Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
During a meeting in which Gowron presents another suicidal plan of attack, Worf calls out Gowron as dishonorable. This leads to a duel in which Gowron at first seems to have the upper hand; he breaks Worf's bat'leth and throws him through a glass display board. When Gowron approaches to finish him off, Worf fatally stabs him with a piece of the ...
In 2020, SciFiNow ranked this first of the top ten episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. [16] In 2020, The Digital Fix ranked this episode as the seventh best episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. They thought the episode was "a great Worf story" in which Worf makes his mark as a new member of the cast without dominating the other characters ...
Sisko, Odo, Worf and O'Brien (Colm Meaney) infiltrate a Klingon ceremony to try to expose him in the follow-up episode "Apocalypse Rising", unexpectedly aided by Gowron's top advisor General Martok, with Worf challenging Gowron to a duel with Bat'leths. Worf wins the duel, and is about to deliver the final blow, but Odo realizes in time that ...
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine is the third live-action television series in the Star Trek franchise and aired in syndication from January 1993 through June 1999. There were a total of 173 (original broadcast & DVD) or 176 (syndicated) episodes over the show's seven seasons, which are listed here in chronological order by original airdate, which match the episode order in each season's DVD set.
Worf tries to convince Martok to challenge Gowron, but he refuses, saying he is a loyal soldier of the Empire and has no desire whatsoever to enter politics, let alone become Chancellor. Worf then kills Gowron himself, and rather than accept the title of Chancellor, gives it to Martok ("Tacking into the Wind").
Just when Worf is about to kill Gowron, Odo reveals the false Martok to the crowd, and the Klingons open fire, quickly destroying the Changeling. Gowron realizes that Odo was fed false intelligence that Gowron was the Changeling, which would have led to Gowron's assassination by the Federation, allowing the fake Martok, and therefore the ...
In 2012, Den of Geek ranked this the second-best episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. [8] In 2013, Hollywood.com noted this episode as among the best of Star Trek ' s Klingon content, highlighting it as a satisfying end for Kor. [9] The Hollywood Reporter ranked "Once More unto the Breach" as the 13th best episode of Star Trek: Deep Space ...
In 2019, Screen Rant ranked this episode worst of the ten worst episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. [8] They note that at that time it had a rating of 5.6/10 based on user rankings on the site IMDB. [8] Their criticism of the episode is that Worf treats Jadzia so badly that "Fans hate that Dax and Worf make up at the end."