Manwithn0n0men
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2019
Wesley was Gene's author insert character [No joke]this doesn't explain away all the exceptional amount of time wesley got while wil wheaton was like 16
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Wesley was Gene's author insert character [No joke]this doesn't explain away all the exceptional amount of time wesley got while wil wheaton was like 16
So that's where they got the idea for the future enterprise D. So all Good Things is just about Q's fanfic, eh?Yeah my mind went straight to the Franz Joseph one.
This thing has to be one of the earliest examples of an overpowered OC ship design in a sci-fi franchise. Something about it still seems to fascinate people though. If you ask me the Excelsior was basically the death of this thing, though in practice every time an Excelsior goes into battle on Star Trek it always gets its ass whipped.
The one in the book is fucking ridiculous though. It can project copies of itself that can simulate damage and take on a bunch of battlecruisers single-handedly. Its also astonishingly ugly.
It looks like if the neck could stretch, like an accordion.I always thought Excelsior was a butt-ugly ship. That dumpy little neck makes it look like a tugboat or something.
Excelsior and Ambassador class necks were far better than the paper sheet thin necks of the Constitution pre and post refits.
The shape of Constitution is perfect but how thin the neck is triggers my autism when figuring out the internal layout of that part of the ship. Connie is still infinitely better than Galaxy with the questionable placement of the impluse engine and primary torpedo launcher right where the Galaxy's neck is the thinnest.Its weird how perfect the Constitution feels, like any attempt to improve on it almost always just looks weird. I fucking love Andy Probert and everything he comes up with, but the refit also has that strange feeling of "Meh, I dunno" about it. The original Constitution actually feels like something that might fly in space, since spacecraft irl are really thin and delicate. I can see why Matt Jefferies was so arrogant about his design, because it really is kind of perfect and every subsequent attempt to modify it just doesn't hit the mark.
The shape of Constitution is perfect but how thin the neck is triggers my autism when figuring out the internal layout of that part of the ship. Connie is still infinitely better than Galaxy with the questionable placement of the impluse engine and primary torpedo launcher right where the Galaxy's neck is the thinnest.
While that's true, it would also easily snap the ship's neck, in case it blew up...I dunno... it kind of makes a certain amount of sense that you want the part expelling explosive ordinance from the ship in a position where it has the least amount of crew surrounding it.
Especially as weapons systems would probably be high priority targets in a battle.
Well... at least it's not coming from the nacelles.Jefferies is to blame for the torpedo launcher in the neck, its in his Phase II design. For some reason, that stuck. Probert did it for the refit, then they kept it for the Galaxy. Weird thing for nerds to hold on to.
I don't think so with the way the galaxy's neck fans out towards the back.While that's true, it would also easily snap the ship's neck, in case it blew up...
Then again, it's not a battleship, so that's not as big a deal.
While that's true, it would also easily snap the ship's neck, in case it blew up...
Then again, it's not a battleship, so that's not as big a deal.
mainly due to production costs I think. getting all the families etc into the saucer and to safety isn't the worst concept (and used once or twice).Which in retrospect did end up being kind of pointless.
mainly due to production costs I think. getting all the families etc into the saucer and to safety isn't the worst concept (and used once or twice).
comicbook.com
Just to be that guy but the saucer section does have impulse engines on it. (Hence why Troi is able to fly away a little in Generations.)DS9's Second Battle of Chin'toka brutally brought the point home that escape pods are such easy targets if one decides to shoot them. A giant escape pod ala saucer section is just one huge target. The Prometheus despite being a bad idea did have each section capable of warp. If the Galaxy saucer section had it's own auxiliary warp core, propulsion system and was capable of warp to bug out of Dodge, then maybe the saucer separation would work.
Yeah that's what I think too.I bet he isn't even going to watch it now, he'll probably just say he did for the fake nerd points. Faggot.
I've always hated the idea of families or civilians on a ship, even on a science ship you could end up in a life-threatening situation. That's also why I never really liked the Galaxy-class.Let's face it, families of the crew along for the ride? Maybe. Random families in general on board the ship? That was dumb. "Ok kids, we're having another Borg attack today so school is canceled and you all need to go to your shelters."
I've always hated the idea of families or civilians on a ship, even on a science ship you could end up in a life-threatening situation. That's also why I never really liked the Galaxy-class.
The other difference between it and escape pods is that the saucer would have shields and weapons of it's own to extend survival time.
Let's face it, families of the crew along for the ride? Maybe. Random families in general on board the ship? That was dumb. "Ok kids, we're having another Borg attack today so school is canceled and you all need to go to your shelters."
what would it be like being a little kid and growing up exclusively in such a huge, artifical environment? I also always found those huge hallways of the Galaxy creepy, like walking through an empty office building in the dead of night. Yesterday's Enterprise made the Galaxy look a lot less cold and sterile by just turning the lights down.