There's definitely nothing in STO, despite the dev teams absolutely loving deep cuts.
the fact the Federation was not picking up steam at all (and felt much more in decline), to me indicates that the writers intended for us to interpret this as the Federation in its death throws until the Discovery showed up.
I agree with the basic fact - the Federation was struggling to maintain what it had in the face of the Emerald Chain and others, and it took Discovery's arrival with unique technology to give it an edge.
But I think they framed it as a story of resilience and determination, mainly through Vance and Sahil.
I disagree with the premise - I think the series as a whole stands as a testament to the Federation prevailing over adversity - it's one of the prevailing themes of the series.
Even the Burn didn't destroy the Federation as you suggest. It became smaller as travel and communication became difficult-to-impossible, but it still existed, and Starfleet was doing everything it could to maintain the peace.
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It's not a zero-sum game, and one entry doesn't have to die for another to live.
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From estimates I've seen, the viewership of "Lower Decks" is relatively low, second only to "Prodigy." It may be very popular with people like us, but it doesn't seem to generate as many viewers as you might expect.
It's interesting how quickly multiverse stuff became a tired trope in current genre TV/film.
Lower Decks being what it is, I suspect it will be a one-off gag.
The wording is vague, but I think there's a chance it will be the complete set, or as close to it as possible.
They built the whole thing for the show, so hopefully they had the good sense to keep it all.
I think I'll go with Narnia. It wouldn't be boring.
This is a Florida joke waiting to happen.
Oh, also:
TRANSPORTER SHOWER
My initial reaction was about how stupid it is to open a theme park attraction themed around a series that's been cancelled, but then I thought about how this thing must've been in the works for several years, and now I just feel sad for the people who worked on it.
hoping his character’s death – in the full context – would make more narrative sense.
Chabon had some lovely and interesting things to say about self-sacrifice being the ultimate expression of the individuality Hugh spent his life working toward, but unfortunately I didn't think any of that came through in the final product.
Yeah, the Delta arc is pretty laser-focused on the Vaadwaur, but it's a little surprising they didn't do a payroll or something.