I can't help but imagine a Mirror Picard with a full, thick head of hair.

Last edited:
Always felt it was a mistake to not make Worf captain of one of those attacking Klingon skips in "Yesterday's Enterprise."
Mirror Borg: "Come join up with us. Compliance is voluntary."
Always felt it was a mistake to not make Worf captain of one of those attacking Klingon skips in "Yesterday's Enterprise."
Mirror Borg: "Come join up with us. Compliance is voluntary."
What?In the mirror universe, Deanna Troi's sister drowned, instead of being eaten by a Betazoid wolf.
Admiral Jean-Luc Picard is the ruthless XO of the Enterprise, responsible for several genocides, his idea of diplomacy is to only kill half the population of a planet and giving the remaining half a second chance to become a good subject species of the empire.
Worf, a klingon slave working in engineering, due to the high radiation no proper empire citizen spends more than 45 minutes per day down there.
Yes, I meant CO, I fixed it, thanks.I think you mean CO (Commanding Officer) given that you refer to Riker correctly as the XO later.
TNG didn't use Commodore and Fleet Captain so I went with Admiral Picard because I wanted him to have a higher rank. But he can also be a Commodore, I'm not married to the idea of making him an Admiral.I'd also suggest Commodore or Fleet Captain would make more sense, as they can still command individual starships but YMMV.
It's not a problem it's a choice just like they made the choice to kill Geordi instead of giving him a visor. The point is to make them over the top evil.That largely made sense when they added it in In A Mirror Darkly, but it stretches credibility for me that this is still a problem centuries later.
It's not a problem it's a choice just like they made the choice to kill Geordi instead of giving him a visor. The point is to make them over the top evil.
The TOS mirror Enterprise didn't have slaves on board so they turned the radiation off to be able to work in engineering themselves.
You didn't mention it but it's the same reasoning. They do it because it's evil.I didn't mention that part, as I don't really have any issue with that.
You're overthinking this. Of course it doesn't make a lot of sense, it's the mirror universe, nothing there makes a lot of sense. The could have beaten the Halkans into submission with a stick and ordered them to deliver dilithium, there was no need to phaser their cities from orbit, they were going to do it anyway and commit genocide because evil and that was the tamest portrayal of the MU.So, why turn it back on?
It seems unlikely that they ever deliberately leaked radiation just for the evulz, it was more a case them prioritising quantity (more ships) rather than quality (safer, more efficient ships) in the early changes, so any anti-radiation changes that they make along line would improve the quality of the system generally, IMO.
What?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.