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* ''NightmareFuel/StarTrekStrangeNewWorlds''
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* ''NightmareFuel/StarTrekProdigy''
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* "Blood and Fire" is about Regulan bloodworms. The ones the Klingons were joking about in "The Trouble with Tribbles". Regulan bloodworms are not funny. Or cute. Or harmless and useful, like the ones in ''Enterprise''. Point of fact, [[spoiler: they travel in gigantic swarms, and they eat people alive, and we get to see it.]]

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* "Blood and Fire" is about Regulan bloodworms. The ones the Klingons were joking about in "The Trouble with Tribbles". Regulan bloodworms are not funny. Or cute. Or harmless and useful, like the ones in ''Enterprise''. [[note]]They ''are'' the ones in ''Enterprise'', though. They were mutated by the Regulans to be used as a weapon, "the creature uses more energy eating than it gains by doing so and is therefore stuck in a loop in which what it eats only fuel its own appetite. They cannot really be killed, as destroying their form only shatters them back into wavicles, ready to turn to particle when re-exposed to blood." When the mutation is corrected, they prove to be the larvae of a beautiful colony creature called "sparkledancers" who flow harmlessly through space.[[/note]] Point of fact, [[spoiler: they the mutant variety travel in gigantic swarms, and they eat people alive, and we get to see it.]]
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!!Novels:
[[index]]
* ''NightmareFuel/StarTrekLogSeries''
[[/index]]


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** Then again, the Vulcans can vouch for the undamaged transmission of [[OurSoulsAreDifferent the Katra]] through the process, so it can be assumed that the soul is transferred along with the mind and memories into the newly re-created body.
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* ''NightmareFuel/StarTrekLowerDecks''
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* ''NightmareFuel/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry''



