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‘Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ races to its conclusion with a spot-on ‘Aliens’ riff

'all those who wander’ swerves into horror and lands a perfect hit..

The following article includes significant   spoilers for All Those Who Wander.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds has never been ashamed to tip its hat to the stories it’s riffing upon , some more obviously than others. This week’s episode, All Those Who Wander, might as well just have been called “Screw it, we’re just going to do Aliens .” Thankfully, it’s so good that you won’t have time to care about the xeroxing from James Cameron’s 1986 original. This is the best episode of Strange New Worlds yet, raising the bar, and the stakes, for next week’s finale.

We start with the welcome and now familiar sight of the Enterprise crew hanging out around Pike’s captain’s table. It’s such a delight to see the crew spending time together and having fun, as the show puts in the hours to show that these people generally like each other. Ensign Duke gets a promotion, while cadets Chia and Uhura are given a send off as they end their tour of duty on the Enterprise. But the levity is punctured, first by Uhura still not sure if Starfleet is right for her, and second by an ominous message from headquarters. A Federation starship has gone missing while surveying an unstable planet, and Pike needs to go looking for it.

But the Enterprise already has an urgent mission to deliver power supplies to starbase K7, so Pike decides to handle a rescue mission with shuttlecraft. Dr. M’Benga, Chapel, La’an, Spock, Hemmer, Lt. Kirk and Duke, as well as cadets Uhura and Chia join him. Number One and Ortegas, meanwhile, take the ship on its original course, meaning this is the fifth or sixth episode this series where Number One has barely featured. Perhaps Rebecca Romijn negotiated far fewer filming days each week given her higher profile than the rest of the cast.

When the shuttles reach the planet, landing in the shadow of the crashed USS Peregrine, it’s not long before the episode switches into high horror. Corpses litter the ground, and the ship itself is covered in the sort of bloodstain made when someone’s trying in vain to cling to the ground while being dragged away. And despite the fact that this is another episode shot mostly on the standing Enterprise sets , clever lighting and direction make them feel altogether more like the sinister LV-426 from Aliens .

Then there’s Newt Oriana, a young girl who has learned to survive previous Gorn attacks by going partly feral. This episode, much more than the flat Memento Mori, is designed to rehabilitate the Gorn from the comedy rubber suit seen in the ‘60s and the awkward CG from the early '00s . Now, they’re the Trek version of the eponymous Xenomorph, complete with acid bile, quadrupedal motion and body horror reproductive process. Worth mentioning that this ain’t the sort of episode you can watch with your kids, especially not when the blue-shirted Cadet Chia succumbs to a chestburster.

It helps, too, that the Gorn are rarely glimpsed properly, despite some excellent creature design, the shadows are always a better way to experience a villain like this. The episode’s conclusion sees the crew taking an Alien3 -style chase through corridors as they lure the Gorn to a trap. Choosing to shoot from the Gorn’s perspective helps amplify the sense of dread and tension, too, since our crew is being stalked from all corners.

But the best moments are when the crew, trapped in sickbay, start to feel the screws turning on them. La’an starts berating Oriana, the child that she sees so much of herself in before Dr. M’Benga snaps at her to leave his daughter… his patient alone . Lt. Kirk, meanwhile, starts lashing out at Spock for his lack of empathy, not long before Spock lets out his own emotions in order to entrap the Gorn. And, best of all, this all feels entirely earned and in character as we’ve gotten to see how these people got these particular scars. Finally, the promise of emotional continuity comes good as we start to see the Enterprise crew almost break under pressure.

Of course, we have to offer additional praise for Hemmer, who once again gets paired with Uhura for some grace notes. The fact that even Uhura has given them a compound name (Hemura!) speaks to how delightful it is to watch the pair interact. And when Hemmer reveals that the blob of alien spit he received earlier in the episode means he’s loaded with Gorn eggs too, it’s a massive blow. I feel like Hemmer was already a figure we’d fallen in love with, and his departure hurts, even if he gets a graceful, Alien3 -esque swan dive death for a sendoff. Give Bruce Horak his own spin-off, or something, please.

(I’m sure I wasn’t the only one who noticed that Duke, Chia and Hemmer’s death means we’ve had a Yellow, Blue and Red-shirt demise in a single episode. Hacky standups will need to look for a better punchline to their Star Trek jokes in the future.)

Also, I feel like I’ve been neglectful in not offering enough praise for this cast, and especially Jess Bush. Bush often has to sell a whole bunch of stuff in her limited screen time and does so with ease. Here, as in The Serene Squall, she shows Chapel adapting to survive against a threat, and sells it so well.

The episode ends with plenty of fallout, Uhura decides to stay on board after Hemmer’s valediction encourages her to put down roots. La’an takes a leave of absence to try and reunite Oriana with her family, and Spock’s emotional outburst has left him scarred. Pike, meanwhile, must be headed for trouble given how freely he treats his life knowing that his future is already set in stone But again, all of this feels earned in a way that prior episodes haven’t quite achieved, and I’m excited to see how we land in the finale from here.

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Star Trek just changed Gorn canon with an Alien -inspired twist

Writer Davy Perez gets into all the nitty-gritty details of Star Trek’s big swing at starship horror.

star trek vs xenomorph

In the final frontier, no one can hear you scream. In the penultimate episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 1 — “All Those Who Wander” — the crew of the Enterprise are dropped into a nail-biting starship horror story, with heavy influences from the 1979 classic Alien . Along the way, we learn a lot more about a certain alien species. Episode writer Davy Perez gave us the scoop on why these aliens are different, and what it all means for the canon of The Original Series and the future of Strange New Worlds . Spoilers ahead.

In Episode 4, “Memento Mori,” the Enterprise crew had a close encounter with the nefarious Gorn, a lizard species. No one actually saw the Gorn, but this week, while looking for survivors on the crashed USS Peregrine , our Starfleet heroes encounter horrifying Gorn babies. The big news is that these Gorn reproduce by popping out of the bodies of other lifeforms, just like the gory xenomorph chestbursters from Alien .

It’s a big change for Trek. Other than one glimpse in the Mirror Universe back in 2005 on the prequel show Enterprise , the only “adult” Gorn we’ve seen is still the classic lizard person from The Original Series episode “Arena.” So, how do these baby Gorn fit in? As with “Memento Mori,” writer Davy Perez felt that “Arena” offered a good amount of “wiggle room” in terms of what Kirk and Starfleet actually know about the Gorn.

Kirk versus the Gorn 1967 Star Trek

Kirk versus the Gorn in the 1967 Star Trek episode, “Arena.”

“Kirk’s idea of the Gorn is different from what he is being told by the Metrons,” Perez tells Inverse, referring to the powerful aliens who force the two to fight . “The Gorn he’s meeting in ‘Arena,’ doesn’t sync with his expectations of them. It was a personal choice I made in my own headcanon that allowed me to have fun with the writing. Viewing it that way creates more possibilities for Gorn stories to continue.”

While the classic rubber monster suit Gorn, designed by Wah Chang in 1967, is iconic, Perez points out that it’s clear in TOS that the Gorn was a “one-off,” meaning some canon trickiness was bound to emerge. The loophole Perez points out in “Arena” is the fact that Kirk’s phrasing in the original episode is specifically vague: “Weaponless, I face the creature the Metrons called a Gorn.”

The classic episode takes place in 2267, while Strange New Worlds happens in 2259. So, if Kirk knows what Pike and the crew know, then the lizard-man Gorn doesn’t really check out with the Velociraptor meets chestburster critters in Strange New Worlds .

“Maybe Kirk has never seen them, he could even be one of those people who still doubts the stories, or maybe even he has seen them and they don’t look the same,” Perez says. “I think the safest thing to say is we have no idea what the Gorn are really like.”

Over the years, various fan theories — and material from Star Trek roleplaying games — have suggested the existence of a variety of Gorn subspecies. In “All Those Who Wander,” Dr. M’Benga discovers the Gorn are “genetic chameleons,” which is why they don’t show up on sensors. Perez points out that, even after this episode and La’an’s childhood experience with these aliens, “we quite literally don’t know very much about the Gorn at all… and that’s what makes them so hard to fight.”

Strange New Worlds episode 9 crashed starship

The Enterprise crew investigates the crash of the USS Peregrine, echoing the crashed alien ship investigated by the crew of the Nostromo in Alien .

Outside of all the TOS canon-weeds, the obvious thrill of “All Those Who Wander” is the way in which the episode brings the flavor of Alien, and other sci-fi horror classics, to Star Trek. There’s never quite been a Trek episode like this.

“Yes, Alien was something I’ve been inspired by many times in the past, and here especially,” Perez says. “It’s hard not to draw the comparison when writing a ‘horror story in space.’ Even back when discussing Episode 4 we started talking about Alien , and not just in what we liked about it, but more how to avoid retreading it wholesale. Our story is unique and specific to Trek, similar inspirations but different in execution.”

But it’s not just Alien that Perez and the SNW team drew upon for inspiration. When Nurse Chapel is chased by the tiny Gorn we get to see the latter’s point of view, which is evocative of Predator . And Perez notes the influences run from the obvious, like John Carpenter's The Thing , to the less obvious.

“You might laugh, but Gremlins !” Perez says. “Think about it, tiny monsters that roam around wreaking havoc with these ‘rules’ that mean the difference between life and death. Baby Gorn are just more deadly Gremlins. Or more aptly put, Tribbles with teeth.”

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is streaming now on Paramount+.

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star trek vs xenomorph

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Writer’s Headcanon Explains How ‘Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ Gorn Fit With “Arena”

star trek vs xenomorph

| July 5, 2022 | By: TrekMovie.com Staff 180 comments so far

The latest episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds showed us the Gorn for the first time in the series. The alien lizards’ look certainly got an update after 55 years, but the episode’s writer has a way of making it all fit together.

Writer finds “wiggle room” in “Arena”

Strange New Worlds co-executive producer Davy Perez, who wrote “All Those Who Wander,” gave an interview to Inverse where he talked about how there’s “wiggle room” to explain some of the differences between TOS Gorn and SNW Gorn,  and even covered Kirk’s apparent lack of knowledge of the species in the original Star Trek episode “Arena,” which introduced them. Perez explained:

Kirk’s idea of the Gorn is different from what he is being told by the Metrons. The Gorn he’s meeting in ‘Arena,’ doesn’t sync with his expectations of them. It was a personal choice I made in my own headcanon that allowed me to have fun with the writing. Viewing it that way creates more possibilities for Gorn stories to continue.

In “Arena,” a superpowerful race named the Metrons transports Captain Kirk and a Gorn captain to a planet where they are expected to fight to the death. Perez’s headcanon relies heavily on this single line of Kirk’s dialogue from the original episode: “I face the creature the Metrons called a Gorn.” Perez sees this as an opening:

Maybe Kirk has never seen them, he could even be one of those people who still doubts the stories, or maybe even he has seen them and they don’t look the same. I think the safest thing to say is we have no idea what the Gorn are really like.

Perez didn’t address why neither Spock nor Uhura mentioned their previous experience with the Gorn during “Arena,” but it’s possible he has some headcanon for that as well. His comments also indicate there could be more Gorn to come on Strange New Worlds .

star trek vs xenomorph

From “Arena”

The Gorn reborn

The following video shows how the Gorn were brought to life for Strange New Worlds , primarily using puppetry.

New episodes of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds debut on Thursdays exclusively on Paramount+ in the U.S., Latin America, Australia and the Nordics. The series airs on Bell Media’s CTV Sci-Fi Channel and streams on Crave in Canada. In New Zealand, it is available on TVNZ , and in India on  Voot Select . In the UK new episodes arrive on Wednesdays on Paramount+ but run five week’s behind the USA. The series will arrive via Paramount+ in select countries in Europe when the service launches later this year.

star trek vs xenomorph

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Me in response to this headcanon:

In the words of acting first officer (cadet) Kirk, in 2009’s Star Trek, “Bulls**t.”

One word for this: preposterous.

I don’t have as much a problem in the change of their look as I do with using them to begin with.

I’m honestly not sure why Kirk would have a different view of the Gorn than what he was told by the Metrons. Honestly that doesn’t make sense. It also makes no sense Kirk doesn’t know what the Gorn are REALLY like. By his time there would be 10 years of more data on them. It is just not reasonable that Star Fleet would not seek them out and attempt to talk and hammer out an agreement. At the very least learn as much as possible about them. And if not, what we have seen on SNW would have certainly been reported. I would guess the only thing that would make sense is that sometime in the next 10 years they vanished and the entire species underwent some sort of metamorphosis. But that still doesn’t explain not being aware they even existed. At the very least Spock would have called attention to the Gorn possibility.

I’m sorry but I call BS on this. It sounds more like they were dead set on using the Gorn because they thought Gorn were perhaps scary and cool. And that was that. It reminds me of a friend of mine who made what I thought was a bad decision and I told him it was a bad decision but he used some sort of twisted logic to convince himself it was a good decision because it was what he wanted to do at the time. And, of course, ultimately he regretted it completely.

You forget they used the Borg in Enterprise, people were aghast (yes I said it) at that. They can’t have the Borg because… But it fit the canonical story line. And it worked. Yes, the Gorn (updated at that) were used in the mirror universe episodes (In a Mirror Darkly 1 & 2), but they would look the same if Archer, et. al., came accross them in any other episode. They didn’t change just because it was the mirror universe.

I don’t mind using the Gorn, and I’ve watched Trek since the beginning- seen all the changes to all the alien races. Didn’t mind when they did it woth the Klingons, Romulans, didn’t mind then and don’t mind now. Hell, the Borg were updated for the movies because they had a better budget than the TV show!

Nope. I did not forget the Borg on Enterprise. I thought going there was ill advised but the way the show worked it didn’t invalidate or contradict what we saw in the feature film or other Borg episodes. That argument is null because bringing in the Gorn completely undermines everything in Arena. Don’t know why you are speaking of the change in the MU episodes of Enterprise. As I said, the change in look is expected and while it seemed to move faster it still pretty much looked Gorn-like. The fact is the Gorn appeared in the MU episode and not a regular Enterprise one was because the show runner, Manny Coto, actually had respect for the source material. He new he could not use the Gorn on Enterprise even though he publicly said he would have loved to do so.

The mistake was made on SNW the instant the word Gorn was uttered in Episode 1. It was a bad decision then and them doubling and tripling down on it only cements the bad decision. These sort of things have plagued Secret Hideout productions.

Agreed. That was one of the reasons Enterprise was so despised. Remember they also met Ferengi, even though the Federations first encounter with that species was with Picard. This Gorn business is representative of the typical Hollywood NPC writer, lacking creativity but no doubt filled with activism, his line of logic is that it didn’t “sync” with his “expectations”. The sheer stupidity-fueled self-serving arrogance is beyond contemptible.

I wish that the writers of Star Trek strange new worlds would just admit that the show is a reboot/reimagining of the original series era. It’s like they are afraid to admit the obvious. You can blame the temporal Cold war you can blame the red angel there are a lot of things you can blame and chalk it up to interference in the timeline. I think the temporal Cold war would make the most sense. The first contact with the Klingons was not supposed to happen in Montana. The guy from the future was manipulating events in the past. Wouldn’t there be a ripple effect in the fabric of SpaceTime?

The original series is not compromised because I think you’ll have to just reimagine the way you think about those stories and one day they may decide to create a series around those stories. The only analogy I can think of is even though the silver age fantastic four comic take place in the 1960s marvel uses a sliding timeline to modernize those stories it doesn’t mean that those adventures didn’t happen but they have to be reconsidered in a more modern context. I love the original series but let’s be real it needs to be modernized and strange new worlds has done a beautiful job of doing that. A lot of the norms in the original series don’t work in 2022 for example the way women were treated on the show but of course that’s a whole another discussion.

I get all the canon conversation but if you go back and watch the original series a lot of their Canon was not consistent. As the show evolved there were adjustments made along the way.

He needs to just say what we’ve all been thinking that the show is a reboot of the original series. There were a lot of potholes in the original series there were things that we were shown without much of an explanation. A lot of things were explained in novels many of which were not even considered canon. Strange New worlds totally up ends the original series and I’m okay with that. This idea of a fidelity to canon is kind of stupid to me especially in science fiction.

