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Seto Kaiba

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Everything posted by Seto Kaiba

  1. It's possible the individual locations jumped the gun on announcing it... that's a pretty common way for leaks to occur these days.
  2. Q's real lesson apparently being "give your first edible a bit of time to kick in before you decide to have another, or you're in for a bad trip". I could absolutely believe Star Trek: Picard is actually a bad trip Jean-Luc is having after the replicator accidentally served him a steak with "non-regulation" mushrooms... Seriously though, what a mess. I thought the Borg couldn't possibly suffer more "badass decay" than they had by the end of Voyager, when Janeway and Janeway all but wiped out the Collective. Now Starfleet is just making the Borg clinically depressed by giving them Dr. Jurati.
  3. Considering the showrunners for Picard spent a lot of their time promoting the series as focusing on the original characters and would absolutely NOT become a TNG cast reunion... that the series has had the actors of all but two of the original characters leave and are turning the third season into a TNG cast reunion is a pretty damning indictment of the show's concept, creative staff, and direction. Now we have one final season of Patrick Stewart directing the Federation Starship Titanic's dance band as the show slowly sinks without trace and they draw his curtains for good. Eh... personally, I didn't find Great Value Han Solo from the United Federation of Latinx Stereotypes all that engaging TBH. Why build a diverse cast if the characterization is mostly racial stereotype-tied tropes? The problem with Q in this season is that Q is a top tier threat. He is A-plot material. You don't involve Q in your story unless Q is central to your story because he is just THAT big of a presence in Star Trek. If he's trying to teach Picard and his crew a lesson, he's up in their faces about it and the stakes are as high as stakes can go. What they did is the same thing Discovery's second season did with Spock. They dangled him in front of the audience as the bait in a bait-and-switch, with him throwing Picard and his merry band of Great Value-brand ethnic stereotype stock characters into a scenario that he was all but completely uninvolved with. The end, where he reveals his motivation and the "lesson" he was supposedly trying to convey with this season-long plot tumor is an embarrassing excuse that had NOTHING to do with the story arc at all. It feels almost like an excuse, a last second "throw it in" because the writers forgot to come up with an actual coherent motive for Q's behavior. I get the feeling that she was intended to be another "strong female character" like Dahj and Soji, but they couldn't work in any way to justify her being superhuman without outing Soong as a rogue geneticist immediately in a way that'd result in him being thrown in prison until doomsday. The whole season is a plot tumor that has nothing to do with what is ostensibly its main plot, and this is just a plot tumor ON the plot tumor. It's metastasized. I'm wondering if season three will follow suit, and the writers will forget or "Threshold never happened" their way out of the events of the past two seasons. It wouldn't be the first time... like when the ENT relaunch spent the entire introduction taking the piss out of "These are the voyages".
  4. Discovery was pretty ridiculous... even from the outset, but it got worse when it got to the 32nd century and literally became Bigger on the Inside. The Constitution-class is big for her era, but Strange New Worlds seems to be doing that same thing as the Abrams movies where the ship is seemingly two or three times its listed original size.
  5. That is a muddier topic... as there are two separate and distinct aircraft that are both called "Variable Glaug". The former is the captured enemy Valkyrie from Macross M3 that the New UN Forces reproduced in limited quantities, and the latter bis-type is a manned derivative of the Neo Glaug with much higher performance. It does have a very basic transformation, yes.
  6. Seems like everyone's bailing out of this one... Alison Pill, Santiago Carbrera, Isa Briones, and Evan Evagora have all been indicated to be leaving the series as of season two's conclusion. That leaves Michelle Hurd and maybe Orla Brady as the only cast members left who are playing original characters. I kind of expect to hear Michelle Hurd is also not coming back in the next few days.
  7. Yeah, it's not the basic structure... it's the inertia capacitor system that allows the pilot to withstand the suit's excessive acceleration and maneuvering g-forces that made it too complex and costly for true mass production in the Protoculture's era and made it all but impossible for the New UN Gov't to replicate it until they seized a factory satellite that manufactured them and studied it during its restoration. (It's implied in Master File that the primary sticking point is the fold carbon. The IVCS needs very pure, very high quality fold carbon to work. Much more so than any other reactor or system used by the Zentradi. Even humanity didn't have the means to synthesize fold carbon at the requisite purity until they captured a Queadluu-Rau production line.) The Queadluun-Rau's performance was so over-the-top that regular Zentradi pilots had severe difficulty handling it even with the IVCS. The Protoculture's solution, other than the decision to restrict it on a cost basis to certain roles analogous to special forces was to build a better pilot (the females). The Nousjadeul-Ger, on the other hand, was made for general use and while it is not as heavily armed or fast and maneuverable as the Queadluun-Rau it is a unit even average pilots can operate well and is simple enought to be mass produced in gargantuan numbers. I think that's the VA-14.
  8. Wow. I really have to hand it to Paramount, season two of Star Trek: Picard truly surpassed season one... in all the worst ways. HEAVY-HANDED USE OF SPOILERS AHEAD. What IS it with these showrunners and having to make everybody miserable, morbid, barely-functional wrecks of human beings (or aliens) and why are they so completely and utterly opposed to Star Trek having any kind of hope, light, or joy? Seriously... the whole schtick underpinning the second season is... The one person upon whom the difference between the Even Worse Futureâ„¢ and the Still Pretty Awful Futureâ„¢ of Star Trek: Picard's 25th Century is conveniently one of Jean-Luc Picard's ancestors, and the man conveniently responsible for everything going wrong is Another Bloody Identical Soong. Except this Soong isn't an insane hermit like Noonin, an incredibly naive moron like Alton, or an unhinged but theoretically well-meaning eugenics-advocate like Arik. Adam Soong is just Saturday Morning Cartoon show levels of EVIL. As per the usual, anyone who's not a returning Star Trek character or a newly-created relative of same might as well have stayed home for all the use they were in the story. Even Seven of Nine's not really contributing much this time around, except to handle "As you know" regarding the Borg. The Borg Queen herself has it the worst of anyone, though. I'm actually kind of impressed by their commitment to this terrible storyline. The actors, writers, and directors are clearly out there trying VERY hard to take this seriously... which makes you wonder why nobody, at any point, put up their hand and said "Why are we doing this? This is terrible."
