[-] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 1 points 8 months ago

Yeah, what else would a “full night’s rest” mean?

[-] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 1 points 8 months ago

What timeline do you want it set in?

[-] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 1 points 8 months ago

It’s a building specifically for housing a vehicle.

In that case, your opinion has been noted and filed appropriately, and my earlier statement stands.

It is a parody of WWII propaganda posters warning military personnel to avoid "loose women" lest they contract an STI.

https://www.cnn.com/2015/08/25/health/wwii-vd-posters-penis-propaganda/index.html

The same is true for two Rikers. That’s the entire point of the episode; that despite them diverging at the point of the cloning into two different people, they are still the same person and need to live with that.

I don't think that as the point of the episode. As their lives diverged their interests and desires did so as well. They were similar, yes, but still different people. Will was promoted after successfully evacuating the people of Nervala IV and he became focused on his career. Thomas was stuck on Nervala IV thinking of the woman he left behind, and when he's rescued he wants to rekindle that relationship whereas Will let it fizzle.

To say nothing of Thomas eventually choosing to join the Maquis. That is not something we'd ever see from Will.

Will: Good luck, Will.
Thomas: I actually thought I might go with the name Thomas.
Troi: Your middle name.
Will: I guess we really are different. I never really cared for that name.
Thomas: Well, I sort of like it. I guess I'd better get going.

What do you not get?

I don't think I will be sticking with Picard's Academy. A story about how young Jean-Luc Picard was a dick, and needed to learn how to make friends doesn't hold much appeal. We know from "The Samaritan Snare" and "Tapestry" that during his Academy days Picard was a bit of a rover and rabble rouser, so seeing him here as a guy obsessed with getting top marks and being alone doesn't really fit. Granted, he's only second year here, but regardless.

Some aspects of the story are the writer, Sam Maggs, trying too hard to be cute, like Picard asking Boothby if he has coffee instead before settling for tea, and some choices are just bizarre. A couple pages in, a caption box describes a characters as "Always drinks his respecting-women juice." Which is just a wild thing to put in a Trek comic for one, but also not relevant to the scene they're in, and we don't see the character again for the rest of the issue.

I also hate the art choices. For some reason the artist decided a Bolian character -- the respecting-women juice drinker -- should have a fin on his face and head as opposed to the bifurcation line that we see Bolians typically have. There's a Betazoid that appears to have a number of extra nostrils like an Ilari from the VOY episode, "Warlord", and if the cover is any indication they glow. In a holodeck simulation, there are a number of ENT era vessels, some of which have their nacelles connected at what appears to be 45° angles to the ships' centreline.

All in all, not much to recommend.

I enjoyed this issue quite a bit, as we finally get a bit of actual story momentum, especially between Worf and Alexander. Sisco being side lined for the issue so we can get the big final confrontation between him and Kahless in the last issue of the crossover didn't work that well though, and I feel like we're supposed to care more about captain Meyerson, despite the fact that he's been in like two issues, one of which being the FCBD issue which was barely marketed.

Still, on the whole, between the Worf/Alexander fight, and the Defiant and Theseus crews working together across the two ships, this mostly worked for me.

On the cover? That's Alexander.

[-] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

"We'll just see about that, won't we Mister?"
- James T. Kirk

[-] USSBurritoTruck@startrek.website 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
  • La’an bluffs a Broken Circle weapons buyer with an ”antimatter detonation switch,” something she tells Uhura she made up on the spot. In “Surrender” Jack Crusher pulled a similar trick on Vadic, implying a personal forcefield was actually an unknown weapon.

  • In the dilithium mines, Doctor M’Benga and Chapel see what appears to be a mostly constructed Starfleet ship.

    • When the ship enters space, Mitchell says she thinks it’s a Crossfield-class, like the USS Discovery. The ship does have a Crossfield-class saucer, but the secondary hull is very different.

    • Motion graphics art director for the series, Tim Peel, has confirmed on twitter that it is not actually a Crossfield-class.

    • The Crossfake’s transponder has its registry as NCC-1729.

