Star Trek

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/c/StarTrek: Your safe harbored Spacedock in these Stellar Seas!

Fire up the inertial dampeners, retract all moorings and clear space dock. It's time to boldy go where no one has gone before!

~ 1. Be Civil. This is a Star Trek community and lets keep that energy. Be kind, respectful and polite to one another.

~ 2. Be Courteous. Please use the spoiler tags for any new Trek content that's been released in the past month. Check this page for lemmy formatting) for any posts. Also please keep spoilers out of the titles!

~ 3. Be Considerate. We're spread out across a lot of different instances but don't forget to follow your instances rules and the instance rules for Lemmy.world.


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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/36274218

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Star Trek: Resurgence (store.steampowered.com)
submitted 1 day ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I’ve just finished this, that was a blast ! Great Star Trek Story and a lot of TellTale drama. Really cool « little » game

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"In SNW, Vulcans are most often the butt of jokes, and that joke is, just about universally, look at how logical these Vulcans are! In season two’s “Charades,” Spock (already half-human) is turned fully human by a noncorporeal intelligence. This immediately makes him smelly, horny, hungry, and catastrophically emotional, things he apparently was unable to be when he was biologically part Vulcan. Later, in season three’s “Four-and-a-Half Vulcans,” four human crew members are turned into Vulcans, which makes them into science-loving assholes obsessed with facts and logic, save for one who, because she got turned into a Romulan, turns scheming and mutineering and altogether evil. There is little nuance in the show’s portrayal of Spock and his emotions, and even less in how it regards anyone with two Vulcan parents. Vulcans in SNW, to oversimplify (but not by much), are cruel, petty beings obsessed with logic and science simply because they are Vulcans."

"Bioessentialism, in brief, is the ultimate anti-liberty philosophy: a bioessentialist universe is a clockwork universe, one where every choice a person makes can be traced back to a fundamental and irrevocable feature of their DNA. A bioessentialist wants nothing from you but your cooperation in the role they’ve decided you must play in their world; God help you if you say no. It’s an ideology so self-evidently evil that it’s at the center of just about any young adult dystopian novel my fellow Millennials may have read in middle school. If you believe in human self-determination in any way, it’s a concept you must not only refuse but actively resist.

Which, of course, makes it all the stranger that it’s so present in a television show that’s been celebrated since its debut for its progressive politics."

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The Star Trek Khan Podcast has been released today and it’s featuring George Takei and Tim Russ!

https://blog.trekcore.com/2025/09/star-trek-khan-audio-drama-premieres-first-episode-today/

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Robert Picardo talks about how he conned his way into Star Trek First Contact

SMOOSHING 100

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/33903002

I painted it for my son, he's a huge TNG fan, particularly this character. I loved TNG as a kid as well so it's one thing we bond over. My wife and I met Jonathan, Brent, and Michael a few years ago at FanExpo, they were all good humored about our Star Wars shirts we wore just for them!

For the timelapse: https://mastodon.social/@BallShapedMan/114964141221194718

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What were your thoughts?

Don't ask mine. They pissed me off in the first 10 minutes and I stopped paying attention entirely.

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by zjti8eit to c/[email protected]
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Given the 32nd Century setting established in DISCO, it seams reasonably plausible that his holomatrix could be swapped for one of programmable matter. He could possibly have tactile sensation (and therefore "fully functional").

Long way for a Data fucks joke. Not sorry.

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Figured I'd throw down one of these for those who may want to dive into some discussion!

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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Fantastic 2-part series on the history of TOS Star Trek

Part 1 is about the TV series, Part 2 is about the movies

The Story of Star Trek (part 1) https://youtu.be/hA7OTFp_kDI

The Story of Star Trek's Miraculous Resurrection (part 2) https://youtu.be/yejAOxQkOWk

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Of the many Star Trek starship models we saw at this year's Wonderfest modelmaking show, this is one that's actually a 1:1 prop replica instead of a scaled down model! Eric Gonzalez is one of the Star Trek fans obsessed with this model of the Constellation Class ship seen in Captain Picard's ready room from Star Trek: The Next Generation, and has built this replica using the same source kit parts and greeblies that Rick Sternbach and Andrew Probert did with the original prop! We learn why the production team made chose this distinctive yellow color for the ship, how that fits into Star Trek lore, and why this is one of rare places you'll find Japanese Mecha in Star Trek kitbashing!

Uploaded to YouTube by Adam Savage’s Tested.

Wayback Machine archive

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/32341625

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Star Trek Thye Next Generation's Dr Beverly Crusher is a severely underrated character. Here's a video explaining all the traits that make the character interesting and why Crusher centric episodes are usually good, except of course, Sub-Rosa.

Here, here.

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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

I didn't see this anywhere.

Harris Yulin, known to Trek fans as Aamin Marritza (aka Gul Darhe'el), died of cardiac arrest on June 10th, 2025 at the age of 87.

Harris is also known for Dynasty, Scarface, Ozark, and the Judge in Ghostbusters II:

"Peace and long life." 🖖

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When it comes to science fiction, no franchises loom larger than Star Wars and Star Trek. While both offer visions of far-off galaxies, future societies, and the occasional knife fight, only one understands how government really works.

While Star Wars: Andor shows a government we can actually recognize—full of ambition, fear, incompetence, and petty power plays—Star Trek paints an unrealistic future where public servants are heroically selfless and competent.

Uploaded to YouTube by ReasonTV.

Gotta love this guy's costuming.

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