Michael Burnham’s mother made a comment in one of the season 2 episodes about how time travel impacts technology and I thought it was interesting that the line was in there.

This idea that all the time travel that has happened in Star Trek had no effect on the timelines is kind of ridiculous to me it’s such an easy way to deal with a lot of these issues but I don’t understand the reluctance on the part of the writers. Discovery pretty much change that entire timeline and they just need to say it.

That is just another example of an option TPTB had at their disposal. Personally I just REALLY wish they had said from the beginning that all of Secret Hideout was a reboot. That everything they were doing was their take on the franchise and as such they would decide what they wanted to keep and toss away from established canon. Had they done that we could focus on the shows themselves rather than all the things they got wrong regarding consistency with established universal rules.

I wish they had just stuck to canon, which would have been done if they had had any respect for the source material.

Yeah, this obviously sounds like an excuse to make everything fit together but it has as much truth as a TV ad. I think they could have used a totally new or develop another less developed alien from one of the previous shows. For example I think these aliens could have been those insectoid aliens from the “Conspiracy” episode of TNG and something happens eventually that sends them into hiding until they show themselves again in the TNG era. I think the writers were basically thinking a bit too much about this while a simpler solution in this case would have sufficed.

100% agreement. I’ve heard a handful of other suggestions, like the one you put forth, that make a lot more sense than using the Gorn. I mean, are they trying to say that there was no other Trek alien that didn’t have an established era of first encounter that could have been used? If they felt that then there is no reason they couldn’t have made up their own species. Enterprise made up Suliban and Denobulans. Are the SNW folks that bereft of creativity? I think the answer is “YES”.

Yeah why not focus on those guys again??? They were in one episode but we know nothing about them in the 23rd century. They were scary as hell.

I also think the Breen is such a great species that they can do tons with. We never saw them until the end of DS9 and they were fun lol. The Breen are the ultimate enemy because they come off so mysterious and everyone should fear them. I still laugh at the line on DS9 when it’s mentioned Klingons sent a fleet of ships to conquer the Breen homeworld and never heard from them again lol.

Or start something up with the Cardassians! Again we know nothing about them in the 23rd century. Here your chance to go big again with those guys.

There are still plenty of CRAZY aliens in every century! ;)

Breen are a great idea. Whenever I rewatch those later seasons of DS9 I always get a bit disappointed how they came a little late to be fully expanded on. But they are totally ripe for exploration, if not here then they’re a must for any potential 25th century Picard spin off.

“I still laugh at the line on DS9 when it’s mentioned Klingons sent a fleet of ships to conquer the Breen homeworld and never heard from them again” Love that! :D

Yeah I just really fell in love with the Breen after DS9. It’s just another testament to that show of how they took a species we never saw and turned them into something memorable in just a few episodes. I hope you’re right we will get them in a 25th century spin off show. They are so ripe for more development.

Dammnit. I was really hoping for a more coherent explanation. I’m fine with visual reboots. TMP did a full visual reboot of the franchise in 1979, so it’s not a new thing. And Enterprise gave us a faster Gorn (albeit in the Mirror universe).

But try and respect the history and stories that are already told. If you wanted a fast scary alien with no redeemable qualities, make one up. Don’t completely rework one that has become an iconic alien just because you want to use the word Gorn.

Wow. A lot of unfiltered self righteousness directed at the creative decision of the SNW team. First of all: Space is big. You can’t even imagine how big. It’s wildly more probable that there are several tribes / factions / even subspecies of one particular race than one that manages to rule as a cultural monolith over a giant junk of space and on top of that keep the genetic code narrow. It’s absolutely possible that the faction we met so far in the SNW timeline are a wildly different one (and located not even close to) the one we met in “Arena”.

Second: Someone said, WHY on earth would starfleet not have tried to reach an agreement with the Gorn between SNW and “Arena”….? Well, would you have tried after learning about them what we learned, without knowing about the outcome of Arena?…. HELL NO. I’d love you trying to argument some earth delegation should have made efforts to negotiate with the Xenomorphs….. that’s (like many insist to point out constantly) the image the Gorn have right now. So… no, the probably would not have tried…

BTW: The SNW team took a silly, ONE OFF alien of the week from one of the most ridiculed episodes in TV history …. and managed to turn them into one of the most dangerous, relentless enemies Starfleet ever encountered. it’s like they turned the Society from “Spocks Brain” intro the Borg. That counts for SOMETHING, right?

The Xenomorphs were animals. Not space faring. Far more instinctual. The Gorn achieved warp capability, obviously. They were intelligent. Intelligent species can potentially be reasoned with. Also it is a very Star Fleet thing to do to attempt to talk. When I say “talk to them” I obviously meant back in Pike’s day. When they were actively harassing and killing Federation citizens and Star Fleet ships. And then, even in Arena Kirk said, “We can talk. Maybe work something out.” So obviously Star Fleet would have tried the diplomatic approach first. They always do. And in doing so it would be obvious to gather as much intelligence about them as possible going in. And in case talks don’t work, you have a good idea of where they are, how they act and think. By Kirk’s time it was reasonable that a great deal would have been known. Certainly at least as much as La’an knew. and she didn’t even study them! All she did was run away without seeing them and she is the obvious expert on them in Pike’s day. Are you saying no one bothered to try and learn more? Ridiculous.

And for the record… Arena is one of the best episodes of the entire series.

Calling it “ unfiltered self-righteousness ” is to majorly mis-describe what is happening here. The only unfiltered self-righteousness I’m seeing here is your dismissal of people’s valid complaints.

Agreed and he is probably not recognizing the fact that he is coming through much more “self-righteous” than the other people here. I also don’t think as an episode “Arena” should be so dismissed as he claims to be. I mean he is basically comparing to Spock’s Brain. Arena is miles above Spocks Brain and I am actually a guy that enjoys Spock’s Brain.

The visual change is not really an issue at this point. This is what NuTrek does, and it’s the least problem I have with the Gorn. But as others have said, the choice to use them, no matter how you explain it, is just an inherently bad idea. All of this could be some new species and no one would have to be going through all this… but no, they have to tie everything back to something we know. Because they’re creatively bankrupt, or they simply don’t think people will watch if they don’t use what is known. Seriously.. it’s a 40 year old series that they can’t synch up with visually, but they can’t let go of pre established, character, places, species, ships and familiar ‘things’ (like the guardian). And they have the gall to wonder why people have such contempt for what they’re doing.

Agreed 100%.

Disagreed 100%

It’s absolutely possible that the faction we met so far in the SNW timeline are a wildly different one (and located not even close to) the one we met in “Arena”.

OMG, here we go again with that fan nonsense of needing and faking an explanation for production look changes in an alien character due to improved make-up/SFX and concept changes, which then inevitably leads to writers doing fan service pandering eps like the Klingon Augment Virus.

No thanks, I don’t ever want to see a Gorn Augment Virus 2-parter on a future Trek series…lol

You’re projecting.

Once again, they are taking huge liberty by changing canon and going their own way. All this episode was is a somewhat star trek take of Alien. REALLY! The original Gorn couldn’t move very fast and were more (somewhat) believable in being warp capable. This new version isn’t. I like SNW, but they are beginning to go off track I believe and do it their own way, just like Discovery, (which is not Trek, but a weird sci-fi show).

Discovery is absolutely a Star Trek show regardless of whether you like it or not. To say otherwise is gatekeeping and isn’t tolerated here.

Exactly who determines what opinions are and are not welcome on this site?

They went off track the moment the word “Gorn” was mentioned.

Please stop the gatekeeping. You are not in charge here and don’t speak for all fans regarding Discovery.

I’m still not sure why it was necessary to call it a Gorn in the first place. Want to do something new? Just do it! No need to shackle yourself with a name.

Yep. They could have used the exact same species as presented on the show and just called them the Noraq or something.

I’m sticking with the same head canon (and beta canon), that I’ve adhered to for years. That there are multiple “Gorn” species that a part of the Gorn Hedgemony. Maybe Kirk was familiar with THIS Gorn species, but not the one we see in Arena. In all honesty though I think it likely that some future SNW episode will negate that theory though.

It is a bit odd. For all of the “visual reboots” of species in Discovery they did shown a Gorn skeleton that was spot on for how see them in TOS.

Giving the Gorn sub categories is not a bad idea. But if that was the case wouldn’t Kirk has said “The Metrons said a Gorn, but this is not like any Gorn I had ever known.” What he did say was “Apparently called a Gorn.” Which means he had never even heard the word before. There is no wiggle room there. It’s rock solid.

That’s actually a horrible idea. That line of thinking is how we get to utter crap fan pandering from the writers like the Klingon Augment Virus 2-parter on the failed Enterprise series.

It wouldn’t be a bad idea had it been established that Star Fleet knew about the Gorn since Pike’s day. But it is obvious no one knew about the Gorn. Not even Spock. So that explanation is moot.

I’m not going to dump on what the writer said but honestly, it’s a bit silly at the same time. I’ve gotten over trying to ‘fit’ in these ridiculous canon gaps by episode 5. None of it is a huge deal. I never even cared about the Gorn lol.

But same time, it’s a bit frustrating because no one just want to say the obvious and that it conflicts with continuity. I guess when you’re a writer that’s kind of a big no-no and yet it happens ALL the time in Star Trek. Every movie, every TV show, it happens! SNW Is not the first show with these problems, it’s just the first that feels so blatantly though outside of Discovery.

OK, you don’t want to call it a reboot, fine, I get it. But what’s wrong with just saying it’s a retcon? Again happens ALL the time in Star Trek. They just changed something to fit the story better or the time a new show takes place in. Fans usually accept it as well. Just call it that and move on! No one is going to stop watching the show either way but these types of ‘explanations’ just doesn’t help. That sound about as bad as Matalas saying maybe Spock just didn’t remember the real date of the Eugenics wars when they were avoiding talking about it in season 2 of Picard. Why are you treating both your audience and Spock as morons? Same advice, just say you retcon the date to a later time and move on .

Yea, and not only that, I do think we get an updated TOS in a few years that will update this canon to make it all consistent with the modern Trek series’.

So all of this canon stuff about SNW is kind of a waste of time in my opinion. It’s going to get updated in a few years with the inevitable new TOS updated series.

Yeah but no one knows that. It’s just your assumption. Which is fine, but you can’t hang everything on ‘well, we don’t need to worry about canon because an updated TOS show will fix that in 5-10 years’. No, we don’t know that man. I understand that’s what you want, but it’s not a fact until it’s said. They should be more focused on canon today regardless.

I get that. But that is why this canon stuff with SNW doesn’t personally worry me much — because I think it’s likely we are heading to TOS being revised.

But you keep saying it as if the rest of us should just believe it too. You responded to me with this first as a reason I shouldn’t worry, correct?

And as said, we don’t know that. Just assuming it is odd. So if there is no show in the future, then is it OK for people complain about it now? So until then…

Let me rephrase that then: “ In my opinion , you shouldn’t worry….”

OK gotcha. But don’t agree lol.

And there are no guarantees all the canon stuff gets miraculously solved just because they remake TOS. They already did that with the Kelvin movies in another universe and fans still moaned over a lot of it, especially STID. ;)

I personally hope they avoid another TOS show altogether.

I agree with you 1000%. I wish they would just say that strange new worlds is a reimagining / reboot of the original series era. It doesn’t negate the original series but it does modernize it. Just say that and get it over with. I’ve been arguing that you can make a case that the temporal Cold war or any number of time traveling events in Star Trek history impacted the flow of time in the prime universe. It’s such an easy way out and I noticed that they’re always trying to give these elaborate explanations every time they make a decision outside of Canon. Star Trek has adjusted and changed Canon whenever it felt like doing it for decades. This is nothing new. I love strange new worlds it’s the kind of thing that the original series era has needed for a very long time.

On deep space nine there is a line that Captain Kirk was responsible for over 17 temporal violations you mean to tell me that in those 17 violations of the timeline there was no impact on how time flowed in the prime universe? I feel like the writers have the ideas to justify their decisions but it’s like they’re afraid to use those ideas. Star Trek Canon has created the justification they need when it comes to their creative decisions.

Bringing Jim Kirk on season 2 is an interesting move in the original series he says that the first time he met Pike is when Pike became fleet Captain. We know that’s not true. I’m totally fine with all the changes but they need to just be real about what they’re doing. The temporal code war the board traveling back to the 21st century the list goes on and on how many times has the timeline been wiped out and restored? So you mean to tell me that when the timelines are wiped out and restored that there are no changes to the timeline?

If Anthony gets an interview with kurtzman I hope he brings a lot of this stuff up because I think it’s time for them to just be real about their creative decisions.

Exactly, it would make their jobs a 100 times easier if they simply called it a reboot. And yes if you have to be fickle about it, then just do it in-universe like with the Temporal Cold War as you said. And of course they HAVE rebooted the show with an in-universe explanation with the Kelvin movies. So there is already a huge precedent for it. I just don’t know what the inherit problem is other than they are afraid fans will not watch it if it’s not in the prime universe.

And I really really just don’t buy that. Fans are fickle but c’mon. It’s still Star Trek with the same characters, aliens and situations. And most of us watch plenty of reboot things. And in this case it will just be an altered timeline if you have to get super nerdy about it, which again we have 3 films that are already doing that. And many fans already use either TCW explanation or the First Contact/Regeneration situation as proof that the changes we been seeing since Discovery are due to those. Of course it’s just their head canon. ;)

But as I said, if they feel calling it a reboot would be too drastic, then just admit you are retconning some things and most fans will be OK with that too. But I don’t understand this weird need to keep telling fans it all is fitting canon when it just isn’t. They can’t just throw this show 900 years into the future to explain why Spock never mentions a sister in TOS so they have to go another direction.

Now to make this fully clear I don’t want to give the impression my issues with canon are impacting my enjoyment of the show. Not at all. I have not rated a single episode any less because of continuity issues. I had plenty of issues with the last episode but it’s more due to a lack of originality and feeling like a rip off of other movies than over canon. I am truly enjoying the show so I can get over it. And as I said the Gorn thing doesn’t really bother me in general.

Same time though the longer the show goes on, the worst it will get and that’s the real concern.

As a fan of Trek for almost 45 years now, I long gave up worrying about canon and it’s numerous contradictions. I just sit back and try and enjoy each episode on its own.

Thanks for saying that Dr B! I’ve been a fan for as long as Trek has been on television and I’m totally enjoying the fact that brand new well made Trek is on my TV! The “canon” purists take things a little too far IMHO. It’s Sci Fi entertainment! They have kept a reasonable amount of continuity and have expanded and updated other elements. I for one am thankful that the people in charge love Trek and want to tell good stories and produce entertaining episodes.

Let the canon outrage continue…..

It’s not being ‘outrage’ over canon, it’s producers/writers constantly trying to tell you they are fitting canon when they aren’t. I don’t understand with just saying ‘yeah, we changed that and here’s why…”.

But instead they want to tell us British Khan is the same Khan from the PU. The ‘visual canon’ in Discovery isn’t really changing TOS canon. Klingons in Discovery really had hair in the first season when they told us before the show they were suppose to just be bald. And now apparently T’Pring and Chapel were besties in TOS when it was obvious Chapel never heard of or met her prior to Amok Time. The Eugenics wars actually never happened in the 90s, Spock is just really really bad at dates. And on and on and on.

STOP TREATING YOUR AUDIENCE LIKE IDIOTS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! That’s really the problem. “How many lights did Picard see?” “He saw 4 lights!” “Nope, it is really 5 lights actually, he only sees 4 now because we changed it after the fact but it’s still suppose to be 5 lights…or maybe Picard just needed glasses and why he thought it was 4? Anyway, it still fits canon if you just ignore your eyes and ears!” Sigh

Yes Tiger2, exactly. STOP TREATING YOUR AUDIENCE LIKE IDIOTS. That’s the issue for me. I’m not really that concerned about canon, up to a point, but the fact that they change things and then pretend they didn’t just because they see the fan outrage? They should put on their big boy pants and admit what they did and stop wasting our time with their coward excuses. They should actually also stop changing things that don’t need to be changed, just because they, what, just want to put their brand on it? Is this an ego thing? For example, since you brought up my favorite show Discovery and their Klingons… why DID they need to change them? The showrunners just wanted to put their own take on it, but it’s not theirs to change… Yes, that was sarcasm about DIS being my favorite show, oh boy!