  9. There's damned by faint praise... but I guess that's more "praised by faint damning"? We aim to please. One thing I'll say for both this and DSC, the TOS-like props were pretty good.
  10. ... so, if I read that right, it sucks but it sucks a fair bit less than "sitting next to grandpa's corpse for hours after he violently sh*t himself and died on a family road trip" (AKA Picard) or "cornered at a social event by an increasingly drunk and aggressive bigot who won't stop trying to gaslight you and sincerely believes allegedly being a very distant relation of someone famous makes them fascinating" (AKA Discovery)?
  11. ... surprisingly apt, considering the plot of the game.
  12. I do find it rather amusing that the animation for firing the wing-glove guns on the YF/VF-19 in Macross 30 basically has the Battroid pelvic thrust at the enemy.
  13. ... there are no rotary cannons on the YF-19's chest. Its only weapons systems are the REB-30G laser gun on the monitor turret (head), the two cannon mounts on the wing glove that take either a REB-20G converging energy cannon or REB-23 laser cannon, the GU-15 gunpod, the internal weapons bays in the legs, and the underwing pylons.
  14. No, the guns mounted on the wing root of the YF/VF-19... the ones that end up on its hips in Battroid mode.
  15. I believe they were shown as single-shot weapons... they're definitely depicted that way in Macross 30.
  16. And "drunk while on duty" too... Maybe his maverick approach to tactics is enough to land him in the role of "a useful idiot" where they simply don't care if his unit is wiped out as long as they achieve their objective? I'm not sure it counts as firing, but Boddole Zer definitely had the authority to demote or promote commanders and execute them via "friendly" fire...
  17. In all fairness, Exsedol clearly considers Quamzin to be in the latter category. How much of an unstable mentalcase do you have to be for a warrior race that's indifferent to casualties consider you an excessively gung-ho psychopath?
  18. Actually, rather a lot of the older fans have seen it... there used to be a fairly brisk trade in bootleg tapes of the series back before Paramount reinstated the series into Star Trek's canon and made it available in a legitimate home video release and on streaming. All the fuss and noise they made to promote it did a lot to raise awareness of the series. That the articles covering the casting decision keep referencing TAS complete with screencaps will probably drive renewed interest in the series too. Ironically, the people dismissing it as a "nothingburger" are likely to end up convincing people it IS something via the Streisand Effect. Though considering how few Star Trek fans still follow the franchise after the messes that were Discovery and Picard, I guess it's possible it would be considered obscure by what little is left of the audience. (All things considered, the identity politics-driven fuss and noise over the casting decision will likely be the closest SNW gets to actual news coverage Paramount doesn't have to pay a shill for, though.)
  19. OK, so Don't Hurt Me, My Healer! is pretty lame. It's basically the same two jokes cycled ad nauseam, Alvin gets himself beaten up by a monster that is actually very friendly and quite apologetic for having hurt him and Carla is verbally abusive as all get-out and refuses to actually prove that she's a healer.
  20. Eh... more or less. That's Macross Dynamite 7. Its first appearance is in episode 2 of the OVA, and it also appears in episode 4. IIRC, it also puts in an appearance in Macross 30: Voices Across the Galaxy.
  21. ... that much was communicated pretty comprehensively in the show itself. The problem is the way it's handled makes a good chunk of the narrative come off like a misogynistic incel fantasy. Every woman is a narcissistic gold-digging social climber and the men who humor them are either desperate doormats or himbos with the intellectual capacity of a single uncooked potato. It's just... creepy. Not in a horror way, but in a "hey author, are you okay? Do you need someone to talk to?" sort of way. The main character (Leon?) being terrible seems to be pretty intentional... as in, he's consciously choosing to behave like a prat to knock some sense into the many people in the society he disapproves of. The last couple episodes he was just maximum trolling and clearly very aware that he was doing it. For now, jumped to Don't Hurt Me, My Healer!. It's definitely one of the weirder starts I've seen to a fantasy series, with the warrior/knight main character literally asking a monster to stop for a minute so he can have a sidebar argument with the healer passing by over how one properly asks for help... EDIT: Good lord, that's one articulate bear... people pay good money for counseling like that.
  22. The one time we see them eating, it's a roast leg of something-or-other that resembles a drumstick. Presumably if you can clone a forty-foot tall man in a matter of minutes, 3D-printing or cloning a large avian to roast would be child's play. There ARE birds that big in the setting, like Eden's giant sauro bird, which seems to be reminsicent of Quetzalcoatlus... but twice the size according to Macross Chronicle. (Picture is a statue of a Quetzalcoatlus lawsoni at the Detroit Zoo for scale, the smaller of the two species with a wingspan of about 5m. The Quetzalcoatlus northropi is around twice as big, with a wingspan of 10m, the height of an average Zentradi. The Sauro Bird is about four times the size pictured here.) Yup... the very first thing we see from them is Quamzin and his subaltern Oigul gambling with liquor rations on how many ships they'd collide with by folding out too close to the Vrlitwhai branch fleet.
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