i'm not even sure why they need to mention them at all they could just say that a special property of warp is that the people subjectively don't feel like they're moving, it's already made up!
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Replying to @Cybren @arthur_affect and
Because they obsessivelyexplain everything. Somewhere in the inner workings of the transporter is a Heisenberg Compensator that deals with the problem that the uncertainty principle would make the transporter impossible. No joke.
1 reply 0 retweets 9 likes -
Replying to @fightuntil @Cybren and
I've seen people propose trying to fix Star Trek's problems with plausibility by trying to pin them down to One Weird Thing instead of having all kinds of impossible tech Like, *just* give them warp drive, and have the principle of warp drive also drive the transporter
6 replies 1 retweet 14 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @fightuntil and
You have the ability to magically make wormholes, sometimes they're big ship-sized wormholes you can drive through, sometimes they're little person-sized ones you can sneak people through Everything else is mundane realistic tech
3 replies 1 retweet 13 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @fightuntil and
The thing being, of course, this isn't actually a "realistic" setting -- any more than it'd be realistic to imagine our world as being exactly like the year 1750 with the one exception of having invented diesel engines, or radio transmitters
4 replies 1 retweet 15 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @fightuntil and
And for a show like Star Trek the nonsense universe-breaking ability of the transporter to just take things apart at the atomic level and rebuild them arbitrarily is half the fun What would Star Trek fandom even be without the Tuvix Debate
2 replies 3 retweets 24 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @fightuntil and
now i want a series that's exactly like star trek except with a fantasy palette swap they're on a big-ass schooner in space, o'brien operates the teleportation circles, instead of shields they have wards there's still a big dilithium crystal at the heart of it all though
5 replies 1 retweet 20 likes -
Replying to @perdricof @fightuntil and
One of my favorite episodes of Voyager, "Muse", is 100% about this concept The one where B'elanna Torres gets stranded on an Ancient Greece-themed planet and an alien Greek playwright turns her mission logs into a literal classical drama
2 replies 3 retweets 22 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @perdricof and
That one was one of the many Voyager Writers' Room cries for help It was veteran Star Trek writer Joe Menosky's final swan song and artistic statement before quitting Star Trek writing entirely
1 reply 3 retweets 20 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @perdricof and
Which is why the episode is surprisingly good, even if the concept is obviously corny and the meta message was obvious from the very beginning
1 reply 2 retweets 12 likes
That they'd lost their way in science-fiction gimmicks and Technobabble of the Week and tropey fandom shipping shit and forgotten the Elements of Drama
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Replying to @arthur_affect @perdricof and
That the core concept of Voyager still "works" if you take all the science fiction elements away A proud ship of explorers blown by a storm into strange and distant seas, clinging to their memory of the Great City of "Earth" in a savage hinterland racked by poverty and war
3 replies 5 retweets 27 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @perdricof and
The "Borg" just being another dime-a-dozen predatory civilization of rapacious raiders and looters and slavers The worst cruelty they enact on their victims being that they steal your children to raise as their own, who grow up thinking that their ways are good and right
1 reply 2 retweets 23 likes - Show replies
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