cuchi

joined 2 years ago
[–] cuchi@startrek.website 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I need the context of this clip, is from a comedy? This was scripted or Patrick Stewart improvised that scene?

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

"It doesn’t matter really".

I was not complaining, just asking. 😀

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 2 points 2 days ago

At first I thought it was a Fortnite crossover or something like that.

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 11 points 3 days ago

Also see "Identity Crisis", "Aquiel" and every Borg episode which is horror.

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

For good or for bad?

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 15 points 4 days ago

I didn't notice this, good catch.

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 12 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Cardassians counts as ICE?

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 0 points 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Warp speed is still very far.

EDIT: But seriously talking, this "why they didn’t just hire alien actors" joke is the equivalent of "I Sexually Identify as an Attack Helicopter".

 

Something I notice comparing pictures, how the makeup is less notable in newest entries of Star Trek.

I have the feeling Deep Space Nine was the peak of makeup effects, like nowdays is a lost art.

What you think?

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 1 points 4 days ago

New Game Plus rewards: Holodeck Picard's chicago typewriter and infinite Phaser.

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 3 points 1 week ago

Now I want to see a Barbie borg.

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 1 points 1 week ago

While you are complaining about Star Trek using AI, I'm still mad because in Argentina you can't see The Next Generation and many of the movies of Star Trek movies are missing.

I'm still think of how ironically of how Paramont sell Star Trek as culturally diversity, but then the franchise have regional restriction for latinos like me.

[–] cuchi@startrek.website 1 points 1 week ago

You thought it Pike was a grandma for his white hair? /s

 

When I started watching the series, I had this doubt. As the three seasons went by, I came to the conclusion that she was simply a woman.

There was a character in the Fallout series, Dane, and I completely missed the fact that they were non-binary. I thought they were more of a tomboy character, but no—the character is non-binary, and the actor is a trans man, if I'm not mistaken.

I want to know if I was the only one who thought Erica might be the same case.

It's weird to say because I usually try not to make assumptions about people, but sometimes I feel rude for not noticing these things sooner.

 

Yesterday I decide watch another TOS episode, I like "Let THat Be Your Last Battlefield".

Something I notice people forget about old Star Trek is how the enterprise was capable of terraforming entire planets or even decontainment it in just a seconds in the episode.

This is also funny to me because Spore game did the playeable spaceship into capable of creating life or destroying it at player's will.

I have the feeling Star Trek writers just forget about this.

What you think about this enterprise feature?

16
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by cuchi@startrek.website to c/startrek@startrek.website
 

I saw a lot of names, canon, and not canon, I know there is constitution and sovereign class, it can have names of locations of earth.

Lower decks ship is the Cerritos, which is a "California" class, together with other ones which I presume have name cities or provinces of that state, but since Lower Decks is more comedy, I start to have doubts about the true canon name and ranks of each ship, since the fanpages and wikis put ships which are doubtly canon.

Most of the time are just names like Rio Grande, but I think that was a shuttlecraft or a runabout.

So still, I don't get the criteria of ranks of names for the ships in general.

This are the kind of doubts I have when I try to understand things related with the lore.

EDIT: So, reading a bit, historically aircraft carrier enterprise was class Nimitz because, well, they like the name, so I can give an idea how can work in Star Trek. I didn't know ships have "class" and random names, I always thought it was more logically choosen. Like, they make 10 ships which are from one class, and given with a name for each one, probably throwing a bottle on it.

Sumarise: Now I know ships has random names and class with all similar ships, but class is not equal of ranks or something. Like hierarchy, that's why I didn't get it.

I didn't know all of this before posting this.

 

Ok, this gonna sound polemic and I'm gonna try to not use any adjectives. (Except for once)

The thing is that sometimes I feel like many stories try to appeal to a broad audience, but regardless of what they aim for, a lot of the time the audience ends up being (I’ll allow myself this just once) men rather than women. I’m not sure if this happens with the animated series of Avatar, but I do notice that with Star Trek, even though they try to make everyone feel represented, the reality is that the average viewer is, well, just that—the average person in the country where it’s broadcast.

In the case of Avatar, it’s criticized by some Japanese people because they associate it more with China, to the point that they label it as almost racist when it’s compared to Japanese animation (anime). What I mean is that no matter how much a series tries to appeal to a general audience or to please everyone, that’s never really going to happen; it will always end up having a group with shared characteristics that likes it.

But what do you think? Can there be stories that anyone—regardless of gender, ethnicity, or country—can enjoy? I think the closest thing to that is Harry Potter, and well, you know what the creator is like, but that’s not the point here.

It’s hard to explain, but this is more aimed at writers or any other creative producer: do you write with a specific audience in mind, or do you think that everyone will like what you create?

 

After watching many episodes of many Star Trek series I was considering to make my own fanfic like I did with Half-Life Ampere.

I have a few ideas, but I'm not sure, it is normal to want to make up my own story set in Star Trek universe?

Also, I personally have troubles to try to be the most lore friendly possible and that make me angry while I'm typing down eveything.

 

I really like this episode, not only because it continue the story of M'benga, but also because it has this tradition complexity about Kilingon, and lot of action and drama in every character.

 

Also to the Krall of Unreal Tournament 3. What you think?

0
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by cuchi@startrek.website to c/startrek@startrek.website
 

I recently saw Star Trek Picard, the first season was okey, season 2 was awful, the season 3 was nice.

Acording some critics last Discovery season is bad, so now I'm afraid of looking a series who has a bad ending, it worth to watch or is as painful as Picard Season 2? Or I should watch Strange New Worlds and Enterprise instead?

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