Star Wars vs. Star Trek

By Adrita Anan

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In the last two decades, two fiction-cult classics of scientific expertise have competed. Both have strong groups of passionate admirers who live and breathe this powerful story. Star Wars and Star Trek certainly share many characteristics that are milestones in science fiction cinema. Although the similarities are unknown, especially when many people confuse their titles with the same one, the illustriousness of each picture is due to distinctions.

Initially a TV series, Star Trek is a space science fiction centered upon a crew of people who work in Starfleet, a humanitarian armada, and space peacekeeping services. The original space opera of Star Wars is a fantasy franchise that revolved around princes, princesses, knighthood, and cavalry in the distant past of a fictional galaxy. The new films directed by J. J. Abrams now revitalize both these hugely popular and successful franchises.

Genres: Star Wars vs. Star Trek

Until recent films, Star Trek had been a religious phenomenon rather than Star Wars and hence did not exert the same fandom and cultural influence as the mainstream. Star Wars has a greater reach and a complicated network of political goals, alien races, personal feuds, and galaxy rule.

Because the presence of the force is a very fantastical concept, Star Wars is classified as science fantasy. On the other hand, Star Trek is considered science fiction because the contents of the films aren’t imaginative and can at least be factual or achievable. But Star Trek and Star Wars both have general frameworks, subjects, and motivations that are both similar and dissimilar.

Backgrounds: Star Wars vs. Star Trek

Star Wars and Star Trek have similar basic backgrounds, but some little internal knowledge distinguishes them.

The aim of Star Wars is to achieve peace. The existence is teeming with life and foreign and human life is intertwined. The underlying principles are Christian, Buddhist, and Jewish. Modern society’s layout may be compared to a utopic society of flower peoples competing with the government to populate in their new waves down by the river in peace and harmony with all of nature.

Star Trek appears to be a more scientific series than Star Wars. The ageless mission is to explore the galaxy and maintain peace. The universe is teeming with scattered life, but foreign and human lives are partially integrated. The implicit belief in Star Trek stems from beliefs that are solely founded on scientific discipline, facts, and the palpable.

Main Character: Star Wars vs. Star Trek

While the most well-known figure in Star Wars is a villain, the most well-known character in Star Trek is Spock, a good man. Spock, or Mr. Spock, is a crew member who is half-human and half-Vulcan. Spock, the first officer of Captain Kirk, uses his brains and intelligence from Vulcan to aid him and his fellow crew members make their decisions during the many trips of Starfleet. Spock is confronted with modest issues throughout the films because he is just a human being. His Vulcan side helps him think in pure logic, therefore he’s often left perplexed when his sensations and emotions come from his human side.

Darth Vader, also called Lord Vader because he’s a Sith Lord, is one of the most iconic characters of Star Wars. Darth Vader (Anakin Skywalker) was a former Jedi who has been enticed and poorly chosen on the dark side. He looks quite frightening with his clothing and has tremendous strength. He has an overall somber aspect and is dressed in complete black. He has an incredibly deep, raspy voice that through his dark helmet sounds mechanical. Darth Vader is a hard-working and unpardoned leader, to whom few have dared stand.

Nevertheless, other characters in Star Wars and Star Trek have similarities and distinctions.

Other Characters: Star Wars vs. Star Trek

Hard stranger existence tends to hold Star Wars. Droids are about people with small planning constraints but they resemble manikins of tins and gold foil. The leaders are untimely, inexperienced, and impassioned rebels. Star Wars appears to appeal to a younger audience.

Star Trek’s alien life can range from the most primitive to the most advanced life signifiers, such as traveling sludge to mind manipulating dwarfs. Droids have emotional and visual characteristics that are similar to humans. Star Trek’s commanders are high-achieving innovators who are in their forties and fifties, exceedingly experienced, and unwilling to compromise a mission based on their feelings.

Weapons: Star Wars vs. Star Trek

Star Wars has got superior weapons. Lightsabers (very dignified brightness swords that slash Ti doors as an atomic-powered chain saw); laser chargeman, planet-destroying canons, and mysterious energy known as “The Force” are all featured in Star Wars. Most Star Wars ships can move their ships to different galaxies in seconds at light speed. In addition, radically shaped conflict ships and conflict Stations add to the arm armory.

Star Trek is apparently attacking engineering more realistically. Star Trek has hapless tasers that look like garage door openers but can be programmed to stun rather than zap to continue life Star Trek spacecraft have deflection velocity, which is called “light speed” in Star Wars. The spaceships are streamlined and appealing, yet they have a more realistic and functional appearance.

We must keep in mind that creativity was the only one connected to a scientific field film on the last frontier, in a faraway galaxy a long time ago. Star Wars and Star Trek are both comparable in their basic attack, but they are both so diverse that each may also be fully seen as their main single fable. The two films enthrall viewers of all ages and ethnicities. These two classics will be made by people for coevals to come independently of the rock-ribbing enthusiasts’ micro-examination. Hopefully, Star Wars and Star Trek will be eclipsed by another series of science fiction films eventually. But, as literacies have stated about Shakespeare, his works, great storytelling, and Star Wars and Star Trek will go unrecorded in perpetuity.

                                                                    Authored By

                                                                                          Adrita Anan

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