![klingon homeworld klingon homeworld](https://game-guide.fr/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/startrekonline_003.jpg)
The Federation helped, but didn't save the homeworld itself.Ĭlick to expand.We could argue that most of the energy went straight to subspace. The planetary evacuation was in fact undertaken the TNG Kronos is a major Klingon colony world to which the High Council, the Chancery, and much of the population of the original Kronos was removed. If it's enough energy at that distance to severely shake a starship, it ought to have exterminated all life on the exposed side of the planet, which you'd think they'd have mentioned.Īt any rate, I like Bernd Schneider's hypothesis that TNG's Kronos is not TUC's Kronos. I don't know what to make of the Excelsior's debacle at all.
![klingon homeworld klingon homeworld](https://live.staticflickr.com/7374/27920453921_a2df4cec70_b.jpg)
if it were another planet's moon, I find it hard to buy that the damage could be that great. I always figured that Praxis was Kronos' moon, and a major antimatter storage site, and the Klingons didn't have the sense to bury it so that direct radiation damage wouldn't photodissociate the O3 in the atmosphere of Kronos (or much worse), or to keep discrete sites that wouldn't cook each other off in the event of an accident, or to not stockpile that much near a major population center in the first place. The proliferation of huge-ass, natural or semi-natural FTL phenomena in Treks 6-11 is a bit of a frustrating point, isn't it?