As has been said before, victories against the goa'uld needed to be few and far between. They needed to be hard won minor victories, and there needed to be nearly as many losses. I can't think of any other way to preventvilain decay in any work of fiction. SGC needed to be the underdog by several orders of magnitude, not the holy-shit-out-of-nowhere snakehead curbstompers they were.
I could not stant the asgard, they were nothing but a prolongd dues ex machina. Tau'ri need something? Asgard are there! Tau'ri fucked? Asgard save the day! How long would you watch a seris if it were any more overt and regularly ended episodes with "God did it, they lived happily ever after?"
This is an excellent idea. I would give you food if I couldAdrian Laguna wrote:In Stargate, status quo has been generally maintained for some ten thousand years. As such, pretty much everybody is unaccustomed to all out war. Conflict tends to be resolved by intimidation, or limited to raids and skirmishes.... So, what the Tau'ri have to offer is over 3000 years of experience in organized brutality.
A better comparison than Afghanistan at this point might be Nepal. Tiny mountainous country, out of the way, low population, few resources, not much to write home about. Yet, it provided something invaluable to the British Empire, which boasted both record size and unchallenged mastery of the seas. One word: Ghurkas. Except the Tau'ri are even better. They are like Ghurkas, spec-ops commandos, military advisers, and scientific experts all rolled into one neat package. The general idea is that the SGC does not have the resources, firepower, or manpower to take on the Goa'uld directly. That part is handled in the background by other players, whose space and ground forces can match the Goa'uld. The role of the SG teams is give advanced training to these forces, assist in developing operational plans, conduct irregular warfare against the System Lords, and (most importantly) search the Stargate network for more allies and Ancient doodads.
That gave me an image of a bunch of guys with swords suddenly appearing in Bush's ranch in Texas on one of his many, many vacations.Big Orange wrote:Ra's assassination in the movie seemed like a big fluke: the ruler of the known Milky Way was visting a remote resource planet onboard his pleasure ship with only a small entourage due to his relaxed attitude that is understandable because Abydos was deep in his territory far away from the borders of his significant rivals and major non-Gou'ald powers. It was stupid luck Ra was as relatively unprotected as he was on his "holiday ranch" when suddenly a small army of USAF commandos burst through a long dormant stargate and while clearly technologically inferior were still well armed enough to sweep aside Ra's bodyguards and destroy his pyramid yacht.
Gods, I hated the Ori! There were SO many good alternatives to "MORE SUPER-DUPER UNSTOPPABLE BAD GUYS POSING AS GODS!!Big Orange wrote:...why were the Ori dreamt up in the first place? Why were so much like the Gou'ald in almost evey way culturally, even their human minions were virtual carbon copies of the more iconic Jaffa!
EDIT: My keyboard sticks andII'm impatient t hit "submit," hence many typos.