* ''Film/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry'':
** After the Klingon moon explodes in a massive PlanarShockwave, the USS ''Excelsior'' is close enough to not only have to ride out the shockwave, but when they scan the moon, they learn that ''[[EarthShatteringKaboom most of it is now simply not there anymore]]''. They then receive one of the more disturbuing {{Distress Call}}s in the history of the franchise, a Klingon, surrounded by flames, screaming in panicked Klingon before the signal abruptly cuts off, followed by a Klingon officer tersely messaging them to tell them that there has been [[DeadlyEuphemism an accident]], and that Starfleet's assistance is ''not'' required.
--> '''Valtane:''' I have confirmed the location of Praxis, sir, but...
--> '''Sulu:''' What is it?
--> '''Valtane:''' I cannot confirm the '''existence''' of Praxis.
** The attack on Gorkon's ship, from the Klingons' point of view. The ''Enterprise'', sent to escort them into Federation space for peace talks, unexpectedly opens fire on them, crippling them and knocking out the ArtificialGravity. Two [[FacelessMooks space-suited assassins]] beam aboard and begin [[ImplacableMan slowly and methodically]] marching through the ship, shooting helpless crewmembers as they float in freefall, unable to fight back or seek safety. Once they find their target, they shoot him in the heart, before calmly marching back the way they came and beaming back to their ship. Did we mention that, due to the lack of gravity, the Klingons' blood is left to ''float'' in blobs drifting through the air, trailing behind the wounded or dead crewmembers, in a rare exception to the BloodlessCarnage usually seen on ''Star Trek''?
** Also, the same attack, from the ''Enterprise'' crew's point of view. The ship they are escorting is being attacked, and by all indications, it was the ''Enterprise'' that did it, with the bridge crew and Mr. Scott urgently shouting at each other unable to agree on what their own conflicting comptuers are telling them, trying to figure out just ''what the hell is going on'' before the Klingon ship finally regains control and prepares to [[ThisMeansWar open fire on them in evident self defense.]]
*** When the Klingon battlecruiser recovers and comes nose-to-nose with the unshielded ''Enterprise'', the ship locks photon torpedos and prepares to fire. Kirk just stares, slack-jawed at the view screen for a full ten seconds. This is the first time in the history of ''Star Trek'' that we've seen Kirk [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness falter in the command chair]]. He doesn't order shields up, he doesn't order evasive maneuvers, and he doesn't charge weapons, or anything else we expect him to do. He just sits there, staring. . .and then he surrenders. It's terrifying.
*** What sells that part is the rest of his crew's reaction, ''especially'' Valeris', you know, an emotionless Vulcan.
---->'''>Chekov:''' Shields Captain?
----> (beat)
---->'''Chekov:''' Shields ''UP'', Captain?
----> (beat) (Klingon Cruiser is now at point-blank range filling the viewscreen, torpedoes armed)
---->'''Valeris:''' (with barely contained terror) '''''Captain! OUR SHIELDS!'''''
*** FridgeLogic: The Enterprise has just fired on a ship carrying a diplomat on a mission of peace. There was no warning or provocation. Furthermore, agents from the Enterprise have deliberately murdered most of the crew on that ship, as well as the diplomat in question. It is an act of war, and worse, it is straight up treachery. The Klingons, worshiping honor, would perceive this as a Pearl Harbor-style event, and their revenge would only be satisfied by the complete destruction of the Federation. It would be a galactic war in which trillions might die and the entirety of known space would be dramatically destabilized even in the best-case scenario. The only evidence Enterprise would have to prove their non-complicity would be the ship's records and the crew's testimony, proof that the Klingons would never trust even if it hadn't been tampered with, because James Kirk is vocal about his hate of Klingons. And of course, let's not forget that this *is* being orchestrated by some top brass in Starfleet. Kirk hates the Klingons for personal and professional reasons, but he also understands them. He knows that any hope of proving the innocence of his ship, and of the Federation, would be forfeit in the event that the Enterprise attempts to defend itself or to escape. He is willing to sacrifice his life, his ship and its crew, because that is the only action he can take, under the present circumstances, which might possibly prevent this apocalyptic war. He will permit the Klingons to retaliate uncontested because to do so would subvert the narrative that Kirk ordered the attack out of personal animosity, and the Klingons respected Kirk as a warrior too much to believe he would order such an attack and react that way. Indeed, Kirk is more than happy to surrender himself to the Klingons once presented with the opportunity for the same exact reason he refused to raise shields. Rather than having a HeroicBSOD, Kirk is demonstrating *the* most legitimate act of heroism of the entire franchise.
*** The scene is also a subtle indication of General Chang's fanaticism, because Chang was aboard ''Qo'noS One'' at the time of the attack. Considering that ''Qo'noS One'' had just sustained heavy damage, and that they were facing a fully-armed and operational Starfleet cruiser commanded by James T. Kirk--a man who eats Klingon battlecruisers as a between-meal snack--the Klingon ship had virtually no chance of winning a firefight with ''Enterprise'', and no reason to expect that Kirk wouldn't defend his ship. This means that General Chang wasn't just willing to die for his cause, he ''expected'' to die for it. Keep in mind that this was a plan that ''he was involved in making''. There's something very unsettling about that level of commitment to a warmongering and racist cause.



* ''Film/StarTrekGenerations''. When Data's newly-installed emotion chip overloads and he goes LaughingMad, it's ''creepy as hell.''
** Picard's family, including Jean-Luc idolizing, CheerfulChild René--one of the very few children that Picard actually likes--[[spoiler: dying in a goddamned fire.]]
** After [[spoiler: Picard fails to stop Soran the first time and they're sucked into the Nexus]], it winds up destroying the planet they're on. And it just so happens to now include [[spoiler: everyone inside the crashed saucer section of the Enterprise. Which means every character we've come to know and love for the past seven years--- Riker, Data, Beverly, Troi, Worf--- ''they're [[KillEmAll all dead]]''. We even get to see some survivors crawling out of the ship's remains just as the planet explodes for good measure.]]
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* The Transporter maps your body ''by tearing you apart, right down to the last atom'' and then constructing a ''copy of you'' at the destination. So, you ''die'' every time you go through the transporter. The copy has your body and your memories, and as far as everyone else is concerned, it's you. But it's not. Interestingly enough, this was the topic of the opening chapter of the very first ''Star Trek'' novel, ''Literature/SpockMustDie'' by Creator/JamesBlish, who who wrote the novelizations for the original series.