LOL about Discovery! I feel the same in sarcasm. ;)

I’m sure if they told people they purposely changed canon that would bother some. But I don’t see how stuff like this makes it any better? What’s funny is all the people who think this episode changed the Gorn doesn’t seem to be won over or convinced by these arguments either, so why keep doing it?

Again, I hate to go back to my greatest hits but this is why I just don’t love prequels. They seem to have the biggest problem with canon because the writers don’t want to make a purely prequel show. And they don’t have to but you have to still show level of restraint or why bother making it a prequel? Discovery learned that the hard way lol. I do think SNW has done MORE right as a prequel versus wrong but they are still making some of the same mistakes. The difference is we do have a show much more aligned with TOS canon and just a better written and fun show IMO. So most people can overlook the canon issues. I include myself in that. At the moment, I give the season an 8/10. Compared to DIS that gets a 6/10 and PIC a dismal 3/10, SNW is sitting pretty good lol.

But I still think they can do a better job with continuity. But I guess that’s also the problem when you bring in so many TOS characters and aliens and not just try to do more new or original stories, hence the Gorn.

I know this is one of your greatest hits but I don’t mind prequels at all. They aren’t inherently bad. Worse case is prequels are handcuffed somewhat by what came before. That doesn’t mean they still can’t work. Enterprise was a very good prequel. And I think Rogue One was an excellent one, too.

The thing is it is very apparent that Secret Hideout is just not up to the task of making a Trek prequel show. At all. In fact, they are barely competent (at best) of creating a post TNG show. I’m returning to one of my greatest hits in saying that Star Trek is currently in very bad hands and would be better of P+ terminated their deal with Secret Hideout.

And you heard me say this as well, I’m not saying you can’t make a great prequel but so far it seems harder for everyone from Enterprise to SNW make a more truer version of one. I include Enterprise because people hollered about that one at the time too. People were really up in arms about some of the changes. But yes compared to Discovery it fits i really really well today. And it was the first.

So I’m not saying they are ‘bad’, I’m just not a huge fan of them in general. But that said, I watch a lot of them including all the Trek ones. One of my favorite shows is Better Call Saul. That’s a prequel done really really right IMO. But to be fair, there isn’t any time travel or alternate times in BCS. And there only about 50+ episodes in Breaking Bad and not the 600+ episodes of TOS-VOY so their jobs are a bit easier.

But we’ve had three Trek prequel shows, they’ve all had these canon issues which I don’t know is about the people that makes them or is it just really hard to just make a more straight forward prequel?

I don’t understand with just saying ‘yeah, we changed that and here’s why…”.

Even THAT would be better than trying to squeeze the round peg in the square hole they are attempting. I really don’t understand their hubris here. I don’t think as many fans would shun a reboot as they fear would. And I certainly think that if they had just said, this is why we did what we did, if it was sound, most fans would accept it. Even me.

Everyone has their own headcanon. You do… I do.. the writers do… as do others commenters as written above. And it’s all fine. That is the beauty of Trek… it can be anything you want! TOS and TNG (as well as the other shows) often contradicted canon as well… that is Trek. How often has TAS changed from being canon to not canon to novels not being canon until it was confirmed on-screen? I have been watching Trek since TOS and honestly, it doesn’t bother me one bit.

Fine, but the writers are not writing ‘headcanon’ they are writing canon, period. I’m not a difficult person. I can overlook anything if the story itself is intriguing enough. But please stop telling people nothing was changed by their stories when it clearly was. That’s just insulting to me. As I said, just tell me WHY you changed it and I think more fans will be fine with that instead of constantly telling us to ignore what we see with our own eyes. That’s how Trump works, Star Trek should be better. ;)

But we got a whole article and a video from P+ here in this story that presents their case for the Gorn changes — isn’t that what you are saying you want here (“just tell me WHY you changed it”)?

Seems like they did exactly what you are asking here regarding the Gorn canon change, right?

I wasn’t talking about the video, just the idea how Kirk supposedly never heard of them and so on. It just doesn’t fly in the face of common sense for some because they have made the Gorn almost mythical on this show. But sure you can definitely argue that. And end of the day they are the writers, they can just say that. But I just think it’s feeling more and more and more ridiculous.

It’s pretty obvious the Gorn are going to be a big part of this show for however long it goes. People tried to make the excuse for Uhura in the first episode she didn’t know them because she wasn’t on the bridge at the time of the attack which is just silly IMO. But then the second episode she CLEARLY knows who they are now lol. This is what I mean. I just wish they say they retcon the whole Gorn thing instead of trying to pretend any of it aligns with Arena. It really doesn’t at all IMO. And as others said it just completely misses the point of Arena.

Yeah! It would be kind of cool actually if they said:

Were making some supporting elements canon changes to some of the characters, alien species and events that you are familiar with from TOS both because that’s a 55 year old show with antiquated production values that don’t really represent anymore what the future might be expected like like, plus also to free up storylines and possibilities so we aren’t so hemmed in by existing TOS (and Berman-era) canon.”

They probably would love to do this, but then I would bet the same higher-up exec at CBS who came up with the ridiculous notion that the LDS cartoon-comedy is now canon is likely insisting that they play the “were sticking to canon” game with the fans for SNW as well.

Sadly agree!

While I would not find that explanation sound (whining about how old the original show was is no reason to abandon key elements in some episodes that made them work) at the very least it would acknowledge they willfully made outright changes to things and would be so close to admitting the show is a reboot that I, as a fan, would see it as such.

There is some truth there. But there are things that are written in stone. Once it was established that Jean-Luc Picard was of French ancestry they didn’t change him to Argentine when they made the feature film, for example.

I mean, this is all going to be fixed anyway when the inevitably redo TOS in a few years, so why sweat over it?

This is ridiculous but “your world of starship captains doesn’t admit women” didn’t mean Starfleet didn’t allow women to be Captains? The truth is, we all have headcannon to justify storytelling choices. I’m not hung up on the way Kirk phrased his references to the Gorn’s identity.

Janice Lester was certifiably insane. You can’t take anything she says as gospel. This is a very, very different situation.

McCoy called it a Gorn before anyone told him what the alien was called. There are countless, blatant errors and lots of dialogue issues. We pick and chose which ones “destroy” cannon.

The Metrons called them Gorn when they stopped both ships and told them what they were going to do. Before the Captain was whisked away. Was McCoy on the bridge for that? And if not, the term Gorn was still now known and could have found its way to McCoy in Sick Bay.

Stuff not shown on screen but assumed to make it make sense is the definition of headcannon. We assume based on how things are phrased in Kirk’s log entry that no one had heard of the Gorn, but it’s never established that Arena is First Contact. Again we pick and chose what we find too much and it varies wildly including Dr Lester being “certifiably” insane – something never established. Meanwhile women can’t be Captains but they can while serving in UESPA, I mean the Space Service, I mean Starfleet. I’m sure this disappointed Helmsperson/Ops Officer Cadet Commander Lieutenant Valeris as she climbed the ranks while conspiring with Sisko’s father, I mean Admiral Cartwright, to kill Klingons whose blood changes color in a few years. A conspiricy prompted by racism that doesn’t exist in the future except everytime Bones disagrees with Spock.

All sarcasm aside, there are errors everywhere. We chose which ones upset us. None of them ruin Trek. They just annoy some of us more than others.

This is an argument I just don’t buy. The idea that if it is not seen then it very well could happen. No. Common sense should still prevail. Just because we don’t see Scotty with an Ice Cream cart in engineering doesn’t mean we can say he sold ice cream in his spare time. Common sense means we can safely say he did not. The way Kirk reacted to the Gorn and Spock’s lack of reaction means we can also safely say that no one had ever heard the word before.

And using the UESPA and such from a time when it was not cemented on the show doesn’t mean they were inconsistent. It was still an organization and producers had yet to settle on a name. A different character played by the same actor does not mean it’s the same person… Etc Etc….

Some inconsistencies are there. They are normally small and generally inconsequential. But the big ones just don’t happen… Except in Secret Hideout productions. Which tells me they should have just said everything they make is a reboot to begin with.

Canonical errors that are not inconsequential: Women can’t be Captains, Khan remembers Chekov, the crew of the Enterprise has zero reason to travel to Genesis in STIII, the size of the Enterprise in STV, Deanna solves a mystery by reading a Ferengi even though Betazoids can’t read Ferengi minds…my point is that there are many and we selectively react to them.

Entire story arcs can fall apart by things actually said in dialogue. But we chose to ignore those errors and then cling madly to things that are mere suggestions or assumptions.

I prefer my canon adoration with a strong dose of consistency. And on the Gorn issue, it just ain’t there. That’s my only point.

The “women cannot be captain’s” thing is the one on your list that could be counted as a canonical error. Maybe. But I wouldn’t count it as such because that was the one and only one time it was ever mentioned. It was deemed a mistake probably almost immediately and was never mentioned again. Which meant it was not unreasonable to suggest the line was an insane person could not be a captain. Which obviously Lester was. Khan recognizing Chekov was a mistake, yes, but it did not ruin the movie. In fact, Koenig himself was aware but didn’t speak up because he knew if he did it would cost him lines. Using the Gorn as SNW is would be akin to Khan saying he was picked up but the Yorktown and was looking for Captain Smith or something. Then the movie wouldn’t work and it would be a grave error from the show. The crew went to Genesis because Kirk needed to retrieve Spock’s body. I cannot speak for the Troi thing as I’m not as familiar with TNG as I am with TOS.

And speaking of errors in consistency, how about Kirk leaving the bridge after the attack and runs into Scotty holding Preston. Why was he taking him to the bridge? It was a cinematic thing done on screen to generate an emotional response even though it made no sense from the characters standpoint. Such things are acceptable to most and quite typical in visual story telling. In the novel Kirk ran into Scotty after he left the bridge and Scotty told him, “I’ve got to get him to sick bay.” Which makes more sense but lacks the emotional punch of the way Meyer presented it.

I guess this was a long winded way of saying that if you do like your consistency then the Gorn appearance on SNW is indeed a rather large issue.

To clarify, the consistency I’m seeking is in when canonical errors bother folks. There’s no consistency at all. Actual lines of dialogue are contradicted and some excuse it. Those same folks get twisted in knots when things that were never spoken but simply implied are bent or broken. That’s all.

If that is your baseline for getting bothered then I find it to be a rather substantial ask. People seem to be bothered by different things. I accept that nothing they make would be universally accepted by fans. But I do think that if they make an honest effort to stay within the rules of the sandbox they are playing in the majority of fans will be at least OK with what they do.

TOS Trek was sexist. You can put all the lipstick you want on that pig, it doesn’t change that fact. There’s no universe where I need to hear NuPike utter “I’ll never get used to a woman on the bridge”, so I’m perfectly happy with a modern interpretation of Trek being inclusive, canon be damned.

Same. But folks will jump through all kinds of hoops to make those lines make sense. And they just don’t. It should be ok to bend things not said if we can ignore things actually said.

The problem isn’t so much the different aesthetic, as it is that the writer entirely failed to grasp one very important theme of “Arena”: the invaders were the humans, not the Gorn. This episode got them so, so wrong. There’s a reason so many fans are calling it SNW’s worst episode of the season. The Gorn aren’t monsters, savages, vicious or animals–and they’re certainly not in any way like either Alien or Predator. I hope this episode’s writer moves on to other shows. I’d hate to see him screw up the Tholians, the Cardassians, or any other species.

True. The Gorns are a space-faring species, and yes they were defending their territory in Arena, albeit in a rather draconian way, but they’re aliens and we can’t judge them by human standards. The Gorn as portrayed in this episode are blood-thirsty animals. We have to realize though that what we saw were “babies” and although they grew super fast, they were certainly not adults. It’s possible in their adult stage they become slower and less savage… But that would be stretching it.

I agree. The visual differences don’t matter to me, but they have completely missed the point of “Arena”.

This is where I am too. They missed the point! I’m enjoying SNW a lot, but stuff like this gets in the way. (I also don’t quite see the value or interest in a species that JUST kills, but that’s a separate issue.)

I was shocked by the violence, especially La’an shattering the Gorn. It was mindless violence with no humanity or anything. It’s all chipper at the end of the episode. No discussions about life or killing or revenge or trauma or seeing other points of views or anything. For me, it just wasn’t Star Trek.

Same here. The visual differences are less important to me than getting other things, like when the Gorn were first encountered, right. The visual differences can be a thing if they stray too far but it’s still less important than other things.

I’d honestly be okay if they never even addressed it. This is the reality of long-term fictional universes. I can compartmentalize and allow for wiggle room when necessary. Then again, I grew up a comics fan, where the notion of canon itself isn’t even consistent, so I’ve just never felt the need to reconcile two contradictory things. At least not things like this. Bigger things? Maybe, but I don’t feel like we’ve crossed that line yet personally.

As a viewer I have to assume I’m watching the character’s reality, unless it’s specifically stated I’m not. Otherwise, you could call the whole series an illusion, if you wanted. Better to just create a new alien, other than Gorn, and have no problems.

My personal headcanon is that there are different species of Gorn. They’re all reptilian but have different qualities. Some are more feral creatures like we are seeing now. Others are like the one we saw in Enterprise. Still others are like the TOS Gorn. They all come together to form the Gorn Hegemony.

If there can be six species of Xindi, why not multiple Gorn? Similar to how we call them all dinosaurs, but a T-Rex and a Velociraptor are two very different things.

Read any Star Trek Novels about the Gorn?

I like this as well. Just like how the first season of PIcard established there were different versions of Romulans, there are different versions of Gorn. Why not?

I like these Gorn. They are very scary and interesting.

I know this is not a popular opinion, but I don’t consider TOS “real” Star Trek. Yes, it started it all but now it’s dated and unwatchable and I don’t give a rats ass how a modern episode of Star Trek connects perfectly to a low budget idiocy filmed 50+ years ago. As far as I’m concerned, Star Trek started with The Motion Picture. Everything before is….too silly to take seriously.

You’re right about one thing: NOT a popular opinion… TOS is Star Trek. The only Star Trek without the necessity of an additional subtitle… Nothing is more important than TOS (not saying it’s the best Trek, but for sure the most pivotal show)…

I’ll take that next step. TOS is still the best Trek.

TOS is the most pivotal show which is oddly part of the problem because it’s also old and outdated and yet the prequels keep attaching their canon to it and it just doesn’t really work outside of the broad strokes.

The perfect example of what I mean is Chapel. The version of her on TOS is a really outdated model of a woman pining for a man and she’s like a little puppy when it comes to Spock. That character wouldn’t work today at all and so they changed her. But they did it to a point she’s just Chapel in name only. No one who is watching Star Trek for the first time is going to get they are suppose to be the same character. It’s almost as ridiculous as telling us that STID Khan and TOS Khan are the same character. Other than having the same name, in what freaking way???

It’s why I wish they just rebooted shows like DIS and SNW from the start so they won’t have to feel as tied to TOS. TOS is a very very old show today with a lot of issues today in both story and production. So much of it is excused because it created the franchise obviously and there is the huge nostalgia factor with it. If they kept going forward in the timeline like they did with TNG, it would be fine. But once they started making prequels to it, it just make the canon issues worse for all the reasons cited since Enterprise started. And it only got worse with Discovery and SNW because TOS is only getting older.

I agree with you, instead of trying to constantly update TOS for the modern point of view I think it would have been a better idea to just create new shows in new time frames and let TOS stay as the historical oddity of its times, something that is truly dated but an example of something of a certain time period that people can see how problematic certain aspects can be. I mean I am a big fan of classic film-noir but if everyone tried to remake every single film-noir out there just to fix their problematic elements than it wouldn’t make any sense and it would be a tall order. Better to leave the past in the past (with all its warts and problems) and try to concentrate on the future.

