In an attached clip from the video ā€œgameā€ Star Trek: Klingon (in-universe an educational holodeck program), a holographic Gowron violently shakes the player and yells player, ā€œWhen I say jump out of an airlock, you will JUMP OUT OF AN AIRLOCK!ā€

My question is, outside of edge cases where itā€™s actually necessary to win a battle, would this level of order-following actually align with proper Klingon theology?

I feel like this would be an honorless death (kind of like if your commander told you to stab yourself with a dā€™k tahg), and thus if you were actually given an order like this, the proper Klingon thing to do would be to challenge your commanding officer to honorable combat. I could see a more Martokian view that honor demands you follow your commander, though, but I feel like even he would have limits.

I can think of three explanations for what Gowron said: 1) Itā€™s simply a hyperbole. 2) Gowron isnā€™t exactly a beacon of Klingon honor (as seen in the last episodes of DS9), so maybe itā€™s a misinterpretation. 3) Itā€™s a mistake in the program. Either itā€™s a glitch if it was made in cooperation with the Klingons or it was done entirely by Federation researchers who messed up a bit.

Obviously, this game falls more in Memory Beta territory, but Iā€™d argue itā€™s reasonably canon, as itā€™s basically screen (live action or animated) Star Trek and a song in this game was later canonized in DS9.

  • MalikMuaddibSoong@startrek.website
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    arrow-down
    1
    Ā·
    11 hours ago

    How about a Worfian view on on honor:

    In war, there is nothing more honourable than victory.

    Worf would absolutely jump out an airlock, drunk on honour, if it would actually mean victory.

    But Worf wouldnā€™t jump out just to die for Gowronā€™s lulz.