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* The Transporter maps your body ''by tearing you apart, right down to the last atom'' and then constructing a ''copy of you'' at the destination. So, you ''die'' every time you go through the transporter. The copy has your body and your memories, and as far as everyone else is concerned, it's you. But it's not. Interestingly enough, this was the topic of the opening chapter of the very first ''Star Trek'' novel, ''Literature/SpockMustDie'' by Creator/JamesBlish, who who wrote the novelizations for the original series.
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* The Transporter maps your body ''by tearing you apart, right down to the last atom'' and then constructing a ''copy of you'' at the destination. So, you ''die'' every time you go through the transporter. The copy has your body and your memories, and as far as everyone else is concerned, it's you. But it's not. Interestingly enough, this was the topic of the opening chapter of the very first ''Star Trek'' novel, ''Literature/SpockMustDie'' by Creator/JamesBlish, who who wrote the novelizations for the original series.
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[[folder:The Series in General]]
* Any time a CaptainsLog entry is prefixed with "Stardate: Unknown" or something else along those lines, you know the crew is in dire straits, usually in the form of being cut off from the rest of galactic civlization for a lengthy period of time or a NegativeSpaceWedgie.
[[/folder]]
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* NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheNextGeneration
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekVoyager
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekEnterprise
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekDiscovery

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* NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheNextGeneration
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheNextGeneration''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekVoyager
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekVoyager''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekEnterprise
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekEnterprise''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekDiscovery''NightmareFuel/StarTrekDiscovery''
* ''NightmareFuel/StarTrekPicard''



* NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheMotionPicture
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekIIITheSearchForSpock
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekGenerations
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekFirstContact
* [[NightmareFuel/StarTrek2009 Star Trek (2009 film)]]
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekIntoDarkness
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekBeyond

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* NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheMotionPicture
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekTheMotionPicture''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekIIITheSearchForSpock
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekIIITheSearchForSpock''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekGenerations
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekGenerations''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekFirstContact
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekFirstContact''
* [[NightmareFuel/StarTrek2009 ''[[NightmareFuel/StarTrek2009 Star Trek (2009 film)]]
film)]]''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekIntoDarkness
''NightmareFuel/StarTrekIntoDarkness''
* NightmareFuel/StarTrekBeyond''NightmareFuel/StarTrekBeyond''
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* NightmareFuel/StarTrekGenerations
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--> '''Valtane:''' I have confirmed the location of Praxis, sir, but...
--> '''Sulu:''' What is it?
--> '''Valtane:''' I cannot confirm the '''existence''' of Praxis.
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-->--'''Doctor Leonard "Bones" [=McCoy=]''', ''{{Film/Star Trek}}''

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-->--'''Doctor -->-- '''Doctor Leonard "Bones" [=McCoy=]''', ''{{Film/Star Trek}}''
''Film/StarTrek2009''



*** When the Klingon battlecruiser recovers and comes nose-to-nose with the unshielded ''Enterprise'', the ship locks photon torpedos and prepares to fire. Kirk just stares, slack-jawed at the view screen for a full ten seconds. This is the first time in the history of Star Trek that we've seen Kirk [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness falter in the command chair]]. He doesn't order shields up, he doesn't order evasive maneuvers, and he doesn't charge weapons, or anything else we expect him to do. He just sits there, staring. . .and then he surrenders. It's terrifying.

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*** When the Klingon battlecruiser recovers and comes nose-to-nose with the unshielded ''Enterprise'', the ship locks photon torpedos and prepares to fire. Kirk just stares, slack-jawed at the view screen for a full ten seconds. This is the first time in the history of Star Trek ''Star Trek'' that we've seen Kirk [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness falter in the command chair]]. He doesn't order shields up, he doesn't order evasive maneuvers, and he doesn't charge weapons, or anything else we expect him to do. He just sits there, staring. . .and then he surrenders. It's terrifying.



