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Again written by Beyer and Johnson, Star Trek: Discovery Annual focuses on Stamets' mycelial network research, [284] while Succession expands on the first season's Mirror Universe story arc. [285] 978-1-68405-360-5: Succession, #2 May 23, 2018 Succession, #3 July 4, 2018 Succession, #4 August 1, 2018 Star Trek: Discovery Annual 2018: April 4, 2018
In 2017, Popular Mechanics said that "The Chase" was one of the top ten most fun episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation, noting that it offers an explanation of why most aliens on Star Trek are similar to humans. [1] They note the episode includes Cardassians, Klingons, Romulans and Federation members on a quest to solve a biological enigma ...
It is the seventh Star Trek series and was released from 2017 to 2024. The series follows the crew of the starship Discovery beginning a decade before Star Trek: The Original Series in the 23rd century. At the end of the second season, they travel to the 32nd century which is the setting for subsequent seasons.
In Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ Season 2 premiere — now streaming on Paramount+ — Spock & Co. absconded with the Enterprise to a mining planet on the edge of Klingon space, where they ...
Watching the fifth and final season of “Star Trek: Discovery” has been an exercise in the uncanny. Paramount+ didn’t announce that the show was ending until after the Season 5 finale had ...
The episode broadcast after "Rightful Heir", "Second Chances", received a rating of 9.7 percent. [2] The episode was released as part of the Star Trek: The Next Generation season six DVD box set in the United States on December 3, 2002. [3] A remastered HD version was released on Blu-ray optical disc, on June 24, 2014. [4] [5]
Star Trek: Discovery co-showrunner Alex Kurtzman previously told TVLine that the sci-fi drama’s fifth and final season was dependent on a “very significant” Star Trek Easter egg, and we ...
In Star Trek films and series, a Klingon biting someone indicates their desire to mate. In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Dauphin", Worf states that the mating ritual consists of a woman roaring, throwing things at the male, and occasionally clawing at him while the male reads love poetry and "ducks a lot". [8]