<?xml version="1.0"?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xml:lang="en">
	<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/api.php?action=feedcontributions&amp;feedformat=atom&amp;user=2406%3A3400%3A20F%3AFFC0%3A7C71%3A43FB%3A2FAE%3A70A9</id>
	<title>2d4chan - User contributions [en]</title>
	<link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/api.php?action=feedcontributions&amp;feedformat=atom&amp;user=2406%3A3400%3A20F%3AFFC0%3A7C71%3A43FB%3A2FAE%3A70A9"/>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/2406:3400:20F:FFC0:7C71:43FB:2FAE:70A9"/>
	<updated>2026-05-25T06:01:11Z</updated>
	<subtitle>User contributions</subtitle>
	<generator>MediaWiki 1.43.0</generator>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=List_of_Mary_Sues&amp;diff=310378</id>
		<title>List of Mary Sues</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=List_of_Mary_Sues&amp;diff=310378"/>
		<updated>2020-01-11T17:15:46Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:7C71:43FB:2FAE:70A9: /* Somewhat Special Cases */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{fail}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{flamewar}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Heresy}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are too many fucking [[Mary Sues]] in our games and fiction. We know it, and we love to complain about it, because it makes us feel a little better to call a spade a shovel. The original purpose of this list is to provide examples so the phenomenon can be studied, identified and - as a result of the latter - avoided.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
(Note: please post Mary Sues in alphabetical order, so they don&#039;t fight about who&#039;s the better Mary-Sue. Also, this is about fictional characters, so while Canon Sues are acceptable, no real-life examples (even if there is such person named &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Mary Sue AKA the Scientology founder&#039;s wife&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; I&#039;m just adding that for fun). For the sake of peace, religious figures [and possibly mythological characters; particularly when they&#039;re from original mythologies] are real-life examples.  Also, any characters added to the list without justifying reasons will be removed from this page.  If you&#039;re going to add a race, please use the list below this one.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Mary Sues Case Studies==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Alice]] from the in-name-only &#039;&#039;[[Resident Evil]]&#039;&#039; movies: A character created for the movies, she has superpowers and is &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;presented as&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; ENTIRELY invincible. She manages to becomes an even bigger Sue when she loses said superpowers yet continues to obliterate armies unscathed. The film refuses to even let other characters do anything but get rescued by her, she&#039;s worse than characters written by [[Matthew Ward]]. The bitch is played by the director&#039;s wife; she&#039;s his perfect Mary Sue waifu insert and she&#039;s literally sleeping with him to get the job. Don&#039;t forget that &amp;lt;i&amp;gt;she dual-wields katanas&amp;lt;/i&amp;gt;. And shotguns. And probably Desert Eagles, too.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Andrew &amp;quot;Ender&amp;quot; Wiggin from Orson Scott Card&#039;s Enderverse, and a blatant (almost comical to a serious reader) example at that.  What&#039;s worse: he only becomes more of this as the story and the books progress.  It&#039;s even worse in the 2013 movie.  At least the books gave the other characters more depth, Ender&#039;s feats took more time to achieve, and it contained some POV&#039;s that weren&#039;t of or about Ender.&lt;br /&gt;
** Ender&#039;s siblings Valentine and Peter.   Ender&#039;s sister is a self righteous prig who is only overshadowed by her obnoxious, sociopathic brothers. Peter, Ender&#039;s older brother, is even worse.  He&#039;s a low functioning sociopath, [[What|but intelligent enough that, as a child, he comes up with sophisticated political philosophies that wow academic circles. As an adult, they prove so sophisticated that he&#039;s appointed Political Leader of Earth.  Despite the fact that a sociopath with absolute power would become a dangerous tyrant as soon as someone refused to do what they say, he doesn&#039;t mess up and dies being hailed as a great ruler]]. Yes, this really happens.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Batman]] in an unskilled author&#039;s hands.  He&#039;s a handsome human billionaire who&#039;s the pinnacle of human physical prowess and manages to defeat superpowered beings simply because &amp;quot;he had time to prepare&amp;quot; (with few thinking &amp;quot;why don&#039;t his opponents also use that time to prepare?&amp;quot;).  On top of this he has LITERAL PLOT ARMOR; one of the DC editorial mandates is that Batman is not allowed to be truly defeated (he&#039;s usually too popular and has a presence in too much of the DC Universe to be allowed the downtime by editorial, unless it&#039;s part of a major storyline such as Knightfall).  Because of this a certain tendency for Batman to turn into a Mary Sue is well documented (Read JLA: Act of God and weep; that story was all about starting the First Church of Batman. Or hell, check out the Dark Nights: Metal storyline, where a bunch of Evil Batmen who are variants on an existing superhero attack the DCU as opposed to, say, just doing a whole Evil Justice League like they have multiple times before).  While Batman does have plot armor (nearly no one thinks to just shoot him when they get the chance and the few times they do he escapes, and he&#039;s never unexpectedly engaged by superhuman opponents who could easily beat him - like Darkseid), the same can be said for other non-superpowered heroes.  That being said, there are many ways of adding dramatic tension to such a foregone conclusion situation, and the above mandate only includes actual defeat, so Batman is allowed to fail and make mistakes in certain situations or the villain can escape to cause trouble even after their plan is thwarted, which also helps lessen the Bat-Sue Factor.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Edgy|Billy Butcher]] from &amp;quot;The Boys&amp;quot; (comics and show, especially the former) is probably the reigning example of a Jerk Sue ([[TVTropes|An unsympathetic character nevertheless favored in the story, according to our frenemeies]]).  A superpower hating vigilante, Billy is half Punisher-knockoff, half self-insert/mouthpiece for author Garth Ennis.  While most superheroes in this series are notorious for being corporate sellouts who often abuse their powers and sponsorships, Billy is clearly equally motivated by personal prejudice against people with superpowers.  This hatred of superheroes is half of what he’s Garth’s mouthpiece for (the other half is Garth’s hatred of religion - especially Christianity, since the only religious people targeted are Christians).  