dataweaver wrote:Remember that we're dealing with an alternate reality here where the Zentran were rewritten from being a galactic empire in their own right to being the Robotech Masters' enforcers. With that kind of rewrite being permitted, the changes related to the Protoculture are no big deal:
That's not actually much of a rewrite... the Zentradi went from being a clone army for an extinct precursor species to a clone army for a species that was slowly going extinct.
dataweaver wrote:You don't need the Protoculture for this; just a realization that this region of space is rich in resources that can allow for zero-time folds accepts the galaxy. That alone would be enough motivation to finance an exploratory mission into Vajra space.
dataweaver wrote:Again, you don't need the Protoculture for this; just an understanding of what fold crystals are capable of, and a transhumanism philosophy that sees a galactic have mind as a good thing.
Character motivations are a fairly important part of the story, though.
dataweaver wrote:Thus my various comments about your standards being too strict.
I would be inclined to argue that yours are too loose, since you're essentially set on eliminating significant parts of the stories and settings of those shows. The topic under discussion was not "how can we massively rewrite these titles to theoretically fit
Robotech", but rather "will they fit gracefully without a lot of (re)work". Much of what you're pitching here is a ground-up retooling of the story and setting.
dataweaver wrote:Not so much “coincidence” (which implies that there fundamentally is no explanation for it) as “mystery”: the reason why there's so much generic similarity between humans, Tirolians, and Zentreadi isn't known; but there's a good chance that it's only because the connection between the three groups' origins hasn't been uncovered yet.
They dismiss it as coincidental in the series... not as an unsolved mystery, just as a simple matter of happenstance.
dataweaver wrote:Mmm… no. Robotech does not say that the Zentreadi go extinct; it just doesn't deal with them in Earth space after the Macross Saga.
Scott Bernard makes the implication that the Zentradi are extinct in the New Generation when he wishes the same fate on the Invid. The RTSC materials indicate Breetai took the remaining population of them into space with the UEEF, and we know they were wiped out there in 2043 by friendly fire from the
Icarus.
dataweaver wrote:Seto Kaiba wrote:Moreover, the New UN Government's having incorporated several other alien cultures into itself doesn't really work with Robotech's xenophobic bent. The UEDF and UEEF brass were depicted as being borderline WH40K levels of xenophobic c.2044, and talking about peaceful coexistence was enough to get you clapped in irons even after the Invid occupation ended.
…and yet, there are the Sentinels.
Who, in
Prelude, are treated with open suspicion by most of the UEEF brass. The Admirals Hunter seem to be the only ones who actually trust them, and the ones responsible for actually liaising with them. The rank and file in RTSC itself are heard to espouse a very Imperium-esque view that the only good alien is a dead alien even in casual conversation.
dataweaver wrote:You're repeating yourself; you said all of this in an earlier post (which I didn't respond to individually because I'm usually at work and using my cell phone to respond). I've already agreed, in the quote you're responding to, that the Jenius family is problematic; I'm not sure why you feel the need to repeat that part.
That'd be because they and their family play such a MASSIVE role in events between 2018 and 2051. It really can't be stressed enough.
dataweaver wrote:That said, it's entirely possible that the resolution of the Shadow Chronicles story could resolve some of these issues: we don't know what happened to the Pioneer. If anything like Robotech III: Odyssey is involved (where the SDF-3's misfold resulted in time travel into the distant past), a lot of the Jenius family issues could easily be explained.
We have a pretty good idea, actually. The leaked plot outlines for the rest of the
Shadow Chronicles OVA, which Harmony Gold did their damndest to suppress, indicated that the SDF-3's disappearance was nothing fancier than a simple case of being captured by the Haydonites and used as bait in a trap.
dataweaver wrote:I'll also grant that Exsedol/Exedore might be problematic; though I haven't watched Macross 7, so I can't comment on how significant of a role he plays — and given your (IMHO) overly strict standards, I'm inclined to take your word on his importance with a grain of salt.
