• they/them

plural system in Seattle, WA (b. 1974)
lots of fictives from lots of media, some horses, some dragons, I dunno. the Pnictogen Wing is poorly mapped.

host: Mx. Kris Dreemurr (they/them)

chief messenger and usual front: Mx. Chara or Χαρά (they/them)

other members:
Mx. Frisk, historian (they/them)
Monophylos Fortikos, unicorn (he/him)
Kel the Purple, smol derg (xe/xem)
Pim the Dragon, Kel's sister (she/her)


is there worse Klingon representation than what you get from Christopher Lloyd &c. in Star Trek III? I used to have a lingering fondness for that particular "Star Trek" movie because not only was it the first Trek movie we ever saw—can't quite remember the circumstances but it was probably a grade-school thing—but it might have been the first ever time we watched anything "Star Trek" at all. I don't remember getting into broadcast-TV reruns of the original Star Trek until later, anyway, and then TNG came along when I was in high school.

it's not a great movie but I can't dislike a film that's got, like, disembodied SOUL representation. and being miraculously raised from the dead. even a joke about plurality!

~Chara


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in reply to @pnictogen-wing's post:

At around that time, people said that about TNG, because the original series Klingons didn't have any background and the only comprehensive theories that fans had came from a FASA game supplement that painted them as somewhere between British colonization companies and hedge fund corporate raiders, rather than pseudo-Vikings.

my personal least favorite kingons are probably either the ones depicted as one dimensional dumb brutes in "the Killing Game" who follow Neelix, or the one Q makes to be Worf's romantic partner in "Hide and Q" who crawls around on the ground looking pathetic, but Christopher Lloyd definitely makes an odd klingon too