It is a multiverse and everything happened.
It's a quantum multiverse and everything happened and didn't happen simultaneously.
It is a multiverse and everything happened.
It's a quantum multiverse and everything happened and didn't happen simultaneously.
in an RP I and a few others were involved in online, we had that scenario, where the Kzin wars were a series of brief incursions after First Contact, mostly fought in the outer solar system without help from the Vulcans, who more or less used it to observe their new neighbors. It cause United Earth to become strong, re-militarize and finally assert itself over the warlord states, as well as gave Earth a reason to have a new defensive presence in space, a Star Fleet, if you will.It wasn’t actually mentioned in TAS that the wars were fought at sublight. We can’t argue that if the Kzinti appearances in TAS are canon, then so is everything Larry Niven ever wrote about them. If the wars occurred at all, obviously it was after the first contact with Vulcans.
We can’t argue that if the Kzinti appearances in TAS are canon, then so is everything Larry Niven ever wrote about them.
Not true. The only things that are canon concerning the Kzinti in the Star Trek universe is what was shown on screen in a Star Trek production. Any other backstory Niven gave, including his entire Known Space universe, is not canon to the Trek universe.
Yes, and that’s exactly what I said. (I think you misread my “We can’t argue” as “We can argue”.)
in an RP I and a few others were involved in online, we had that scenario, where the Kzin wars were a series of brief incursions after First Contact, mostly fought in the outer solar system without help from the Vulcans, who more or less used it to observe their new neighbors. It cause United Earth to become strong, re-militarize and finally assert itself over the warlord states, as well as gave Earth a reason to have a new defensive presence in space, a Star Fleet, if you will.
An old Gold Key comic had the Man/Kzin wars ongoing until the advert of warp drive won the war for humanity (as FTL did in the Known Space universe), with a scene depicting a fleet of Bonaventure-ish pre-Connies.
You can't really apply that to modern Trek without ruining the whole point of First Contact, though.
An old Gold Key comic had the Man/Kzin wars ongoing until the advert of warp drive won the war for humanity (as FTL did in the Known Space universe), with a scene depicting a fleet of Bonaventure-ish pre-Connies.
You can't really apply that to modern Trek without ruining the whole point of First Contact, though.
While their envisioning looks dated, it still looks more realistic as a TOS prequel than ENT and DSC did.
Q's bit as the drug-controleld soldier was said by him to be "mid 21st century", so i'd interpret that as representing some of the soldiers that fought in WW3. which is the route memory Alpha presents it as. this is reinforced by the fact that the court scene, described as from the "post-atomic horror" by picard, said soldiers were being used as Guards and Bailiffs, suggesting that the court scene being depicted dates to the same period.If the Kzin Wars are a canon event in Star Trek, what's actually likely now that the species was mentioned in Star Trek Picard, i wonder how they correlate with the events on earth in 2079 mentioned in "Encounter at Farpoint", considering that the rise of military dictatorships and things like the tribunals often happen during times of strife.
Maybe these things weren't just after effects of WW3 but more connected to the conflict with the Kzin.
Q's bit as the drug-controleld soldier was said by him to be "mid 21st century", so i'd interpret that as representing some of the soldiers that fought in WW3. which is the route memory Alpha presents it as. this is reinforced by the fact that the court scene, described as from the "post-atomic horror" by picard, said soldiers were being used as Guards and Bailiffs, suggesting that the court scene being depicted dates to the same period.
so it would seem likely that said soldiers and the court both date to WW3 or immediately after it. we don't know anything about the factions involved in ww3, other than the "eastern coalition" mentioned in first contact, and the fact that ENT establishes that Colonel Green and his movement of terrorists were active during and immediately after the war.
honestly given the description of Col.Green's faction and their actions during and after the war, and the uniform we see videos of him in in ENT, i would not be terribly surprised if the soldiers weren't from Green's faction, and the 'post atomic horror courtroom' wasn't based on kangaroo courts his faction ran in devastated areas.
as far as the Kzinti go.. yeah it is a tricky thing to fit into the timeline. the dialog in the TAS episode has Sulu saying the last war with them was 200 years prior, which would put it in roughly 2069. the idea of multiple wars clashing with the statement that earth didn't know what threats existed in space (VOY "friendship one", talking about the probe's launch in 2067) my own personal interpretation would have the Kzinti being something of threats to Earth's early colonization efforts using warp 1 drives (most likely Conestoga type vessels) and Sulu's statement was inexact.. that he was rounding up by a few decades. so you'd get 4 conflicts between the Kzinti and earth in the 2070's and maybe 2080's, with them being raiders who attacked earth's colonies and harrassed Earth's nascent interstellar trading vessels. the 4 'wars' being waves of Kzinti invasions of certain larger colonies, which came with increased raids. Earth being targeted because their colonies and ships were not well defended, and the Kzinti themselves weren't much more advanced than earth and not really able to take on the ships of the vulcans, andorians, or tellarites. (Kzinti ships in my mind would have been maybe warp 3-4 and having armaments akin to the NX class. and they probably got their tech from someone else, rather than having invented it. they'd have relied on slaves to build and repair stuff, much like Niven's version)
and that the war ended when the raids started threatening Vulcan interests, which led to the Kzinti being easily defeated by the Vulcan high Command, who instituted the policy of restricting the Kzinti to their own homeworld. A policy which Starfleet would eventually pick up after the formation of the UFP.
humanity bringing its barbarism into space, albeit briefly and probably understandably, may have pushed the Vulcans to clamp down harder than they may have initially.
While their envisioning looks dated, it still looks more realistic as a TOS prequel than ENT and DSC did.
An old Gold Key comic had the Man/Kzin wars ongoing until the advert of warp drive won the war for humanity (as FTL did in the Known Space universe), with a scene depicting a fleet of Bonaventure-ish pre-Connies.
You can't really apply that to modern Trek without ruining the whole point of First Contact, though.
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