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Post by CrutchCricket on Mar 7, 2017 20:18:06 GMT
We do, kinda. As I said, Lyta's "official" P5 scanning range was 20-25 meters (though she also admitted that her Vorlon upgrades actually made it much, much further. And while we don't see it on screen, we also know that the Army of Light also used rogue human telepaths as well. Ultimately, though, I'm starting to suspect this is really an example of Rule of Cool. JMS has admitted that in real-life, distances in space battles would have made the fights a lot less interesting to watch than they ended up being. I meant we have no basis for assuming a telepath's range for this alleged "antiShadow" energy is any different than the range of their normal abilities, any more than we have a base for the energy itself. And yeah, I'll cut JMS some slack for Rule of Cool on ship battles since he got freakin NASA impressed with his StarFury design I think the Drakh were another Shadow-aligned race in the last war. But at any rate, I think the implication is most of the other races were either destroyed, or otherwise devastated to the point of being reduced to barbarism. No other advanced race is known to have fought in the previous war. Even the Centauri were preindustrial at the time. Yeah, the Drahk, the Streib (doctor aliens, also the ones who kidnapped Sheridan and Ta'lon in Season 2), that invisible alien from that one episode with the prejump engines ship and a few unnamed others. Which makes it that much more strange that the races on the Vorlons' side don't even get a mention. It'd be really weird if all they had fighting for them is the Minbari. Are we still sure theirs is the right way?
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Post by Vormav on Mar 9, 2017 10:59:11 GMT
I was talking more about telepath reactions to the war after the fact. We see Sinclair torn up about it and there's plenty of hints of how other people are affected by it, from fear to awe (after all there had to be some thing for Clark to twist into the so called "Minbari War Syndrome"). But these reactions are exclusively by mundanes. No telepath ever comments on it. Or indeed on relations with aliens in general. Telepaths seem to be weirdly set apart from that. Apart from "it's kind of weird to scan alien minds" we never really hear what they think about other races, or even telepaths of other races. At best we get "amused then annoyed" from Bester when he walks in on the Minbari telepaths. We get two dimensional plots and issues about how humans and aliens differ or how telepaths and normals differ but never a three dimensional one incorporating all three. But we can talk about the war itself too. You're right, telepaths wouldn't be on the front lines, but they'd have to do something. The Minbari were going to wipe out all humans not just normals. The Psi Corps would've had to deal with that somehow. As for Dukhat, I'm sure they did have telepaths aboard. At the Battle of the Line when after they test Sinclair they have telepaths brought in to erase his memories. It's possible they could've brought them onboard from another ship but what purpose could they have served on that ship that they couldn't serve on the Grey Council's ship? Ergo I conclude the Grey Council does have telepaths on hand aboard their ship. And while the Vorlons would make them redundant in terms of their abilities, they were keeping themselves hidden and would never serve that purpose anyway, especially for a lesser species. Did Dukhat have to die and the Earth-Minbari War have to happen to propel Sinclair towards his destiny though? I suspect the question is more philosophical than anything. I agree it would be interesting to see more interplay between normal humans, human telepaths, and aliens. Perhaps political pressure against Earth for their treatment of telepaths coming from the League of Non-Aligned Worlds, Interstellar Alliance, or what-have-you at the time of the story? As to human telepath reactions to the Minbari War, it's hard to even speculate on what they'd be given the near complete lack of information regarding their involvement in the war (at least, to my knowledge). My best guess would be that human mistrust of telepaths marginalized telepath involvement in the war, and that there were many telepaths that suffered dearly from that rejection, or hid their talents so they might serve more directly. We saw examples of both these types of telepaths in the series in the Harriman Gray character ("Eyes" in season 1) and Ivanova, respectively. As historical inspiration, I'm thinking of rates of depression and suicide in men who were not allowed -- because of age or health -- to join the military as large portions of communities signed up at the outbreak of the First World War. Deceit was unofficially encouraged in many cases to get otherwise ineligible men/boys into the army, of course, and I would expect something similar in the B5 universe if telepaths were officially barred from serving in the Minbari War. I think the Drakh were another Shadow-aligned race in the last war. But at any rate, I think the implication is most of the other races were either destroyed, or otherwise devastated to the point of being reduced to barbarism. No other advanced race is known to have fought in the previous war. Even the Centauri were preindustrial at the time. Yeah, the Drahk, the Streib (doctor