Sons of Kyuss are not composed of worms, but are rather worm-infested corpses. They look very much like zombies (at least until you get within 30 feet of them and hit their fear effect).
He seems to have some sort of tech glove on his hand. And all the things he moves are metal, so I think it is some sort of magnetic gadget that he uses. He could be familiar with tales of Jedi, their actions, and their code from his pre-Empire childhood or from the less restrictive attitude...
I kinda agree about the "exploring the multiverse stuff," but it would provide a great way for a new show to bring in a wide array of Star Trek actors and actresses to do voice work (as S5E9 showed us -- who had Lily Sloane and Elim Garak and Harry Kim meeting up on their bingo card? :ROFLMAO: )
Another great retrospective article, but the pedantic part of me must point out that the slithering tracker was in the AD&D 1E Monster Manual. This issue from 1984 is years before 2E was even a thing.
Just a nitpick for clarity: Ian Holm played Ash, the android science officer. John Hurt played Kane, the facehugged.
The three androids in the first four Alien movies are A, B, C: Ash, Bishop, and Call. This one should have been a D name...
Kudos to the 4 actresses playing Valya/younger Valya and Tula/younger Tula. Besides the physical resemblance, they have clearly worked on matching mannerisms, voice, and speech patterns and do an excellent job, IMO.
I have no experience in this realm beyond supporting many projects on Kickstarter, BackerKit, and a few smaller crowdfunding platforms, but at first glance I don't see how the platform (and their differences) will influence pledging patterns. I believe the reverse J (or an L with big serifs ;)...
Sounds like you consider only contact with a face of an internal cube to spread the fire, and not contact along an edge? IMO a normal web spell can burn for at most 2 (or possibly 3) rounds. A 20-foot cube of webs has 8 5-foot cubes within it. Any one cube within in it directly contacts all the...