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STSF Laura

STSF GM
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Posts posted by STSF Laura


  1. They're not canon, it's a species Vex made up himself. Can see more info on his bio somewhere on the Excal section.

    He did? I always assumed it was based on the character in Diane Duane's TNG novel Dark Mirror. There's a dolphin-species scientist in it.

     

    Well, this is what you get for making assumptions. Hmm.... ::trots off to read bio::


  2. ::nods:: Well put. I think that's why even with the advance of technology, simming in general will continue to have a significant and stable player pool. :P

    ::nods:: Likely until we reach a point of truly immersive VR, which enables a user to interact naturally with the entire environment, and to add items into the world in realistic (or not-so-realistic) ways...

     

    ...at which point, is there going to be any point in simming, since I think I just described a holodeck?


  3. <--Glass Half-Empty

     

     

    I Hate to be the one to pop the bubble of all the Save Ent'ers. But I doubt that Paramount is really going to listen to the masses. I don't think they would have cut the show if they didn't think it was an acceptable loss...IE they've already made up their minds.

     

    But, if it floats your boat....e-mail them away. Heck I might just even send them an email or two. :P

    But there's a standing history of popular campaigns saving Star Trek, you pessimist! :P ::pours more water into your glass::


  4. N0 a Graphic Novel is not a Comic Book :P

     

    It's what is called Trade Paper Back ( ::curses John Anderson for filling his head with useless information:: )

     

    Graphic Novels are much lengthier comic books...and the ones I have read...much more serious Cheack out Maus I & II sometime)

    Actually <useless information> a trade paperback is anything that's bound in a heavier, more durable paper than the mass-market paperbacks are done in. They're sort of in between normal paperbacks and hardcover books. Graphic novels often wind up as trade paperbacks, but they don't have to be. And comics are sometimes made into TPBs as well, usually by story arc. And of course, regular prose novels can be TPBs. </useless information>

     

    Graphic novels can be quite awesome. A friend of mine actually did one for her senior art project in college. A lot of work goes into those things!


  5. Have ENT @ 8p, Atlantis @ 9p, and BSG @ 10p...its a Sci-Fi Slam Dunk.

    None of which I would watch. ::sighs:: There go my sci-fi Fridays.

     

    Seriously, though, Sci-Fi picking up ENT would probably be a good thing for it. But only if they contract for new episodes, and Berman is not at the helm. Just rerunning the currently produced episodes isn't going to help anyone, I think.

     

    Saying Nemesis was a good movie should be sufficient grounds to prove that Berman's insane. I rented and watched it just to finally see my 2nd favorite ST couple finally tie the knot. The rest I could easily have done without.


  6. Hey there,

     

    Great punt? ::puts on his old person clothes...like those A9 always wears:: You don't know what a punt is! Back in the day, when you had a punt it was a REAL one...could keep you from getting online for five or ten minutes in some cases. Youngins.

    Only five or ten minutes? Bah, you had it easy! I remember punts that took people out of comission for an entire sim!


  7. As for the other casting decisions, I honestly have to say I agree with almost every one. I think the new Apollo has been outstanding. I think having the character be a female adds a new dynamic (not necessarily sexual in nature).

     

    1. You meant Starbuck, unless I've really missed something.

    2. I've got no objections whatsoever to there being some female Viper pilots in the main cast, which is probably why I'm not having so much trouble with Boomer's gender change. I really liked Sheba in the original series.

    3. The new dynamic... yeah, well. As long as it stays non-sexual, I suppose it'll be all right. I have a nightmare about sexual tension between Apollo and female-Starbuck... that's just wrong. I would like to see it play out that a man and a woman can be friends and comrades without being at all sexually attracted to one another. On the other hand, I'm not really seeing any male-male friendships of the depth that the original Apollo and Starbuck had developing, and that's sad.


  8. I'm still having trouble getting over some of the casting decisions, which is interfering with getting any sort of real 'read' on the show. Making Starbuck female bothers me, although I'm having less trouble with Boomer's gender change. And Olmos, whom I thought would be a good choice for Adama, seems to have been directed to play it very low-key; he lacks the sheer presence that Greene brought to the role.


  9. Voyager was actually my favorite of the Trek series. I enjoyed TNG, especially during the later seasons, and I was/am a big fan of the kind of long-term arc that DS9 used, but I felt that DS9 dropped in and out quality-wise, and its final season I really couldn't have cared less about. I cannot stand ENT on the whole, although I've caught a few bits and pieces that I enjoyed. TOS I feel rather neutral about; on the one hand, if it were new today, I would hate it; on the other hand, I can appreciate it for what it was in its day.

