One of my friends tried showing me Deep Space Nine a while ago. It was pretty dire.
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I think I prefered TNG over DS9 when I was a kid because DS9 was too dark and not enough explory.
Nowdays I dunno. |
It had the best ending that a Star Trek show will ever see.
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ds9 was my favorite, bigger space battles
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If absolutely forced to choose I'd pick Star Wars every time, but these days I'd take Mass Effect over both every time.
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Why? Because Mass Effect has such a better story and more likeable characters who have believable relationships?
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His version of Common People is awesome.
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Star Wars, because Star Trek is really boring.
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Like seriously, it is the fucking boringest science fiction ever made. It's worse then fucking battletech. It's like if someone just took a science fiction setting and stuffed it full of twilight zone episodes and hamfisted moral lessons. The actual battles are fucking boring too. It's like they're all animated by the guys who do the Doctor Who starship exposition scenes, only they've got bodgy-as-fuck lasers ohwait "phasers" and shit. The ships all look flighty and way too maneuverable for their sizes. Also when you consider the sheer amount of technical, crew, and random alien problems their ships suffer every other day, it quickly becomes obvious that the federation must have like five ships left at this point that haven't spontaneously exploded.
Also every fucking movie has the same set-up! Here's a more powerful vessel, we can't beat it, let's go on an excursion, let's get beamed aboard it, now it's weaker, let's blow it up. I have no idea how they still managed to do that formula for the new film. Man. |
Trek pwns that shit.
I prefer Star Trek just for the reason of being more subtle and contemplative. I like Star Wars as well (sort of), but it's the same, old mishmash of archtypes and tropes since the dawn of time. Star Trek has plenty of clichés as well, but it explores the gray areas of morality and the wonder of humanity's future; it leaves room to breathe. It can get pedantic with its meaningless techno babble and navel-gazing (especially in TNG and voyager), but that's nothing we haven't seen from Doctor Who. While both are guilty of underestimating the vastness of space and the means of transcending it, Star Wars is very much on the lower end of that ("half-way across the galaxy by now..." please...). |
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Two, the original Star Wars trilogy may be a mishmash of classic archetypes and cliches, but a) this isn't inherently bad and b) it came out during a time when anti-heroes and rather downbeat films were popular. Star Wars was a breath of fresh air and completely changed cinema. |
No, it isn't inherently bad, just rather boring IMO.
I didn't take the circumstances of its release into account. I don't see how it changed cinema though and, if so, was that change necessarily good? I also don't think the Star Trek films are so bland and repetitive like Strike Witch described. All of the films made within the last twenty years, excluding Nemesis and the reboot, don't really fit that category. |
I haven't seen either. What?
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I enjoy Star Wars more than Star trek... I've watched a bit here n there of Star Trek, but it was never really more to me than a TV series. |
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which show is better is a matter of opinion and is different from person to person. me personaly prefer farscape over both of them. (I still like star trek and star wars but farscape is just much better) I intended this to be a thread of which would win in a battle scenario, in my opinion obviously star trek but I want to hear some arguments of why poeple would mistakingly think starwars would win |
My favourite science fiction film was 2001: A Space Odyssey.
I still prefer Star Wars to Star Trek, though: at least Star Wars wasn't about one single spaceship. |
I don't like to call a lot of "science fiction" these days "science fiction" at all. There may be a sliding scale of the "hardness" of science fiction, but I demand a certain degree of hardness to be worthy of the name. Otherwise it's just fantasy in space. Which is absolutely fine, I'm into that, but it's not "science fiction" to me.
As it is, there would only need to be one chapter in Harry Potter in which Dumbledore apparates onto the International Space Station to battle Voldemort and it would be a sci-fi series forever more. |
I once read an interesting definition for science fiction someone proposed: if the story revolves around "what if?", it's science fiction. Usually, the "what if?" needs to revolve around something "sciency" in relation to us as humans.
By this definition, 2001 is science fiction because the plot is basically "what if there were aliens that came before us?" Star Wars by this definition would not be science fiction because the plot is not speculative; it's more of a fantasy adventure that's set in space. |
The fullest and best sci-fi story I've ever read is Ever17: Out of Infinity.
It has time travel, immortality, a killer virus, a romance between a human and a female machine, the many worlds interpretation, fourth dimensional beings and is in effect an essay on identity. The best sci-fi short story I've read is The Dandelion Girl, which is pretty archaic stuff for science fiction. |
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Fantasy generally speculates about the big concepts, like Good vs Evil, Light and Darkness, love and death etc.
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What the hell is a "proper author"?
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Not Stephenie Meyer.
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Star Trek 2 and 3 are masterpieces. 4 is pretty good. And the rest of them range anywhere from awful (the new one, and Generations), to okay. |
First Contact was on tonight. Seeing Picard kill those Borg with a Tommy gun never gets old, and his speech about the advancement of the Borg through the galaxy is epic.
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Note also that I used ironic capitals when I mentioned the phrase. |
I would have accepted "uses chapters," except that that would exclude Pterry for most of his career.
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Precisely. Proper Authors wouldn't consider Pterry a proper author.
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