Vou dizer q mesmo sempre achando a Winona Ryder linda nem reparei q era ela.
Concordo com Anica, serie é mais legal pois tem mais episodios mais rapido^^
nao vi ST: enterprise (sou da velha gereção mesmo)
The Kobayashi Maru (1989) by Julia Ecklar tells how each of these officers faced the problem:
* Chekov evacuates his ship and then crashes it into the three Klingon cruisers, destroying all four ships in the process and (inadvertently) all of the evacuees as well.
* Sulu realizes it is probably a trap and refuses to cross the Neutral Zone.
* Scotty attempts to fight the Klingon ships, employing a series of unorthodox tactics, such as bypassing the Klingon shields using a works-on-paper-only calculation (the failure-to-work-in-practice demonstration experiment was published by Scotty before he joined Starfleet and this fore-knowledge of theory/practice results in his being judged unsuitable for command track and sent off to engineering, as he actually desired), and transporting various destructive items to them. At first, he is surprisingly effective, but the computer scenario ups the ante with the arrival of additional Klingon ships. Scotty responds in kind with even more unorthodox tactics that rapidly escalate in on-the-fly engineering derring-do and destructiveness. He eventually loses to a staggering fleet of 15 ships, but claims that if there had been an actual engineering room in which he could have preformed his instructions himself, they would have been destroyed as well. This example proves it clear that the simulation will never end, no matter what the student throws at the Klingon ships, as an ever-increasing number of Klingon vessels will arrive on the scene, guaranteeing that the testee will lose eventually.
* Kirk reprograms the simulated Klingons to be afraid of "The Captain Kirk," arguing that he expected to build a comparable reputation.
O Scotty é foda