![]() ![]() Spock, who had not believed a single starship could defeat the Doomsday Machine, remained troubled "I cannot help wondering if there are any more of these weapons wandering around the universe," the Vulcan said. Though Decker lost his life when he blew up a shuttle inside the planet killer's maw, Kirk later destroyed it by turning Decker's ship, the Constellation, into a giant explosive. ![]() Logically, he concurred with Kirk's belief that the creators of this monstrosity no longer existed to turn off the weapon. ![]() Spock hypothesized that the Doomsday Machine came from outside the galaxy. Kirk dubbed it "The Doomsday Machine" because it reminded him of a hydrogen bomb - a weapon so deadly that neither side would really benefit from its use in a war. Kirk in the classic Star Trek episode "The Doomsday Machine." The titular devil, a massive weapon that powered itself by destroying planets, was advancing steadily toward the most densely populated region of the Milky Way. "They say there's no devil, Jim, but there is, right out of hell - I saw it," Commodore Matt Decker told Captain James T. Wildstorm Sets Smith and Rusch on a Planet Killer ![]()
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