@@mikeysrants4527 I had a similar thought. I guess I always felt like the Borg were completely crippled only controlling a couple of directionless ships after the death of the Queen. I dunno, I kinda wish they'd gone a different direction with the season and kept it grounded in reality. The story and mystery were developing amazingly with each episode, and there was a real opportunity here to lead into something like the return of the Blue Gills. To me, it felt like the stories of the Borg and Dominion had run full circle.
@@Shadowkey392 It's just my opinion, but I felt like the season was building up to a new baddie, or possibly an internal threat seeking to usurp power within the Federation. The Borg at this point are toothless, the assimilation tactic was contrived, the Borg don't make alliances nor seek revenge, rebranding the Titan "Enterprise G" felt shoe-horned and like a studio decision, and the scale of everything in the final few episodes was just out of whack - including fleet size, power scaling of space dock, etc etc. I feel like that had a plan for some big risky new baddie that the studio felt would be received negatively so they chose the safe route, brought back the D, and gave us a familiar enemy. Just....started to feel like Fanfic.
"We've got to give _Enterprise_ more time. Concentrate all fire on that Super Star Destroyer!"
Best edit of this ive seen with the StarWars music. Well done. Its half trench run. half blowing up the second Deathstar.
A long-standing argument in a geekdom has been answered. Yes, the USS Enterprise D would have kicked ass in the battle of Endor.
Glad I'm not the only person who had this thought after watching the episode
After? I had it during
Riker should have said… “Look at the size of that thing!!”
Cut the chatter, Number One! Accelerate to attack speed!
That’s no moon, that’s a space station
That’s no moon, that’s a space station
And my head went to Robot Chicken just now. “That’s no moon… that’s yo mama!”
That cube is insanely out of scale. Man this season started out so promising and fell so flat. At least we got this tho.
I feel like it’s a mega cube, the borg are on the ropes and this was their last attempt at regaining the supremacy they used to have.
@@mikeysrants4527 I had a similar thought. I guess I always felt like the Borg were completely crippled only controlling a couple of directionless ships after the death of the Queen.
I dunno, I kinda wish they'd gone a different direction with the season and kept it grounded in reality. The story and mystery were developing amazingly with each episode, and there was a real opportunity here to lead into something like the return of the Blue Gills. To me, it felt like the stories of the Borg and Dominion had run full circle.
How on earth did this “fall flat”???
@@Shadowkey392 It's just my opinion, but I felt like the season was building up to a new baddie, or possibly an internal threat seeking to usurp power within the Federation.
The Borg at this point are toothless, the assimilation tactic was contrived, the Borg don't make alliances nor seek revenge, rebranding the Titan "Enterprise G" felt shoe-horned and like a studio decision, and the scale of everything in the final few episodes was just out of whack - including fleet size, power scaling of space dock, etc etc.
I feel like that had a plan for some big risky new baddie that the studio felt would be received negatively so they chose the safe route, brought back the D, and gave us a familiar enemy.
Just....started to feel like Fanfic.