Almost surely what they wanted the Ambassador class to be. Also what they wanted the NX-01 to be in the beginning before they noticed how much more guns they needed.
The original project was something anybody could play, and as far as I know if you can find it you can still play it today, and you will be able to forever.
You can't do that with TRA/OTOY now can you?
streaming-exclusivity is an extremely bad thing.
As for the minecraft stuff, trekcraft exists today, and they have like 4 different iterations of the Enterprise D, with the latest version using a mod to add more detailed blocks and still being worked on today, all the way back to the original.
your embedded images are too big and make your post look bad
i'm done, do what you want
I have 20px wide and 22px tall
(edit)
the center symbol needs to be one higher
also the chat doesn't work I guess
To be fair, its an open source game, so I don't really mind that much. And the logo that's here is already smaller than the original one lol.
They wanted to do that scene since the very beginning! and they only did it at the very end
As if the other 10 star trek movies didn't exist lmao
Yeah star trek right now really can't seem to decide whether "space is cold" or not.
Of course, that's because the truth has just alittle bit of nuance to it, and nuance is hard for writers.
Space can be cold, depending on where you are, but its also barely even there. No atmosphere means no convection, and that means you're gonna be losing heat much too slowly for it to be your number one problem if you've just been spaced without a suit.
Would've been cooler if it was the three-nacelle version that everyone loves
Speaking of unused music, the final TMP/TNG theme itself was almost different:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbdhC-OXXa0
There's an interview where they tell stories, and apparently after they made this early version of the music, Robert Wise listened to it and gave the best three word critique ever - "There's no theme!"
Goldsmith basically went "...oh.", then went back and reworked what he had already into the 2nd version, and there you go that's the final theme.
For me, its less "Oh my god how could this happen!?" and more "I told you asshats so!"
Was there ever a time when it wasn't shitty?
Re-arranged for a smaller orchestra, and more energetic (most noticeable in the percussion)
I saw a lot of opinions back in the day about it, and it almost seems like people were offended that they even tried to break the mold at all.
I don't actually mind Faith Of The Heart for the intro. My biggest problem with it is that its not an original song - it was written specifically for a movie that was completely unrelated to Star Trek.
I would probably appreciate it more if they wrote their own song for ENT - it could even be a country/pop song like FOTH, but it would still be a Star Trek song.
They definitely cherry picked the best bits of the song for the intro though. I like their cover more than the original.
Actually, if you've watched TNG's early seasons, you've already heard this unused theme, in bits and pieces.
The very first piece of music heard in TNG ever (that isn't the intro itself) is a slower, less energetic (more introspective I guess?) version of that unused theme.
The main leitmotif itself appears all over early TNG.
I figure that, when Maccarthy was writing the early filler music, he assumed that his theme would become the main theme, and so heavily leaned into it when writing the filler music. Obviously, the main theme was tossed - but not his other music.
The TMP nacelles are very 70s (lol), but the rest of the ship looks so good that it makes you overlook it.
I think that you could make a good case for the First Contact/Regeneration/QWho loop directly being Q's creation, rather than a vague sense of fate.
"Full Impulse" is generally considered to be 0.25c. The force of an impact of a Voyager-sized (700 kilotons) mass at that speed would be many times greater than that of the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs. And I think its reasonable to assume that 0.25c isn't a hard limit, but rather an agreed-upon speed limit for starships. If you could make an object go even faster, that energy goes up by a few orders of magnitude. 0.9c sounds doable. I don't know about any faster, but maybe?
At that speed, the force of Voyager hitting a planet would be at least hundreds of times greater than the aforementioned asteroid. This sounds like it would completely sterilize the planet.
Which begs the question, why don't we see weapons like this in star trek? I'd figure the Federation wouldn't use them, but the Federation isn't alone.
One argument I tend to see when this comes up is, that the shields would block it. Which then makes you think, if they could block that, then what couldn't they block? It makes them pretty much invincible. So I don't think that's it.