How can anyone write historical fiction...?clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Oct 28, 2018 9:51 amOn paper, I really liked the idea of Abrams Trek as it could have been the equivalent of the Ultimate Marvel universe. There is too much canon and too much history for new viewers on their first viewing to understand - there is no ''pick up and play'' as it were.Yukaphile wrote: ↑Sun Oct 28, 2018 1:03 am Here's my proposal. Don't try to cash in on TOS and TNG nostalgia. Try a reboot. Now, I know this may seem like a JJ Abrams inspired attempt to take the franchise in new directions, but I actually have a radically different take on what they did, that I think could have actually worked. Don't do a half-assed reboot, but instead a completely expansive reboot that doesn't adhere even one iota to the previous continuity. It's not time travel, it's another dimension. Call the main reality we've been following Earth-415 or something, and then create a new, entirely separate Earth to play around in. Maybe even one of the parallel universes we saw in "Parallels." Like the one where the Borg had overrun the Federation. Well, no, maybe it wouldn't work after how badly Voyager nerfed the Borg. But my point is, that could offer up a lot of new storytelling possibilities, without being shackled to a greater canon. Because my worst fear with STG is that they're going to botch the continuity, like they're doing with STD. So, just shove the continuity to the side and create a new Earth for us to play around in. Like, maybe the Federation has Klingons and Romulans are Federation members in this reality, or maybe the Dominion is the way the Federation should have been, and it's them uniting to take on the Borg or something.
What do you guys think?
What in the Red Klingon Hell did TOS Spock do in Into Darkness? They should had just left him out of it.Yukaphile wrote: ↑Sun Oct 28, 2018 1:25 pm The problem with Abrams Trek is that it was time travel, and not an alternate dimension. It was still shackled to the previous continuity to a large extent, and that was because of nostalgia. "These are the same characters you love, only changed!" By placing it in another dimension, and not an altered timeline, then you could even explain this new version of Khan. He's Khan-2 rather than Khan-1. Similar to Earth-1 Superman and Earth-2 Superman. Yeah, he'd be the inferior Khan, but I think it would have upset a lot less people. And this way, you don't have those pesky fanboys obsessing over continuity errors. It's win-win! But alas, they did not do that.
I am fine with darker Trek but this sounds to much like IRL nasty politics.Beastro wrote: ↑Sun Nov 11, 2018 8:13 am Continue Star Trek from the end of the Dominion War, maybe give it a few decades, see how the war altered perceptions, especially in the Federation.
I'd like to see the Federation taken down a few notches given that it is effectively the hegemon of the Alpha Quadrant after the Dominion War. Have a large amount of people, especially humans, be disillusioned with the Fed societies promises, the Federation leadership worn out by its position in the AQ and caught too much reacting and not acting as forces like Romulans, now bent on revenge towards them for Spock costing them their home system are actively working to align races against them motivated in a way they never were before.
I'd also would like to see things from the perspective that isn't one from the Federation, but I think having a cast centered around aliens wouldn't work. The framework I've laid out, though, would be perfect for the disillusioned faction in the Fed having formed their own secessionist nation that more realpolitik and ruthless, but one that still maintains an outlook very akin to their mother nation echoing the similarities between the US and Britain despite the bad blood over the War of Independence.
Last bit too, would be to see other things play out that could be revisited, like the Founders maintaining a strong reluctance to change their outlook with Odo becoming something of the leader of a minority reform faction that had a very uphill battle, the Ferengi being pushed to take on more of a political role in the AQ as nations grow suspicious of Federation dominance leading to the establishment of a military and them having to go outside of their element getting a taste for why other races act nasty in ways they don't understand. Also have more activity of lesser AQ races and revisiting many like Enterprise should have, such as what the Tholians are up to and how they might look on things.
Finally, break up the Borg. Have an arch be about the protagonists introducing, or helping introduce, something to the Collective that would unleash rival collective personalities that have always existed within the Collective, but have been restrained. That would fragment the Borg into effectively what are nations and lead them into infighting as the each collective battles for dominion of the whole. That would allow them to remain a threat, but allow their always looming galaxy wide threatening posture they've had since TNG to finally be resolved.
The Ferengi are retarded based on what i have seen of them. Fun, but retarded.
The competetition for eyeballs is on another plain of existence now. It can have less views and be more valuable.clearspira wrote: ↑Wed Nov 14, 2018 9:26 pmIts made by the same people that made STD and we simply do not know how much creative control Stewart has. This whole thing is a propaganda exercise to try and prop up this struggling franchise because in many ways it is worse off now than it was in the aftermath of Enterprise and Nemesis. At least we had no fan civil war then.
Did you hear that STD officially has the lowest viewing figures of any Trek series to date? If it was on TV it would have Neilsons between 1 and 2 whereas Enterprise was cancelled with a 5 and a half. Part of that is the fact that not everyone is willing to pay for a subscription true, but they CHOSE that format, it is on their heads.