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Seto Kaiba

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  1. Wait, you mean to say there are actual human beings posting there? I thought it was just spambots spamming spambots. Maybe Pinhead from Hellraiser would be more appropriate, since he seems to think that this comic is a sight he has to show others.
  2. While there are undeniably less elaborate ways to engage in self-harm, who are we to kink-shame him?
  3. Presumably out of courtesy for any silent psychopaths on these boards that might actually want to read the comics?
  4. Probably best to wait for some kind of official statement from the SDCon organizers.
  5. Well, either that or they used a different set of search terms to compile their data. After a bit more fiddling last night, I'm inclined to suspect a little from Column A, and a little from Column B. I did some experimenting with searches on series acronyms and with vs. without the colon in the title and found that it WAS actually possible to reproduce some of their results. It's slightly more problematic to use Discovery's official acronym since that's shared with all manner of other DSCs, whereas TNG, DS9, and VOY largely have Star Trek as the dominant user of the abbreviation. If you specify that the search term is an American television series, most of Star Trek: Discovery's apparent advantage disappears and its performance is very similar to the other Star Trek shows barring spikes around the premieres of each season of the series in worldwide search performance. (MUCH less pronounced for season two though.) I'm not sure how odd this necessarily is, since these shows are still on the air in reruns around the world. If they weren't, it'd probably be a bad sign for Discovery. Curiously, in the by-region breakdown, search interest in Star Trek: Discovery is mostly localized in Asia and Eastern Europe. Of the 42 regions to be identified in the query in the time window I specified (Nov 1 2015 to today) that covers the lifespan of Star Trek: Discovery's development and production from the first public announcement onwards, there are only 2 western european countries in the top 10 (France and Spain) and the United States is #40 of 42, with only Hungary and Japan showing less non-zero interest. If Doomcock had made the argument that Star Trek: Discovery is far and away the least searched among North American audiences he'd have had an entirely valid point. The US is in the top 10 for searches made on every other Star Trek show save Enterprise... and even Enterprise has a 14 place lead over Discovery at 26. I'm mildly curious if Star Trek: Discovery's damn-near-last-place performance in the US is due to the (richly deserved, IMO) antipathy that many fans in the west seem to have for it, or the show's exclusivity to the CBS All Access platform that so many fans felt was a bridge too far. YouTube pundits like Doomcock, Nerdrotic, and to a lesser extent MechaRandom42 are kind of like the Hunter S. Thompsons of the fandom critical commentary world. They adopt a gonzo journalism-esque style heavily freighted with their own emotional reactions, occasionally make a good point, but are mostly just ranting and raving. Most of the fun watching them is just in how wound-up they get... especially Doomcock, who seemingly understands and appreciates that people watch him for his hamminess far more than his content. They all belong to that weird, seemingly amnestic bunch of pundits who love to rant and rave about how political correctness is supposedly destroying the entertainment industry... having apparently forgotten that the media of yesteryear was often FAR less subtle about the exact same Aesops. (Many of us, I'm sure, remember how often cartoon characters in Saturday morning cartoon shows used to break the fourth wall to make a point about how Drugs Are Bad, Discrimination is Bad, etc.. GI Joe's memetically famous "Knowing is half the battle" hasn't been forgotten by most viewers and they were FAR from the only ones doing it, and Superman and Captain America were both doing it as far back as the 1940's and 1950's.) That's clickbait journalism for ya... as much as they (esp. Nerdrotic) like to rant about the sins of the access media, they're basically just as bad. Star Trek always had the "SJW narrative". TOS was one of the most progressive, envelope-pushing, unsubtle society-critiquing shows on television. Gene Roddenberry's progressive politics just blended near-seamlessly into his vision of an optimistic, utopian future for humanity. Put simply, Star Trek lived and breathed its message. They could get on the pulpit without it feeling like a lecture because that was just how things were in the 23rd century. Star Trek: Discovery's showrunners f*cked it up by turning the 23rd century of their series into a grimdark, hopeless, dystopian future. Instead of blending in as a natural part of that bright future, a progressive message felt like a grating soapbox screed made all the more grating by the showrunners crowing about it. A speech on the rights of man is not out of place coming from a decent, morally upright person like Kirk, Picard, Sisko, Janeway, or Archer... but it doesn't feel particularly congruous coming from an obvious psychopath like Lorca or someone whose character-establishing moment was multiple acts of violent bigotry like Burnham.