aliens, also the ones who kidnapped Sheridan and Ta'lon in Season 2), that invisible alien from that one episode with the prejump engines ship and a few unnamed others. Which makes it that much more strange that the races on the Vorlons' side don't even get a mention. It'd be really weird if all they had fighting for them is the Minbari. Are we still sure theirs is the right way? Were not the other First Ones involved in that war on the Vorlons' side? If that was the case I can easily imagine other space-faring peoples trying to stay the hell out of it. That and I'm pretty sure that many others that fought in that war for either side were wiped out or knocked down to the point of never recovering, like the people Gideon encounters that had also been struck by the Drakh/Shadows' plague (in "Racing the Night," I believe). Who, other than the Vorlons and the excessively conditioned Minbari, ever said the Vorlon way was right? I thought the whole point of the resolution to the Second Shadow War was that neither side was right.
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Post by CrutchCricket on Mar 11, 2017 2:05:44 GMT
I agree it would be interesting to see more interplay between normal humans, human telepaths, and aliens. Perhaps political pressure against Earth for their treatment of telepaths coming from the League of Non-Aligned Worlds, Interstellar Alliance, or what-have-you at the time of the story? As to human telepath reactions to the Minbari War, it's hard to even speculate on what they'd be given the near complete lack of information regarding their involvement in the war (at least, to my knowledge). My best guess would be that human mistrust of telepaths marginalized telepath involvement in the war, and that there were many telepaths that suffered dearly from that rejection, or hid their talents so they might serve more directly. We saw examples of both these types of telepaths in the series in the Harriman Gray character ("Eyes" in season 1) and Ivanova, respectively. As historical inspiration, I'm thinking of rates of depression and suicide in men who were not allowed -- because of age or health -- to join the military as large portions of communities signed up at the outbreak of the First World War. Deceit was unofficially encouraged in many cases to get otherwise ineligible men/boys into the army, of course, and I would expect something similar in the B5 universe if telepaths were officially barred from serving in the Minbari War. Interesting points. I think you're right on the money for what the average telepath would do. Psi Corps itself though, I think that's a different story. I was thinking the other day that they might actually try to profit from the war. Since the more extreme of them believe a war with mundanes is inevitable, aliens wiping out most of humanity would do their job for them. The only question is how to avoid destruction themselves? A possible answer: the Narn (or maybe the Centauri). We know the Narn are mighty thirsty for getting their hands on some telepath genes again. And the Centauri would really rather not have anything strengthening the Narn. So there might be a sweet spot of negotiation there. Oh sure they'd have to work for aliens for a bit. But Psi Corps is nothing if not subversive. Eventually they might even reach out to the Minbari. Since they consider themselves evolved relative to mundanes they'd play the "we would never react with such violence like savage monkeys" card and we know most Minbari would still be kind of guilty over the whole thing. If Psi Corps could convince them they're different the Minbari might even be suckered into protecting them as a way of atoning for their genocide. I could easily see the Corps come out on top of even this. It'd be a hell of a "what if?" Were not the other First Ones involved in that war on the Vorlons' side? If that was the case I can easily imagine other space-faring peoples trying to stay the hell out of it. That and I'm pretty sure that many others that fought in that war for either side were wiped out or knocked down to the point of never recovering, like the people Gideon encounters that had also been struck by the Drakh/Shadows' plague (in "Racing the Night," I believe). Who, other than the Vorlons and the excessively conditioned Minbari, ever said the Vorlon way was right? I thought the whole point of the resolution to the Second Shadow War was that neither side was right. I think if you're spacefaring you don't really have much of a choice. The Shadows will mess with you and the Vorlons will try and get you on their side. And yeah the other First Ones were there as well. I've always wondered why they cared and why they always fought for the Vorlons' side- Ivanova's reverse psychology trick on the Walkers was cute but I give it a pass on Rule of Cool, not on what should actually happen with an advanced/transcendent race. But if we accept they could be swayed, how come no one ever tried (or succeeded) to get them to fight for the Shadows? I think the point of the Last Shadow War was that both sides have gone too far. But the series itself still kind of gives it to the Vorlons in the end via Deconstruction of Falling Stars, where humanity (and I think Word of God says Minbari as well) basically become the new Vorlons. It might've been interesting if they made a more neutral restart of the cycles with the Centauri becoming the next Shadows.
