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Kesper North posted:This is me being incredibly angry that the ships in Destiny 2 are all absolute trash by comparison to this day, with very few exceptions
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# ? Feb 8, 2022 05:51 |
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# ? Jun 12, 2024 13:46 |
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I saw this cool Lego moc spaceship https://flic.kr/ps/3mjHc2 I'd like to request the coolest asymmetrical ships yall got
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# ? Feb 18, 2022 16:13 |
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You know what I miss? The 80's "hulk" style spaceship Always just a beefy slab with some windows poking out of it like frog's eyes. Always seemingly assembled from scrap metal using 40's-level riveting and welding, most of the times it is observed this ship has been hosed up beyond belief by calamity.
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# ? Feb 19, 2022 16:31 |
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Recently I watched through a show called The Freemaker Adventures. Basically it's a Lego Star Wars show but centered around its own little original cast of characters. The central premise is that they're a freelance salvage/repair team, and throughout the show they have to keep repairing ships or cobbling together parts to make new ships, which is extremely my jam. The show falls into a lot of pitfalls that other EU stuff does, but they do keep returning to that central theme of salvage and repair throughout the show, and it's a pretty fun show overall. The main ship throughout the show is the Star Scavenger. It's an interesting design. A CT-900 Freighter (not light, just a freighter) that the Freemaker family uses to go around the galaxy to find more salvage. It's got a funky hammerhead front with those outboard two turrets that extend out to have an angle behind the cargo compartment, and that scoop that allows them to make quick grabs. The head actually can separate from the cargo compartment to form its own independent ship if you don't wanna haul stuff, which I guess is situationally useful. https://i.imgur.com/HtZ4r7G.mp4 It's pretty hard to find good shots of the in-show model, and the official kit doesn't really do the show's design much justice. I guess it makes sense. It'd be a pretty big model if they did it to the same scale. It makes sense to skimp on the interior, since that doesn't usually matter much for a toy, but it's a bit of a shame how the show did clearly design the pieces it was meant to use but couldn't use them. The mini-scavenger would've been more doable, but it's even further off-model. At least they managed to do the scoop. Some guy made a model from scratch of his own non-lego impression of the ship. In a little bit of a spoiler, the second season has the Freemakers join up with the Rebel Alliance as fulltime mechanics, and the little kid Freemaker ends up as apprentice to the shipbuilder Quarrie who made the B-Wing in Rebels. Together they build the Arrowhead, a custom starfighter with a super-strong shield powered by a massive crystal and can be focused around an extendable blade that can cut through other ships. Since it's a smaller ship that in the show itself just has narrow single-file seating, the kit does a better job of staying accurate to the show. Also a non-lego conception of it.
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# ? Feb 21, 2022 23:25 |
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Can the Arrowhead blow up suns, too?
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# ? Feb 22, 2022 03:11 |
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I've been having some fun this morning loving around with a new alt in STO. Say what you will about Voyager as a show, the Intrepid is one of my all-time favorite Star Trek designs.
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 15:36 |
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I like the Intrepid shape but the "skin" is pretty ugly. All gray and warty.
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 16:01 |
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I don't like all the surface detailing and in-cuts (which are there mainly so they can have sets where the windows don't have heavy angles) but the ship is much less grey than most star trek ships, it's light blue. How much of that you saw depended on what the people in color processing were feeling like that day (after all, the Enterprise-D model was a pale blue as well and they just desaturated that totally out 100% of the time) but the blue shone through much more than other shows. MikeJF fucked around with this message at 16:11 on Feb 27, 2022 |
# ? Feb 27, 2022 16:03 |
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My mental image might be slightly tainted by the micro machine, it was uniquely disgusting looking.
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 16:15 |
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Brawnfire posted:My mental image might be slightly tainted by the micro machine, it was uniquely disgusting looking. Oh ew, did they carve the deflector grid into it? That's meant to be, like, barely visible detailing
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 16:24 |
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There's the ochre goblin of my youth. Makes the show version look especially graceful by comparison
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 16:41 |
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I think Voyager is hideous. It looks front heavy and its tiny nacelles are way too stubby. The concept is way better for me.