And that’s what they did for a long time, certainly when the 24th century shows were going. I honestly loved the way they treated the TOS era meaning they basically left it alone as a museum piece. It was kind of frozen in ember but obviously still recognized in canon. I think that was really the smart way to go. Now it doesn’t mean you can’t go back to the 23rd century at all but I think it would’ve made things easier if it was at least post-TOS 23rd century. Once you do a prequel of it for a more contemporary time it really hits home how unaligned TOS feels to the rest of the franchise today.

Here’s a really funny example of a video that makes the point discussing contradictions of the interior size of the new Enterprise. I don’t personally think its a big deal, you have to update things. But it does prove how out-of-canon SNW feels to TOS in many ways:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dX-LhlpE_SE

It’s just an example of trying to pretend any of this truly fits with TOS. It doesn’t at all but then this is the part you have to tell yourself it’s just a TV show and go with it. I think most do but there will always be limits too. ;)

So is your comment.

I completely understand and support the upgrading of anything that is almost 60 years old. If we want Trek to continue, it must be upgraded for today’s audience. In saying that, however….

  • Why would you upgrade the Gorn versus making a new alien? Seems silly to do that, especially with such an iconic race. Even Shatner did a commercial a few years ago with the Gorn that we know. And I do not buy the fact of “why wouldn’t we see them again?” That is an easier cannon question to answer than “why do the Gorn look, act, and are so different.”
  • How could a species like the “new” Gorn achieve space travel, which they obviously do?
  • I think the fact that Spock and Uhura don’t mention this is a huge support of not using the Gorn and using another species.
  • No one else seemed to mention this on any board I have been on, but the laying of eggs from vomit and having those eggs bread in a human is right out of Robert Wolfe’s Andromedia. The Magog did exactly that. The writers this year have taken so many ideas from other properties that this seems to be another one.

Don’t get me wrong, I really like SNW, but there is always room for comment.

“Even Shatner did a commercial a few years ago with the Gorn that we know.”

Yeah, but the entire point of that commercial was to advertise an upgraded version of the Gorn as seen in Star Trek The Video Game (2013) [great score BTW]…

And ANDROMEDA started as an After the Fall of the Federation pitch, so it swings back round.

This is what happens when you don’t care about canon. They find one little thing that they can cling to, and run with it. If he’s saying using the Gorn wasn’t his choice, and that’s the best he could do, then fine. If that’s his own excuse for using them, that’s friggin’ weak.

I’m not that bothered by them using the Gorn. It’s the copy and pasting from Alien and Predator in the last episode that bothered me more than anything. I mean, here’s an opportunity to get to learn more about an iconic Trek species and, so far, it’s all very familiar sci-fi stuff we’ve seen in those franchises and their many, many copycats over the years.

Hopefully, and I’m assuming this will be the case, if and when we see the full grown Gorn used in SNW, it’ll be something more substantial. More than screeching monsters. Fingers crossed.

*sigh* Gatekeepers…. We lobbied for SNW. We finally get it? And some fans are mad we didn’t get a guy in a rubber suit. Arena was broadcast 55 years ago. Thinking that the BULK of SNW viewers are even aware of it, is naïve, at best. I guess I gotta keep reminding people: It’s show BUSINESS, folks. There aren’t enough fans that are canon advocates to sustain this show. Gatekeeping isn’t new. Batman fans in 1966 were livid, at the campy take on the Caped Crusader. Now, for a LOT of legacy Trek fans, ’66 Batman is the “only” Batman.

I happened to enjoy episode 9, despite the dents the writer put in the canon helmet.

TOS broke canon. “Vulcan has no moon, Miss Uhura” In TMP? One big HONKING moon. Vulcanians became Vulcans, the United Earth Ship Enterprise morphed into the Enterprise from the Federation. I don’t hear anyone complaining, with their hair on fire, about that.

I remember the drought times. The 10 years between TOS and TMP. Yes, there was TAS and fiction books. Then, the drought was 2-3 years between films until TNG came along.

Then there was a drought of 12 years for Trek on TV. 2005-2017. Personally, that one was the hardest for myself.

Now, we have Trek, back on TV, almost weekly.

CBS owns Star Trek, plain and simple. They can make a Star Trek cereal if they want to, we just don’t have to buy it.

Show BUSINESS, folks. We gotta accept that, or find our DVD’s of TOS.

I don’t think you are getting it. No one is mad we aren’t getting a guy in a suit. That’s not the problem. The problem is they are using the Gorn to begin with when it was made painfully clear that went against what was established. Even Manny Coto, when he ran season 4 of Enterprise, said he really wanted to use the Gorn but knew he couldn’t! Would be nice if we got show runners who respected Trek like he did.

Sure, the bulk of the audience is not aware of the intricacies of the episode “Arena.” But that just means if SNW people had made up a new alien no one would care. Had they used another alien whose first encounter was never specified or implied it still wouldn’t matter. That changes nothing for people who don’t know much about TOS and the long time fans are happy as it shows respect for the source material. It’s a win win that requires only a teeny tiny bit of imagination from the producers and writers.

Things that were changed during the show’s gestation period really don’t count much as they don’t contradict anything. Vulcan having a moon or not doesn’t change the story any. Would it have been nice had the matte artists working on TMP known this? Sure. But it didn’t take away from the story at hand and didn’t invalidate the episode where Spock told Uhura Vulcan had no moon. I don’t sweat the small stuff. Hell, I don’t even mind the new look of aliens so long as they don’t go so far as to being unrecognizable. But the big things…. They really should know better and not going there to begin with is a win win for the production.

No, I completely get it. Continuity fans are upset that the Gorn were used, before their appearance in TOS. For the fans that say, this goes here in the timeline, that comes after this event, in the timeline, and take GREAT COMFORT in knowing these events. I get that it helps in world building for TOS. I would throw the remote at the TV, if R2D2 came out of the turbolift and chirped its way to the helm, So I understand canon advocates concerns. Some are forgiving, like myself and others are saying- “What have you done with my Star Trek?” that doesn’t go there, It’s entirely possible that Starfleet or Section 1031 has classified the Gorn until they know what to do with them. Pike may have written a report and Starfleet decided to classify the incident. I’m okay with the writer’s head canon because it helped him tell a great story. It’s a big galaxy, out there. People may be aware of their peers but not their adventures.

If that is your head canon and helps you accept what SNW is doing then more power to you. I can even accept the character change of Christine Chapel. Barely. :) But to me there are things that are so huge and universe changing that they just shouldn’t touch. Using the Gorn before anyone knew about them is one of them. I find it painfully obvious no one on Kirk’s ship even was aware of the word Gorn before the Metrons used it. But the SNW folks decided, “screw that. We want to use the Gorn anyway.” To me there are only two ways to do that reasonably. Use the Gorn on any show set AFTER TOS. Or just make your pre-TOS show a reboot. And honestly, there is really no good reason they HAD to use the Gorn for their Big Bad. None. They could have used a different Trek alien that had no established first encounter or made one up. That is why SNW is so frustrating. Everything they did wrong could have been so easily fixed but they did it anyway.

Sorry about the mini rant. It’s just that the incompetence is infuriating to me.

I see your point, but this is unlike anything else in show business. The props for TOS are likely more famous than the lead actors in many current tv series. If you took 8″ x10″s of a communicator and phaser onto the street, most people would know what they were — even if they just said Star Trek. TOS is still on tv, every day. People saw the Gorn last month. They read the book. Mego made a figure of it last year. The least the SNW producers could do is pay attention to what it was, or make something new. They did after all, reproduce Roddenberry’s whole first pilot, and added his legacy characters to make this show. Why not use the USS Constellation? Don’t rework Balance of Terror, or do a kinda sorta Tholian Web, or use the Gorn. Use the millions they have and access to computer techniques TOS producers could only dream of and make something new. I always thought it was the studio, not the fans, that wants to coast on what came before, because it’s just simpler to copy the past than risk new creations.

I really don’t care if we have to throw out the entire Arena episode. Or just say it’s the same alien. Anyone who watched the motion picture and accepts that that enterprise is the same one on the show should be able to accept a change to a species which had one episode only.

I’d prefer they just used a new alien here… but whatever. Not losing sleep either way and I really like SNW

But it’s not the same ship. They said it underwent an 18 month refit. Decker said “This is an almost totally new Enterprise.”

The revision to the Gorn does not bother me so much. If anything, it makes Kirk’s victory in Arena all the more impressive. Arena was definitely set up to tell a brains vs. brawn story, that element can be preserved by making it an underdog vs overconfidence story. A much more aggressive and capable Gorn is convinced he will win by his superior strength so misses the strategy Kirk identifies. Now just replace the plodding, ’60s fight scenes with much faster moving, more desperate combat from a modern show and it’s all good.

So when Kirk and the Gorn are dancing cheek-to-cheek and going nose-to-nose, why doesn’t the thing clear its throat and take Kirk out that way? No, this doesn’t wash no matter what cycle you put the machine on.

It’s not uncommon in nature for creatures to have estrous cycles. So a Gorn not in a reproductive cycle wouldn’t be spitting out eggs.

“ Maybe Kirk has never seen them, he could even be one of those people who still doubts the stories”

Seriously? That’s what the writer is going with? It’s clear that Pike and the Enterprise had documented experiences with the Gorn that led tot he death of Starfleet Officers. Those are nor “stories” like Bigfoot to the Loch Ness Monster.

There is no “headcannon” here. To me that means he filled the gaps in on a character or race in his head. It’s not “headcannon” to change the nature of a species from what has been established on screen.

He created mindless Aliens that seem no different than a Dinosaur in Jurassic Park – hardly a species that seems capable of creating advanced technology.

Why not create a new species for this? The writers and producers had to know this would not be a popular move with fans. Just a really odd choice, and a really lame explanation from the writer. Not a lot of creativity from a guy who’s job it is to be creative.

Honestly, I don’t think the Gorn should have been included in the show at all – it’s hard to square their appearance in SNW with what we saw in TOS and I find it somewhat disrespectful to fans.

Funny… Many are annoyed with what they did with the Gorn in this episode but I was miffed when the Gorn were mentioned in the first episode. I found it odd that they would know about them when Spock, Uhura and no one else knew about them 10 years later. They way it was set up I knew it would only get worse as they doubled and tripled down on their incredible mistake.

I’m not really down with making the Gorn’s half-Velociraptor/half “Alien.”

That being said, it was a fun ep, and I will look forward to the revised version of Arena in a few years when they get to redoing TOS.

A poor excuse for a lousy job. Ignoring cannon is a poor job and a disrespect for other’s jobs. “To have fun” with the writing is too cheap and only means cheating with the legacy. SNW was a nice try. It began quite very well in a blast of glory… but like a New-year firework, it’s fading to a vanishing and forgetful death… I’m so so sorry they choose (again) this path. It could have been glorious…

Got Melodrama?

Got plagiarism?

My head cannon? The whole series is a reboot. That’s the only way this show works for me and I’m fine with that. Nothing wrong with a reboot, even if Trek fans are irrationally terrified of the very notion.

I wish I could do that. I really do. But there are so many instances like this very article where the BTS staff are justifying what they are doing to fit what came before. And failing. I just wish they officially said this is a reboot. Their version of the show had The Cage been picked up as a series. Which is perfectly fine. Then none of this Gorn, T’Pring and Chapel stuff would matter one teeny tiny bit.

It really should just be a reboot and all these problems goes away. Instead of trying to desperately make something fit that clearly doesn’t just do your thing and people can judge it based on that and not how it fits with a 55 year old outdated TV show.

That’s how I’m looking at it, too, but it is getting more difficult to maintain with each passing episode. It would all be made incredibly simpler if one of these doofuses serving as Trek’s shepherds would just come out and admit that’s what they’re doing.

Had that been said CLEARLY and so freeing both the fans AND the writers to do whatever pleases them, it would be acceptable, yes. Now, it’s clearer and clearer that IT IS a reboot, a “based on” but not the same or “the same timeline” as they insisted… No, it’s not. It’s something else. And OK if it is…!! They just had to be clear that “it’s not ‘your fathers’ Star Trek”…!! It would eliminate a whole lot of problems and reclamation…!!

LMAO Headcannon = Justification for lazy, sloppy writing. Seriously, the writers of SNW and Picard need to be fired. They’re so bad and amateurish they make the first season of TNG look like classic literature.

Wow, very harsh lol.

So, we don’t know what the long term here is, or if there is one with the Gorn. Maybe as Gorn get older, they grow thicker hides and slow down versus the young ones. More deliberate and calculating versus all speed and instinct (Think young Anakin vs later Vader).

Maybe they do only include the strongest of a brood to be raised as their young? Maybe Vasquez Rocks was particularly cold for the Gorn Captain and he was having a slow day. Who knows. And that is fine.

Why? Because I don’t want all the answers. I want to be invested in how they square that circle. The journey is why I watch Star Trek, not the destination (even if episodic/ semi-serial).

All that is fine. But explain how no one in Kirk’s day knows them yet everyone in Pike’s day does?

I agree that this explanation for the differences in the Gorn is a stretch. On the other hand, several posters were suggesting a better rationale in another article’s discussion that the hatchling Gorn are wildly aggressive without any adults around. Perhaps their species had to evolve from a “reptilian brain” past and did so by the adaptation of a significant transformation in puberty. As adults they mellow into more intelligent and reasonable beings. This may yet be a approach that SNW will develop in future episodes. I wonder what Linus, someone from another reptilian species, would have to say.

While the choice to use the name Gorn seems to profoundly trip up a lot of people here, I’m a bit exasperated with the resistance to actually thinking through whether their head canon based on Arena makes any biological sense.

The one thing that does make biological sense is a Gorn culture that advances and organizes through individual fights for dominance. It’s not the only option for a reptilian society given that some snakes and spiders do cooperate, but it’s not unreasonable.

The exploration of what different reproductive “strategies” mean for the development of intelligence is only occasionally explored in science fiction, but it’s an important concept in biology.

R/K Selection in evolution describes the trade off between having numerous offspring with few that survive vs few offspring in which parents invest intensely in their care and development.

R breeders include most insects, spiders, fish, amphibians and reptiles. It’s an advantage to treat offspring as expendable in very hostile environments. They lay their eggs in nests, and in some cases are parasitic breeders. The key point is they breed and then abandon the mass of eggs to develop to maturity without parental support or guidance.

Few R species develop higher levels of intelligence, which is why octopuses are so fascinating. They are solitary R breeders who can reach a level of intelligence close to dogs and cats or higher.

Mammals and birds are K breeders, investing intensely in the care of their young to adolescence.

There are a few science fiction books where R offspring can only enter society at maturity after reaching a certain level of sentience. Before that they are considered to be more like animals.

Having the Gorn be R breeding reptilians in hostile environments makes a certain sense. Having them be an intelligent species that doesn’t value individual life in quite the same way, could follow from that.

By contrast, we would expect Saurians to be K breeders like birds. Linus in Discovery would have had a very different upbringing with parental involvement.

Even though there has been more than one spacefaring reptilian species in the franchise, I don’t think Star Trek has taken this on the implications of R breeding strategies with a major species before.

As much as people complain here that they don’t want the same old aliens with bumps on their heads, they seem to be actually quite resistant to something actually strange and new that fits entirely into biological theory.

TG, thanks for your most interesting and scientifically informed reply to my speculation! We’ll see where things go with the Gorn in future episodes of SNW and perhaps other series.

Speaking of other series, I feel exactly the same as your final sentence with regard to the Klingons in season one of Discovery. It seems to me that with so much attention devoted to them across many Trek series that they were becoming too familiar, too human, and insufficiently alien. This is always a danger since, after all, everything is being written and performed by human beings. And maybe this danger was heightened by TNG focusing on Worf, a Klingon raised by humans. It seemed to me that the Disco producers wanted to make Klingons truly alien again with the less human makeup, language use, and rituals. DS9 and Voy and Ent also attempted this from time to time. So, I hope in Picard S3 we don’t reencounter overly “domesticated” Klingons. I also think that the depiction of the truly alien was significantly advanced by Disco S4.

Thanks, again!

That is not what the problem is. The problem is using the Gorn to begin with. If TPTB really wanted to to something actually strange and new then they should just make up a new alien species and no one would whine about what they look like, how they act or that they were used in a TOS episode and were unknown at the time.

