A sense of 'wonder' is achieved by allowing the story to reflect that; I personally do not equate technobabble and gadgetry and gizmos as 'wondrous'. More like 'boring'.Thirdfain wrote:I disagree wholeheartedly. Sci Fi can aim to be wonderous and fantastic, but it can also be used as a backdrop for very mundane, human stories- tales of politics, human corruption, and hope.
B5 is very wondrous. Why? It's story is oft-times down to earth, particularly the politics and Londo's scheming and the Clark's takeover of EarthGov. A lot of that is what you call the 'mundane, human' element. However, the wondrous part is when Sheridan appears in Larger than Life form via Draal's holographic technology, and calmly announces B5's secession. THAT's wonder. THAT's fantastic. Not so much the fact Draal has the technology to make that possible, but Sheridan has the idea of using it for that effect.
Or the Great Machine on Epsilon 3 is another example; it's just there, it's a product of some other civilisation's construction, and it's off limits to everyone else. It was never used as a Deus Ex Machina throughout the entirety of the show (although there were times when it could have been used for that effect, and it would have been perfectly justified).
Note that the difference between the GMoE3 and a 'black hole bomb' or 'FTL missile' is that the latter are just technowank for technowank's sake, while the former inhabits it's own little niche of the setting. It was there before B5 was constructed, it will be there long after it's pieces fall into a decaying orbit. It's a mystery; like the Walkers of Sigma 957. It is a 'machine' but it's wondrous not because of being a piece of technology, but for having a story about it. It has an origin, but it's left an enigma - thereby, the B5 universe is enriched thanks to it's inclusion.
I agree with this as well; wonder is NOT achieved with a 'weapon of the week' or a 'particle of the week' solution, or reconfiguring the deflector dish as it's the Enterprise's swiss army knife; that's bullshit. Wonder is achieved by reminding the reader of the scope and scale of the universe: showing Sinclair and Ivanova look as ants when compared to the inner workings of the GMoE3. Or when Cat Sakai's ship was swarfed by the Walkers, and later on so was the White Star.The spacetravel is just a tool for creating a unique, interesting setting. Adding extraneous, weird, or ridiculous technology seems pretty useless to me.
Would you consider the Great Machine of Epsilon 3 to be 'extraneous'? Or 'rediculous'?