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 17:39 |
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That looks like it already started going to warp
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 17:41 |
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The silly requirement to have the nacelles move also hurts the final version
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 18:00 |
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Tsaedje posted:The silly requirement to have the nacelles move also hurts the final version They move in STO, too! It gets more use in that game, the nacelles move into warp position when traveling through sector space and drop down when in-system for impulse. The_Doctor posted:I think Voyager is hideous. It looks front heavy and its tiny nacelles are way too stubby. STO has a variant based on that.
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 18:49 |
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The concept version would've had them move, but it would've been horizontally, the pylons would've slid in and out slightly. (Think the Galactica launch bays) I wonder what prompted the change, the speedboat version had been basically approved and everyone all the way up to and including the show's producers had been signing off on the designs, it must've been a directive from the studio when they tried to show them new ship. It was really late in the process. MikeJF fucked around with this message at 19:51 on Feb 27, 2022 |
# ? Feb 27, 2022 19:30 |
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Voyager definitely had the whole "definitely not the loving best ship in the fleet" thing going for it with its design, which I think was key. Because next to the Galaxy glass that Intrepid design always looks like a joke.
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 22:15 |
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The newest Trek has the Protostar, which is basically a baby version of the Voyager. It has a fancy superspeed drive though.
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# ? Feb 27, 2022 23:35 |
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jeeves posted:Voyager definitely had the whole "definitely not the loving best ship in the fleet" thing going for it with its design, which I think was key. Ehhhh, it was still supposed to have the latest cutting-edge technology. They made a big deal about the top speed and the ~~*~bioneural gelpacks~*~~. That trowel-head shape at the front got around, though. Voyager, Prometheus, hell even seaQuest went in on it:
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 03:38 |
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Gotta go fast knife ships was like the worst thing to happen to Trek. Eaves’ Sovereign design for First Contact kind of cemented it, but Voyager was definitely the canary in the coal mine.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 05:22 |
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Farmer Crack-rear end posted:That trowel-head shape at the front got around, though. Voyager, Prometheus, hell even seaQuest went in on it: SeaQuest was obviously meant to resemble a squid, I don't think they're drawing on Voyager influences.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 10:59 |
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Also seaQuest predates Voyager.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 11:01 |
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jeeves posted:Gotta go fast knife ships was like the worst thing to happen to Trek. Eaves’ Sovereign design for First Contact kind of cemented it, but Voyager was definitely the canary in the coal mine. The Intrepid is a better Defiant than the Defiant in my book. It's still recognizably the Starfleet aesthetic and layout, pared down and streamlined to a minimum. The Intrepid class to me screams a Starfleet destroyer or frigate, go fast and heavily armed.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 13:32 |
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Cythereal posted:The Intrepid is a better Defiant than the Defiant in my book. It's still recognizably the Starfleet aesthetic and layout, pared down and streamlined to a minimum. The Intrepid class to me screams a Starfleet destroyer or frigate, go fast and heavily armed. I think the whole point of the Defiant was that it was Stafleet trying something completely new, so it shouldn’t look like their standard designs.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 15:07 |
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The idea of making Trek ships pointy is a pretty obvious one, since the original Enterprise design was just this really bizarre thing that doesn't really seem to draw influence from anything real. The saucer is the only thing that is really drawing from preconceptions of spacecraft. The engines are sort of like rockets, except blunt, and there's two of them on these weird spars connecting to a separate main body that either has a jet intake or a satellite dish on the front. It's crazy. It makes a lot of basic sense to make the ships pointy, since rockets are pointy, aircraft are pointy, the longest-used real-world spacecraft was pointy, and at this point in history, so much in our world has been designed to be streamlined for aerodynamics that it just seems pretty straightforward to apply those principles when designing newer Trek ships. It may not be in the spirit of the original ship design, but it does make sense. Bucnasti posted:I think the whole point of the Defiant was that it was Stafleet trying something completely new, so it shouldn’t look like their standard designs. I think it does look like their other designs, it's just that what it most looks like is the Danube Runabout, a ship that doesn't show up a lot in the rest of Trek, but it was already being extensively used in DS9. It's just that the ship was bulked out to have some of the saucer geometry of standard Trek ships.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 17:06 |
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Just don't look at Discovery, which decided that actually Starfleet has always had Defiant style ships.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 17:27 |
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SlothfulCobra posted:It makes a lot of basic sense to make the ships pointy, since rockets are pointy, aircraft are pointy, the longest-used real-world spacecraft was pointy, and at this point in history, so much in our world has been designed to be streamlined for aerodynamics that it just seems pretty straightforward to apply those principles when designing newer Trek ships. It may not be in the spirit of the original ship design Well, yeah, there was a very deliberate mandate for the original design of 'don't make it look like real-world streamlined rocket ships, because it's the product of far more advanced technology that's nothing like that.' They even added the balls on the back of the engines after the pilot episode to make them look less like rockets, so you wouldn't mistake it for that. It's a bit weird they eventually went backwards from that to 'make it look swooshier like it flies faster'. (To the point where they made the new retconned design of the TOS Enterprise flatter in Discovery, with less decks in the neck, so it would look more streamlined. But that's me harping on stuff I've said before.) MikeJF fucked around with this message at 17:45 on Feb 28, 2022 |
# ? Feb 28, 2022 17:37 |
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Which I liked. Aerodynamics were us following constraints and rules or even just convention. We warp space to our whims now.