He doesn't do a hell of a lot, but he's on display fairly prominently. He's a literal talking head (at giant size, his head sticks up thru a hole in the floor of the
Battle 7's bridge) who serves as the resident Mr. Exposition, though he does tour and decode the Protoculture ruins on Lux, and at one point takes command of
Battle 7 while Max is away. (He also plays a minor role as a dispenser of comedic snark.)
dataweaver wrote:I'll also note, though, that Zand was somehow brought back to life in Robotech, according to Prelude to the Shadow Chronicles; it's possible that something similar could explain a “resurrected” Exedore.
Zand didn't come back to life in a strictly literal sense, it was your standard trope of the character whose alleged death was a coverup for him taking some kind of clandestine assignment.
dataweaver wrote:There stealth thing? Show me a scene in a Macross show where stealth played a noticeable role, as opposed to just being part of the “background technology”, where it's assumed that both sensors and stealth are in an arms race and tend to come out even.
There are actually several.
Macross Zero's first episode has the active stealth-equipped Sv-51 being invisible to the radar of the UN Forces fighters in the area.
Macross Plus has a scene showing the YF-21's active stealth system rendering it invisible to the radar in Isamu's VF-11B even at point-blank range. There's also the Brera's VF-27 being invisible to most sensors prior to him revealing himself to the Frontier NUNS in
Macross Frontier (he got dismissed as a foo fighter when spotted).
Macross Delta has a few examples of active stealth systems being used to sneak past orbital patrols. There are several more examples in side stories, like Ivan Tsari's VF-27 being invisible to Echo Flight's radars in
Macross E.
dataweaver wrote:The Shadow Device thing that Edwards used in PttSC could be thought of as a super-stealth system that was a giant leap forward in effectiveness far beyond where the technology would have been otherwise.
Its demonstrated effectiveness, apart from concealing the Shadow Fighter from the protoculture sensors that only the Invid appear to use, is no greater than the active stealth tech in common use in
Macross... the difference being that, in
Robotech, they don't have countermeasures for it.
dataweaver wrote:The SDF-1 is considered special in Robotech because of the protoculture matrix, not because the ship's design itself is particularly special.
That's actually not correct. The Robotech Masters attribute several systems, such as the barrier system, to it being Zor's ship. The protoculture matrix was the most important detail, but far from the ONLY one.
dataweaver wrote:And where in Macross did The VF-4 figure prominently? Macross Plus?
Macross: Flash Back 2012,
Macross 7 Trash,
Macross R,
Macross VF-X, and
Macross M3 from the main chronology, and
Macross: Eternal Love Song from the
Macross II continuity.
Its most prominent appearances among that would probably be its debut in
Flash Back 2012, its use by the Dancing Skulls special forces team in
Macross M3 (Max and Milia), the NUNS Special Forces using them in
Macross VF-X, and them being the mid-story upgrade for the crew of the
Prometheus II in
Macross: Eternal Love Song.
dataweaver wrote:More generally though: as written, Macross 7 starts in 2045; Macross Frontier is in 2059; and Macross Delta is (I think) in 2067. This is before any adjustments to try to make the Jenius family work. My point is that everything after Macross Plus takes place later than Shadow Chronicles, the “leading edge” of the Robotech timeline. They're all in “the future”; so it's Okay to a certain extent of their technology is more advanced.
I'd agree in principle (and yes,
Delta is set in 2067)... but making such a MASSIVE leap in technology overnight would be really out of place in a setting where Word of God says technology is largely stagnating.
Specs-wise (and yes specs are part of canon in both cases) the state of the art VF in
Robotech c.2044 is barely on par with a 0th Generation VF design like the Sv-51 or VF-0. Not even the thermonuclear-powered variety like the VF-0+ and Sv-52, the conventional jet turbofan powered ones. If you cut over at 2045, how do you explain a 10x+ increase in performance like that? Or the complete 180 in armament, with the new VFs using high-powered rotary cannons and variable ordnance mountings instead of exclusively short-ranged micro-ordnance. Or the sudden return of SSTO capability that went out with the VF-1?
dataweaver wrote:Unless you can back this up with examples, I can't argue the point — because it's just an assertion of opinion at this point.
I've already given a number of examples in previous posts, but if you wish I will work up a list for you.