---->Chekov: "Shields Captain?"

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---->Chekov: "Shields Captain?"---->'''>Chekov:''' Shields Captain?



---->Chekov: "Shields ''UP'', Captain?"

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---->Chekov: "Shields ---->'''Chekov:''' Shields ''UP'', Captain?"Captain?



---->Valeris: (with barely contained terror) " '''''Captain! OUR SHIELDS!''''' "

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---->Valeris: ---->'''Valeris:''' (with barely contained terror) " '''''Captain! OUR SHIELDS!''''' "SHIELDS!'''''
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* NightmareFuel/StarTrekDiscovery
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*** The scene is also a subtle indication of General Chang's fanaticism, because Chang was aboard ''Qo'noS One'' at the time of the attack. Considering that ''Qo'noS One'' had just sustained heavy damage, and that they were facing a fully-armed and operational Starfleet cruiser commanded by James T. Kirk--a man who eats Klingon battlecruisers as a between-meal snack--the Klingon ship had virtually no chance of winning a firefight with ''Enterprise'', and no reason to expect that Kirk wouldn't defend his ship. This means that General Chang wasn't just willing to die for his cause, he ''expected'' to die for it. Keep in mind that this was a plan that ''he was involved in making''. There's something very unsettling about that level of commitment to a warmongering and racist cause. =

to:

*** The scene is also a subtle indication of General Chang's fanaticism, because Chang was aboard ''Qo'noS One'' at the time of the attack. Considering that ''Qo'noS One'' had just sustained heavy damage, and that they were facing a fully-armed and operational Starfleet cruiser commanded by James T. Kirk--a man who eats Klingon battlecruisers as a between-meal snack--the Klingon ship had virtually no chance of winning a firefight with ''Enterprise'', and no reason to expect that Kirk wouldn't defend his ship. This means that General Chang wasn't just willing to die for his cause, he ''expected'' to die for it. Keep in mind that this was a plan that ''he was involved in making''. There's something very unsettling about that level of commitment to a warmongering and racist cause. =
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*** The scene is also a subtle indication of General Chang's fanaticism, because Chang was aboard ''Qo'noS One'' at the time of the attack. Considering that ''Qo'noS One'' had just sustained heavy damage, and that they were facing a fully-armed and operational Starfleet cruiser commanded by James T. Kirk--a man who eats Klingon battlecruisers as a between-meal snack--the Klingon ship had virtually no chance of winning a firefight with ''Enterprise'', but no reason for them to expect that Kirk wouldn't defend his ship. This means that General Chang wasn't just willing to die for his cause, he ''expected'' to die for it. Keep in mind that this was a plan that ''he was involved in making''. There's something very unsettling about that level of fanaticism.

to:

*** The scene is also a subtle indication of General Chang's fanaticism, because Chang was aboard ''Qo'noS One'' at the time of the attack. Considering that ''Qo'noS One'' had just sustained heavy damage, and that they were facing a fully-armed and operational Starfleet cruiser commanded by James T. Kirk--a man who eats Klingon battlecruisers as a between-meal snack--the Klingon ship had virtually no chance of winning a firefight with ''Enterprise'', but and no reason for them to expect that Kirk wouldn't defend his ship. This means that General Chang wasn't just willing to die for his cause, he ''expected'' to die for it. Keep in mind that this was a plan that ''he was involved in making''. There's something very unsettling about that level of fanaticism. commitment to a warmongering and racist cause. =



** Picard's family including Jean-Luc idolizing, CheerfulChild René--one of the very few children that Picard likes--[[spoiler: dying in a goddamned fire.]]

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** Picard's family family, including Jean-Luc idolizing, CheerfulChild René--one of the very few children that Picard actually likes--[[spoiler: dying in a goddamned fire.]]

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