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 17:39 |
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Cythereal posted:Just don't look at Discovery,
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# ? Feb 28, 2022 17:53 |
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Are trek ships even capable of entering an atmosphere?
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 17:19 |
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Voyager can land, and did https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uBhLOrzFs4g
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 17:22 |
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Some are, some aren't. Voyager and other smaller ships can land, and the Enterprise can water-land in the reboots. (And for big ships saucers are designed to be able to detach and emergency land too.) Almost all of them can do some level of atmospheric operation though. You don't need to be aerodynamic if you've got enough thrust and don't need to go fast enough that drag is a problem, though. If you can put out 1G of acceleration upwards and have fine enough attitude control you can just hover downwards like a very graceful brick. MikeJF fucked around with this message at 17:45 on Mar 1, 2022 |
# ? Mar 1, 2022 17:23 |
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Now I wanna see a Borg cube land and just spread Borg creep
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 17:24 |
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Brawnfire posted:Now I wanna see a Borg cube land and just spread Borg creep That's not great for the property values
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 17:29 |
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NIMBY: Not Interested in Meeting Borg, Y'all
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 17:32 |
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https://i.imgur.com/BrT5C8Z.mp4 (Picard. Was a (mostly) dead cube and didn't creep though, the space orchids lowered it to the surface before it crashed) MikeJF fucked around with this message at 17:38 on Mar 1, 2022 |
# ? Mar 1, 2022 17:33 |
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Fantastic Foreskin posted:Are trek ships even capable of entering an atmosphere? Yes! You can even see two of the landing gear covers on the underside of TOS Enterprise saucer, the neck itself become the third "leg". You'll need a Starbase to reattach the Engineering section though.
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 18:42 |
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Star Trek Online further posits that all ships are capable of operating in the upper atmospheres of planets, courtesy of the dyson sphere zones where you have fleet battles taking place in the upper atmosphere among colossal megastructures dotting the dyson sphere's inner surface. All ships suffer a speed and turning radius loss due to atmospheric friction, though.
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 20:04 |
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Buncha star trek ships have operated within the corona of stars and deep into the thicker gas layers of gas giants: if their shields can handle that, and their engines can handle the aerodynamic pressures, they can handle the comparatively minor superheating of atmospheric re-entry and aerodynamic pressures of the generally much thinner atmospheres of rocky planets, irrespective of aerodynamic shape etc. The real reason ships in Star Trek can or can't operate in atmosphere is to accommodate whatever story was being told at that moment. Any ship can suddenly do fine in atmosphere if that week's episode/that movie demands it.
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 20:45 |
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# ? Jun 12, 2024 13:46 |
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It would make sense if atmospheric limitations for ST ships were due to subspace/warp field interactions with planetary atmospheres and surfaces rather than a limitation in the ship's capabilities. I can't imagine something that distorts spacetime to go fast would do anything nice to a planet.
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# ? Mar 1, 2022 21:03 |