ML, I understand from your many postings about this that you would have preferred the introduction of a whole new species. However, reaching back to a species that appeared in a single TOS episode without little development and adding distinctive characteristics and ascribing previously unknown features to it is also a reasonable approach. The underlying concern that many folks here have is what kind of canonical limits are imposed by earlier appearances and where does one draw a line on a spectrum of how the earlier precedents are adhered to or revised or disregarded. There is no consensus about this. It is a matter of individual preferences.

I am more lenient about alleged canon “violations,” though I have my limits (as in an earlier thread about the time travel inconsistencies in Picard S2). Even with regard to what the TOS crew knew about the Gorn in “Arena” given what SNW has done, to me that jury cannot even hear the case until we are given the full extent of SNW’s presentation of them in upcoming episodes.

Again, going in and fleshing out the Gorn is not the problem. The problem is having the Pike crew deal with the Gorn when it was clearly established that not one person on Kirk’s Enterprise in Arena had ever even heard the word before. If they want to flesh out the Gorn, have them show up in Picard S3. Or have them show up on a Captain Sulu show or anything set in a time frame AFTER Arena. Nothing they do in upcoming episodes could change things unless they introduce changes in the space time continuum. Which might work but I would still say was a cop out and an overly complex solution to a mistake that didn’t need to get made.

Well, I’m not concerned enough about this to go back and watch Arena, but is it the case that Kirk and company didn’t know who they were chasing until the Metrons identified them as Gorn? Then the (adult) alien captain so named was totally unfamiliar to their past experiences with Gorn. I admit it’s a stretch but could be unpacked in this way in future episodes. At the end of the day, this discrepancy just doesn’t loom so large as to make SNW less enjoyable for me.

It is the reasonable and even solid conclusion based on the character reactions and what they said that this was the very first encounter anyone in Star Fleet had with the Gorn after the raid on Cestus III. A raid where no one on Cestus III knew who attacked them. So we can safely say no one had heard the word Gorn before it was revealed to them by the Metrons.

We all have what limits we are willing to accept before rejecting something. As I said before, I’m not a HUGE stickler to canon but some things just have to be adhered to. When the Gorn were first encountered is one of them for me. And here’s the thing… Secret Hideout has already used up all of the slack I think was reasonable to give them. Had they started with this show I would probably not be as down on them about this as I am. But given their past… That they have consistently tossed out and retconned anything that they wanted to do what they they wanted to do as well as the below average quality of their products… I just can’t give them a pass for the Gorn thing. I just can’t. Sorry.

My point is that an R – or “fast” -selection reproduction strategy is much more consistent with the adult Gorn in Arena than an M – “slow” one.

If the Gorn have a seed and ignore reproductive cycle, and only collect and admit the rare individuals who reach sentience into their society, it would make sense of the events in Arena.

Federation colonists wouldn’t see a planet with juveniles lacking sentience as belonging to the Gorn, but the Gorn would consider it theirs.

Understood. That’s very clear. Still to be explained is where the word “Gorn” came from, but that’s easily devised.

Not sure why you are replying to me with this. It has nothing to do with my main point. I’ve never complained about the Gorn reproductive cycle or why the young are speedsters when the old seem to be slow and cumbersome. My complaint was that they appeared in a time when it was established on TOS that no one had heard of them yet.

All they had to do was name them something else, but at this point I would’ve preferred no explanation and left it to us fans to decide how/if we care. They completely changed the Klingons in The Motion Picture, and I was probably upset for a few minutes, and that was that. Even Worf didn’t want to talk about it…

The 17 year locust Gorn

Lt Kirk fought the

Gremlins Gorn

On the bridge of the legendarily cursed Farragut

I’m less fussed by a change to the Gorn that two other elements.

1) The species makes no sense. How is a race that is basically feral actually spacefaring? Also, how do they actually survive as a species since they use Highlander rules from birth?

2) Why are they now xenomorphs? The whole episode was essentially a mashup rewrite of several Aliens movies, right down to the Ripley dive ending. I now really want to never see the Gorn again. I just can’t take them seriously after that episode. Sadly they are obviously lined up to be the recurring baddies. Sorry, Davy, but Star Trek vs Aliens was a bad choice to go with.

These headcanon excuses make no sense either unless Kirk never reads reports. This is not a great defense of the logic here at all.

Overall, I thought the writing on this episode was really poor. SNW, you can do better than this. I know the second season is already wrapped, but I really hope there are no more rip-off episodes like this. It’s bad enough a number of episodes are basically mashups of older TNG/TOS plots, but at least the cast carries it off well enough that I don’t care. They’ve been very good up to now.

And this is why it was a VERY bad idea to run straight to the 2nd season without first gauging how the first season was received. And they could also see what worked and what didn’t. I felt it was obvious the Gorn did not work back in episode one. Now I seem to have more company in that decision.

I have a much better answer: it’s 2022, not 1967.

The march of time isn’t an answer; it isn’t even an excuse. It’s just lame, like this dumb overwriting of what went before.

Is there any reason to doubt the Gorn we did not see in Memento Mori were unlike the one seen in Arena? The Gorn seen in this episode were young. Who is to say they don’t mature into an adult Gorn like the one seen in Arena? I’m confused by the fact there seems to be a disconnect where there doesn’t need to be one.

I’m confused by TPTB need to tie into pre-existing IP at every opportunity regardless of whether they should be doing so.

Look, ALIENS runs roughshod over the actual internal logic for the Alien lifecycle from the first film by introducing a queen into the mix. There’s actually a piece of Giger art that shows the whole intended lifescycle, and if you watched ALIEN with the cut Skerritt cocoon scene spliced in (I edited the laserdisc into a ‘special’ VHS including most of the cut stuff for a friend in the early 90s), you get an idea that this whole lifecycle is there in the original.

So I suppose SNW jumping off from ARENA in all these weird directions shouldn’t be considered tons worse than what Cameron did (but Cameron succeeded so spectacularly well, that’s a distinction!) … but it is, it really just is. This is TREK , not a sequel to what was intended as a one-off horror movie.

The Gorn were given an update for Enterprise, the newer more vicious Gorn babies we’ve seen on SNW is a natural progression. People think the TNG era Klingon is the proper look, forgetting the TOS Klingons. Why is this a thing? They look different because the technique used to portray them is different, and better. Not just a dude in a foam and rubber suit anymore. When will people stop over thinking the bits they don’t agree with (while just accepting the bits the like) and enjoy it for the entertaining and skilful thing it is? A lot of work, both behind and in front of the camera, goes in to producing a wonderfully entertaining show. Enjoy it! Revel in the skill of the writers, directors, camera operators, actors, make-up artists, CGI artists, etc. Are you not entertained? 🖖

No. Not when they make poor decisions like introducing a species that TOS had no idea existed when they first encountered them 10 years later. Along with some other mistakes they made. Secret Hideout has run out of slack. They no longer get the benefit of the doubt.

I’m mostly entertained by SNW, yes, but you gotta call ’em like you see ’em. It’s weird and more than a little cultish to praise everything we see, and pay to watch by the way.

If you don’t like the food at McDonald’s, you feel free to say so, don’t you? Paramount is not much different. Come on, these aren’t mom and pop shops that live or die by good word of mouth on Yelp.

I love the updated Gorn ❤️!!!! The venom sacs in their mouth and the Predator heat vision were really cool to see! And their new ships are fantastic too 👍!! The Gorn has always been one of my favorite races and it’s nice to see them get some respect finally and show how truly formidable they can be 🙂.

The Federation is going to have a lot of problems with this version of the Gorn 🙂 and I can’t wait to see their conflicts unfold on screen. Because this version of the Gorn is so much more terrifying and formidable now, I really can’t wait to see what these guys do for the Tholians when they show up! Oh, my God, my heart’s getting excited at the prospect of seeing a truly terrifying version of them next. They are my favorite race in all of Star Trek, the Gorn is second, so it’s really cool for me to see these species get these awesome special effects updates that weren’t available when I was growing up in the ’90s.

They tried updating the Gorn and the Tholians on Enterprise in the Mirror Universe and it almost cost them their whole budget for season 4 so that says something about how expensive it is to use the more unique alien races in Star Trek. That’s why I’m very happy to see Paramount is finally willing to spend the money on updating Star Trek’s more unique aliens, that’s just awesome, man 🙂👍!!! Live long and prosper, Trekmovie 🖖.

Perhaps adult Gorn do not move as fast as juveniles. This certainly true with cats!

How abou thisinstead: You know all that time travel to years predating Arena? Well, some of it resulted in changes to the timeline as shown in Arena.

“I think the safest thing to say is we have no idea what the Gorn are really like.”

Fella, if this is the best you can do, I recommend you just shut up and cash your paychecks without explanation. What a crock of s–t.

That statement is actually backed up by canon, but die mad about it if you want.

The statement may be true but what is also true is that no one knew they even existed before the Metrons revealed them to the Enterprise. Which honestly is the bigger problem here.

I rewatched “Arena” tonight. Certainly, when written, it was intended to imply a first contact situation. But I tried to listen to the dialog very closely to see if I could accept Perez’s head canon, and I can. It could be interpreted that this is the first time encountering a Gorn of this type, which is confusing to Kirk. At one point in the dialog, Kirk says that his enemy is “apparently” a Gorn, which could mean that he is accepting it, even though it is different than Gorn previously encountered. Canon issues like this have been popping up since the original series first aired and I actually enjoy trying to figure out possible explanations. I’m fine with Perez’s explanation.

My thing there is if that were the case he would not have used the word “apparently”. I would have been more like “The Metron said this was a Gorn.” And either way there would almost certainly be something like “but this is unlike any Gorn I was aware of.” after. Had they known at the time that someone 50 years later might want to use the Gorn for a show set 10 years earlier maybe they would have. But the fact is they didn’t. And I find such “head canon” an incredible stretch. So incredible I just can’t buy it.

I probably will, thanks!

I love the new additions to the Gorn as a species, and now I can’t wait for the remake of Arena with the possible remake of TOS. It would be awesome to see Nu-Nu-Kirk fighting an updated Gorn instead of a slow-moving person in a rubber lizard suit.

This entire first season of SNW has been excellent. I hope season 2 is even more exciting.

Geez, why can’t they simply admit to a minor retcon. Instead they come up with ridiculous “headcanon”.

Thank you! That’s what I been saying too. It’s so odd they can’t just say they are retconing parts of the Gorn instead of this nonsense.

There is no such thing as actual headcanon….It’s just making sh*t up as you go….in your head.

Repeat to yourself: It’s just a show, I should really just relax.

Puppets! It’s getting closer and closer to Farscape and I am 100% okay with that!

I think they would be far smarter to categorize SNW as a soft reboot. Let’s stop being slaves to a dated 50+ years-old show. That statement doesn’t mean that I don’t love the original. I do and always will. Nevertheless, it should only influence and not limit today’s writers and artists. Let them create. I’d rather be entertained by a new story rather than always worrying about how a puzzle piece fits into an old one.

All they have to do, then, is move the show along in the timeline (no need for alternate universes, at all), and there would be no problem.

Here’s my beef with this and all of the other times Trek’s new producers have “headcanoned” (read that: retconned) what came before:

IT’S NEVER NECESSARY.

How big is the galaxy? How many new stories are out there? How many new worlds to explore?

That spirit of adventure is totally lost on this constant, cynical re-imagining of what other, obviously more talented people have done before them.

Why do we need to remain stuck between Enterprise and TOS? Why does that part of canon constantly have to be continuously revisited? How many more Mirror Universe (cringe) visits do we need?

Granted that they’ve tried to move into the future in STD and Picard with horrifying results, and what they did to Picard and Company especially is inexcusable, making the dawn of the 25th century as awe-inspiring and hopeful as a walk through East LA or downtown Detroit at night.

But Trek is about… wait for it… boldly going where no one has gone before. Not visiting the characters and stories better writers came up with 60 years ago and re-arranging the furniture.

If there really are no new adventures to be had out there in the Final Frontier, then hang it up.

It was obviously inspired by “Alien” as well.

It doesn’t bother me because we have literally seen ONE being that fans have used as a precedent for how an entire species looks which is…problematic in itself. Star Trek Online even gives you a bit of an option with slight variations on how your Gorn can look. If this is a lizard species, I have no problem with their young being on all fours and primal. Human babies make vocalizations and crawl long before they’re able to walk and talk. Think of apes as well. Idk, it’s just very weird to me that Star Trek fans of all people can’t wrap their heads around The Gorn going through normal species growth as all animals do. It’s 2 dimensional thinking to imagine they’d just pop out looking like small versions of the TOS creature. Lizards molt and change as they grow…c’mon now

Hear, hear!

I think this is a damned if you do, damned if you don’t situation for the writers of SNW.

By using the Gorn in the way that they are very likely violating established canon. However if they were to create an entirely new species to fill this role of an apparent merciless antagonist, fans would cry out that canon was being broken due to there having been no mention of this species up to this point.

Ignoring the fact that Star Trek has broken its own canon since almost day one: Spock’s parentage and emotionality, the look of the Klingons, when the Borg were first encountered by Starfleet, the nature of the Borg themselves, and the circumstances around the Earth/Romulan war to name just a few, we as viewers are left with two options. Continue to watch the show and hope that the “breaking” of canon is either explained at a later point to address our concerns and/or that the story told is so strong that it eases the violation of canon; or simply stop watching the show and acknowledge that this current round of new Star Trek content is not meeting our desires and we will take our attention elsewhere.

At the end it needs to be said, we don’t own Star Trek, as much as it feels like we do at times. The writers and creators of these shows are free to do whatever they want. We, as fans, should accept that and act accordingly. If you really want to send a message that this doesn’t work for you, stop watching. It’s the only way to tell them that this isn’t working for you.

I will continue to watch as SNW is the first Star Trek show in a long time that I’ve enjoyed without reservation.

Live Long and Prosper

Personally I don’t worry about canon and continuity too much. If a show is good and the writing is good (like SNW) then IMHO, it’s no big deal. If SNW was terrible, then this would be a big problem. Whether its the Klingons (TOS vs TMP), the Trill (TNG vs DS9) or now the Gorn on SNW, I’m not that upset because each of the shows were and are, great and they stan on their own. Btw, at first I wondered about how wise it was to reintroduce the Gorn as they could have easily just called them something else. But considering the amount of comments RE this story, they probably made the right decision. Especially since the show overall is doing very very well on sites like Rotten Tomatos.

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Gorn from Star Trek

The history of ‘Star Trek’s’ Gorn, from styrofoam rocks to big green xenomorphs

Tom Meisfjord

The Gorn. Since debuting in the 1967 Star Trek episode “The Arena,” they’ve been called a lot of things. “Weird.” “Iconic.” “Weirdly iconic.” Thanks to their striking combination of Ferrigno-green slabs of thigh beef and Spirit Halloween-level facial features, the Gorn have taken up a special place in the hearts of Trekkies, representing a threat whose level of seriousness lay somewhere between tribbles and that Riker clone who disguised himself by wearing fake sideburns.

Like Daleks, Cruella De Vil, or any fictional monster with the staying power to stick around for six decades, the Gorn have gone through a fair few reimaginings. Here’s a quick rundown of every take on the Trek villains.

Part One: The Gorn Identity

star trek gorn

Star Trek had only been a thing for four months when the Gorn made their first appearance. Episode 19 of the original series aired in January of 1967, spinning a yarn about a Federation outpost on an exotic world getting pretty well smooshed.

The smooshers, who follow up their smooshing by luring Kirk and company into a smoosh trap, are an unknown alien species — cold-blooded reptilians, according to sensor readings, but difficult to get a bead on. After a quick exchange of explosives, the aggressors and the Starfleet personnel make their way back to their respective ships, and a high-warp chase ensues.

Unfortunately for everyone involved, the Enterprise and the alien ship wind up driving through sort of a galactic speed trap. They’re forcibly pulled over by powerful space narcs called Metrons, who don’t cotton to gunplay and irresponsible starship maneuvers in their neck of the woods. The Metrons’ dim view of violence leads them to decide that Kirk and the captain of the alien vessel should get transported to a quiet spot where they can kill each other with primitive weapons. It’s kind of like when you were a kid and you’d fight with your brother, so your parents would give you both all of the ingredients to make gunpowder and then watch you shoot each other with cannons. 