  6. I'll second that. I'm guessing that was a Japan exclusive? If I'd seen an Enterprise-D kit of THAT level of quality, I'd probably have snapped it up if it was sold in the US. I'm struggling not to make a "wants the D" joke here. I really am.
  7. Did s'more messing around in Google Trends and I still can't reproduce the results Doomcock is crowing about. Star Trek: Discovery definitely wasn't a hot search term after the show started airing and word got around what a turdburger it was, and Star Trek: Picard seems to have worn out its novelty surprisingly quickly, but they definitely trended above TNG for a while.
  8. More like Why is The Matrix 4? The ending of the Matrix trilogy did NOT cry out for further continuation. It had what was, essentially, a happily ever after.
  9. We did get onto a rather odd tangent there because of the surface detailing on the Aoshima Enterprise-D, didn't we? For what it's forth, this kind of attention to detail both on the part of the original designers and the model/toy manufacturer is one of the main factors in whether or not I'll open my wallet for a particular model/toy. I mean, look at that Aoshima Tekering posted. With that level of detail, it looks practically as good as the original shooting model... and that thing was almost the size of a small sedan. (Looking at my Diamond Select Enterprise-A and Enterprise-B, it feels like a weird omission to be missing some of that realistic surface detail.)
  10. Voyager's crew must suffer... that's why Neelix is the cook. Who else could bring an entire starship to a screeching halt with nothing more than a nice sharp cheese? Oh, they are... it's a memory/resolution issue. Transporters deconstruct and reconstruct a person down to the quantum level, which consumes an ENORMOUS amount of memory. The physical patterns of a handful of people were sufficient to consume all available computer core memory on Deep Space Nine's main computer and supporting systems. The rest of the pattern had to be dumped into the capacious standalone buffers of Quark's holosuite arcade, requiring a third set of extremely powerful computers to recomposite their patterns and rematerialize them. Because replicators have to store hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of patterns they only store that pattern data down to the molecular level and they engage in a bit of cheating when it comes to things like texture and consistency of complex structures. That's why (according to Eddington anyway) replicated food is a always a bit off... the shortcuts which the replicators employ the provide a nutritionally complete entree that closely resembles the desired meal mean that what you get will be slightly off in terms of texture, flavor, etc. That lower resolution is also why they can't replicate living tissue except using special experimental replicators with much higher resolution (the genetronic replicator that they used to put together a new spine for Worf).
  11. Dilithium crystals don't generate or store energy, they're porous to light element matter and antimatter at extremely high temperatures and pressures so they're used to moderate the matter-antimatter pair annihilation reaction. The matter and antimatter streams meet inside the dilithium crystal, and the resulting high-energy plasma is used to transfer that energy where it's needed. Star Trek: Voyager's writers made it out to be pretty energy-intensive, which is why Captain Janeway instituted rationing of replicator usage early on and the show maintained it through its conclusion. Not a huge issue for a Starfleet ship operating within easy distance of a deuterium and antideuterium refueling complex, but for a ship 75,000ly from home with no easy way to refuel its all-important reserves of antideuterium, conserving energy would've been important. (The writers proceeded to shoot themselves in the foot by having Voyager's holodecks running more or less constantly, even though replicators are a big part of what makes holodecks work. The excuse that the holodeck's power system wasn't compatible with the rest of the ship made no sense at all. This was made slightly worse by an apparent misconception on a number of different writers part that deuterium was rare. Yeah, it only makes up 0.02% of hydrogen in Earth's oceans, but that's still an awful lot and it's pretty easy to convert regular hydrogen to deuterium with the right equipment... which is the entire point of bussard collectors.)
  12. Replicators were the part of Gene Roddenberry's vision for Star Trek: the Next Generation that Ron Moore and Ira Behr were least happy with. As Ron Moore put it: So, once Gene was out of full control over Star Trek the idea was gradually introduced that replicators were imperfect devices that were very limited in what they could produce. There were all kinds of materials that couldn't be replicated (including a number of essential materials for starship manufacture and maintenance), some objects/devices were too complex to replicate in one piece and had to be replicated one piece/assembly at a time and assembled by hand, and that as a result of the complexity issue and nutrition-focused programming the DS9 and VOY writers favorite hobby horse: that replicated food was often easily distinguishable from the genuine article... occasionally to the extent of being unpalatable. There was probably some material in the photon torpedoes that USS Voyager was issued that couldn't be replicated... besides the antimatter in the warhead, which Voyager wouldn't have been able to replicate but which they would've had plenty of anyway.
