The Phays mentioned that she was feeding her children, yet Stambob talks about how there’s something being put into it that’s bad. Pew pew! Believe it or not, this is all part of a complicated plan to grow fresh food.įood is pretty important here. Meanwhile, Kirk phasers some plant equipment in hydroponics and imagines Klarr’s face on it. And in this mission, they keep following Kirk around and being passive-aggressive. The Klingons barge in, asking for answers, and are unhappy that McCoy wants to treat the woman back on the Enterprise.Īm I the only person who never liked the Klingons as villains or allies? Bunch of paranoid bullies with single-minded dispositions. However, understanding never happened and she’s nearly a vegetable as a result. Spock does a mind-meld with the woman in the corner, who apparently gorged on the library computer in an effort to try to understand who made the ship and what is going on. In another room we meet the Phays, a “food-fixated mothering computer” that keeps swapping between referring to itself as “I” and “we.” It seems to think that all of the people on the ship are its children (of sorts) and ignores Kirk’s entreaty to stop trying to land the ship in the middle of a settlement. Wonder if I just won myself a space-time teddy bear too. Scans from the tricorder reveal that the playhouse is actually a space-time portal. The Klingons beam in to do their own search of the ship, which I predict will quickly end in bloodshed.Īgain, nothing is quite as it seems here. These guys are more like a gang, with the ringleader to the right there. Fortunately, Uhuru is descended from royalty, so the king treats with her and then leaves.Īnother room, another collection of disturbed people. ![]() And a cactus that probably thinks that it’s a cactus. More examples of Hollywood crazy here: a big man being a little baby and a guy who thinks that he’s a king. Talking to the two people here give the feeling that we’ve stepped into some sort of mental institution, as they’re textbook Hollywood “crazy.” McCoy examines them and notes that both have some physical issues going on, while Spock tricorders the plants and discovers that none of them are on file, but all have similarities to real plants. Might want to change that red shirt, Uhura! The away team beams over to the alien ship, joined this time by Uhura (because of possible communications issues). At least the Klingons don’t want to fight. The Klingons are there to defend their interests (Atabis is a disputed planet) and the aliens… no idea. Showing up at Atabis, the Enterprise encounters two strange sights: a Klingon battlecruiser and a giant alien ship. ![]() That sounds more fun than stuffy Romulans, so away we go! Then another call comes in, a planetary invasion of Atabis. Kirk is loathe to violate the treaty, so he ignores the call. First up is a Romulan sub-commander who broadcasts a distress call from the Neutral zone. Episode 7 starts out in a wild flurry of huge events. Now that shore leave is over, it’s back to the stars - and in a big way. You can follow the entire series on the Retro Gaming page.) (This is part of my journey going checking out Star Trek Judgment Rites.
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