Materializing on the planet, Kirk and the audience get their first look at the Gorn. The tricorder readings from earlier got a few things right: The creature in front of Kirk is definitely reptilian. What they couldn’t have predicted, though, was just how much the alien captain would look like what would happen if Vince McMahon encouraged a Sleestak to start taking some injections to further his career.

The fight is one for the ages. The music is classic. The rocks are uncharacteristically bouncy. Kirk is faster than his sluggish opponent, but the Gorn captain is incredibly strong — not as strong as Khan from the second movie about Khan , but at least as strong as Khan from the first movie about Khan. On a related note, Star Trek is kind of a mess. That’ll be relevant in a minute.

When the Gorn captain finally communicates with Kirk, he’s high-octane arch. He offers to kill Kirk quickly if he stops moving around so much, then lets him know that the outpost he and his crew smooshed earlier was on a planet that the Gorn had called dibs on. This leads to Federation officers, perhaps for the first time, considering that maybe they can’t just park their stuff in people’s yards without asking. 

Kirk wins the fight, pulls a classic hero move, and announces that he won’t kill a helpless super-strong lizard man with a taste for annihilation. Everyone goes their separate ways. Spock and Uhura don’t mention anything about having hung out around Gorn before, inadvertently dropping nerds in the future into a never-ending echo chamber filled with continuity errors, but again, we’ll get to that in a minute.

Part Two: Here today, Gorn tomorrow

Archer fighting a Gorn on "Star Trek Enterprise"

It’s uncharacteristic for a species with such an iconic debut to go missing for long stretches of time, but the Gorn didn’t show up again through the rest of the original series. Aside from a cameo in Star Trek: The Animated Series and a deleted scene from Nemesis, the species fully ducks out of the franchise for just shy of 40 years.

The next time we see the Gorn is a full four series later in a 2005 episode of Star Trek: Enterprise. “In a Mirror, Darkly, Pt II” introduces a fresh take on the Gorn — an ambitious new look, fueled by optimism and creativity and maybe a little bit too much faith in how far CGI could get you on a television budget the same year that Sharkboy and Lava Girl hit theaters.

This go-round, the evil counterpart to Captain Archer faces off against a Gorn in the Mirror Universe. This isn’t the sort of Gorn you remember. This guy is slinky and ceiling-crawly. The compound eyes of the creature seen in the original series are replaced by reptilian lizard peepers. This reimagining of the Gorn would look right at home in a video game cutscene made by a studio that’s been struggling for a while. Brought low by a targeted gravity beam, the defenseless lizardman gets a close look at how dark and gritty this timeline is when Archer pew-pews him full of special effects blasts. The only thing strong enough to kill CGI is CGI.

In point of fact, OG Gorn in their rubbery glory would only make one more appearance on screen, during an ad for 2013’s Star Trek: The Video Game. The commercial sees William Shatner and the Gorn he fought back in ‘67 arguing over their couch co-op sesh. 10 years later, it remains the only fondly remembered aspect of a game that made a whole generation ask, ”How big is anything supposed to be?”

Part Three: I Know Gorn When I See It

Gorn screaming on "Star Trek: Strange New Worlds"

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is a peculiar thing. While it mostly veers toward humanistic optimism about bright-eyed, hard-working explorers, it can’t always escape the black hole of dourness left by its Discovery parentage.

(As a quick, related side note: Captain Lorca had what sure looked like a Gorn skeleton in his office on Discovery. The producers said it was a Gorn, then realized that the Federation hadn’t made contact with the Gorn by that point in history, then walked it back and claimed that it wasn’t a Gorn at all. Discovery was a real mixed bag.)

Case in point: The even newer, even darker, even CGI-ier Gorn, alluded to and kept just offscreen for most of the first season before making their wet first appearance in the episode “All Those Who Wander.” 

The new Gorn would have been unrecognizable to a Star Trek fan in the ‘60s, and suspiciously recognizable to anyone working on the movie Alien in the ‘70s. The days of lumbering were over. The bug eyes were kaput. Now, Gorn — albeit very young ones — looked like a cross between Gremlins and those guys from Dead Like Me that stuck people’s heads in revolving doors. Folks who’d encountered them were petrified of a second run-in, a detail that’s made up about a third of La’an’s dialogue throughout the series, and with good reason. The new Gorn had a habit of sneezing acidic propagation snot on their victims, impregnating their exposed skin with exploding sacks of smaller Gorn. Gorn gestation wound up being what took out fan-favorite Chief Engineer Hemmer, who sacrificed himself to stop the bloodthirsty buns in his oven from cooking. It was a tough pill to swallow, but it went down a little easier thanks to the fact that it gave Carol Kane’s Pelia a chance to join the crew.

The Gorn made one more appearance on SNW as the antagonists in the season two finale, “Hegemony.” Fully realized, fully terrifying, and for the first time since the series premiered, seemingly capable of escaping the trap of being to Strange New Worlds what the Ferengi were to the first year or two of Next Generation, the Gorn are finally primed to take their place as a Star Trek villain worth not laughing at hysterically. 

Oh, shoot, speaking of which.

Part Four: Never Gorn-a Give You Up

Gorn wedding on "Star Trek: Lower Decks."

Star Trek: Lower Decks is silly. It’s some of the best Star Trek in recent memory for fans of the old days who don’t mind treating a show about spaceships less than reverently, but also just hyper goofy. It’s Rick & Morty if Rick & Morty had been licensed by Paramount and the Roddenberry estate. It’s what everyone expected The Orville to be, but funnier.

So it can be easy to forget that it’s also canon. More than a wacky side project for Trek nerds, it’s a series of stories that take place in the wider Star Trek universe, the same way-too-serious place where those guys from Picard treated Borg victims like they were in a Hostel sequel, and where that lady from TNG died from melting into the floor. All of those stories are just as valid to Trek continuity as the time when the crew of the USS Cerritos was hunted by an anthropomorphic Starfleet insignia named Badgey. Either it all counts, or none of it does.

And so, there’s one last detail about the Gorn that we can pull from Star Trek lore. According to the Lower Decks episode “Veritas,” the Gorn have extravagant weddings. The brides wear white dresses, and the guests sit in uncomfortable-looking folding chairs, and the whole thing is eerily similar to the ceremony for your partner’s hayseed cousin that you got stuck at last summer, only with a flaming mouth-shaped cave instead of a bespoke apple orchard as a backdrop.

This franchise really went off the rails.

Nicole Nafziger in a confessional for 90 Day Fiancé

  • Cancelled comics
  • IDW Publishing

Star Trek: The Next Generation/Aliens: Acceptable Losses

The comic was announced at the MCM London Comic Con on October 28, 2016. Dirk Wood of IDW and Matt Parkinson of Dark Horse took the opportunity to announce a new crossover series for April of 2017. In addition to the Xenomorphs , the comic was to feature familiar Star Trek alien races such as the Borg and the Romulans, which were described as playing a vital role in the plot. [2] However, in late December 2016, Randy Stradley announced via his Facebook account that the comic series had been cancelled. [4]

Had it been published, Star Trek: The Next Generation/Aliens: Acceptable Losses would have been preceded by Aliens/Vampirella , published concurrently with DC Comics/Dark Horse Comics: Batman vs. Predator , and would have been followed by Archie vs. Predator II .

  • Alien film series cast members Raymond Cruz , Brad Dourif , Idris Elba , Nicole Fellows , Jenette Goldstein , Leland Orser , Ron Perlman , Mark Rolston , Winona Ryder and Eddie Yansick have all appeared in various Star Trek live action media. Of these actors, only Rolston appeared in the original The Next Generation television series, while Goldstein appeared in the first Next Generation feature film, Star Trek Generations .

Gallery [ ]

Work-in-progress cover art by Tristan Jones.[5]

References [ ]

  • ↑ " Bleeding Cool - Star Trek: The Next Generation vs Aliens from IDW and Dark Horse for April 2017, Announced at MCM London Comic Con ". Retrieved on 2016-10-28.
  • ↑ 2.0 2.1 " IDW - STAR TREK / ALIENS CROSSOVER PRIMED TO (CHEST)BURST IN 2017 ". Retrieved on 2016-10-31.
  • ↑ " AVPGalaxy - Star Trek: The Next Generation vs. Aliens (Dark Horse & IDW) ". Retrieved on 2017-02-02.
  • ↑ " Facebook - Randy Stradley Dark Horse ". Retrieved on 2016-12-27.
  • ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 " AVPGalaxy - Star Trek: The Next Generation vs. Aliens (Dark Horse & IDW) ". Retrieved on 2017-02-02.
  • 1 Yautja (Predator)
  • 3 Xenomorph XX121 (Alien)

Borg (Star Trek) vs Xenomorph (Alien)

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The Borg investigated an ancient precursor ship, determined to assimilate the technology on-board. This ship however was filled with some kind of life form that latched onto each of the drones. The Drones awoke quickly and were brought back to the Collective, but then the chestbursters emerged, ripping through their armored bodies and rushing into the darkest corners of the Borg Cube. The Borg could not detect the Xenomorphs and thus began to hunt them before being picked off one by one. Their connection to the collective allowed the Borg to find them, only for those drones too, to be picked off, and this time their implants connecting them to the rest of the collective were severed.

The Borg continued to hunt down these creatures, adapting their strategy to kill off these alien creatures and one of the Drones reported back... the same biology that was on the precursor ship was now on their Cube.

  • The Xenomorphs cannot be detected by Borg internal sensors.
  • The Xenomorphs are appropriately diverse for the species that have been assimilated by the Borg, but are not cybernetic.
  • One of the Xenomorph Drones has become a Queen and has made her lair within the cube by the time the Borg respond in full force.
  • Assume the Borg still outnumber the Xenomorphs at a 10:1 ratio.

Can the Borg manage to assimilate a Xenomorph? If they do, what would be the end result and which hive mind's influence would be stronger? Even without assimilation, can the Borg hope to defeat the Xenomorphs if they attack in full force?

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The Borg all DIE.

The Aliens will stealth-kill them all, the Aliens still have higher physicality all the way around (strength, durability, agility, etc.), and are waaay faster than the Borg.

@the_imperator @betatesthighlander1 @616vulture @fetts @johnnyz256 @princearagorn1 @floopay

@juiceboks @rogueshadow @misterwhisper @floopay @masterofluck123 @sirfizzwhizz @sergeant-rl3 @super_saiyan_devil @exmaster3000

@rockette : Even though the Borg have superior firepower? And even if the ship's internal sensors can't see the aliens, the Borg themselves have visual enhancements.

@rockette : Even though the Borg have superior firepower ? And even if the ship's internal sensors can't see the aliens, the Borg themselves have visual enhancements .

Superior firepower didn't help the Colonial Marines much, did it? R.I.P. Hudson, Vasquez, etc.

Visual enhancements only help the low-level superhuman Predators to a degree against the Aliens. What the hell is a super-slow, group of fodder Borgs gonna do but die here?

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Alien via stealth

@rockette :

Visual enhancements only help the low-level superhuman Predators to a degree against the Aliens.

But they still help.

Superior firepower didn't help the Colonial Marines much, did it?

The Colonial Marines were outnumbered, had no way to adapt to their enemy, and weren't Borg.

What the hell is a super-slow, group of fodder Borgs gonna do but die here?

Probably shoot them.

The Borg aren't slow, they move at a moderately fast walking speed.

Fodder does not automatically equate to weak. ComicVine's got such a warped perspective.

The Borg get blitzed.

Not saying this is a complete stomp...

Yes, yes I am.

The Borg Die.

@rockette : The Borg display exceptional reflexes, they only have slow movement speed. Saying this is a blitz is... silly.

No, no it's not.

The Aliens could/would swarm the Borg.

The Aliens can tear the Borg apart.

If the Borg injure an Alien, it's blood will eat them even quicker than a fully organic humanoid (their acid eats through metals/plastics/inorganics faster than flesh/organics).

The Borg get "assimilated" into the Alien Hive.

This is just a bad fight for the Borg, and the Aliens already have a foot-hold in their Cube, and have an Alien Queen.

The Borg are F**ked.

@rockette : Yes, and a single blast from one of the Borg would be enough to rip a single Xenomorph apart, with their enhanced vision and range over the Xenomorphs, claiming that this is just a stomp in favor of the Xenomorphs sounds like bias against the Borg in some way. Yes the Xenomorphs have a queen, but the Borg are more than capable of dealing with the drones.

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Don't all individual Borg drones have a personal force field while they're on the Cube? IIRC the Enterprise crew beamed aboard a Cube and after phasering one or two drones their personal shields adapted to the phasers. Of course I could be remembering wrong.

I don't think that helps in melee.

The Aliens will tear them apart.

Almost all battles will have someone being biased toward one opponent in some way or fashion.

That said, the Aliens sometimes win against a species that would utterly destroy the Borg (Predators/Yautja).

I don't see the Borg as being particularly threatening to a species like the Alien Xenomorphs. Especially since the OP has stated that the Aliens already have a significant presence aboard the Cube, and a Queen, which means tons of face-huggers are roaming the Cube as well.

@rockette : You mean like how the Xenomorphs have been defeated by random humans with makeshift weapons?

OP also stated that the Borg still outnumber the Xenomorphs 10:1, and the chances of assimilation still exist.

OP also stated that the Borg still outnumber the Xenomorphs 10:1, and the chances of assimilation still exist .

I don't think that is possible with an Alien Xenomorph drone/warrior.

Maybe if they captured the Alien Queen, and assimilated her (since her intelligence is near-human) that may work, maybe.

Capturing a Queen is difficult for several Yautja with tons of experience, superhuman physicality, and the know-how and tools to do it.

Like I said before, this is just a bad battle for the Borg.

I really can't see them winning here.

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And why can't they put a forcefield over the Queen and teleport nanoprobes into it?

Well I guess how fodder somebody is depends on their verse. As an example, a fodder tier demon or psyker in Warhammer 40k would turn most any marvel street tier and lower end mid tiers into a smear on the sidewalk. But that doesn't make those street levellers weak

Are you volunteering for that?!

The Alien Queen has low-level telepathy, and has many Warriors and worse Praetorians guarding her. They'll never get close enough to force field her, or nano-probe her.

You know that the Borg can put up forcefields anywheres in their ship right? They don't even need to get close

@rockette : Now that you've got someone else to debate you, I shall bow out and watch.

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LOL Xenomorphs aren't fast enough to speed blitz. How did someone form that conclusion?

Let's consider how the Borg fared against Species 8472. Species 8472 and Xenomorphs seem approximately equal in physicals. Xenomorphs have acid blood, and 8472 can infect humanoids with its cells. This causes incapacitation.

8472 tore the Borg to pieces in hand-to-hand combat, and I don't doubt that Xenomorphs could do the same.

It may ultimately depend on how resistant the Xenomorphs are to energy weaponry. 8472 can be killed by such weapons, though they are much more durable than most other humanoids.

You know that the Borg can put up force fields anywhere in their ship right? They don't even need to get close

Here the Borg would...

1 - Have to find the Queen.

2 - Deal with a ship full of very protective and sometime controlled (telepathy) Drones/Warriors/Praetorians.

3 - Not harm her doing it; she sends out distress calls, & any Borg within 100+ meters of her would get swarmed if she was in distress/pain/dying.

4 - Deal with face-huggers.

5 - Try not to get blitzed by creatures that are vastly physically superior to the Borg in every way.

6 - Deal with the fact that sometimes the Aliens use their own blood to melt through wall/floors/ceilings should they need to get out of traps, or get into somewhere.

https://youtu.be/14Mf_nTyWBc?t=38s

https://youtu.be/oJE4xpIIDfk?t=1m53s

I'll find more.

In the comics, they move/run so fast that they can dodge projectiles (bullet-timing), catch sprinting humans/humanoids (not walking Borgs), and can leap several meters vertically and horizontally with blurring-speed (can't makeout what they are).