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Post by Iakus on Mar 11, 2017 2:15:47 GMT
I think if you're spacefaring you don't really have much of a choice. The Shadows will mess with you and the Vorlons will try and get you on their side. And yeah the other First Ones were there as well. I've always wondered why they cared and why they always fought for the Vorlons' side- Ivanova's reverse psychology trick on the Walkers was cute but I give it a pass on Rule of Cool, not on what should actually happen with an advanced/transcendent race. But if we accept they could be swayed, how come no one ever tried (or succeeded) to get them to fight for the Shadows? I think the point of the Last Shadow War was that both sides have gone too far. But the series itself still kind of gives it to the Vorlons in the end via Deconstruction of Falling Stars, where humanity (and I think Word of God says Minbari as well) basically become the new Vorlons. It might've been interesting if they made a more neutral restart of the cycles with the Centauri becoming the next Shadows. I want to say Delenn talking about the other First Ones siding with the Vorlons was probably repeating Vorlon propaganda. The remaining First Ones showed very little interest in the younger races and seemed perfectly content to sit out the current Shadow War until Lorien coaxes them out of hiding. More likely they sat out the last war too, and just hung around doing...First Oney stuff. You know, being all inscrutable and such.
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Post by CrutchCricket on Mar 11, 2017 2:23:48 GMT
I want to say Delenn talking about the other First Ones siding with the Vorlons was probably repeating Vorlon propaganda. The remaining First Ones showed very little interest in the younger races and seemed perfectly content to sit out the current Shadow War until Lorien coaxes them out of hiding. More likely they sat out the last war too, and just hung around doing...First Oney stuff. Well given the Minbari were actually present themselves in the last war, I think they'd have first hand knowledge on whether the other First Ones were there or not. And was it Lorien who actually convinced them to come out? Ivanova got the Walkers by herself. Lorien pointed her to where the others were but I don't think we see who did the talking. Anyway, I'd still expect the Shadows to call them out on favoritism. As I've noted before, almost every major escalation we know of it's always the Vorlon side pushing the envelope and in some cases, I'd say flat out breaking the rules of engagement. I mean, yeah the Shadows are still dicks, but come on! If you have to screw with people's heads and time itself to win an argument, maybe your argument's not that good
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Post by Iakus on Mar 11, 2017 2:29:18 GMT
I want to say Delenn talking about the other First Ones siding with the Vorlons was probably repeating Vorlon propaganda. The remaining First Ones showed very little interest in the younger races and seemed perfectly content to sit out the current Shadow War until Lorien coaxes them out of hiding. More likely they sat out the last war too, and just hung around doing...First Oney stuff. Well given the Minbari were actually present themselves in the last war, I think they'd have first hand knowledge on whether the other First Ones were there or not. And was it Lorien who actually convinced them to come out? Ivanova got the Walkers by herself. Lorien pointed her to where the others were but I don't think we see who did the talking. Anyway, I'd still expect the Shadows to call them out on favoritism. As I've noted before, almost every major escalation we know of it's always the Vorlon side pushing the envelope and in some cases, I'd say flat out breaking the rules of engagement. I mean, yeah the Shadows are still dicks, but come on! If you have to screw with people's heads and time itself to win an argument, maybe your argument's not that good The minbari of a thousand years ago were there. But who knows what got covered up or conveniently forgotten about? We know Valen's origins were covered up to prevent "concern" about minbari purity. And I suspect it was Lorien. He was still held in esteem by the First Ones. Even the Shadows. And both the Shadows and the Vorlons screw with people. Shadows have Keepers, assassinate inconvenient mistresses, genocide everyone in a race that even carries a telepath gene...
