Oh these are prettier, aren't they?Well the borg are strange and mysterious so I'm fine with us not being sure about where the Queen begins and the collective ends. I'd also like to think that this does a good job of solidifying the amount of destruction caused by Janeway.
The Borg as we once knew it as a unified collective has long been defeated and this was its last gasp at surviving. I'm glad they kind of ignored the Jurati thing though.
Shaw says 20 years. So the Enterprise F and G might have been about the same age. Around 2379, Picard retired, Worf took his command and Riker moved on to his own. The E is eight years old at this time, the D having been lost in 2371. After an unspecified number of years, Worf's ship was destroyed and succeeded by a ship of the same name, and he went into the way of the samurai, which seems to be what he's been doing for the bulk of the 22 years we didn't see. It's now 2401, thirty years after the D was destroyed.so I’m confused though. Was the F already scheduled for decommission or just took too much damage to bother fixing? They sure don’t make them like they used too. I think either the OS Enterprise or the D have the longest runs. Maybe B. C and E are out. How old was the Titan at the start of the show?
Shaw says 20 years. So the Enterprise F and G might have been about the same age. Around 2379, Picard retired, Worf took his command and Riker moved on to his own. The E is eight years old at this time, the D having been lost in 2371. After an unspecified number of years, Worf's ship was destroyed and succeeded by a ship of the same name, and he went into the way of the samurai, which seems to be what he's been doing for the bulk of the 22 years we didn't see. It's now 2401, thirty years after the D was destroyed.
Shaw says the Titan is 20 years old - or at least that its nacelles are. It underwent a radical refit either around the time Shaw took it over from Riker (a few years before 2401) or recently enough to still have new ship smell. This is made somewhat worse by the fact that Riker put off his promotion to the Titan, implying it existed and had a captain before he took the conn. The Titan is actually the Titan-A by its livery, which means it's the successor to a previous ship named the Titan, but it could have already been that when Riker took command of it in the first place because people don't regularly read out registries when casually referring to ships.
My suspicion is that the unremarked upon "-A" was a VFX decision by one of those STO folks to make room for the Luna Class Titan, which was the most famous non-canonical starship in Trek until it appeared in Lower Decks in 2380, commanded by a much younger Riker and Troi straight out of Nemesis. The Luna Class was created to reflect ships of the age and wears that on its sleeve, so it's an aquiline potato like the Intrepid, Sovereign, and Akira classes.
At some point, straight lines, clean surfaces, and round saucers came back into style, which totally had absolutely nothing to do with STO being full of ships designed to evoke past eras while being on-meta in the game's present, and the Neo-Constellation and Neo-Constitution classes of the Stargazer and Titan-A, upscaled and grey echoes of TMP era ships, would have been conceived. The "-A" in no way proves, but implies that this is the Titan of this new generation of ships.
And the "-A" would have worked, if not for Shaw talking about those twenty-year-old warp nacelles, which makes the Titan in some sense at least as old as the destruction of the Enterprise-E. As it stands, there's three possibilities:
Edit: Oh, and respectively, those possibilities would also correspond to "Luna Class Titan never existed," "Luna Class Titan somehow 'is' the Neo-Connie Titan we saw", and "Luna Class Titan existed, but was destroyed."
- Riker moved to the Titan-A at the same time Worf took over the Enterprise E. The Titan-A is a newer ship than the E. Because of the E's short life of about a decade, the F might be a newer ship than the Titan-A, or a ship of similar age to the E, a decade senior of the Titan-A, that was redubbed.
- Riker moved to the Titan-A at the same time Worf took over the Enterprise E. The Titan-A was the Luna Class Titan we know, slightly older than the E, but was "refit" into an entirely different class (the Neo-Constitution) when Riker left it, and basically the warp coils are the only thing about it that are 20 years old. The F can still be anywhere from the same age as the E to a successor a few years after its destruction, so somewhere in the range of 20-30 years old, but it's immaterial because the Titan-A is essentially brand new.
- Riker moved to the Titan′ at the same time Worf took over the E. They had similar adventures and both ships were destroyed, resulting in the Enterprise-F and the Titan-A being dubbed. The ships could have been of any age, but most likely the Enterprise-F was of similar vintage to the Enterprise-E, and the Titan-A was fresh off the line. As of 2401, the Enterprise-F has been living on security updates and is sunsetting, while the Titan-A has just had a major feature update and should have another decade in her.
Edit again: To be clear, I think the last possibility makes the most sense of the "-A" designation and the Titan's implied younger vintage relative to the Enterprise F in the spoiler, and I don't think the second is possible at all. I do think the first possibility, which can still make the Titan-A 20 years old and the Enterprise F 30 without a filler ship presumed to be the Luna class, is plausible. However, the second possibility does amuse me the most, because it stretches the use of "refit" as a Trek meme to explain problems of visual continuity well beyond the breaking point, and because it makes possible the scenario where the Enterprise G, F, and E were originally constructed in that order.