  13. Hm... assuming that older officer on the Horizont at the beginning was the commander of Mars Base's 21st Armored Battle Company, 2101 could refer to 1st Lt. Bernard being part of (probably leader of, given his rank) 21st Company's 1st Platoon.
  14. Given where it's placed, my guess would be 162 is his aircraft's modex number. No clue what 2101 might be, I don't recall seeing anything other than Battle Company numbers on Ride Armor line art. 21 would obviously refer to his being a part of the 21st Armored Battle Company, but he wasn't its leader so I'm not sure about the 01.
  15. Yup... ancient graffiti has revealed that "Yo momma" jokes were alive and well during the Roman Republic, and the oldest surviving English language joke is a dick joke. That doesn't mean a new take isn't welcome, or sometimes eminently necessary... as with that godawful Star Trek: Titan story. EDIT: ... can't seem to reproduce his results in Google Trends though.
  16. To be entirely fair, the show the showrunners shot wasn't the show the showrunners had intended to make... they were victims of the network's insistence on Voyager being TNG 2.0.
  17. I hope the convention organizers release a statement soon to clear all this up. Right now there seem to be a fair few people getting incensed on her behalf on Facebook and other social media. I hope it doesn't hurt attendance, since I'm sure the organizers had no intention of making Mari feel slighted or replaced. They're die-hard fans too, so the idea of upsetting Mari is probably as disconcerting to them as it is to the rest of the fandom.
  18. That was kind of a "depending on the writer" thing. Star Trek: the Next Generation was the worst offender, frequently depicting Starfleet (and other) ships as so fragile that a single hit from a phaser array, disruptor, or torpedo was enough to destroy them utterly. The Enterprise-D itself was a victim of several of the more egregious examples, seemingly exploding at the drop of a hat from damage that barely slowed previous Starfleet ships. The USS Reliant, for instance, was barely slowed by the loss of a warp nacelle where the Enterprise-D was totally destroyed by the loss of one in a collision with the USS Bozeman. As the effects technology improved along with the growth of the effects budget, Starfleet (and other) ships got a LOT more robust. USS Voyager in "Year of Hell" was probably the best example, completely riddled stem to stern with battle damage and still not just flyable but combatworthy. Nondestructive external battle damage was hard to model when ships were still being shot using physical models. It was easier and cheaper to just have a ship explode than it was to build a model and do a dedicated effects shot for battle damage the way they had to do in "Best of Both Worlds" for the Borg cutting a chunk out of the saucer section. CG changed the change there, so depicting severe battle damage became a lot easier. You could argue the opposite as well, that the incredible defensive and offensive capabilities of Starfleet ships - which are built as vessels of exploration but which can easily go toe-to-toe with purpose-built warships - is proof in concrete form of the Federation's underlying principle that peaceful coexistence yields far greater benefits than belligerence. Instead of being built with technology from a single species, Starfleet ships are built with the very best provided by all the Federation's members. They can explore the galaxy and bring the Federation's message of peace and goodwill while still having the means to defend themselves should their message fall on deaf ears. (In short, they're mighty because their message is right... whereas the Romulan, Klingon, and Borg attitude is that they're right because they are mighty.) IIRC, the showrunners had expressed a view that the success rate against the Borg was more a matter of tactics. Starfleet met the Borg at Wolf 359 arrayed in orderly lines of battle and fought in formation. Armed with Picard's knowledge, the Borg knew exactly where the weaknesses of those formations and ships were and took them to pieces easily. Presenting the Borg with an orderly array of targets just made their methodical approach to battle that much easier. The Enterprise-D's later success in confusing the Borg enough to rescue Picard was built on defiance of convention and insane troll logic, helped by the fact that the Borg didn't consider one ship to be a threat. Starfleet's later, better result against the Borg were a product of adopting a chaotic, highly disordered battle strategy to make it harder for the Borg to predict their actions (as in First Contact). The comparison to the Galor-class is probably unfair, since the Galor-class was more or less Cardassia's line warship... analogous to what the Excelsior and Miranda-classes were in the Dominion War. It's not surprising at all that the Federation's state of the art flagship class outclassed them. They were a challenge for Picard's USS Stargazer, but not so much the Enterprise-D or another of the Federation's flagship-level classes. That much is pretty much explicitly stated on a number of occasions in multiple shows. The USS Defiant aside, Starfleet ships are built for maximum multirole performance as vessels of exploration and scientific endeavor. It became a bit of a recurring thing for Janeway and other Voyager crew members to have to explain to the aliens of the week that Voyager wasn't a warship despite her amazingly overpowered weapons technology by the standards of the region. I think a part of it is that, after the Khitomer Accords ended the Klingon Cold War, Starfleet stopped focusing so much on combat performance since its ships were no longer heavily pulling duty as border patrol along the Klingon border. The Enterprise-A and the Excelsior had plenty of phaser banks and well upwards of a hundred photon torpedoes apiece. USS Voyager had plenty of phasers, but her torpedo magazine? 