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Post by CrutchCricket on Mar 11, 2017 2:35:09 GMT
And both the Shadows and the Vorlons screw with people. Shadows have Keepers, assassinate inconvenient mistresses, genocide everyone in a race that even carries a telepath gene... And yet, the Shadows left the majority of the Narn population alive. Would the Vorlons have been as restrained in their place? Remember them wiping out all traces of "Shadow influence"? Had it not been for Coriana 6, they would've totally Death Star'd Centauri Prime because of one person. Granted, that one person was responsible for catalyzing the whole current war, but still...
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Post by Iakus on Mar 11, 2017 3:37:00 GMT
And both the Shadows and the Vorlons screw with people. Shadows have Keepers, assassinate inconvenient mistresses, genocide everyone in a race that even carries a telepath gene... And yet, the Shadows left the majority of the Narn population alive. Would the Vorlons have been as restrained in their place? Remember them wiping out all traces of "Shadow influence"? Had it not been for Coriana 6, they would've totally Death Star'd Centauri Prime because of one person. Granted, that one person was responsible for catalyzing the whole current war, but still... True, but the Shadows had their own planet killers. As well as fun diseases that give you 2-5 years to cure or the entire planetary population dies. Shadows were all about "survival of the fittest"
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Post by CrutchCricket on Mar 11, 2017 3:58:37 GMT
True, but the Shadows had their own planet killers. As well as fun diseases that give you 2-5 years to cure or the entire planetary population dies. Shadows were all about "survival of the fittest" Which a) only came out in response to the Vorlon planet killers and they never deployed themselves, to our knowledge (though yeah, it is "totally them"). Hell I bet even the technomages were supposed to be a response to telepaths
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Post by fiannawolf on Mar 16, 2017 19:20:09 GMT
I wish they still had babylon 5 books/comics still in production. Even if it was special mini series or limited runs. There's so much more to tell in this universe.
Loved the techomage books. Good stuff.
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Post by fiannawolf on Apr 7, 2017 2:53:37 GMT
Finished B5 rewatch. Onward to Crusade. SiL still gets me, even all these years later...
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Post by CrutchCricket on Apr 7, 2017 14:12:21 GMT
I wish they still had babylon 5 books/comics still in production. Even if it was special mini series or limited runs. There's so much more to tell in this universe. Loved the techomage books. Good stuff. I'm of two minds on this. On the one hand I want more B5 content because B5 content. On the other this is perhaps the only universe where I feel it's already complete and you've told the story that needed to be told. Sure you could still do some side stuff. But for some reason it doesn't seem to have the large "fill me" empty spaces that other franchises do.
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Post by fiannawolf on Apr 8, 2017 3:09:39 GMT
Yea, on one hand, I want more but on the other....sometimes its not best to milk something. Would still play the crap out of a B5 CRPG though.
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Post by Vormav on Apr 10, 2017 22:00:39 GMT
Finished B5 rewatch. Onward to Crusade. SiL still gets me, even all these years later...Me too. It's one of my favourite series finales, if not my favourite, and I'd like to think it's not just because I'm a huge B5 fan. It provides the kind of resolution that lets you feel like the characters are complete and that the story has come to its natural conclusion. Every single time I watch that finale I get a strong urge to go back and rewatch the series because it does such a great job of making me feel the progression of the characters that I want to experience it again.
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Post by akots on May 13, 2017 8:37:43 GMT
OMG, I just watched The Lost Tales - Voices in the Dark. linkTo be honest, this is one of the best. I did not even know it existed. I wish this kind of writing was there for silly Meda game. Most silly me.