While he does help the protagonist try to get justice for his girlfriend’s death by superhero collateral damage, Billy is bitter, ill-spirited, confrontational… an edgelord through and through.  Even becoming a villain via wanting to genocide all people with superpowers only adds &amp;quot;Villain Sue&amp;quot; to the list, as he only loses because he chooses too.  He’s also consistently never wrong, as any time a character has something to say about Billy or his actions, he has something back to throw at them proving they’re actually wrong due to author fiat ensuring Billy only argues against strawmen.  Goes to show that making a Mary Sue a smug edgelord is just as repellent as the “over-the-top graceful, sweet and affectionate” opposite, especially when they’re also the author’s hypocritical, preachy mouthpiece. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Caius Ballad, the antagonist of &#039;&#039;Final Fantasy XIII-2&#039;&#039;. Impractical overdesigned costume? Check. Impractical giant, overdesigned sword? Check. Purple hair? Check. Story-breaking powers? Check. Can&#039;t be beaten? Check. Openly called the most powerful &#039;&#039;Final Fantasy&#039;&#039; villain ever by his creator? Check. The only mitigating feature this fool has is that his English VA is Liam O&#039;Brien.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Darkseid from DC Comics is a rare case where people actually &#039;&#039;like&#039;&#039; someone for being a Sue. He wasn&#039;t one at the start of his career - Jack Kirby conceived him as a paper tiger who, for all his grandiose plans and ambitions, was only powerful if people feared him and could be beaten up by two street thugs who didn&#039;t know who he was, not anticipating that fans might prefer a villain who was really as intrinsically powerful as Darkseid claimed to be. He&#039;s strong and tough enough to go toe-to-toe with Superman, he has laser eyes that can do whatever he wants them to (including killing people instantly or bringing them back to life), he&#039;s a masterful schemer who knows all about setting up gambits where he wins no matter what and striking deals with easy ways around them he doesn&#039;t mention, most of his minions rival the Justice League in power and on top of all that he&#039;s the ruler of an entire planet that reliably goes to shit when he&#039;s not around to slap it into shape and sometimes a wide-reaching galactic empire. Despite all this Villain Sue-ness, any attempts to nerf him or bring him down to a more realistic villain level are met with backlash and outrage, and his most celebrated storyline in recent comics history is Final Crisis, in which the heroes required a time-travelling, god-killing bullet to defeat him and he actually forced Batman to abandon his rule against killing. The message is clear: Darkseid is DC&#039;s ultimate villain (or close enough to that status that the number of people higher than him can be counted on a hand or two/ doesn&#039;t require literal divine intervention etc. to defeat and thus retaining a meaningful conflict) and the fans won&#039;t settle for anything less. &lt;br /&gt;
** There&#039;s a reason for this, by the way: Darkseid and his court neatly fill the archetypal niche of embodiments of &amp;quot;the fucked up things people do when you give them power&amp;quot;, with, for example, Gods of Child Abuse and of Torture as two of his chief henchmen. If you&#039;re going to have a hero who&#039;s about Hope and positive, creative or protective Aspirations (see: Superman, Flash, etc.), a villain who embodies the crushing of hope and negative, destructive Aspirations is incredibly useful. Making such a character a paper tiger can be made to work (see the Crimson King, under Special Cases), but is going to be unsatisfying, usually deeply so.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Divis Mal from the RPG [[Aberrant]]. Oh, where to begin? Well, first of all on top of being the absolute, balls-out, most powerful Aberrant in the setting, ever, he&#039;s super smart, plans for everything, never loses &#039;&#039;no matter what the players do&#039;&#039;, and has an ideology that can basically be described as &amp;quot;like Magneto, only &#039;&#039;right&#039;&#039;. About &#039;&#039;everything.&#039;&#039;&amp;quot; He&#039;s also in a loving relationship with a super-attractive partner who is &#039;&#039;also&#039;&#039; super-powerful, and his enemies are all stupid and happen to be straw-stuffed right-wing stereotypes because of course they are. He also serves as a thinly-veiled self-insert fanfic character for the lead game designer (a gay man with issues), and said designer once claimed that the title of the game referred to &#039;&#039;him specifically&#039;&#039;. It was all the sequel game could do to take the piss out of all the problems he caused.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Dr. Doom, depending on the writer. Worst case is he&#039;s written by somebody that forgets that he&#039;s a VILLAIN and depicts his rule over Latveria as unrealistically benign and makes it look like the superheroes are wrong for trying to keep him from taking over the world.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Elizabeth from &#039;&#039;Bioshock Infinite&#039;&#039;. Plot-sustaining power (the key to the whole plot literally rests in her hands), cannot be harmed, &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;makes a grown veteran of war look like an idiot child&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; only if you suck at the game... Regardless, she is routinely placed in easily escapable situations for the pure purpose of being saved when she can plausibly save herself, and makes none of the major (or minor) mistakes in the game. While some claim that she greatly dislikes violence, especially killing, individual interpretations vary depending on whether you view her murders as character arc-defining. To make her comparable to Sues like Lightning and Alice, Ken Levin told the trolls who [[rule 34|34&#039;d]] his perfect wife purpose, which result in a hilarious reverse psychology that gave Ken Levin [[promotions|what he wanted]]. She even gets to be tied into how Fontaine got Jack&#039;s (bioshock 1 mc) command code in the first bioshock. Way to ruin the franchise with some conventional plot device.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Elminster]], who is currently having a threesome with the goddess of magic and rad boobies and his adopted super-hot albino elf daughter while simultaneously beating the god of murder in a sword fight with one hand and the god of slavery in a magic fight with the other. Also, he&#039;s like a million years old and looks it.  Ed Greenwood&#039;s self-insert character in the [[Forgotten Realms]], and a big source of &amp;quot;Why doesn&#039;t he just do this for us?&amp;quot; questions whenever he appears in questlines. Also, along with the gods of the setting and the Harpers, he&#039;s one of the reasons why the Forgotten Realms are in [[Medieval Stasis]].