40. (Not that that stopped Janeway from firing over 125 of them during the series after indicating there was no way to replace them.) Once the Dominion War was underway, we saw even older ships like the Excelsior-class USS Lakota being upgraded with Starfleet's latest weapons technology including quantum torpedoes and new combat-ready ships coming out of the yards by the dozen (thanks to reused art assets from the recent films). (The novelverse, in cooperation with the old showrunners, explicitly established that Starfleet ships adopted the shape they did with the saucer section, the separate engineering hull, and the outboard warp nacelles, because that design produced the best multi-role performance in the warp drive. It made the warp drive more vulnerable in combat, but it made up for it by providing a more efficient warp field that allowed ships to use less energy to achieve the same warp factors, to achieve higher warp factors more readily, and more readily change warp field geometries on the fly to change course while at warp. Vulcan ships from Enterprise are described as being very fast and efficient in a straight line thanks to their coleopteric warp coil, but have very poor versatility and turning performance. Klingon ships with their centerline nacelles were described as more durable but far less efficient.)
  19. It wouldn't... the UK and EU trademark laws were already pretty well-aligned before the UK joined the EU.
  20. There were a fair few Star Trek fans among Macross's creators... and the Tatsunoko Production staff too. The Star Trek: Titan novelverse series did a plot a lot like this, tying into the aborted arc involving the crystalline entity from TNG's Data/Lore backstory, the space jellyfish from Encounter at Farpoint, and a few other giant space monsters from old Trek. Both were, in Star Trek: Titan, essentially invasive species by dint of having ended up outside their natural habitat. Captain Riker's USS Titan stumbles into their natural habitat well outside Federation space and discovered the jellies being preyed on by a violent humanoid species who turn their corpses into organic starships. Riker being Riker, they interfered immediately and later came to understand the species they'd assumed were cruel, inhumane hunters were more along the lines of the space DNR engaging in a vital ecological management program to keep these organisms alive in their natural habitat while also preventing them from the planet-destroying shenanigans they got up to in the TV shows.
  21. BURN THE HERETIC! (Just kidding. )
  22. Really, I think there's a lot of latitude for writing Star Trek stories. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine proved that a Star Trek story didn't need to follow the Gene Roddenberry "planet of the week" formula to be successful. You could set a show in a fixed location or indulge in serialized storytelling and still keep that essential Star Trek flavor. The thing that sets Star Trek apart from other sci-fi produced in the west is that the future it depicts is a fundamentally optimistic, aspirational one. That's where J.J. Abrams and Alex Kurtzman both screwed up. Bad Reboot's Star Trek movie trilogy and Star Trek: Discovery both dispensed with the idea that the future would be a bold age of space exploration in which humanity had long since learned how to treat itself (and others) with dignity and respect, and where clever diplomacy was just as potent (and far more preferable) a problem solving tool than violence. They didn't want to tell that kind of story. They wanted to make something more generic, the kind of standard space war story where the situation never gets more complex than Lawful Good vs Chaotic Evil and problems are solved by shooting each other with ray guns. That's why Star Trek '09's story created a parallel world with a more militant, openly nationalistic Federation and Starfleet who see the Klingons and Romulans not as worthy foes or potential allies in the future, but simply hostile aliens to be destroyed. That's also why Star Trek: Discovery's entire first season was one long war story, against a more bestial, far less civilized Klingon Empire full of cruel, bloodthirsty, warmongering savages who live by no law other than the survival of the fittest. They've been dehumanized to the point that they're not people, they're just space monsters the heroes can kill without remorse or complaint. There's no code of honor... they're just rapists and murderers and terrorists and every other kind of immoral thing you could think of. Star Trek: Discovery's second season was little better, with a few optimistic plots before the rot set in and they introduced an omnicidal enemy who wanted to exterminate all life and therefore diplomacy was never an option so massive ray gun battles and grisly combat deaths could be the norm. That's where I fear Star Trek: Picard is headed. Picard had issues with dehumanizing the Borg drones already, but now we're going to see the Romulans as irredeemable villains who're just keeping the Borg drones in gulags to torture them. You can write almost any story in that general setting and call it Star Trek, but without that optimistic, principled future it won't feel like Star Trek. That is the most important thing for writing a Star Trek story... that the future is a better place, that humanity and its allies have principles, and that differences are celebrated rather than shunned. That vision of the future is the quintessence of the Star Trek setting. Everything else is negotiable.