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Post by nanotm on May 14, 2017 14:24:31 GMT
I tried watching b5 reruns a couple of years ago but I couldn't take the bad picture on the big screen I loved the show years ago and would probably enjoy watching it again now but for some reason the broadcaster decided to just broadcast the original grainy film product and I couldn't take the lower fps values it actually made me physically ill (yes this is probably broadcaster specific and just my luck to be suffering satellite tv in the uk) from what I remember of it though the show rocked and I really wanted to rewatch it because its one of the few i used ot lie in bed watching religiously on the 12" portable all those years ago. i cant remember ever having a particular favourite character though i did like the ship they got gifted and always rooted for the team to pull through... as to the battles, even navel encounters don't happen at knife thrown range except in movies so artistic licence is always allowed to generate gravity and awe and yes i loved the series where they joined the light and got that ship (i really want to say it was whitestar or dwarfstar but i just cant remember) but what self respecting geek wouldn't love it, those ships were just sweet
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Post by CrutchCricket on May 14, 2017 19:20:01 GMT
akots- Yeah it was pretty good. The only thing I didn't like about it was the "quantum space" thing. Another "higher" level of hyperspace? Remember what happened the last time someone tried that? But the interaction between Galen and Sheridan was awesome. nanotm: You got it, it was the White Star (and later the White Star Fleet). Minbari and Vorlon ships were sweet, so obviously their baby would be too. Gotta give it up for the Shadow vessels too though. They were everything they needed to be.
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Post by akots on May 14, 2017 20:53:49 GMT
akots - Yeah it was pretty good. The only thing I didn't like about it was the "quantum space" thing. Another "higher" level of hyperspace? Remember what happened the last time someone tried that? ... Not exactly thirdspace aliens, no. I think it is more relevant to actual physics and various models of quantum spacetime. This whole field was vividly discussed in early 90s and had a few satisfactory models finally developed based on Lie algebra and under general patronage of Dr. Julius Wess and other early developers of supersymmetry. The theories are quite popular even now. It is not exactly separate spacetime, so transition is not physical movement but the effects of distortion may be described quite well I think. They should have replaced it with some more accurate description aka " noncommutative extra dimensions" but that would be too geekish. Technically, it is not a wormhole or any sort of jump, quite hard to describe exactly. Wiki article is not bad, has some additional references in it. link
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Post by CrutchCricket on May 15, 2017 18:39:19 GMT
Not exactly thirdspace aliens, no. I think it is more relevant to actual physics and various models of quantum spacetime. This whole field was vividly discussed in early 90s and had a few satisfactory models finally developed based on Lie algebra and under general patronage of Dr. Julius Wess and other early developers of supersymmetry. The theories are quite popular even now. It is not exactly separate spacetime, so transition is not physical movement but the effects of distortion may be described quite well I think. They should have replaced it with some more accurate description aka " noncommutative extra dimensions" but that would be too geekish. Technically, it is not a wormhole or any sort of jump, quite hard to describe exactly. Wiki article is not bad, has some additional references in it. linkCool. My issue with it was mostly because it seemed so out of place/a needless one up over the show proper. Plus I'm very suspicious of the lore around it. We see Vorlons still using hyperspace regularly in the show. Why don't they use "quantum space"? And if you're saying they didn't have it but the Alliance invents it well then I call major shenanigans.
