PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Star Trek (franchise)
rdfs:comment
  • Paramount Pictures, owner of the Star Trek franchise, does not consider anything other than the live action Star Trek television series and films canon. Nevertheless, there are licensed comic and prose stories, and these have very occasionally referenced the DWU.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:tardis/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Paramount Pictures, owner of the Star Trek franchise, does not consider anything other than the live action Star Trek television series and films canon. Nevertheless, there are licensed comic and prose stories, and these have very occasionally referenced the DWU. * The Star Trek novel makes an indirect reference to the Time Lords, a direct reference to Metebelis crystals and features cameos by the Second Doctor and the Fourth Doctor. * Several Star Trek stories have mentioned "" as Starfleet engineering tools. For instance, the novel , the eBook and novel . * A direct reference to the Doctor Who franchise is made in the novel , which describes USS Enterprise crewmembers watching a Fourth Doctor episode. * 's time travel novel features a number of minor, but intentional, references to the DWU. [1]. * Time is described as "a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, time-wimey . . . stuff", as in TV: Blink. * The character of is a conflation of the names Rani Chandra and Anjli Mohindra. * A ship named the appears, which Bennett claims to have named after producer Verity Lambert. * The , archenemies of the already established , were named after Shirna, the partner of Vorg, who both appeared in TV: Carnival of Monsters. * A "large, blue, boxlike artefact" is seen in a Federation storehouse of alien time travel devices. * A planet is described as having "silver trees and an orange sky", with inhabitants who have been monitoring history for thousands of years — thus making it an apparent analogue of Gallifrey. * The Tigellian chronic hysteresis is a reference to Tigella. * Other extremely incidental references are also in the book, but they are obscured by bad spelling on the author's part (such as the fact that a character is supposedly named after Peter Purves, but spelled Purvis) or deliberate obfuscation (such as a unit of measurement named the "maloc", which is supposedly a tip of the hat to the "malcolm" from TV: Planet of the Dead) * The novel describes the death of Kathryn Janeway as a "fixed point in time". (TV: The Waters of Mars)