Star Trek
Welcome to a Star Trek community where you’re free to chat and share your opinions about all things Trek!
I want to have a place where fans can come to praise, discuss, and even criticise things in the Star Trek franchise. No show or movie is perfect, and I don't believe people should be silenced for having a dissenting opinion. That being said, there are still a few rules.
Be Nice - No personal attacks. You can disagree with someone's opinion, but it needs to stop there.
No Slurs - This is applicable to ethnicity, religion, gender, or anything else.
No Adult Content - Keep it family friendly.
No Spamming or Trolling - Consistently spamming comments or trolling is just not needed.
Please keep topics Trek related or Trek adjacent for the most part, and have fun!
view the rest of the comments
The lack of immortality. Sure, you could go the, "We have found that the distinct possibility of death makes life more meaningful" BS, but really - would it take that much power to have someone step into a transporter each night before bed (like taking a very short shower), get buffered, and then sleep? Next day: "Oh no! Lt. Promiscuous has been decapitated! Oh well, beam her back to life and update her on the last 5 hours and we're good to go again."
I get it that for plot purposes, that can't be a thing. But there should be a very good explanation as to why it's not being done.
So the episode with scotty in the next generation he invented a way for the pattern to not degrade. Its supposed to be relatively short term and have only so much capacity. Even during transport when their are issues it suggest they can lose the buffer. Im relatively accepting of it on that point.
In Strange New Worlds, which is set earlier than Scotty could have invented that, the doctor keeps patients in the pattern buffer when their condition is deteriorating and there's nothing he can do to stop it. It's presented as janky and his own invention, and not necessarily harmless.