
The original Khan's file would have been from some point well before '96, because the child was an emperor or whatever before 1996, and was exiled in 1996.
I felt the same initially. However, I've watched several TNG reaction vids / channels since Picard and thankfully it's become a distant memory.I used to agree with you on this stance, until Star Trek: Picard. Now, when I watch TNG all I see is Robot Picard. It really did ruin TNG for me.
Given Khan's apparent age in "Space Seed" the first experiments would have to be from the 1930s or earlier.![]()
1940s then1996 - 46 (age of Ricardo) = 1950, maybe later, if the augments age fast, but it woudln't have said 1996. maybe 1966 (nice easter egg for space seed lol.)
Cumberkhan and Montalkhan.1959 would tie in with Khan's stated age in STID ("300-year-old frozen man") but even in that case the Cumberbatch Khan would be the same Khan as Montalban since the Botany Bay departed Earth two centuries before the Narada changed history to create the Kelvin Timeline. So his origin story should still be the same as the TOS and TWOK Khan's.
Interesting you cite Doctor Who as an example of an ongoing universe with consistent continuity over decades, given one of its more infamous trademarks is that it's always been inconsistent. I mean hell, this is the show which couldn't even remember if it took place in the 1970s or 80s and one of its most renowned writers even said in an interview "continuity is only whatever I can remember."I think that's partly Star Trek's fault. And Doctor Who, Star Wars etc. These franchises introduced the concept of an ongoing cinematic/television universe with consistent continuity over decades.
I think it's fairly consistent, especially considering that past episodes weren't even available to watch for a long while. I started Doctor Who in 2010 with the Matt Smith Doctor, then went back and watched the classic era a few years later, and it was great watching all the pieces starting to slot into place. The introduction of Gallifrey, the appearance of the Master, and so on.Interesting you cite Doctor Who as an example of an ongoing universe with consistent continuity over decades, given one of its more infamous trademarks is that it's always been inconsistent. I mean hell, this is the show which couldn't even remember if it took place in the 1970s or 80s and one of its most renowned writers even said in an interview "continuity is only whatever I can remember."
Why does new shows change this?still happened as we saw them
I'm sorry, sir, but Trek has always been consistent! Are you suggesting otherwise?According to one episode of DS9 the Eugenics Wars happened around the year 2173. And in early ENT Archer grew up around San Francisco - until later episodes had him growing up in New York State.
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