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The Taelons' fate – and possibly Liam's – is decided after Liam and Renee find Ma'el's regeneration chamber. The discovery of the secret location causes the surviving Taelons and Jaridians to seek the mechanism, which promises to restore their draining energy.
Earth: Final Conflict is a science fiction television series based on ideas developed by Gene Roddenberry.The series was produced under the guidance of his widow, Majel Barrett-Roddenberry, who possessed notes kept by Roddenberry that would provide the conceptual basis for the series.
Taelons: Gene Roddenberry's Earth: Final Conflict: Humanoid Tagorians: Noon Universe: Takeshi Goda (Parallel Planet on the contrary) Doraemon: Humanoid who is the gender-swapped version of Takeshi Goda: Taiidan: Homeworld: Humanoid Tamako Nobi (Parallel Planet on the contrary) Doraemon: Humanoid who is the gender-swapped version of Tamako Nobi ...
Anyway, this other guy also claims reading the same thing about Earth: Final Conflict. While I don't see how this would have worked (how could the Taelons--or their Star Trek-universe equivalents--POSSIBLY be retconned into the Star Trek universe? Would they bring in a new race or use an existing race, e.g. the Vulcans?
Energy beings have a variety of capacities. The Taelons (from Earth: Final Conflict) are barely more powerful than mortals, while others such as Star Trek ' s Q, Stargate SG-1 ' s Ascended Ancients/Ori, Ben 10: Alien Force ' s Anodites, or the Meekrob from Invader Zim possess god-like powers.
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The Taelons (the series' main aliens) also visited Earth many times before initiating first contact in the mid-21st century. In the television series Space Island One (1998), the crew of the Unity encounter a Babylonian space probe, the Tower of Babel having been a rocket rather than a literal tower to reach the heavens.
Earth: Final Conflict (1997–2002): In the fifth and final season of this series, there is an episode, in a departure from the current storyline, that replaces the Taelons with the newly born and more aggressive alien race of energy vampires called the Atavus. Angel (1999): A spinoff of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.