&lt;br /&gt;
**Ironically he didn&#039;t start out originally like this. Back at the beginning of D&amp;amp;D, Elminster wasn&#039;t a massive Mary Sue. Believe it or not, he simply used to be a maxed-out wizard with some additional abilities and stuff that appeared as a Deus Ex Machina in case players had an encounter that was too difficult to overcome. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TedsiCaV2B4 Empress Theresa] is a good example of the &amp;quot;waifu&amp;quot; theory of Mary Sues and the Doyalist definition of Mary Sues, where the author&#039;s relationship to the character is the defining factor.  Short version: Deranged author who can&#039;t take criticism creates his perfect waifu, hands her the world, and refuses to edit the resulting masterpiece, and posts the result for sale on Amazon. Criticism results, which in turn results in internet arguments on a scale that is &#039;&#039;amazing&#039;&#039; (by themselves, they dwarf all of the arguments and criticisms of the Twilight franchise put together, with the unsettling add-on that this is all the author&#039;s mindset).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Every author self-insert.  Especially those found in high-school writing assignments.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Green Lanterns from Earth, especially Hal Jordan. All the human Green Lanterns are regularly shown to be the best Lanterns in the core because they ALL have indomitable willpower, skill, and courage, surpassing others who have been in the corps for decades. Most other lanterns exist only to be killed off as a means of showing how dangerous a threat is. They&#039;re only ever effective when they are helping the Human ones.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Haoh from Shaman King. If there is any villain that can truly be called a Mary Sue, it&#039;s him, most other villains with this accusation still get defeated. Haoh not only proves invincible throughout the whole series, able to easily pull of feats that are impossible for everybody else, he also has the ability to revive himself if killed, meaning even if the heroes beat him, which they state is impossible in a straight-up fight, it would be pointless, because he&#039;d just back even stronger. Worse is that he goes around saying how awful humans and everyone, even the writer, seems to agree with him because the series ends with him winning, only delaying his plans to kill humanity because reasons, and gets away with a number of atrocities that would make numerous the [[Warriors Of Chaos]] jealous.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*IG-88 in the &#039;&#039;Star Wars&#039;&#039; expanded universe, given that he easily breaks into the second Death Star and uploads his personality into it and takes control with nobody noticing, and before that single-handedly took over a planet. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[James Bond]]. To what degree varies, but the Roger Moore version is the worst offender: he&#039;s unbeatable at just about everything, never loses his composure, a ladies&#039; man to an unrealistic degree (even lesbians and villains who stand for everything he opposes switch sides after a dicking from Bond, not to mention that time he had sex with a lesbian was questionable consent at best...so Bond gets away with actual sexual assault if not outright rape), implausibly intelligent, a crack shot, and basically unkillable.  In the books, he is an unlikable git and an alcoholic, yet still gets shit done.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*James T. Kirk of [[Star Trek]], but only when written by William Shatner.  While in TOS, Roddenberry himself outright stated Kirk was his Author Avatar and that he wanted the show to have the ambiance of Kirk being able to have any woman he desired, Kirk was still allowed to occasionally fail or make mistakes in certain situations. For other non-Shatner written works, the Suedom factor is kept under control by factors gone into under the list found under &amp;quot;Somewhat Special Cases&amp;quot;, below.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*John Galt, Dangy Taggart and most of the cast from Ayn Rand&#039;s &amp;quot;Atlas Shrugged&amp;quot;, which figures given her literature&#039;s reputation for being barely-disguised political sermon. Galt frequently has the narrative grind to a halt in order to focus on his inane views, somehow single-handedly grinds the economy to a halt by founding a libertarian utopia where no &#039;communists&#039; can hold him or other similar geniuses back, and is shilled as the only sane man after the rest of the world becomes a dystopic hellhole without said &amp;quot;genius&amp;quot;. Then there&#039;s the primary female character, a wannabe railroad tycoon trying to get a new train line built despite the fact that &amp;quot;evil socialists&amp;quot; can&#039;t keep them running without crashing every few hours because of mean ol&#039; unions and regulations oppressing the poor upper class. Said woman somehow manages to bed Hank Rearden, local inventor of a metal supposedly even stronger than steel (so basically titanium), called Rearden Metal. Yes, just drips with creativity, don&#039;t it? It&#039;s telling that the Bioshock series, based off her work, is far better received and a more realistic depiction, generally due to taking the prospect of a single man basically playing God to its logical conclusion (I.E. another dystopia but now with blackjack and hookers).&lt;br /&gt;
** A Science Moment: Technically, Titanium is weaker than Steel. By weight it is tougher, but by volume, or amount  it is quite weaker. Many confuse this.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*John Kramer, the &amp;quot;Jigsaw Killer&amp;quot; from the &#039;&#039;Saw&#039;&#039; films. Pick any character you know of with a long list of skills or attributes, this guy has more, and he keeps getting away for a half dozen movies.  He&#039;s also influenced people to the point that even after he dies, some of them copy his actions and ideas and think they&#039;re doing good things.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Jon Snow (especially the show version): While this is in the books as well, it is more evident in the show and he is currently dying from a mutiny in the books.  Being a bastard is a bad thing in Westeros so he gets sent to the wall, but it&#039;s uphill from there.  He gets a Valyrian steel blade (which is incredibly rare and an heirloom of noble houses) in his first week.  He has a pet Direwolf puppy like his siblings, but of course his looks unique.  From here he gets named as squire and successor to the commander of the Night&#039;s Watch (though this does cause some resentment among his peers).  Later on he meets Wildings where he spares one who turns out to be a woman; it&#039;s obvious where this goes... they don&#039;t get along, they fall in love, have sex and spend some time together, something forces them apart and she dies.  She also has red hair, which stands out because among Wildings its considered lucky.  While he gets stabbed like in the books, in the show he dies from it then gets resurrected by Melisandre/the Lord of Light.  