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Post by akots on May 15, 2017 19:47:07 GMT
Cool. My issue with it was mostly because it seemed so out of place/a needless one up over the show proper. Plus I'm very suspicious of the lore around it. We see Vorlons still using hyperspace regularly in the show. Why don't they use "quantum space"? And if you're saying they didn't have it but the Alliance invents it well then I call major shenanigans. Vorlons don't need it, they are never in a hurry and for their purpose whatever they have works well enough. They seem to be more interested in spiritual dimensions which are clearly different. Also, all their technology is organic in nature and it might have trouble either transitioning or maintaining integrity in noncommutal matrices which may require specific shielding. There is multitude of reason why it might not be an issue. According to the movie, the discovery of technology was made by vorlons but apparently, they could not adapt it for themselves. For what it's worth, same speculation as we can concoct here after some deliberation: Babylon wiki
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Post by CrutchCricket on May 15, 2017 21:58:15 GMT
Vorlons don't need it, they are never in a hurry and for their purpose whatever they have works well enough. They seem to be more interested in spiritual dimensions which are clearly different. Also, all their technology is organic in nature and it might have trouble either transitioning or maintaining integrity in noncommutal matrices which may require specific shielding. There is multitude of reason why it might not be an issue. According to the movie, the discovery of technology was made by vorlons but apparently, they could not adapt it for themselves. I would say they're definitely in a hurry in season 4. And why bother "folding hyperspace" to hide their fleet if they had access to quantum space and could just get wherever they were going twice as fast as anybody else? Another issue: the Vorlons and Shadows were supposed to be evenly matched. And despite their differences in how they jumped, both used hyperspace. Even if you ignore the Vorlons not using quantum space because they were seemingly complacent/preferring to act through intermediaries, there is no such excuse for the Shadows not phasing in and out of quantum space to get their stuff done. Which of course breaks several things: -the pilot dude from season 2 catching footage of the Shadow vessel to prove they're out there. -Sheridan outrunning and later destroying a Shadow vessel with a jump gate -The Psi Corps intercepting the Shadow vessel carrying Garibaldi -the Shadows using hyperspace at all, not just for efficiency, but given it's property of enhancing telepaths, they should steer well clear, if they had an alternative. Finally, as First Ones and given their characterization, the Vorlons can be assumed to be basically unchanged for thousands, if not millions of years. So if they discovered quantum space before Thirdspace, that still means they were using their organic ships (the Vorlon ships seen in flashbacks in Thirdspace are not that different from modern Vorlon ships, if at all) while doing. Which throws the compatibility hypothesis into doubt. And let's not even get into how the Alliance could've found a whole new way of travel from Vorlon tech when Vorlon space is still closed to them for a million years. And speaking of a million years, doesn't the ascended human at the end of Deconstruction of Falling Stars jump out of the Sol system via regular hyperspace? Sorry, I love the special otherwise and I do wish JMS had gotten the rest of the stories he had planned for that series out. But quantum space doesn't seem very thought out compared to the rest of the series. Then again, the other part of that special featured a supposedly actual demon. And somebody actually approved the Legend of the Rangers pilot that thankfully went no further So quality and consistency was sadly on the decline, Crusade notwithstanding.
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Post by akots on May 15, 2017 22:35:09 GMT
I would say they're definitely in a hurry in season 4. And why bother "folding hyperspace" to hide their fleet if they had access to quantum space and could just get wherever they were going twice as fast as anybody else? Another issue: the Vorlons and Shadows were supposed to be evenly matched. And despite their differences in how they jumped, both used hyperspace. Even if you ignore the Vorlons not using quantum space because they were seemingly complacent/preferring to act through intermediaries, there is no such excuse for the Shadows not phasing in and out of quantum space to get their stuff done. Which of course breaks several things: -the pilot dude from season 2 catching footage of the Shadow vessel to prove they're out there. -Sheridan outrunning and later destroying a Shadow vessel with a jump gate -The Psi Corps intercepting the Shadow vessel carrying Garibaldi -the Shadows using hyperspace at all, not just for efficiency, but given it's property of enhancing telepaths, they should steer well clear, if they had an alternative. Finally, as First Ones and given their characterization, the Vorlons can be assumed to be basically unchanged for thousands, if not millions of years. So if they discovered quantum space before Thirdspace, that still means they were using their