I mean, I kind of want to avoid further arguing, but yeah. I really feel that. I could have sworn I talked about that, but looking back at my ranting, I must have left that out. So I'll say I completely acknowledge that westerns and sitcoms and dramas and the like have the luxury of not being bogged down by world building. They have both a visual as well as a literal vocabulary that we're all familiar with so the ball can get rolling much quicker. That said, maybe part of the flaw in sci-fi writing is that the writers are a bit too worried about world building sometimes? I mean, how hard is it to say "It's a fucking spaceship with anti-matter engines. We're not going to take the time to explain it because that's what it is and fucking deal with it so we can get on to addressing whether or not it's morally acceptable to tell this stone age civilization that gladiatorial combat is immoral." I mean, at this point, I'm beating a dead horse but I'm honestly not concerned about space ships. I'm concerned about characters being compelling and realistic. Dude. Maybe it's because DS9 is literally brand new to me, but I would easily watch it, frustrations and all, over the majority of the shit being pushed by Marvel and DC right now. Shit, it's getting to the point where I think I'm gonna stop keeping track of The Valiant Universe. I don't know if you're actively reading anything right now, I'm assuming you're not, but let me tell you, it's baaad. That's all you. I know what tickles my imagination. :)You literally held DS9 to be worse than Brooklyn 99. And your justification is "the writing sucks and the writers suck."
Given an hour in which everything about the world is known (Brooklyn 99) or an hour in which a new concept must be explained, explored and then resolved (DS9), much less of the hour can be devoted to the decorum you so crave.
There's a reason 99% of it these days is fuckin' superhero dreck.
But most people wouldn't accuse science fiction of being crap but Kaiju films of being great.
So long as we're clear that we're talking about your imagination, not an objective assessment of science fiction as a genre, we're all good. You have to worry about the world-building. You need to build enough of a universe where aliens have been bred to relish their role as prey for a hunting species for the audience to accept it and confront the implications thereof. You? You get wrapped around the axle on O'Brien the military man who Would Never Do That (perhaps that's part of the world they're building...). You also come into this with a hell of a detriment: nobody watched DS9 without having been sheep-dipped in two series of Star Trek before hand. There is literally no one on the planet except you who said "you know what? I think I'll ignore the two series that the nerds actually like and focus on the one in the universe that people think is ehh at best before moving on to Voyager, the series most people hate so I can talk about how much sci fi sucks." There are great swaths of TNG that suck. There are many episodes of the original Star Trek that fans would rather forget. But DS9 will always be "another series in the Star Trek Universe" that completists watch and nobody else cares about. If you really wanna get your dork on, go sit through The Animated Series and try and wrap canon around that. The Federation vs. Kzin. "Any script in a storm."
Complaints about those two episodes aside, I don't think I'm struggling too much with DS9 just because I've learned from comics to just take shit as it's thrown at you. The major reason I'm watching it is because I've been told it's gonna explore themes that interest me as an individual (war and religion apparently, from what I can gather). I have no intention of watching Voyager or Enterprise because if they're series that even the fans of the universe don't like, then there is no way, I as a non-fan, can expect to appreciate them. That said, one of my work friends said, in terms of OG and Next Gen, that if you just watch random episodes at random times, with no schedule commitment, and not binge watch them, they're much easier to appreciate. What are your thoughts on that? Oh. Wow. A Star Trek cartoon. What is the consensus on that? I have to know. I can't imagine I'd enjoy it. As for watching the rest of the series of DS9, I promise to try my best to be more malleable and not let my complaints draw me out of the fun. If you really wanna get your dork on, go sit through The Animated Series and try and wrap canon around that.