The scene where Andromeda attacks the other ships to help Tyr Anasazi escape is taken from the episode "Angel Dark, Demon Bright" when Andromeda is destroying the Nietzschean Fleet.
Goof: Andromeda lists some of the approaching enemy ships as belonging to the Bokor. In the episode "Dance of the Mayflies", the Bokor is actually a microscopic organism that reproduces by invading living beings and kills them in order to utilize their bodies. Therefore, the Bokor have no set ship designs by which to identify them. Unless she scanned the lifeforms on all the approaching ships, there's no way Andromeda could have known the Bokor were involved in the attack.
The opening quote from this episode comes from CY 11745 while this episode takes places in CY 10089, 1656 years earlier. This is one of very few to come from the future. Others include: "Under the Night (1)" and "An Affirming Flame (2)".
The opening quote was said by the Clarion's Call, Ryan's ship from "The Knight, Death, and the Devil".
Goof: The Balance of Judgment said he'd spent three years living inside Rommie's mind, but he entered it towards the end of Season One, and it's now towards the end of Season Three, so he'd only been there for two years.
Nitpick: Tyr's son, Tamerlane, was last seen one year before this episode. He's grown way too much in one year unless, of course Nietzschean superiority includes the greatly accelerated growth of their young.
Nitpick: In the episode "Cui Bono", Beka told Dylan that Sid could take the Maru because he knew the access codes to launch the ship. If you need launch codes to fly the Maru, how did the Princess get them? She must be one heck of a skilled hacker!
Goof: If the corrosive material being fired at the Andromeda in the first act came from outside, and a hull breach is "imminent", how is it that the corrosive material got inside?
Goof: During the scene in which the "princess" observes the "fire at will" transmission, the International Business Machine logo is clearly visible at the top of the transmission monitor.
The Andromeda is fully crewed in this episode.
Goof: During the firefight on the Maru, Beka is shown beginning to climb up a ladder, then the scene cuts to her finishing her climb downwards off the ladder.
Harper: Yes, oh Glorious-Creation-Of-Mine-With-The-World's-Crappiest-Timing?
At the time Harper says the above, it is actually Andromeda's AI speaking to Harper, NOT Rommie, who he did create.
Trance uses a bonsai tree in this episode to travel back in time. In Season One's "Angel Dark, Demon Bright", when Trance 'accidentally' took the crew back in time and defeated the Nietzscheans at the battle of Witchhead Nebula, the episode ended with her pruning one of her trees, then saying "That's better", giving a first hint that her ability to affect fate is connected to her hobby.
We see that the Andromeda is not fully crewed, but has a security team and a few others.
Trance's pruning of the bonsai tree was never supposed to be a literal manifestation of her ability to affect fate, but just metaphor for the way she has chosen to shape the future.
It is revealed Trance was on board the Andromeda minutes before it got frozen 300 years ago.
Nitpick: One of the patrons of the bar where Dylan, Tyrand Beka go to meet their contact sneers at Tyr for being a Nietzschean. But Tyr no longer has his forearm bone spikes, the most readily identifiable sign of the Nietzschean race, so how did the man know his racial identity at a glance?
Harper says the last time Trance slip-piloted, they wound up back in time. Future-Trance has slip-streamed since then, she did in Season Two "In Heaven Now are Three". Trance (version 1) also slip-piloted during the first season finale. While that resulted in meeting the Magog Worldship, that wasn't her fault. It could also be argued that the first "mistake" wasn't one at all, but rather Trance making sure that Dylan and Andromeda would stop the Nietzscheans from becoming too powerful for them to bring back the Commonwealth upon their return.
Slow aging is not no aging. The crew of the Bellerophon apparently travel so fast that time passes very slowly for them but not for those outside. A few months of their time is more than 57 years of real time. However, since they claimed to have spent 20 years of their time, which is almost 3000 years regular time, why are the crew not older? Some of the crew must have started the trip in their teens or younger if they have aged 20 years.
Sid doesn't seem to be going by the name "Sam Profit" anymore, as he was back in "The Pearls That Were His Eyes".
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