"Word of God" is that the Luna-class Titan definitely existed, even if you don't want to accept Lower Decks as canon, so we can just stop that speculation about no-Luna-Titan right now.
Welp there we go. Option 2, ship of Theseus. Cool.Well I guess this answers it. Not sure how “official” this page is.
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My thoughts are all scattered. I really could use a second watch to get them organized, but...
Did Picard ever catch up with Laris?
I'll still stand behind my overall feelings in that this was a problematic season that used nostalgia to incredible effect.
This is that epilogue scene at the end of the last Harry Potter book if Rowling had spent another novel or two earning it. The idea that everyone retires content in their legacies and we see them pass the torch to the next generation is so much sap that I can't imagine how any series can earn the privilege of doing so without making me gag, and yet they did it, fully earned.More than anything, seeing the Enterprise-D and the bridge crew all back together to save the day sure did feel good. As someone that sometimes wishes we never saw anything past All Good Things... , this is the ending that I wanted for them. Together. Happy. Family. Gave me all the feels. If there's anything that I take away from this season, it's this.
The fact that this will likely be the last time they're all on screen together is certainly bittersweet. But, at least they got that chance. DS9 will never get that, and that hurts.
Second season in a row for Picard that the main conflict was resolved with a hug - but again, this time it was earned. I didn't cry but it felt like a good moment for it.I'm also happy that it was the power of love, and family that helped win the day.
I knew there was going to be a shooty-fly distraction but I didn't expect it to be the Titan. I think they did exactly what they were supposed to do and kept the Queen's and Vox's attentions divided, but I can see what you mean. The split also set up the Enterprise G crew and let the D crew go do their thing, which I think was the main impetus.Kinda wish that Seven and the remnants of the crew on the Titan had gotten more to do. I wonder if it would have been better for them to run interference on the cube at Jupiter instead, as the strafing runs against the fleet didn't seem to achieve a whole lot.
No, Data was still at the helm and they still aren't going to let Deanna drive the D again. What she did was locate them based on her emotional bond to Riker. But it seemed very deliberate that everyone got a chance to shine and especially Deanna and Crusher weren't flopping around helpless in a crisis like TNG sometimes did to them.Beverly totally wrecking the Borg defenses was fantastic. Heck, I really liked how everyone had a chance to shine. Was it Deanna that drifted the ship in for the rescue as the Queen's chamber was exploding?
And it made the whole conflict feel a lot more plausible. Both the Borg and the changelings were a scrap of leftovers from their respective wars. In many respects this was actually a much smaller threat overall than previous seasons' universe-enders and felt like a conflict of manageable scale. And I think that in a way this is the best treatment of the Borg since the original too - they were scary and adaptable in their earliest appearances and neither of those things really carried over into First Contact and Voyager, so seeing them do something new and having this corpse ship and Gigerized queen while carrying out this creeping covert infection really tapped into something IMO.Decomposing Borg was a great touch. Showing how much damage that they received at the end of Voyager and how the Queen was barely holding on was great. I liked that they didn't downplay that nor Admiral Janeway's sacrifice.
Hundo P.I think I can speak for the rest of us Trekkies and say, WE NEED STAR TREK LEGACY GREEN LIT NOW!
It's odd that we didn't get a followup there, they were super selective with those. Or at least some dialogue in the Crusher / Picard / Crusher scene returning to the Titan/G. Almost like they left it open for the shippers whether Picard followed up with Laris or got back together with Crusher.Sadly not
This though, they could have easily forgotten and I'm really glad they followed it up. Almost but not quite justifies the beating she took at the start of the season.Worf leaks Rafi top secret accommodations and Rafi finally gets the credit that she has earned over the last few years and her family openly and eagerly welcomes her home.
This is entirely just my take on it, but I think Vadic's changelings only wanted revenge. "Tick tick tock goes the ancient clock." They had a reduced lifespan, most of them by choice, and may or may not have been allowed to reenter the Great Link if they had means to get there, while the Founders at large didn't care what happened in the Alpha quadrant or have interest in revenge. For Vadic's people, the Federation just needed to die.So, say, if the Borg plan had worked, would they and the Changelings have gone their separate ways? I wasn't sure what the endgame was for Vadic's faction. Also, wouldn't it have been smarter to play the long game and run similar infiltration missions through all of the major Alpha Quadrant powers?
More than anything, seeing the Enterprise-D and the bridge crew all back together to save the day sure did feel good. As someone that sometimes wishes we never saw anything past All Good Things... , this is the ending that I wanted for them. Together. Happy. Family. Gave me all the feels. If there's anything that I take away from this season, it's this.
Also, just a random thought I had, but I wonder how often Scotty stopped by the Fleet Museum after Geordi took over to have a drink on the bridge of the 1701-A. I was very happy to see that's where it ended up.