Use Trek sciency technobabble to either spark or move the story forward and don't get too hung up on it, what is more important are the characters, their interactions, relationships and dynamics should always be what really drives the story.
Late joiner to this but I remember asking my chemistry teacher in high school all kinds of scientific questions, much to the chagrin and horror of my classmates. He had a piece of advice that has stuck with me for 20+ years now; whatever you write be consistent. Those who know won't mind if you craft a coherent story with engaging characters that draw them in to the world. Those who mind those details are going to mind no matter what. The rest are just jumping in for the ride.Counterpoint: There is nothing in the realm of the science of this or last century that says an amoeba can be the size of a solar system (TOS:"The Immunity Syndrome"), A spaceship can have a baby (TNG: "A Fistful of Datas"), explosive devices can reproduce like cells (DS9's "self-replicating mines"), or two human beings can travel so fast they mutate into horny pink monitor lizards (VOY: "Threshold.") All that nonsense is canon, and if professional writers got paid to write it, there's no way we should hold a fanfic writer to that standard. It's a matter of taste. Grounded sci-fi may be to your taste, and most of the time it's to my taste, but we always have to keep two things in mind: One, none of these stories work without some level of bullshit inserted into them, and Two, there's an audience for everything.
So, Bynar, what I'd say to you is that there's no way to know for sure how readers will react to what you make up until you actually make it up and present it to them. I can tell you that acceptance of made-up stuff is inversely proportional to the quality of the overall story. The more compelling your narrative, the less anyone will notice anything silly that it contains.
And now I'll say what I always say: Just write the story.
Has anyone ever tweaked a major canon character history to make it work with your fanatic?
Personally, I'm staying far, far away from canon characters. The exception being in my story TIMELINES (link below), most of the characters are canon. While I didn't specifically call them out by name, it should be obvious who that are.Has anyone ever tweaked a major canon character history to make it work with your fanatic?
Is the late 2350's early 2360s too soon for a Bajoran to be in Starfleet?
Any tips on coming up with titles or episode names for fanfics?
All the time. I've been using Star Charts to keep track of the journey my story is taking, and help me select the planets I want to use.Does anyone use a Star Trek Map for reference of the distance between two planets?
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