He&#039;s revealed to be the bastard child of Rhaegar Targereyn and Lyanna Stark, making him Westeros&#039; rightful king, as well as Daenerys&#039; nephew - but that doesn&#039;t stop him from having sex with aunt Daenerys*, and this time the incest is portrayed positively!  Also, him beating Ramsay Bolton (see below); that&#039;s right, Jon&#039;s so Mary Sue his plot armor trumps the plot armor of another Mary Sue (to be fair, though, he was actually on the verge of loosing the big battle to Ramsay right up until the moment his ass gets saved by his little sister and about four thousand mounted knights.)  While some of the earlier traits don&#039;t necessarily equal a Mary Sue, they add up... oh, they add up (*Daenerys, a warqueen who brought dragons back from extinction among other things, makes mistakes and suffers consequences that would seem to impact her Sue-factor if they didn&#039;t always turn out to be functionally inconsequential in comparison to her astounding triumphs through casual part-time parenting.)  Book Jon is way more well rounded as a character, where it is pointed out that he actually had a decent life as a bastard before coming to the Watch, and several choices he made ended up biting him in the ass come the mutiny.     &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Jotaro Kujo, from Jojo&#039;s Bizarre Adventure Part 3 and 4 (And part 6 but not in part 6... we&#039;ll get to that later). He&#039;s pretty much invincible like Kenshiro, but unlike Kenshiro, he didn&#039;t train a single day to be as hax as he is (His Stand &amp;quot;Star Platinum&amp;quot; is really strong, at the cost of short range, but plot gets in the way and he always gets close enough to ORAORA the bad guys). Also unlike Kenshiro, he is an asshole to everyone, but never suffers any consequences from it (Women literally ADORE him despite his jerkass attitude, because 80&#039;s). He spends the entire trip to Egypt spurting out massive amounts of [[Just as planned]] against every villain of the week, or simply getting powers as plot demands, some of the most outrageous examples being: The use of &amp;quot;Star Finger&amp;quot;, which completely negates the previously stated range weakness; His &amp;quot;battle&amp;quot; against Steely Dan, where he DID get humilliated but retributed it tenfold in the end; His &amp;quot;battle&amp;quot; against Alessi, where he gets to beat a grown man unconscious with his bare fists despite being turned back into a SEVEN YEAR OLD; His battle against main villain DIO where he wins DIO&#039;s time stopping powers for bullshit reasons and wins; and, even more ridiculously, being able to RESURRECT his very dead Grandpa Joseph by [[what|using his stand for blood transfusing and heart-resetting]]. In part 4 he mellows down a lot, most notably [[FAIL|getting beaten by a rat]], but that doesn&#039;t prevent him from beating the shit out of the main villain Kira TWICE and stealing the spotlight from Uncle Josuke (The titular Jojo of part 4) on his final battle; too bad Josuke!. Part 6 however, does a great job at not only nerfing but rounding him altogether, the Jojo this time being his own daughter, Jolyne Cujoh (Note that is not Kujo), a delinquent who ends out in prison and resents him greatly for being an awful, absent father and constantly reminds him of it. He attempts to &amp;quot;fix&amp;quot; things but [[Just as planned|falls into one of main villain Pucci&#039;s schemes]] and is rendered comatose for great part of the story, when he latter regains his powers (With a significant decrease in durability) and comes to terms with Jolyne, the villain becomes Godlike and ends out killing him along with the entire universe; too bad Shonen Jump!, now seinen is Araki&#039;s best friend. In Pucci&#039;s universe he is a complete spineless weakling, but in case that was a bit too much, reality resets again and creates [[Awesome|a new universe free of the Joestars Tragic Fate and Part 3&#039;s bullshit]]. PD: In the Videogame Eyes of Heaven he is even worse, but this entry is already too long so i&#039;ll only say the creators weren&#039;t too good with resolutions.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Kai Leng, from &#039;&#039;[[Bioware#Mass_Effect_3_.28The_Downfall.29|Mass Effect 3]]&#039;&#039;. You&#039;re constantly told he&#039;s a badass assassin, but when he shows up, Shepard&#039;s crew suddenly become drooling idiots so Leng can strut about, act tough, and monologue. He brags about killing Thane (alien assassin squadmate from the previous game) even though the latter was hobbled by a terminal illness requiring daily medical care and Thane &#039;&#039;STILL&#039;&#039; got the drop on Kai Leng; Thane even says himself &amp;quot;That other assassin should be embarrassed.  A terminally-ill Drell kept him from reaching his target.&amp;quot;  When you &amp;quot;win&amp;quot; the &amp;quot;fight&amp;quot; against him on Thessia, he still gets away, utterly unaffected by the crumbling architecture that stops Shepard from pursuing him. By the end of the fight, you&#039;ve advanced the plot a grand total of nowhere, regurgitated information you already have, and been hamstrung as a player because the writer wants his character to look cool. He is yet another antagonist dropped onto a story filled with them, but is nothing more than a costume, sword, and book of one-liners. Unlike Saren from ME1, we have no connection with this douchebag because the story doesn&#039;t give him enough screen time to develop into anything.&lt;br /&gt;
** Alternate take: What appears to be Sue-ness is BioWare writing him as a Hate Sink. (Basically a character designed to be hated and nothing else, [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HateSink ask those smashers at TV Tropes for more info].) BioWare were using the Reapers as cool villains and leaning into the Illusive Man getting the Darth Vader treatment of the tragic, sympathetic villain who can possibly redeem himself with his death, so Leng became the game&#039;s villainous punching bag. Given what a gut punch the final battle is, clearly they wanted Leng&#039;s ultimate downfall to give the player a moment of catharsis so they could take a small victory where they got it. And for that to work, it had to be satisfying, and that meant he had to get on the player&#039;s nerves without an excuse or understandable motive to undercut their focused rage against him. Note that during the final battle against him, Shepard spends the whole time dressing him down as a coward who can only win by running away and after beating him, smashes his stupid sword and guts him like a fish with their omni-blade. [[Awesome|&amp;quot;That was for Thane, you son of a bitch!&amp;quot;]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Fist of the North Star|Kenshiro]], nothing can kill him and he&#039;s morally flawless, superior to everyone-fucking-else. At least until Shin Saga in the anime, where he starts fucking up often, even with his super kung-fu laser ninja powers. Most battles are curb-stomps until later on because &#039;&#039;it&#039;s a fucking show from the 80&#039;s&#039;&#039;. Do note, however, that Kenshiro loses a &#039;&#039;lot,&#039;&#039; especially later on, and mostly wins his hardest battles because he&#039;s the only one worth a shit left alive by that point in the series.