File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
>> Anonymous
I see no Intrepid class. It's all good.

It is actually nice to see some CG trek stuff rendered well, and without some nerd's silly fantasy ships. Still, could be bigger.
>> Anonymous
That's the kind of epic shit they needed to put into the later few Star Trek movies. Insurrection was boring. It was like watching a really long episode of the series (Nothing TERRIBLY wrong with that but they can do so much more). Nemesis sucked balls. Story seemed completely random and a lot of continuity gets fucked up without explanation right off the bat. And for those who know the story in Nemesis, you'll know what I mean when I say that it failed to deliver in EPIC-NESS (like OP's pic).
>> Anonymous
oh, and First Contact was the SHIT
>> Woraug
Just my nerd side showing.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but when a certain class of ship is the flag ship (In this case, the Enterprise E, sovereign class) isn't it sposed to be the only one of it's kind in Starfleet, until a new flagship comes and it's a different class? Since I see two sovereign class ships there.
>> Anonymous
>>89125
Whichever one comes out alive gets the promotion obviously.
>> Xen !2vGYxLwb5g
>>89125
Well, the Enterprise-E actually can't be the only Sovereign-class ship, because the first ship of every class shares its name with the class. Besides the Enterprise, there has to be at least a U.S.S. Sovereign, and possibly other ships of that class.

Just because it's the flagship doesn't mean it's unique. The Enterprise-D kind of attained that status as TNG went on, and it definitely wasn't the only Galaxy-class ship.

I'm such a nerd for this kind of stuff.
>> Anonymouzzz
From wikipedia... "the flagship of a fleet is usually the best-equipped, and most famous ship from whence orders come."

teh win, nothing about uniqueness

Otherwise the Enterprise C would be a flagship... or something, since it was the only one of its type left in TNG
>> Anonymous
Flagships need not be the best. They're called "Flagships" because that's the ship that a fleet's Admrial chooses to fly his flag from. (i.e. make his command ship)

A good example was the U.S.S. Augusta. While it was smaller compared to the battleships of the Atlantic fleet, it was chosen to be the flagship by the then Admrial CinClant in 1940.

http://www.internet-esq.com/ussaugusta/history/herstory.htm