     

    I divide Voyager into two parts: pre-season 4 and post-season 4. And I ignore the existance of season 4 whenever possible. It really does seem like two different shows, and I agree that the post-season 4 Voyager is much better. As several others have pointed out, Trek series need a couple seasons to find their feet.

     

    I thought the cast had an excellent dynamic, and I'm going to completely disagree with Grom on the character ratings. I'm also going to disagree with whomever said Seven and Tuvok shouldn't have scenes together -- one of the best things about those scenes was that the actors did manage to imbue an emotional underpinning in them, despite the control of the characters. I mourn the fact that the writers didn't seem to know what to do with Chakotay's character, because there was a great deal of potential there, but that's my only major character complaint.

     

    The Borg issue and the Gamma Quadrant wormhole were the major stumbling blocks for me in terms of the series' credibility; I didn't find the long-term encounters with aliens all that odd. The had far-flung areas of influence; so does the Federation. Realistically (if we can apply the term to a sci-fi show), it takes about a year to cross the Federation at warp 9.99. (ST Encyclopedia) That has a tendency to get ignored rather frequently, of course, like when a fleet gets sent to DS9 from Earth.

     

    Did Voyager have bad episodes? I refer you to the package of trite cliches and character assassination that called itself season 4. But, oh, man, when they got it right... Wow.

     

    As for the books... Peter David has personal issues with the series; he refers to it rather bitterly if he speaks about it at conventions and the like. He swore once he would never write for it. So you won't find any Voyager books by him.... under that name, anyway. ::coughs:: The team of Dean Wesley Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch have done some nice work with VOY books. But, if you want my opinion on the best writer doing Voyager work, check out Christie Golden's stuff. It's better than the series, whether you consider that saying a lot or very little. ^_^ She's been rather prolific with Voyager books, but I don't know if she's written for any other series; she's rather new as recurring Trek novel writers go. She's written a post-finale wrap-up pair of books: Homecoming and The Farther Shore, which I recommend to anyone who felt the finale ended about an act too soon.


  10. I can remember, off the top of my head, two people I played with who chose to kill off their characters. One did so because he was quitting, and he wanted to go out in a blaze of glory. He did manage to work his death realistically into the frame of the sim, but on the whole most people found it a bit irritating. Then again, most people found that player a bit irritating, so it might have just been carry-over.

     

    The second player worked out her death scene with several people in advance, including the command team, the SGV, and the player of her character's husband. It was an incredibly emotional scene that people remembered years later --- and when she returned to the ship about 18 months later, as a new character (and yes, an Ensign), it was nearly a year before all of the 'old timers' had connected the two characters, in part because there had been such finality to the death scene.


  11. What are Featured Sims 

    Are they for everyone?

     

    Featured sims are Advanced sims, which means you must first graduate from the Academy. They are just regular Advanced sims which have been selected to be spotlighted and publicized for a time period. It's a way of telling people more about the options STSF offers.

     

    Well what about people like me that can only have sims once maybe twice a week!! 

    I want to become a GM but i cant graduate unless there are more sims at 8 so i can play for 2-3 hours insted of one!! 

     

    Graduation is not a race. Whether you sim every week or once a week does not matter. You should come to whichever Academy(ies) you are able to attend, and not worry about whether you're spending as much time simming as someone else. You will graduate in your own time regardless.

     

    Actually, this idea about simming every night is a little puzzling to me. When I started simming, the conventional wisdom was to pick one sim and stick with it, so that the GMs would get to know you and your style and could help you get better and see you improve. I don't see anything wrong with simming frequently, just because it's fun to sim, but I still think it's better to be a regular in one or two sims than to jump around a lot.


  12. I wasn't there either. But the author in me can't help pointing out that the scenario for the character is flawed. A Security officer, Ferengi or otherwise, serving on a Federation ship, would have taken an oath to serve the Federation and Starfleet, which would include following the orders of his superiors. In this case, whatever the Ferengi would like to do with the ship, the fact remains that he's on-duty and therefore obligated to follow orders, whether he likes them or not. If he couldn't follow orders, he wouldn't have made it through the Academy, and if he couldn't sublimate his desire for profit to the needs of Starfleet, why did he join in the first place?

     

    Unless of course this was a Ferengi sim, in which case one figures a DaiMon has ways of keeping his crew in line...