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Kratos from &#039;&#039;[[God of War]]&#039;&#039;. He curb-stomps fucking gods due to [[plot armor]] (and because one of them decided to give a bloody psychopath the powers of a god; MENSA applicant right there) and he has threesomes with complete strangers, even though he is meant to be grieving for the death of his family that he himself murdered. Oh and the rules for how death works change whenever it&#039;s convenient for him. Err, some of this is because most of the gods he kills with super-powerful items, including Blade of Olympus, the God of War universe&#039;s version of Zeus&#039; lightning bolts the cyclops gave him to defeat the titans, which has been infused with all the power of the Greek God of War. And he is later revealed to house the Power of Hope since GoW1, a power strong enough to kill gods. Now he is starting a new family in Norse mythology land Midgard while STILL having the &amp;quot;godly&amp;quot; super strength despite the blade of Olympus drained all his power and gave it all to the world.(Note that he clearly didn&#039;t give up his combat experience nor his genetics as a demi-god son of Zeus. Even without those things, he&#039;s at minimum a heavily trained demi-god from the strongest of the Greek gods.) At least he acknowledged how fucking awful he was in the past and tried to be a good father toward his new son Atreus, but still keeping his no gods allowed policy. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Lana Lang from the TV show &#039;&#039;Smallville&#039;&#039; (note; Smallville is not considered canon to the Superman story by DC Comics).  Almost big a Mary Sue as Bella from Twilight; almost because she actually has a few useful skills, but she learns them unrealistically quickly (becoming a black belt in martial arts in &#039;&#039;one week&#039;&#039;).  She has the cliche orphan story but with a unique spin for maximum snowflake effect (her parents were killed by a meteor strike), everyone in the story loves her with the exception of some villains (the key word is SOME), and she&#039;s treated as someone who can do no wrong.  Lana even got on the cover of TIME magazine, in-universe, as a child!  She serves as a wedge between Clark and having a relationship with any other girl and between Clark and his eventual Superman destiny.  Clark technically sacrificed his father to save her!  In one episode, Clark rewound time on a day in which Lana died, and instead lost his father.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Lightning from &#039;&#039;Final Fantasy XIII&#039;&#039;, she is basically a pink-haired Cloud without any of Cloud&#039;s likable personality traits. She&#039;s currently the NEW AND ASTONISHING HEAVENLY Valkyrie that fights a purple Sephiroth in her new game &amp;quot;Lightning&#039;s Return&amp;quot;. Not that we care, but she was created by Motomu Toriyama ([[Matt Ward]]&#039;s Japanese cousin), a man with a Chris-Chan-like persona and Matthew Ward-style writing who is now continuously raping the franchise. He has a waifu love for Lightning like Paul has for Alice. Lightning is comparable to Alice on many levels, which says a lot, really. She also has tons of fucking DLC &amp;quot;costumes&amp;quot; dedicated to her so the player could dress her up and fap her to death. This is so fucking shameful that I&#039;m crazy enough to believe Alice is a much capable heroine. Somebody kill me, please. Oh, just recently, Toriyama decided to have Lightning become a guest character in a future Final Fantasy. So not only is the franchise gonna suffer the rotting Emperor syndrome, but Lightning is now the literal goddess of every Final Fantasy game? Seriously, have you ever seen Paul doing such disgusting things with Alice? Like forcing Alice into an actual &#039;&#039;Resident Evil&#039;&#039; game (well, the &#039;&#039;Resident Evil&#039;&#039; franchise is dead as well)? Motomu Toriyama is officially worse than Paul Anderson!!&lt;br /&gt;
** Gets worse: Toriyama has stated that Lighting is the &amp;quot;first&amp;quot; strong female character in any &#039;&#039;Final Fantasy&#039;&#039;. Even ignoring the dozens of better-written female characters, some of which he himself has written, the &amp;quot;strong&amp;quot; meaning just physical doesn&#039;t work either; FF7&#039;s Tifa (a game he worked on, btw) can punch tanks to death.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Lisa Simpson from &#039;&#039;The Simpsons&#039;&#039;, depending on the writer.  Lisa has dipped into Mary Sue-dom the same way as Brian from Family Guy (both serving time as smug mouthpieces for their show&#039;s creators on hot-button-topics).  There was also a time where Lisa had the tendency to never be punished for the times she does do the wrong doing (she ruins Homer&#039;s BBQ in &amp;quot;Lisa the Vegetarian&amp;quot; and merely got scolded by him where Bart would likely have been strangled for it).  One episode had people deferring to Lisa over Prof. Stephen Hawking in Hawking&#039;s area of expertise, and Groening once said Lisa is his favorite character and that he would do anything to prevent her from looking bad (to reference the strangling; the show&#039;s animators also applied a double-standard as they strongly protested against the idea of Homer strangling Lisa for upsetting him like he does with Bart).  While Lisa&#039;s popularity in-universe fluctuates, at its worst the whole town bends over backwards for her even when it goes past characterization (eg; Springfieldians can be &#039;&#039;&#039;VERY&#039;&#039;&#039; sore losers, as demonstrated in the episode &amp;quot;Boys of Bummer&amp;quot; where the whole town - sans Marge - ridiculed Bart for losing a sports game [[Grimdark|to the point that they nearly drove the 10 year old to suicide]], but when Lisa lost a spelling contest she was applauded for winning second place and got a Mount Rushmore-style sculpture of her face).  That being said, there are episodes where Lisa is depicted as unpopular at school, her activism is made over-the-top to be played for laughs, she&#039;ss neglected at home and less of a &amp;quot;smartest person around&amp;quot; and more of a &amp;quot;only sane person surrounded by idiots&amp;quot;, lessening the Sue-factor. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Magneto is not inherently one, but he does have the INSANE potential to become this when crappy writers start taking his sympathetic traits too far (&amp;quot;Hey guys, let&#039;s [[What|make Magneto a member of the X-Men and have him date Rogue]]!&amp;quot;) or just forget he&#039;s the bad guy. Hell, he sometimes becomes this even when he&#039;s a horribly despicable villain. Jeph Loeb&#039;s raping of the Ultimate Universe known as &amp;quot;Ultimatum&amp;quot; has him use his magnetic powers to nearly destroy the world just by waving his hands at Earth&#039;s magnetic poles (completely breaking the laws of physics in the process) and then effortlessly take on half the X-Men and almost all of the Ultimates singlehandedly and nearly win.