Of course whose to say such a world as that wouldn’t actually be a globe, with volcanic activity in the south pole resulting in an arid desert and jungles, offset by the equatorial ice rings? Such a planet owing to its large size would need to be much less dense than Earth or else gravity would be crushing - perhaps with the core of the planet consisting of lighter, stronger elements, such as certain carbon structures, with the volcanic activity being largely superficial as opposed to being driven by a dynamo effect. Orbiting contra-rotating rings in prograde and retrograde orbits of iron or other metals might generate a magnetosphere that would provide shielding from cosmic rays, and these would roughly correspond to the ice rings, but would also pose a hazard to astrogation, with perhaps the safest route being a rapid deceleration from a high geostationary orbit and the gently maintaining a tight circling pattern above the landing speed at say, mach 5, which would preclude most atmospheric braking, so obviously such a planet would be accessible only to galactic civilizations with more advanced propulsion technologies, such as fusion rockets, or better yet, matter/antimatter based power.
Or alternately, we could avoid all that by mapping this world to the interior wall of a Dyson sphere, except, dang it, it turns out those are impossible to build. So much for the TNG episode “Relics.”
By the way i do wish Star Trek would do a nice graphical transporter accident, like in GalaxyQuest. I wanted to see the mess at Starfleet Command following the transporter malfunction in Star Trek: The Motion Picture that killed Commander Sonak and the navigator. According to the novelization, they formed with their organs outside their bodies! Alas, for 1979 for a G rated film that would be unthinkable, but let us not forget, ALIEN came out around the same time and was even more gruesome, so there is that.