  • Doctor M’Benga and nurse Chapel inject themselves with a serum that that makes them slower and weaker so that when they attack their Klingon captors they don’t completely overwhelm them. Not doing so would be considered a war crime, as Klingons are extremely bad a fighting as seen in many, many episodes including, but not limited to:

    • “The Trouble with Tribbles” - Klingons provoke Scotty, Chekov and other Enterprise crew to a fight, only to lose

    • “Star Trek: The Search for Spock” - A Klingon lord gets the jump on a Starfleet captain, and ends up dumped into a pool of magma like he’s trying to steal the One Ring

    • “House of Quark” - The head of a Klingon House attacks a small Ferengi and ends up stabbing himself to death

    • “Marauders” - A group of malnourished colonists fend of a group of armed Klingon warriors after only a day’s worth of Vulcan martial arts training

    • “The Vulcan Hello” - A Klingon Torchbearer attacked an unarmed Starfleet officer with a bat’leth and stabbed himself to death

  • Apparently in the Klingon Empire they do call them Klingon disruptors.

  • The D7-class battlecruiser we see appears to be a reuse of the CGI model introduced in “Through the Valley of Shadows”, perhaps with some updated textures.

  • Doctor M’Benga was able to use the Crossfake’s transponder communicate with the Enterprise in Morse 2. Morse code has been previously used in:

    • The SS Botany Bay’s call signal in “Space Seed” was broadcast in morse

    • Scotty tapped out ”stand back” before destroying the wall of the brig in “Star Trek: The Final Frontier”

    • The SS Mariposa’s distress beacon was an SOS in “Up the Long Ladder”

    • In “The 37’s” the *USS Voyager” discovered an SOS coming from a planet in the Delta quadrant

    • Harry is able to alert Tom Paris of sabotage aboard the Delta Flyer using morse in “Drive”

    • In “Mindwalk” Dal was able to send an SOS to the rest of the Protogies, but they assumed those were the only letters he would have memorized so they couldn’t use it to communicate back to him.

  • ”They thought it worth their lives to prevent another war. Logical.” This follows Spock’s reasoning from “Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan” where he first says, ”Logic dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.”

  • The maneuvering pack Doctor M’Benga finds looks to be of the type introduced in “Brother”.

  • We see the D7’s nacelles reconfigure to ready weapons; “Elaan of Troyius” established that the nacelles also house disruptor cannons.

  • Spock is able to revive Chapel using CPR. We’ve previously seen Kirk use the technique to save the life of a child in “The Paradise Syndrome”, and Tendi do so with Boimler in “First First Contact”. It’s not entirely clear if Chakotay actually performed CPR on Janeway in “Coda” or if that was only part of a hallucination inflicted upon her by an alien entity.

  • Captain D’Chok’s armour has a similar design to the Klingon armour introduced in “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” and used all through TNG, DS9, VOY, ENT, and the TOS and TNG movies, but is gold, like the tunics Klingon soldiers wore during TOS.

    • D’Chok’s baldric bears a House symbol first seen in the DIS episode “Point of LIght” one by one of the members of the High Council.

    • Both House D’Ghor and House Kol wore gold armour in season one of DIS.

  • Spock states he ”[has] been known to” drink bloodwine. In “The Conscience of the King” Spock tells Bones that his father’s people were *”spared the dubious benefits of alcohol,” which might imply that they are not actually capable of becoming drunk from it. And in “Cease Fire” Soval declares that Vulcans do not drink, but he himself immediately makes an exception. Also, T’Pol, Sakonna, Tuvok, and Spock are all seen drinking at one point or another. And both Vulcan port and Vulcan brandy were introduced in “The Maquis, Part I” and “Repression” respectively.

    • Despite his claim, this is the first instance of Spock drinking bloodwine on screen.

    • Spock is hungover during his call with April, so perhaps even if Vulcans are spared the benefits of alcohol, they still experience the drawbacks, which could explain why they don’t drink. Except when they do.

  • When the map in April’s office resolves, a few locations can be made out

    • Deep Space 2

    • Galdonterre - The planet where Kang, Kor, and Koloth were able to track the Albino to in “Blood Oath”

    • Cestus - Cestus III is introduced in “Arena” as the planet where the Enterprise beams down to have dinner at an observation outpost only to find it’s been razed by the Gorn

    • What is a probable Gorn attack ship - in the Gorn Hegemony they just call them ships.

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