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Master Chief from the &#039;&#039;[[Halo]]&#039;&#039; series is definitely one. For one, he has [[Matt Ward|Ward-grade]] [[Heresy|plot armor]]. Seriously, it was repeated throughout the games that he was born with the word [[What|&#039;&#039;&#039;LUCK&#039;&#039;&#039;]]. To further expand on his Sueness, this 7-foot tall hunk of raging Leprechaun saved the entire Galaxy &#039;&#039;Twice!&#039;&#039;, single-handedly stopped the Human-Covie War at the last minute, escaped and defeated an entire race of &amp;quot;Super-Space-Zombie-Fungus&amp;quot; that could mindfuck Culture-tier Civilizations without [[What|having his own brain being raped]], is one of the last surviving SPARTAN II&#039;s, solo an entire legion of Covenant Honor-Guards (Which are equivalent to Spacemarine Captain in rank but with inferior gear and training) as well as successfully assassinating a very important Covie leader protected by said Guards without being captured, survived escaping an Exterminatus-level explosion that destroyed a Super-Weapon &#039;Ring&#039; by &#039;&#039;out-flying it&#039;&#039;, somehow his armor is strong enough to deflect Fuel-Rod shots (Which are essentially Plasma Cannons), destroy a flying and mentally psychotic lightbulb with an overcharged Lascannon as a Self-Defence weapon (To be fair 343 Guilty Spark &#039;&#039;is&#039;&#039; a Forerunner Janitor Robot), and did I mention he saved the entire Galaxy &#039;&#039;twice&#039;&#039;? Furthermore with the release of Halo 4, MC is now magically gifted the genes and DNA by the Librarian to become full on [[RAGE|&#039;&#039;impervious to a fucking Forerunner Super-Weapon/Death-Beam&#039;&#039;]], which allows him to single-handedly fight through the insides of a very important Forerunner Capital Ship filled with Necron/Warp-Spiders kill bots and somehow through the act of plot, [[Derp|defeat &#039;&#039;the&#039;&#039; highest ranked Forerunner Military General that has the power to solo the entire Galactic Empire from Star Wars.]] I mean [[Rage|WTF!]] did the developers of Halo not realize that they just created a character with plot-armor so powerful that they make the likes of [[Kaldor Draigo]] look decent in comparison? Thankfully however, as pants-on-head retarded as some of the feats listed for MC are, he at least has some faults such as being psychologically raped in childhood, doesn&#039;t have the &amp;quot;Morally Superior to thou&amp;quot; personality and has a very grim view of the war, almost got killed by the killer space popcorn, being rather mediocre for a SPARTAN II when compared to his other colleagues, is only good in leadership and even then made some stupid mistakes, gets pretty beaten the fuck up by a Brute, his Superhuman abilities only stopped when fighting against low-ranked Elites and know he will lose against one if he fought one-by-one, and most of the battles he has been through had almost cost him his life. Those faults listed are what makes good old Chiefy &#039;&#039;NOT&#039;&#039; in the top 10 most powerful Mary-Sues and makes him somewhat tolerable albeit boring compared to the other listed.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Moka Akashiya from Rosario + Vampire: Stupidly fucking OP enough to one-shot kick &#039;&#039;&#039;EVERY OTHER FUCKING MONSTER&#039;&#039;&#039; IN THE &#039;&#039;&#039;ENTIRE FUCKING SERIES&#039;&#039;&#039; AND &#039;&#039;&#039;BOTH&#039;&#039;&#039; SEASONS, has a &#039;&#039;special exception&#039;&#039; to her power levels made so she gets &#039;first ancestor&#039; vampire blood to enable her to be &#039;&#039;even more powerful&#039;&#039;, has no character development &#039;&#039;at all&#039;&#039; (both her personalities), is a student at an academy and one-shot kicks two members &#039;&#039;of the fucking faculty&#039;&#039; &#039;&#039;&#039;AND TOTALLY GETS AWAY WITH IT&#039;&#039;&#039;, and is &#039;&#039;unbearably arrogant&#039;&#039;, revelling in her power and basically saying everyone else is beneath her. Not even other OP fucking vampires OLDER THAN HER can beat her. The only reason she&#039;s this bad? The author admits he LOVES vampires. So she&#039;s not only an Author Avatar, but a Canon Sue as well, existing only for [[Heresy|heretical deviants]] to fap to and the author to [[Slaanesh|schlick]] to. God-Emperor fucking damn it, Akihisa Ikeda. You little shit. What&#039;s worse is that [[Matt Ward|he has no shame about it]]. [[C.S.Goto| No, really]]. Even those who initially get one over on her before getting kicked are &#039;&#039;&#039;MORE&#039;&#039;&#039; OP &#039;&#039;fucking vampires&#039;&#039;. Not really, she&#039;s easily one-uped by non-vampires with many characters introduced in S1 &amp;amp; especially S2 who rather easily take her down. Compared to the big leagues, she&#039;s a promising new recruit but not comparable to them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Mordenkainen (Gary Gygax&#039;s personal avatar in the Greyhawk setting and a level 30 wizard who never fucking ages past 50 despite being a hundred fucking years old without turning into a lich, he became bald for some reason, which makes him look evil, but he remains Stupid Neutral).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Olympia Vale, another character from the [[Halo]] Series and seems to be all around taking over the mantle of Mary Sue from Master Chief as he is pushed in the sidelines like an old man being pushed in the old folks home. Whilst Locke has been accused for being a rather bland and forgettable copycat cutout of the original MC, he still pales in comparison to that of Vale.  Essentially imagine Vale as MC but remove the sociopathic and borderline mentally damaged aspects of John 117, make her a prodigy even beyond that of Spartan recruits which in turn made her pretty easy to integrate in the SPARTAN IV program and make her instantly learn the language of the Elites whilst by herself in space with the only excuse being that [[Bullshit|&#039;she was bored&#039;.]] Vale and to an extent, the majority of the SPARTAN IV&#039;s seem to be an ongoing campaign from Karen Traviss (AKA the Destroyer of Fluff and Halo&#039;s Matt Ward) [[Derp|to further demonize Halsey and her SPARTAN II program]] for no better reason other than being forced to be [[Fail|unethical in an organization as ethically sound as the]] [[Inquisition|Imperial Inquisition.]] As you can imagine, this has already spurred some [[Skub|ire bitching]] in the Halo community and only time will tell if newer sequels from the game would flash her character out in a more decent or obscene matter.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Ozymandias, AKA, Adrian Alexander Veidt from &#039;&#039;Watchmen&#039;&#039;.  He was born into a wealthy family, then threw it all away and earned even more money.  He&#039;s a perfect athlete, good-looking, smartest man in the world (He mind fucked Dr. Manhattan, a blueish godlike superhuman) and a vegetarian.  