Well, it says after a 100 years, the academy is opening up again, so that makes us think its after the Burn in the Discovery future era.
Starfleet Academy is not going to visit a new world every week and meet a new culture and technology every week. Is this just going to be a teen drama?
Zing!Neither did DS9 and we know how poorly that turned out.
Zing aside, DS9 was at the mouth of the wormhole and exotic and interesting things were always stopping by. These will be students taking tests.Neither did DS9 and we know how poorly that turned out.
To be fair, you and I are on the Earth all the time and often find interesting things to do.Good point. I am sure that we will see the Cadets go on training missions as well. Heck, they might even be part of various ship crews later on. I doubt that they will be on Earth the whole time, as that would be kind of boring.
To be fair, you and I are on the Earth all the time and often find interesting things to do.
More to the point, DSC establishes that the Federation still exists as far ahead as the 32nd century. If anything, from a historical perspective, that's amazingly optimistic; cultures don't tend to last a thousand years without collapsing and being replaced. It speaks to the Federation's resilience in being able to survive cataclysms and the periodic generational swings between fascism and inclusive democracy that all long-lasting cultures encounter.I don't like Discovery and most of what it has accomplished, but the Burn did not make all the other shows meaningless. The things they explore are still explored and the people they meet are still met. The Federation is springing back because of all the foundations that had been set before.
As well as frequent comments of "But we're just cadets!".Well, if this is a replacement for Star Trek: Epic, expect these students to encounter universe-ending crises at least once a season.
Which is really just a rephrase of the classic "you're the only ship in the quadrant.""But we're just cadets!".
Red Squad never let that stop them!As well as frequent comments of "But we're just cadets!".
Yeah, when you really put it in context like that, we just happen to see the Federation and Starfleet in what's likely their darkest time in the next millennium, which is good for Discovery because there's a problem to help solve, and a little easier to write than a Federation at its apex would be.More to the point, DSC establishes that the Federation still exists as far ahead as the 32nd century. If anything, from a historical perspective, that's amazingly optimistic; cultures don't tend to last a thousand years without collapsing and being replaced. It speaks to the Federation's resilience in being able to survive cataclysms and the periodic generational swings between fascism and inclusive democracy that all long-lasting cultures encounter.
That's the one set in the Animated universe, right? Worth the price of admission just for Tiberius Maximus.