Not too much of an issue

  • Easy with technology that literally every race in Star Trek have, the sensors tech that would instantly tell them where all the Aliens would be
  • Which would get teleported off the ship or put in force fields
  • Doesn't matter
  • A few drones don't matter here. Even if the facehuggers can't be contained I doubt whatever they could inject into a Borg would work due to the nanoprobes in every drones body. At absolute worst you would end up with an assimilated Alien
  • Which doesn't matter
  • Borg ships automatically regenerate their metallic bits. Nevermind that Alien blood probably wouldn't melt through feet thick of advanced metals more durable than duranium (which is the standard armour plating in Star Trek)

And if they tried that they would have to:

  • Easy with technology that literally every race in Star Trek have, the sensors tech that would instantly tell them where all the aliens would have

Aliens aren't easy to detect with sensors. They were tracked by movement by the Colonial Marines, and have a special vision-mode that allows the Predators to track them. The Borg wont have that vision mode, and the motion tracking only works when the Aliens move in large numbers or swarm, and even then it is close-range.

@decaf_wizard : I did specify the sensors in Star Trek are not going to detect Xenomorphs in this case. In that case, if their sensors can't lock onto something, they won't be able to transport it off their ship.

I also specified that Facehuggers are capable of reproducing using Borg Drones. If anything, the Borg might be able to adapt to it, but they wouldn't have the ability right off the bat.

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Xenomorphs fight stronger opponents such as Predators and win, I definitely see them wiping the borg out

Indeed. Seems to be split decision here looking back through the votes.

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If Borg weren't so nerfed it would be an easy win.

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Borg should win, Xenomorphs tend to die rapidly against ranged weaponry and that's when they outnumber, 10 to 1 is a stomp in the Borgs favor.

Facehuggers can't subdue Borg to make more, the Borg don't even breath and are simply too strong. On top of that they may not be able to lock on to the Xenomorphs they can still lock on to there own.

The Borg wouldn't bother assimilating the Xenomorphs, too dumb.

Against a single borg or even a handful I could see the Xenomorphs potentially getting the drop on them. But here you have an intelligent force against what is essentially dangerous animals with above average intelligence, it's a stomp in the Borgs favor.

@rockette : No trust me I KNOW EVERYTHING about Xenomorphs I just don't think they have the speed to Speed Blitz anyone. In fact the Colonial Marines we doing better in out running them.

Colonial Marines >> Borg movement speed, imo.

Colonial Marines also think on the fly and have instincts.

The Borg do not, downside of a collective mind. They can't think for themselves.

@rockette : I don't know anything about the Borgs.........OH!!!! I see. The Borgs are SUPER slow right?

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If I remember correctly the Xenomorphs can spit acid to short distances and if an alien queen dies on the ship the large amount of blood will bleed through the ship and probably cause the ship to be destroyed

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Xenomorphs, maybe with ease. Borg have no defense against the acid blood or any melee attack. And Xenos are MUCH faster than a drone. The only way I see the Borg winning is if they all gain up on the Xenomorphs, and even that may not work.

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The Borg would adapt and eventually win, they are technologically engineered and advanced hive mind assimilated amalgam of 1000s of different other technologically advanced species (ergo they are like a dumb down version of the Flood)... yet people think they can’t bug hunt easily?... ripley by herself with a flamethrower, some grenades, assault rifle, a tank top, cargo pants and boots demolished an entire hive of xenomorphs with a scared little girl on her back..... so what on Earth makes anyone think the xenomorphs stand a chance against the Borg... the Borg have destroyed and assimilated species as dangerous (if not more dangerous) as xenomorphs before for example species 8472 and the Hirogen... the aliens have never been confronted by a relentless, invasive, calculating,cold blooded and vastly intelligent collective like the Borg before.... even the predators would get violated by the Borg, technologically speaking they are way more advanced and also the Borg don’t adhere to codes of honor/tradition like predators (which is the predators major flaw)... the Borg are literally like skynet but way way way more advanced, the Borg would never bring back infected drones to a cube, they would do a thorough scan of the threat, assess the potential danger then either destroy the facehugged drones or remove the face huggers before gestation can begin.. there would be no fight because the Borg are not incompetent space marines, dim witted defenceless human terraformers or curious space miners.. the aliens are deadly by human standards but by Borg standards they are just another species to either assimilate and/or destroy.. a few facehugged drones are dispensable, RESISTANCE IS FUTILE...

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Borg have personal forcefields and transporter tech. Xenos get stomped.

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I think there is a problem with the setup. I don't see more than 1 or 2 chestbursters actually forming as the drones nanoprobes would more than likely annihilate the parasite once implanted.

If that rule sticks though I could see the collective simply destroying the drones if they were to be infected with a chestbursters cutting off the xenomorph life cycle and picking off the xenomorphs at a 1000:1 loss ratio of they had to.

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The borg probably.

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I personally dont see how anyone who watches ST at all can begin to think the nanoprobes would survive to assimilate anything Xenomorph related.

  • Species 8472 was immune to probes due to the high antibodies in their blood alone. In the episode Scorpion Species 8472 immune system was so efficient that any foreign body cells encountered were immediately destroyed, including Borg nanoprobes.
  • Another episode before this had shown Borg drones attempt to assimilate a character name Phlox in Enterprise episode Regeneration . In this episode Phlox advanced immune system is capable of fighting off the Borg nanoprobes.

Thats not one, but TWO examples of Borg unable to assimilate because of high immune system beings. So how in the bloody hell they will infect super acid for blood beings? There probes will die on contact faster than any immune system can do the job.

However as others mention Xenos by feats are faster and better at using the environment to attack the Borg. More so in this mix mash of random chaos by design Borg Cube. I can see the Xenos pulling a hard core Species 8472 on them in the fact they will run through dozens of Borg before falling. Face Huggers taking additional Borg out of the fight via chest bursting, or Borg taking out their own for the Xenos. Either way each Face Hugger is a one for one kill when they land.

How do force fields matter when physical attacks work easy on them every episode they are in? Where was Transporter tech on Specie 8472 boarding attacks? I dont think you really watch Star trek or if you do are hard core ignoring the feats and making stuff up to see them wining.

Wheres the Borg force fields against hand to hand here?

Been nice to have close combat force fields here!

Dont be making shit up.

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Resistance is futile. Borg win.

Resistance is futile. Unless your Captain Archer.... or Captain Picard... or Data.... or Lore...... or Captain Janeway..... or Species 8472......

Damn in hindsight kinda easy to resist the Borg. ;)

@tourneymaster : https://youtu.be/i4FGvMdhG80

@tourneymaster : Picard was assimilated and flat-out said he was unable to resist it in the season 4 episode "Family." Archer and Janeway had plot armor. Data and Lore were unique androids - only two of them in existence - and couldn't be assimilated (watch Star Trek: First Contact) . Species 8472 were the one race in all of Star Trek canon specifically created to be a rival species to the Borg, and they didn't even originate in normal Space but "Fluidic Space."

The xenomorphs don't stand a chance. Sorry. ;)

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Xenos pretty easily. Borg are pretty slow and have shit aim. Even the red shirts got out of the way. Aliens were dodging auto aimed plasma casters and going to to toe with competent Predators. The Queen makes it unfair as once the face huggers come in its game over. Just a bad matchup. They have the technology to do this I just cant see them pulling this out as they are not quick thinkers and this can get out of hand very fast. Cool battle.

Lets see, in ll that counter reply, not once you explain how resistance is futile when several beings and people resisted. My point stands, Xeno's win ;).

Unless you have a counter to ship bulk head melting acid that nano probes to assimilate in. Xeno acid is dozen times more acidic than any real world known acid by the way, pure movie magic. Any counter to the fact shitty hand to and fighters like Worf can beat Drones all day but a super human Xenos will not? Can I see these close combat Borgs?

Nah, in the end, pure Trekkie fantasy to see how they, as the Vulcan's would say, logically win.

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Pretty much what the Borg will end up looking like.

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star trek vs xenomorph

star trek vs xenomorph

Wolverine's New Weapon Basically Confirms Upcoming X-Men/Alien Crossover

  • Wolverine defeats the Yautja and takes a Xenomorph dagger, setting up a potential X-Men and Alien crossover in the Marvel Universe.
  • The Xenomorphs exist in Marvel's 616 continuity, as confirmed by the Yautja's ceremonial dagger made from Xenomorph parts.
  • The X-Men may face a tough fight against the brainless Xenomorphs, but Marvel is setting the stage for an epic crossover thanks to Wolverine's new weapon.

Warning: contains spoilers for Predator versus Wolverine #4!

Wolverine has a new weapon, and it just set up a potential X-Men and Aliens crossover. While the Xenomorphs have yet to make their presence known in the Marvel Universe, the Yautja have targeted Wolverine in the four-issue Predator versus Wolverine . In issue four, the long-standing conflict between Logan and a Yautja comes to a head, and as the dust settles, Marvel teases a crossover fans have been dreaming of for years, as the X-Men will meet the Xenomorphs.

Predator versus Wolverine #4 is written by Benjamin Percy and drawn by Ken Lashley, Kei Zama and Gavin Guidry. Wolverine confronts the Yautja that has been stalking him for years, ultimately defeating it.

As Wolverine reflects on the decades-long hunt, and how it made him feel, fans learn he took a trophy of sorts from the Yautja: one of its ceremonial blades, which is made of Xenomorph parts.

It Is Time For the X-Men to Meet the Xenomorphs

Aliens and Predator are two of the greatest science fiction franchises in history. Both were originally owned by 20th Century Fox, which led to crossovers between the two properties. The Xenomorphs first met the Yautja in Dark Horse Comics’ Aliens versus Predator , first published in 1989. The book was a smash hit, spawning many sequels as well as two live-action films. When 20th Century Fox was sold to Disney in 2019, Marvel obtained the rights to publish new comics based on the venerable franchises, launching both new Predator and Alien titles, including Predator versus Wolverine.

Predator versus Wolverine changes both Marvel and Xenomorph lore. The book is set in Marvel’s 616 continuity, and the Yautja ceremonial dagger at the end confirms the Xenomorphs exist in it too. These daggers, created from Xenomorph parts, are resistant to their acidic spit. The Yautja used it several times throughout the book’s run, and Wolverine was able to see just how effective a weapon it is. How exactly this dagger will lead to the Xenomorphs' arrival in the Marvel Universe remains to be seen, but it will be a fight for the ages.

Star Trek vs Alien Crossover Was Meant to Give Picard His Ultimate Challenge

What would a fight between the x-men and the xenomorphs look like.

The prospect of the X-Men, or other Marvel heroes, fighting the fearsome Xenomorphs is the stuff of fan dreams. The Xenomorphs have already met a slew of DC characters, such as Superman and the Authority, but have never crossed over into the Marvel Universe–but all of that is set to change. The X-Men do have the Brood, a race similar to the Xenomorphs, but they are possessed of cruel intelligence, whereas the Xenomorphs are brainless, meaning the X-Men may be in for an even tougher fight. While the Alien and X-Men crossover may still be a ways away, Marvel is setting the stage for it now, thanks to Wolverine’s new weapon.

Predator versus Wolverine #4 is on sale now from Marvel Comics!

Wolverine's New Weapon Basically Confirms Upcoming X-Men/Alien Crossover

Star Trek: Should Janeway Have Let Species 8472 Wipe Out The Borg?

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Deadpool & Wolverine's Director Still Couldn't Do One Thing Despite An R Rating

Wolverine: rumored front-runner emerges to succeed hugh jackman as logan, wednesday season 2 needs to up the horror factor.

Over the years, Star Trek has had its ups and downs. The Original Series, iconic as it is today, was canceled due to poor viewership, and even the series that fans consider the greatest, The Next Generation , had a very poor rating until season two landed. One of the most divisive programs was, and still is, Voyager, which gets a lot of negative reviews not only due to the often poor writing, but from some morally convoluted decisions made by the protagonists. One of the biggest examples of this is when Captain Janeway sided with the Borg, who were on the brink of extinction, and decided to help them defeat Species 8472. But was this really such a bad decision?

Starting off with the giant tribble in the room, the biggest issue fans have with what Janeway did, was not that she sided with the Borg and helped them survive, but that she did so by committing genocide. Species 8472, the designation given to this alien race by the Borg, were some of the nastiest aliens found within the Star Trek universe, a bunch of extra-dimensional apex predators. They were, despite first appearances, incredibly intelligent, and came from a dimension known as fluidic space, which was accessed by the Borg in an attempt to assimilate them through quantum singularities. They were, despite being organic, immune to assimilation, and the Borg's attempt was considered an act of war. They drove the Borg out of their space, and followed them into the Federation/Borg dimension, with the explicit aim of Borg xenocide.

RELATED: Star Trek: What Are The Origins of the Borg?

This might seem, at first, like a good thin. The Borg have been primarily villains throughout their tenure on Star Trek , a terrifying force hell-bent on assimilating and destroying cultures. They seemed to be unstoppable, with the Federation only able to hold them back rather than defeat them properly, they were always a looming threat in the background. Species 8472 offered a solution, if the crew of the USS Voyager had simply sat back and allowing them to wipe the Borg out. Species 8472's aggression wasn't even unjustified or unprovoked — the Borg had invaded their space and tried to assimilate them. Bt of course, things for Captain Janeway were never simple.

The biggest issue with allowing this plan to unfold was that Species 8472 were really nasty. Janeway did consider the idea of letting them destroy the Borg, consequently making the universe a much better and safer place, but this all ended when she met a member of the species. They were ruthless and attacked without provocation. All attempts to communicate were met with the words "the weak shall perish" — a motto on par with the Borg's “resistance is futile.” Before she left the show , the character Kes managed to make telephonic communication with them, which resulted not only with her being seriously injured, but led her to reveal their nefarious plans: Species 8472 would not stop at ending the Borg, but would continue to “purge” the galaxy. Considering how effectively they were killing Borg, something the Federation had been struggling to do for years, they were a considerable threat to all life in the universe.

Their plan to wipe out all life in the galaxy stemmed from their desire to never allow another living organism to enter their fluidic space, as the Borg had opened a door that could be opened again. Species 8472 just wanted to be left alone, and they would annihilate anyone that could potentially jeopardize this. It thus makes sense why Janeway did what she did. Faced with two highly powerful foes that stood in her way to return home, she made a deal with the more reasonable one. What's more, they had worked out an effective way to wipe out Species 8472. They had found a way to harness what were basically bioweapons, moderating nanoprobes created by the holographic doctor , but could not use them on the scale needed to stop 8472. Thus, they partnered up with the Borg, who used the weapon in exchange for relatively free passage through their space.

Many fans take issue with the way in which Janeway sided with the Borg, the use of a genocidal biological weapon used on nightly intelligent sentient beings truly being the icing on the cake. However, there is a resounding consensus that overall it was the right decision to make. The Borg were powerful and terrifying, and continued to pose a real threat to the Federation, but it’s a case of "better the devil you know." The Borg, in all their culture absorbing, assimilating glory, were a far better option than the ruthless desolation and xenocide at the hands of 8472, who had made it clear that they would not stop until every living organism that was not a member of their race was wiped out.

MORE: Star Trek: What Ranks Do Each Color Shirt Represent?

Who Was The Original Captain Kathryn Janeway?

Game rant's ultimate sci-fi guide, why voyager deserves more credit than it gets.

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Alien movies in order (release & chronological).

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Every Alien Franchise Movie Ranked From Worst To Best

When alien 1979 is set (exactly), eddie murphy teases plans to remake 1963 oscar-winning comedy movie with martin lawrence.

  • The Alien franchise, known for its unique aesthetic and iconic Xenomorph creature, has captivated audiences for over 40 years.
  • The release order of the Alien movies follows a linear narrative centered around Ellen Ripley, while the prequel films explore the origins of the Xenomorph.
  • The upcoming Alien: Romulus movie will be set between the original Alien and Aliens , offering a new chapter in the franchise's timeline.

The Alien movies in order represent a long and complicated timeline that continues to captivate audiences for over 40 years. The sci-fi horror franchise Alien has a unique aesthetic, inspired by the works of artist H.R. Giger and the early eras of science fiction. Ridley Scott was the first director to set the tone and style for the series, and he helped bring O'Bannon and Shusett's vision to life to launch a global franchise, spawning multiple films, books, games, and merchandise. The titular "alien" of the series, known as the Xenomorph, has since become a sci-fi horror icon.