In the book he is able to successfully genetically engineer some sort of monster that would be teleported to New York and as it dies unleash a psychic shockwave that would kill millions in a &amp;quot;common enemy&amp;quot; plot to avert World War 3 by uniting them against &amp;quot;interdimensional aliens&amp;quot; (he does the same in the movie, but instead of aliens, he tricks people into making Dr Manhattan their common enemy - Dr Manhattan himself goes along with the plan once he finds out so there will be world peace).  The only downside he had is loneliness, since he had betrayed all his friends and killed the only companion in his life, a fucking genetically-engineered female lynx named Bubastis, by having her bait Dr. Manhattan to the incinerator and killed them both with a switch.  Still, Ozymandias is perfect because Mary Sue don&#039;t need friends. It was also portrayed that his &amp;quot;common enemy&amp;quot; scheme to stop World War 3 (which involved killing millions) in a positive or at least sympathetic light.  He also caught a bullet fired from a gun with his bare hands, and the bullet didn&#039;t just go through them, like it would in real-life, despite him not having superpowers.  Interesting to note that he the idol he worships: Alexander of Macedonia, is a man born before Christ, and the name Ozymandias is reference to a freaking [[Necron|Egyptian pharaoh: Ramses II]], proving that Adrian is just as egoistic as [[Dante]] and the [[Ultramarines]] by have the name of an ancient ruler as his own nickname. Hell, his color page on &amp;quot;before the watchman&amp;quot; made him looked like some sort of floating Jesus!!  Thankfully, he has the decency to acknowledge what he did was wrong in the comics while also justifying it as being for the greater good...which it was in that it stopped World War 3, and he is more complex and well rounded as a character than several others. &lt;br /&gt;
** There&#039;s also the deliberately ambiguous implication that Ozymandias could get some comeuppance in the future (author Alan Moore stated that what happened after the end of the graphic novel is for each reader to decide for themselves); this is done with Dr Manhattan&#039;s cryptic response to Ozymandias&#039; question whether things would work out, and Rorschach giving his journal - containing evidence implicating Ozymandias and revealing his plan - to a news outlet. &lt;br /&gt;
** A direct sequel to Watchmen called &amp;quot;Doomsday Clock&amp;quot; came and finally made Ozymandias pay for what he has done. After the news outlet ousted Veidt&#039;s plans, it started a chain of reaction that eventually led to his downfall as well as the supposed end of humanity. European Union dissolved, the USSR went back its old warmonger ways with their relation between the US degrading to lows below even the Cold War, nuclear weapons failed to be disarmed and one such missile was fired from Russia to New York City. Adrian is now the most wanted man in the world and has brain cancer (possibly ironically validating what he framed Dr. Manhattan for). Still, he managed to fight his way out of this chaos with other DC heroes (superman and the godamned batman mind you, characters with thick plot armor), the Comedian (brought back by Manhattan), pretty much everyone around the world but especially Dr. Manhattan (who masterminded this all from his glass palace on Mars). Also, keep in mind this sequel is not written by Alan Moore himself so it&#039;s at best considered an alternate continuity.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Prometheus (the DC supervillain) certainly didn&#039;t &#039;&#039;start&#039;&#039; as this but ended up being twisted into one. When first introduced he was a genuinely cool and intimidating supervillain whose insane skill and manipulations were balanced out by his crippling mental issues (which the heroes exploited to take him down). Unfortunately, writers who weren&#039;t as skilled as Grant Morrison got their paws on him and made him ludicrously overpowered to the point where he single-handedly &#039;&#039;destroyed Star City, killing Roy Harper&#039;s daughter in the process&#039;&#039;. Thus Prometheus went from an awesome member of Batman&#039;s rogue gallery to a complete waste of pages. Thankfully he was prevented from becoming any worse thanks to Green Arrow putting an arrow through the bastard&#039;s skull.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Ramsay Bolton (show version): Oh good fucking God, where to start with this particular Villain Sue? Well, for one, he manages to take on twenty of the best Ironborn warriors, who were all heavily armed and armored, while not just unarmored but SHIRTLESS and armed with nothing but a kitchen knife and a mace, and SOMEHOW kicks their asses.  Then, much later, he is shown to completely annihilate the battle-hardened Stormlander army led by Stannis Baratheon, the greatest military commander in Westeros, with nothing but cavalry, while the previous episodes had established that Ramsay is a tactically inept moron. (This can also tie in with the fact that the writers of the show seriously fucked over Stannis from &amp;quot;stern-but-honorable competent tactical genius&amp;quot; into &amp;quot;greedy, fanatical moron&amp;quot;).  Finally, he is constantly shown to get his way no  matter how stupidly contrived it seems to the viewer, arguably the worst case being marrying and deflowering Sansa Stark by raping her and getting the killing blow on fan-favorite giant Wun-Wun.  His Sueness ends with his face getting caved in by Jon and fed to his own hounds by Sansa.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Rey AKA Ma-Rey Sue from the [[Star Wars]]. Like Olympia Vale from [[Halo]], Rey has only been in two movies so far so she has an excuse that the finished sequel trilogy may flesh out her character more. However, even then she has already caught some backlash among the old guards of Star Wars who view her as a self-insert Mary Sue with a feminist agenda. Pushing aside from politics, accusations on why she is an insufferable Mary Sue spans from her immediately knowing how to fly the Millennium Falcon despite being a scavenger who should have no pilot experience, knowing more about the inner workings on [[What|&#039;&#039;said&#039;&#039; Millennium Falcon then Han Solo and Chewbacca]] (You know, the guys who flew the ship for half their god damned lives), knowing how to [[Derp|speak and understand Wookie]] despite no evidence or mention that she could, being all of a sudden a [[Wat|powerful Force user who can resist the mind tricks of a trained Jedi-turned-Sith apprentice]] despite no previous mention of her being a Force sensitive, [[Bullshit|performing said Jedi mind trick almost immediately after learning she is a Force Sensitive]] despite the fact that performing a Jedi mind tricks is known to be difficult to master (on the other hand, she had just been in telepathic contact with somebody who would know how to pull off a Mind Trick and wasn&#039;t quite as good at telepathic interrogation as he thought he was) and [[Fail|kicking a pretty powerful Force User in the ass that has been trained in the lightsaber far longer that she is]] (To be fair, Kylo Ren was shot by Chewbacca&#039;s Bowcaster which can make people fly ten feet of the air). As you can imagine, this created a [[Skub|shitstorm of untold proportion]] not seen since the likes of Chewbacca being killed back in Legends material. &lt;br /&gt;
** An alternate view to both the above is that Rey&#039;s plot role is essentially &amp;quot;Luke from New Hope, but with two other characters filling Luke&#039;s role as the Everyman and the Ace Pilot&amp;quot;, and as such gets a vast amount of &amp;quot;Specialness&amp;quot; because she fills a Jedi-apprentice shaped hole in the plot structure. Episode 8 more or less continues the &amp;quot;essentially just a version of Luke&#039;s Jedi plotline from ESB and RotJ&amp;quot; thread, with some of what [[TVTropes]] would call a &amp;quot;Subverted Relationship Sue&amp;quot;. Probably her biggest problem is how very little focus and character development she actually gets when she should be the main character.