1. The Narada from the 1st of the Star Trek Reboots
2. The Enterprise D from Next Generation
3. The Enterprise E from the Next Generation Movies
4. A Borg Cube
Thanks for your feedback!

Moderator: Vympel
What are the Borg like in the AU anyways? I mean basic concepts such as the speed of warp drive has been revised, so what impact would it have on the Collective?A Borg cube would probably steamroller the Vengeance pretty easily, given that the only time Starfleet has actually destroyed a Borg cube involved a gigantic fleet and Picard's residual connection to the collective.
it's certainly possible, problem being that we really don't see the Vengence at it's intended role.Borgholio wrote:I'm wondering if the big guns really were designed as bombardment weapons...against a station or planetary target perhaps.
No, what we need is to have the Big E take on a ROMULAN ship or two.Borgholio wrote:We need the next movie to have the big E taking on a Klingon ship or two.
And what competent Starfleet Intelligence officer will plan defenses based on this assumption? 'Into Darkness' had Khan declare himself as such, and Kirk's crew claimed the same- that Khan wasn't representative of the Federation- when the Klingons caught them on Q'onoS, trying to catch Khan himself. Did the Klingons buy that? If you were a Klingon forensic investigator, trying to find out how and why a Starfleet vessel penetrated Klingon defenses and then killed a bunch of Klingon warriors ON THE KLINGON HOME WORLD, would you buy that?Gandalf wrote:He's racially Romulan, but not politically Romulan. That much is obvious when he states that he doesn't represent the Empire, because they "stand apart." He's a lone nut with a loyal crew and a big gun.
That may be a welcome change from the recent movies' "pew-pew lasers light show," but as Chuck noted in his 'Transformers' review, sci-fi movies' special effects cost MONEY, and with the amount they must invest to make the movie, the studios will want to "play it safe."Personally, I'd like to see the next film have no ship combat, just awesome discovery stuff.
This just demonstrates Marcus is incompetent or insane- and by consequence, the scriptwriters are incompetent for make such an incompetent character a military leader in a non-comedy movie. Can you imagine Adm Ernest King brushing off Office of Naval Intelligence reports on the "potential new Japanese threat" in January 1942, i.e., AFTER THE JAPANESE ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR?DaveJB wrote:It wouldn't surprise me if Starfleet Intelligence actually did start drawing up information on a potential new Romulan threat, only for Admiral Marcus to brush it off because he was convinced that the Klingons were the real threat and/or thought it wouldn't matter either way with all the superweapons Khan was making for him.
On the other hand, Narada's weapons effortly destroy entire fleets of nuTrek ships with one or two shots. Vengeance is built a lot bigger and tougher... but that much?Elheru Aran wrote:*sigh* "So would the rest, I think"? Such a compelling argument.
Consider: the Vengeance was made to fight a war, not explore. It's a battleship rather than a starship. Yes, the Narada is from the "future", but that doesn't automatically make it better.
Of course, the Borg cube also outguns the Enterprise-D, by at least an order of magnitude, so that suggests the cube has a decisive edge over the Vengeance.The Borg cube also has a decent chance as well, but Ent-D and Ent-E would be more of a match. Ent-D in particular would probably lose-- while it's a big craft, the Vengeance outguns it.
Hey, it worked for Avatar.Sidewinder wrote:That may be a welcome change from the recent movies' "pew-pew lasers light show," but as Chuck noted in his 'Transformers' review, sci-fi movies' special effects cost MONEY, and with the amount they must invest to make the movie, the studios will want to "play it safe."Personally, I'd like to see the next film have no ship combat, just awesome discovery stuff.
There are references to superheavy 'dreadnought' ships built using the same technology as the Constitution-class, but larger and more powerful, in the TOS era. Wish I could remember where from; it's from some of the Trek EU novels.Lord Revan wrote:Tbh we don't know what the Romulan Star Empire did after the Narada incident, it's been at least months between Star Trek(2009) and Star Trek Into Darkness, for all we know The Romulans did their best to convince that Nero was in fact acting alone and UFP has no reason to ally with the Klingons to wipe them out.
Personally I think the Dreadnaught-class was something Starfleet had been working also in the prime-verse but there, it was shut down as an unneeded drain on resources, while in Abrams verse the apprence of the Narada allowed Admiral Marcus to demand the extra resouces.Spoiler
What? On what do you base that statement?Eternal_Freedom wrote:Into Darkness takes place after Praxis has exploded (early apparently)
He's probably basing it on the existence of the debris field around the planet.What? On what do you base that statement?
And it's implied that the Vengeance was in response to the Naranda.Elheru Aran wrote: Consider: the Vengeance was made to fight a war, not explore. It's a battleship rather than a starship. Yes, the Narada is from the "future", but that doesn't automatically make it better.
Unless the Vengeance's registry is 74656, a cube will rape it.The Borg cube also has a decent chance as well,
The E-D's worst enemy is it's own warp core, if the Vengeance can output a volume of fire to overload the shields...just one more torpedo to the back of the neck will kill the E-D.but Ent-D and Ent-E would be more of a match. Ent-D in particular would probably lose--
I would hypothesize that the Vengeance makes up for the 100 year tech gap at the expense of efficiency, as an example the ship would have larger torpedos that match 24 century yields (the V has bigger 'coffins')while it's a big craft, the Vengeance outguns it. Ent-E is a closer match in firepower but we don't know how much of a match exactly.
Given that some 24th century designs like the E-D are literally held together by their structural integrity fields, that's true.One thing to bear in mind is that nu-Trek ships are apparently built far tougher than old-Trek. The Enterprise re-entered Earth atmosphere without power and came to a screeching halt before it lifted off again. That'd have shredded most old-Trek ships with ease.