The first sequel, Aliens , became a sci-fi action-packed movie by James Cameron , and that trend continued through Alien 3 and Alien: Resurrection . After battling their interstellar rivals in two Alien vs. Predator films, the franchise explored the Xenomorph's origins in the divisive film Prometheus, with Ridley Scott returning. Alien: Covenant returned the series to its roots in a film similar to the first Alien , but it was met with little fanfare. The legacy will now continue with the upcoming Alien: Romulus which will further complicate the timeline.

Ridley Scott's Alien franchise has made a lasting impact on horror history, but how do all the Alien films compare when ranked against each other?

Alien Movies In Release Order

From alien to alien: covenant.

The release order for the Alien movies is broken into three quadrants that are relatively easy to follow. The first four films, Alien, Aliens, Alien 3, and Alien: Resurrection follow a straight-line narrative that centers on Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) within the world of the Xenomorphs. The following two entries in the series are the Alien vs. Predator films, AVP and AVP: Requiem , which break away from the story of the first Alien movie, taking place in the present day, many decades before Ripley. They also directly crossover with the Predator franchise.

The last section of the Alien movies in release order is the two prequel films, Prometheus and Alien: Covenant , which explore the origins of the Xenomorph . However, the franchise will soon be expanding with the upcoming Alien: Romulus which arrives this summer and will be starting yet another chapter for the wider series as it won't be a continuation of Covenant 's prequel arc.

The exact timeline of the Alien franchise has never been clear - but a tie-in novel may have answered one of the film's most pressing questions.

Alien Movies In Chronological Order

From the dawn of time to the far future, avp: alien vs. predator (2004), alien vs predator.

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AVP: Alien Vs. Predator was the first movie in the Alien franchise that is set in the present day. The movie takes place in 2004 as it follows a group of scientists and explorers who are investigating an unusual heat signature in Antarctica. While investigating it, they discover a temple and find themselves in the middle of a long ceremony of new Predator warriors using Xenomorphs as hunting targets.

While it is fun seeing the Xenomorphs face off with another iconic movie monster, Alien Vs. Predator has largely been wiped from the official canon of the Alien movies. Though it features some interesting connections, such as Aliens actor Lance Henricksen appearing as the head of the Weyland Corporation, Prometheus later suggests that the Xenomorphs didn't exist until long after the events of this film, which suggests they have been around for a long time. Still, when watching the Alien movies in order, this is a good place to start.

Alien vs. Predator: Requiem (2007)

Aliens vs. predator: requiem.

Alien vs Predator: Requiem is a direct sequel to Alien Vs. Predator . In fact, it t akes place immediately after the first movie ends, still set in 2004 . When the Predators unwillingly allow a Predator/Xenomorph hybrid aboard their ship, it causes them to crash in a small town in America. As the two species continue to battle, the townspeople are often caught in the crossfire.

While the movie delivered the R rating that fans wanted from the first movie, it was still met with muted box office results and worse critical reception. As a result, the Alien vs. Predator movies ended and the timeline was largely ignored. However, there are some interesting connections made, including the idea that the Predator technology helped advance the Yutani Corporation from the Alien franchise.

Prometheus (2012)

While some fans may want to include the Alien vs. Predator movies as part of the canon, it could be said that the Alien timeline truly begins with Prometheus. The movie starts in the year 2089 with archaeologists discovering an ancient map which is thought to be an invitation from the creators of humanity to come and find them. This leads an expedition to a distant and barren moon, LV-223, which they arrive at in the year 2093.

The movie explores the species known as the Engineers who are suspected to be the creators of humanity. However, it is also shown that they are interested in creating new species as well. While a traditional Xenomorph doesn't appear in the movie, the film ends with an alien creature emerging from an Engineer's chest which resembles the classic monster.

Alien: Covenant (2017)

Alien: covenant.

Alien: Covenant continued Ridley Scott's prequel exploration of the Alien universe without directly tying to the original movie. The movie takes place 11 years after the events of Prometheus in the year 2104 . The movie follows a colonizer ship that is damaged during its flight and crash lands on a seemingly habitable planet. There, they encounter David, Michael Fassbender's android from Prometheus , who is continuing his mission of breeding the alien species.

Similar to the alien that appeared at the end of Prometheus, Alien: Covenant features a variety of monsters that are close relatives of the classic Xenomorphs rather than directly recreating them. However, the movie ends with David leaving the planet along with two facehugger embryos suggesting that this is the beginning of the birth of the Xenomorphs. While there were reportedly plans to continue the prequel series, those ideas were abandoned following the lukewarm reception to Alien: Covenant .

Alien (1979)

The original Alien takes place in 2122 , roughly two decades after the events of Alien: Covenant . This is the first introduction of Ellen Ripley in the franchise as well as her first appearance on the timeline. Ripley is part of a commercial space vessel called Nostromo that is traveling through space when the crew is awoken by the ship's computer having detected a distress signal. The signal draws the crew to a barren planet where they encounter the facehugger eggs and unwittingly allow an alien creature on board their ship.

The movie gives the best glimpse at the full cycle of the Xenomorph with it beginning as the egg which releases the facehugger onto its victim. The baby Xenomorph then grows inside its host's body until it is ready to bust out through the chest. It then rapidly grows into the killer adult Xenomorph. The movie ends with Ripley as the sole human survivor, escaping the Nostromo in an escape pod and entering stasis.

Alien: Romulus (2024)

Alien: romulus.

Alien: Romulus is the seventh film in the Alien franchise. The movie is directed by Fede Álvarez and will focus on a new young group of characters who come face to face with the terrifying Xenomorphs. Alien: Romulus is a stand-alone film and takes place in a time not yet explored in the Alien franchise.

While there is still a lot that is not known about Alien: Romulus , it has been confirmed that the movie takes place between the events of Alien and Aliens with the exact year not yet confirmed. The movie follows a young group of colonists who locate a broken-down space station in which they encounter the deadly Xenomorph and have to fight for survival.

Despite the placement in the timeline, the movie is not expected to feature the character of Ellen Ripley . Instead, there will be a new young cast of characters with the likes of Cailee Spaeny, David Josson, and Isabela Merced. The movie will also be directed by modern horror master Fede Álvarez with Ridley Scott producing. It will be interesting to see how the movie connects in the timeline and perhaps explain how the Xenomorph got off the original planet and ended up at this space station.

Aliens (1986)

James Cameron took helm of the Alien franchise for the first sequel, Aliens , which was a much more action-heavy story compared to the quiet thriller approach of Ridley Scott's Alien . The movie takes place nearly 60 years after the events of Alien in the year 2179 . The story begins with Ripley's pod being located and her being awoken from stasis. She then learns that there have been a colony set up on the same moon she and the Nostromo crew encountered the facehuggers.

With communication to the colony suddenly stopping, Ripley joins a group of marines going to the barren moon to investigate. Ripley also meets fellow heroes, Hicks, Bishop, and young Newt. The movie further explores the evil schemes of the Weyland-Yuntani Corporation who are seeking to use the Xenomorphs for nefarious purposes. It is also the first encounter with a Xenomorph Queen in the franchise.

Alien 3 (1992)

Though Alien 3 came out several years after Aliens , the story picked up in the same year, 2179 . This is explained as the escape ship Ripley, Newt and Hicks were in at the end of Aliens is revealed to have had a facehugger inside. The ship crashes on a prison planet with Ripley as the only survivor. As she forms an uneasy bond with the prisoners of the planet, the stowaway facehugger latches onto a dog and begins its terrifying cycle.

The movie showed that Weyland-Yutani was still trying to get their hands on a Xenomorph and Ripley ends up being key to that. It is revealed that she was infected by a facehugger as well and that she has a chestburster growing inside of her. At the end of the movie, Ripley decides to kill herself and the alien to avoid it falling into the wrong hands. This serves as the final appearance of the original Ellen Ripley in the timeline.

Alien: Resurrection (1997)

Alien resurrection.

The final movie in the Alien timeline to date is Alien: Resurrection . The movie jumps ahead more than 200 years following the previous film with it set in the year 2381. Sigourney Weaver returned to the franchise for the fourth time. However, while her original character of Ripley is confirmed to have died in Alien 3 , she appears in Alien: Resurrection as a clone of Ripley. It is revealed that Ripley's blood and the blood of a Xenomorph Queen were used to recreate a clone of Ripley that still had a Xenomorph embryo inside.

After they were able to extract the embryo from the Ripley clone, Xenomorphs were then bred aboard a space vessel until they inevitably broke loose and began their rampage. The movie is also notable for including a human/Xenomorph hybrid. The movie ends with Ripley and the other survivors crashing onto Earth. However, the promise of this leading to an army of Xenomorphs on Earth has not yet come to fruition.

Alien (1979)

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COMMENTS

  1. What if Starfleet encountered a xenomorph? How would that turn out?

    Xenomorph vs. Borg. Go! Reply reply ... So if there were a legit Alien/Star Trek crossover, it would play out where they arent aware it's on the ship, mysterious deaths or disappearances of background characters, a minor character/guest star would get facehugged, the crew would try various methods to capture or kill the creature that wouldn't ...

  2. [Star Trek & Aliens] Somehow, a xenomorph has gotten aboard a ...

    Absolutely zero issues. Star Trek is one of the worst sci-fi realities for a Xenomorph to exist. Xenomorphs are only dangerous in the Alien-verse because their level of technology isn't that high in comparison to others. The facehugger / chestburster can just be removed via the transporter.

  3. How would a crossover, Star Trek: Aliens Vs Predators go?

    DS9 already did a variation on how a Predator crossover would work with the Jem and the Holograms. Predators = Hirogen & Jem'Hadar. Xenomorphs = Modern Gorn. The federation would torpedo xenomorphscfrom orbit. Or just transport a torpedo onto a predator ship. Aliens vs Predator vs Borg.

  4. How STRANGE NEW WORLDS Transforms the Gorn, an Old STAR TREK Enemy

    Aug 10 2023 • 11:47 AM. In its first season, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds reinvented one of the franchise's oldest alien adversaries, the Gorn. They gave this classic antagonistic species an ...

  5. 'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' races to its conclusion with a spot-on

    La'an starts berating Oriana, the child that she sees so much of herself in before Dr. M'Benga snaps at her to leave his daughter… his patient alone. Lt. Kirk, meanwhile, starts lashing out ...

  6. Star Trek just changed Gorn canon with an Alien -inspired twist

    'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' just changed everything about Gorn babies. Writer Davy Perez explains what it all means, how 'Alien' helped, and how it changes 'The Original Series.'

  7. Star Trek vs Alien Crossover Was Meant to Give Picard His ...

    Star Trek and Alien crossover would have given Captain Picard his biggest challenge, with Xenomorphs, the Borg, and the Romulans involved. The scrapped book, Acceptable Losses, had the potential ...

  8. Writer's Headcanon Explains How 'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' Gorn

    The latest episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds showed us the Gorn for the first time in the series. The alien lizards' look certainly got an update after 55 years, but the episode's ...

  9. The history of 'Star Trek's' Gorn, from styrofoam rocks to big green

    The history of 'Star Trek's' Gorn, from styrofoam rocks to big green xenomorphs Imagine 'Godzilla vs. Kong,' but they're both way shorter and Kong is a Canadian. Tom Meisfjord

  10. Xenomorph

    The xenomorph (also known as a Xenomorph XX121 or Internecivus raptus, and simply the alien or the creature) is a fictional endoparasitoid extraterrestrial species that serves as the title antagonist of the Alien and Alien vs. Predator franchises. The ... or the Klingons and Borg in Star Trek), the xenomorphs are not sapient toolmakers ...

  11. Star Trek: The Next Generation/Aliens: Acceptable Losses

    Dirk Wood of IDW and Matt Parkinson of Dark Horse took the opportunity to announce a new crossover series for April of 2017. In addition to the Xenomorphs, the comic was to feature familiar Star Trek alien races such as the Borg and the Romulans, which were described as playing a vital role in the plot.

  12. Borg (Star Trek) vs Xenomorph (Alien)

    Yes the Xenomorphs have a queen, but the Borg are more than capable of dealing with the drones. Almost all battles will have someone being biased toward one opponent in some way or fashion. That ...

  13. CAPTAIN PIKE VS XENOMORPH GORN?

    Today's episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is absolutely crazy- like bonkers. Or did I accidently end up watching alien covenent? Who knows. The produc...

  14. Star Trek: Aliens (Star Trek/Aliens Trailer Mashup)

    The USS Enterprise faces its greatest threat yet as Captain Kirk and his crew answer a distress signal in an uncharted nebula only to discover the perfect or...

  15. The Gorn are xenomorphs : r/startrek

    The Gorn are xenomorphs. Die-hard Alien (s) fans know that "xenomorph" is descriptive, even though canon now seems to claim that the term refers to the specific Alien species (although it's still debatable). Regardless, canon clearly states: their "appearance… can vary, depending upon the host in which the embryo was implanted".

  16. Xenomorph Drone (Alien) vs Star Trek : r/whowouldwin

    Xenomorph Drone (Alien) vs Star Trek. So for this versus there's 4 rounds: Round 1: The Xenomorph is onboard the Enterprise with its crew from the original series. Round 2: There's two Xenomorph on the Enterprise with its crew from The Next Generation. Round 3: The Xenomorph is on the Voyager. Round 4: There's two Xenomorph on DS9.

  17. STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION and ALIENS Get a Comic Book ...

    Next year, Dark Horse Comics and IDW will be teaming up for a Star Trek: The Next Generation vs. Aliens comic book miniseries that will pit Captain Picard and company against the dreaded Xenomorphs…one of the few alien races that even Picard can't reason with! Bleeding Cool had the first report of the announcement, which was made earlier ...

  18. Every Type Of Xenomorph In The Alien Franchise Explained

    The Xenomorph Overseer Of The Queens. The Empress is a non-canonical Xenomorph featured in Aliens Online, Alien Versus Predator 2, and Alien Versus Predator: Extinction. The Empress is an evolved and rare form of a Xenomorph Queen and is considered to be superior, only bowing to the Queen Mother.

  19. Wolverine's New Weapon Basically Confirms Upcoming X-Men/Alien Crossover

    Star Trek vs Alien Crossover Was Meant to Give Picard His Ultimate Challenge A proposed Star Trek/Aliens crossover would have pit Captain Picard against his biggest challenge: assimilated Xenomorphs.

  20. Alien: Every Xenomorph In The Franchise, Ranked

    Alien: Every Xenomorph In The Franchise, Ranked. The perfect organism, the Xenomorph has terrified audiences since its debut in 1979. Much like its extraterrestrial brother the Predator, the Xenomorph stars in an action/horror mega-franchise. Except, the Alien movies have gone on even longer, with four sequels, two non-canonical spin-offs, and ...

  21. Marvel vs. Alien: Deadpool, Spider-Man & More Take on Xenomorphs in

    The Marvel Universe already has a species of Xenomorph aliens, in the form of parasitic insectoid creatures called the Brood. Debuting in X-Men comics in 1982, only three years after Alien came out in theaters, the Brood are clearly inspired by the iconic movie monsters and have been used as staple Marvel villains since. In particular, Captain Marvel and the X-Men have a lot of terrible ...

  22. Star Trek: Should Janeway Have Let Species 8472 Wipe Out The Borg?

    Species 8472 offered a solution, if the crew of the USS Voyager had simply sat back and allowing them to wipe the Borg out. Species 8472's aggression wasn't even unjustified or unprovoked — the ...

  23. Klingon (Star Trek) vs Xenomorph (Alien): Tournament Post Round 1

    Granted, I haven't seen much Star Trek, but what I've gathered is Klingons are stronger and faster than humans are, with a more brutal and warrior-like mentality, but all the same even Yautja with weapons have been killed one-on-one by a Xenomorph Drone. Warrior - 8/10 Drone - 6/10

  24. Alien Movies In Order (Release & Chronological)

    Alien vs Predator: Requiem is a direct sequel to Alien Vs.Predator.In fact, it takes place immediately after the first movie ends, still set in 2004.When the Predators unwillingly allow a Predator/Xenomorph hybrid aboard their ship, it causes them to crash in a small town in America. As the two species continue to battle, the townspeople are often caught in the crossfire.