organic ships (the Vorlon ships seen in flashbacks in Thirdspace are not that different from modern Vorlon ships, if at all) while doing. Which throws the compatibility hypothesis into doubt. And let's not even get into how the Alliance could've found a whole new way of travel from Vorlon tech when Vorlon space is still closed to them for a million years. And speaking of a million years, doesn't the ascended human at the end of Deconstruction of Falling Stars jump out of the Sol system via regular hyperspace? Sorry, I love the special otherwise and I do wish JMS had gotten the rest of the stories he had planned for that series out. But quantum space doesn't seem very thought out compared to the rest of the series. Then again, the other part of that special featured a supposedly actual demon. And somebody actually approved the Legend of the Rangers pilot that thankfully went no further So quality and consistency was sadly on the decline, Crusade notwithstanding. Yes, there is a lot of lore missing here as well as actual physics rationale. To me, it looks like JMS just watched some PBS show about supersymmetry, and there were a few good ones out there at about that time, and decided to put it in just for the sake of mentioning the thing might exist. The only rational way I see is that it is not compatible with organic shielding of both vorlons and shadows. Might have something to do with ugly earth-like cubic ships from rangers movie instead of "normal" minbari-vorlon design. And quantum spacetime is not really some space that can be discovered, it is a bit different concept in my understanding, at least from the point of physics. It does not allow to access something new and it is not a transition to somewhere else, just something noncommutative. It is not an invisible extra dimension, nothing like that and it must involve all four (or 5 or 6 or more?) coordinates. So, given the existence of Epsilon III/Draal, it all makes sense. Which maybe may mean that vorlons/shadows existed for a few weeks or maybe a million years. As long as it does not require changes in spatial position or uses some anchor (Zatras/Sheridan, War without End), it can be used by anyone including vorlons that came with newly reborn Valen. However, once it is used to actually move things, it needs shielding. Just a possibility. Yes, rangers suck, Harrison style, and too silly, also some bad actors there.
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Post by CrutchCricket on May 16, 2017 3:49:32 GMT
Eh, I think we agree there wasn't much forethought put into it (coolness of quantum mechanics aside) so for my part, I'd rather ignore it, particularly since it shows up nowhere else. Just like "oh noes these guys are totally worse than the Shadows" silly nonsense villain+1 Rangers pulled. Also punch, punch, kick to shoot spaceships... It's not what they were on, it's what they should've been on. Not even G'Kar could save that mess.
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Post by ComingOfShadows on May 23, 2017 1:09:46 GMT
Eh, I think we agree there wasn't much forethought put into it (coolness of quantum mechanics aside) so for my part, I'd rather ignore it, particularly since it shows up nowhere else. Just like "oh noes these guys are totally worse than the Shadows" silly nonsense villain+1 Rangers pulled. Also punch, punch, kick to shoot spaceships... It's not what they were on, it's what they should've been on. Not even G'Kar could save that mess. Legend of the rangers is the only B5 thing i never watched, nor do i know much about it. I guess since it didnt come with the dvd sets i sort of didnt know it existed and then forgot about it repeatedly. What exactly was the premise of the whole thing and your thoughts on it then? If you dont mind my asking that anyway, its just you just have a nice viewpoint on all things B5.
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Post by CrutchCricket on May 23, 2017 1:45:46 GMT
Legend of the rangers is the only B5 thing i never watched, nor do i know much about it. I guess since it didnt come with the dvd sets i sort of didnt know it existed and then forgot about it repeatedly. What exactly was the premise of the whole thing and your thoughts on it then? If you dont mind my asking that anyway, its just you just have a nice viewpoint on all things B5. Legend of the Rangers was the first spinoff they tried. It was to be a spaceship show, focused on a group of Rangers, obviously as they went about their space shenanigans. It was set post B5 so you have a mix of humans, Minbari and a fat Drazi as the main cast. G'Kar was in the pilot but even he couldn't save it. Generic stock characters were aplenty, like the young hotshot captain with something to prove, the wise and logical Minbari that even to a non-Trekkie reeked of Spock, the minority blue collar crew member (the fat Drazi was the engineer or something), the rival crew etc. Plus they also turned the terror doctrine/ Minbari war doctrine of "always finish a fight" into "literally never retreat, ever, or you're out". Which is beyond idiotic. Then you had downright silly things like the weapon system of a ship being activated by the gunner chick literally doing punches and kicks. And of course they tried to one-up the Shadows, which made it go from hilarious to actual sacrilege in my books. So yeah, definitely pass.
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