Reminds me of when I got banned from a Star Wars forum for saying that I liked some aspects of the prequels ('twas long ago) and not hating on them and Lucas enough.
EDIT: That being said, for me, r/startrek was more about the community, and the spirit, core of it has moved here, then so be it. If reddit is little more than a knowledgebase/thing I come across when googling STObuilds or something then that's also fine.
God yes. That's so goddamn annoying every time. Primary reason why I always skip 30 days.
This is pretty much what I think as well. I migrated to here mostly because I think that the root and core of the Community has done the same, and r/startek was one of the few places where you could still talk Star Trek without unreasonable whining.
Ich halte meinen Account aktiv, primär weil, wie viele ander gesagt haben, Reddit trotz aller Unkenrufe ne massive knowledgebase ist, und aber auch weil Ich für einige gute Internetfreunde zumindest bis auf weiteres keine andere Kontaktmöglichkeit habe.
My biggest (only real) gripe with it is the "sit by and watch a civilisation die from something we could prevent inside five minutes without ever being noticed" shtick.
It was. They used different lighting to make the same two or three rooms appear as whatever non-standard set they needed. IIRC most "generic room #1231" sets were one and the same with furniture re-arranged and different lighting.
Many, many, many years ago, there was a novel that had a Warp bomb (or the supposed impossibility of one) as a premise. It was set pre-First Contact and rotated around Zefram Cochrane being forced by IIRC Colonel Green to try and develop one.
@trekchu
@startrek.website