  23. The novels, at least, had a coordinated continuity across the four Star Trek relaunch novel lines and the new TOS novels that were made alongside them. I'm not sure if the Star Trek: Discovery novels are coherent with them, but the TV series itself borrowed the second season's primary antagonist (Control) from them and the ending of season two seems written to avoid ruling out that the Control AI was actually permanently destroyed. (Control in the novel-verse was not a malevolent AI as such, but more a very well-intentioned extremist ala Sloan that would take any action, no matter how unsavory, to preserve the Federation and its ideals in a galaxy that didn't share them. The actual malevolent AI was Control's creator, the AI Uraei, a pre-Federation surveillance AI which created Control and Section 31 to take extralegal action on its behalf... and was deleted by Dr. Bashir a few years after Nemesis.) Star Trek: Picard poses more problems, being that the Borg apparently are the centerpiece of its plot... while in the novelverse the Borg ceased to exist when the "sufficiently advanced" race that accidentally created them killed the Borg Queen for good and cut off the Collective for good a few years after Nemesis. The whole reason that they went back to developing in the Prime universe was that Star Trek fans largely didn't really care for the Jar-Jar Abrams reboot films and their darker, more action-centric take on the setting, and the films themselves were not really all that successful commercially. Star Trek: Beyond in particular did very poorly once marketing costs were added in, which led to an exodus of financial backers that killed the fourth movie stone dead. Because the audience that DID like the films were mostly the casual viewers and the Star Trek fandom's feelings for them hovered between ambivalence and dislike, there was very little in the way of licensing revenue to recoup costs and losses. Going back to prime universe Star Trek made sense... as in "dollars and". Bad Reboot still wants to do things Abramsverse-style because that's their take on Star Trek, but because many fans don't care for it at all they keep increasing the percentage of prime continuity references and appearances by characters from previous Star Trek shows in the hopes of making their creative output less unpalatable to the die-hard fans who actually buy the franchise's licensed merchandise. They're hurting pretty bad because there aren't as many licensees buying licenses and paying royalties because market research shows them that the fans who are paying for merchandise don't like Abrams-era Trek.
  24. Started Nobunaga Teacher's Young Bride today. It's pretty unremarkable so far. The only thing that really stood out to me was that, like Isekai Cheat Magician and a bunch of recent shows with odd premises, the protagonist accepts a completely implausible situation almost immediately and practically without question. He asks her a few basic questions about her name, her family, and what year it is, and jumps right to "this girl is the real Ikoma Kitsuno, the warlord Oda Nobunaga's lover and mother of his children, and has traveled 467 years forward in time". Seems like fodder for some decent-ish comedy tho, and it's pretty well-animated for a short series.
  25. Battlestar Galactica's 2004 TV series was a strong performer, but it kind of burned out on its own when its spinoff Caprica was poorly received and got cancelled by SyFy in 2010. Game of Thrones was what I mentioned because it's the property that's generally credited (or blamed, depending on your perspective) with the spate of dark, action-heavy, highly serialized shows we're currently living with by producers and film pundits alike. Can't say that I have, and please tell me that isn't the real cover... that looks like he made it himself in Microsoft Paint during a boring staff meeting. Actors have a bit more clout working in feature films rather than broadcast television... though, to be fair, all my examples were supporting actors and actresses raising grievances with the producers. After seven seasons and two previous feature films as Jean-Luc Picard, Patrick Stewart could kind of hold the project hostage to get any changes he wanted made. It's not clear if he could do that with Star Trek: Picard.
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