That's because they haven't even gone on about it in multiple series.Shoot, I’m far from a casual fan but I can’t name a single battle from the Dominion War off the top of my head.
In Picard they couldn't even bring themselves to say "Odo".
That's because they haven't even gone on about it in multiple series.Shoot, I’m far from a casual fan but I can’t name a single battle from the Dominion War off the top of my head.
Shoot, I’m far from a casual fan but I can’t name a single battle from the Dominion War off the top of my head.
Operation Return.Shoot, I’m far from a casual fan but I can’t name a single battle from the Dominion War off the top of my head.
Sure but there was only one that stood out as the changing point in the Federation's relationship with the Borg and the galaxy at large. Where we see them move towards more combat oriented procedures, and dedicated warships. WOLF 359 might not be the only battle but it was a large one with huge impacts going forward. An enemy that could not be negotiated with but simply destroyed.Wolf 359 is getting overused. There must have been some other attacks from the Federation's greatest enemy.
Exactly. The impact is more than the event itself.It's like WWII era movies mentioning Pearl Harbor all the time, as a historic turning point that everyone in the audience remembers.
The Battle of Chin'toka.
The only TNG-recent conflicts we know about were the various wars with the Cardassians, Talarians, Tholians, Tzenkethi, and the Erselrope wars (whatever that is. And we don't even know if those wars were with the Federation.) And of all those, the only other conflict we know of with a specific name was the Setlik III massacre, and that seemed to be localized to just one planet.
The realest answer is the VOY writers weren't paying attention and were unjustifiably desperate to do lazy continuity porn for the premise of a Starfleet vessel being ~60,000 light years away from home. I really hate how many VOY episodes use the Wolf 359 scenario when it added nothing to the plot to justify small universe syndrome. (grumble grumble the Amelia Earheart episode also should not have been in the Delta Quadrant)Here's a question - how did anyone who was captured and/or assimilated at Wolf 359 survive? The cube was blown up in the next episode.
This is a reasonable deduction! But it's an entirely after-the-fact line of reasoning! The obvious point of "The Best of Both Worlds, Part 2" as presented for itself was that the Enterprise-D crew successfully neutralized the Borg invasion by blowing up everything they sent. There is absolutely nothing in the TNG episode about the Borg fielding smaller craft even in scenarios where smaller craft would be useful. VOY on its own makes no sense in the context of TNG with what we have canonically.Some of the Starfleet ships may have been assimilated and sent back to the Delta Quadrant rather than totally destroyed, or the cube might've launched a sphere to go back for some reason.
Exactly! They should have dropped in a line about this when Chakotay met Riley Frazier! Chakotay himself is former Starfleet. He should have asked how Frazier could be alive when the Wolf 359 cube was blown to dust for everyone to see.I'd wish they'd just say one of those little spheres popped out the back, like in First Contact, nobody noticed it escaping with some Alpha Quadrant "samples" and it made it to transwarp and got away.
40 starships lost, and at the time it was presented as being a major blow, even though 'they would have the fleet back up in less than a year'.
True enough, about five years later they were sporting 600-ship fleets (though perhaps not all starships) and implying that was just one of the fleets ...
I think Starfleet's tactics at Wolf 359 were to use a few ships to attack, and keep going in waves. Look at "EMISSARY" and how the battle goes... there's never more than 2 or 3 ships attacking the cube at once at any given time.
That kind of attack feels more like a budget kind of thing, more ships and effects would need more money.
Maybe it's because they're only a few hundred meters long and they're THOUSANDS OF METERS APART.Agreed that budget was an issue. I'm just speculating on an in-universe reason why we saw so few ships engage the cube at once.
Agreed that budget was an issue. I'm just speculating on an in-universe reason why we saw so few ships engage the cube at once.
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