&lt;br /&gt;
** An argument for Rey is that both Luke and Anakin is just as ridicolous, but they fit easier the form of tropes they are. Luke, being the most classic [https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheHero Hero] ever, is quickly established as good at most things he does, culminating in flying an X-Wing through the Death Star trench and makes an one-in-a-million shot to destroy the Death Star, and this is less than a week before he was just a farmboy from fuck-all. Anakin is the [https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheChosenOne Chosen One], and people who are chosen tend to be skilled and powerful regardless. Young Ani competes and wins a pod-race that only aliens can normally participate in due to the sheer insanity of it, and then blows up a Trade Federation Dreadnought with a fighter he&#039;d never been in before. Again, no problem. Now Rey is about as much the Hero as Luke but is an Unchosen One compared to Anakin, and the wildest thing she does in her first movie is to use the Force untrained (much like Luke does in A New Hope) and gain the upper hand on a Sith apprentice. Overall, Rey is propably the least powerful in her first movie, but since people don&#039;t expect her to be that powerful, she gets called a Mary Sue for it. Why people doesn&#039;t expect her to be [[-4 Str|as powerful]] as [[Lawful Good|Luke]] and [[BBEG|Anakin]] is better left for another discussion entirely, though the fact that Rey is touted as a strong female character while being propped up by the failures of men and saved by men throughout the trilogy doesn&#039;t help her case. &lt;br /&gt;
** Then we get a new wrinkle, care of &#039;&#039;&#039;Rise of Skywalker&#039;&#039;&#039;, where we learn that Rey is &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; Rey &#039;&#039;&#039;Palpatine&#039;&#039;&#039;. You heard right, Rey is literally Emperor Palpatine&#039;s &#039;&#039;granddaughter&#039;&#039;. You can imagine the sheer level of [[Skub]] this created.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Richard, from the Sword of Truth series (he&#039;s not as bad in the TV series). He is always considered an ideal hero despite being cruel, sociopathic, and thinking that the universe should bend over backwards for him [[What|(which it actually does).]] Everyone who disagrees with him is evil (even if that&#039;s the only reason they&#039;re considered a villain) or turns evil. Gratuitous rape is thrown in by the author as a cheap way to make him look better (making villains as reprehensible as possible doesn&#039;t solve the problem of the protagonist being completely un-heroic).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Richard B. Riddick, from the Riddick universe. Vin Diesel&#039;s personal self-insert inspired from his own D&amp;amp;D Rogue. Didn&#039;t start out as a Mary Sue though, going from a sensible power level &#039;&#039;(where a fist-fight with a morphine-addicted merc is reasonably fair)&#039;&#039; with dubious morality and a lovably snarky badass attitude.  Later becoming &#039;&#039;(particularly amongst the directors cuts)&#039;&#039; a superpowered badass who can single-handedly take on squads of soldiers with a knife, resist soul sucking, commune with animals and make threats with [[Just as Planned]] modes of killing. &#039;&#039;(&amp;quot;kill you with my teacup&amp;quot; / &amp;quot;dead in 5 seconds&amp;quot;)&#039;&#039;, oh... he can also explode as shown in the director&#039;s cuts and off-screen in the video games.  His later portrayals also show his morality becoming a &amp;quot;told you so&amp;quot; mentality, where, when people die it&#039;s really because they are the assholes and nothing to do with Riddick.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Sarah Kerrigan from the Starcraft series has become this more and more as time passes. In the first game she&#039;s just a terran ghost (psionic assassin) who gets turned into a human-zerg hybrid and disappears from the plot after like two or three missions in the zerg campaign, but then she becomes one of the main villains of the expansion pack and everyone else in in the game becomes a thundering dumbass so she can look like a master manipulator despite being played for a sap by yet another character, and commits several atrocities to serve herself and her own agenda but is not punished them in any way despite multiple characters swearing revenge on her. Then the sequel ramped it up.  Out of fucking nowhere she is designated the saviour of the galaxy from the new villain in town with virtually no justification offered except that Blizzard were too cowardly and attached to the the character to follow through on people wanting her dead. She gets purified of zerg corruption and another character who&#039;s more fun and interesting gets killed off so she can live. The zerg campaign centers on her and shows her doing yet more pointlessly-cruel and destructive things in the name of petty revenge, its only concessions to the ridiculousness of letting her live being some half-hearted acknowledgements of her past crimes. And after a pair of pointless guest appearances in the protoss campaign and its prologue campaign, she gets picked by the last good Xel&#039;Naga in the universe to receive his essence and become a Xel&#039;Naga herself so she can defeat the main villain in a laser beam-off. And after her boyfriend, a better-written character who spends all his time getting shit on throughout the series, is seen moping in a bar at the end of the final campaign, she gets to ass pullingly make him a Xel&#039;Naga too, for some moron&#039;s idea of resolving their relationship with happily ever after ending.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Sakamoto from &#039;Haven&#039;t You Heard? I&#039;m Sakamoto&#039; never fails at anything and always manages to look [[Awesome]] no matter what he is doing or how much the other characters try to sabotage him, and it is hilarious.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Selene, from the &#039;Underworld&#039; movies. Throughout the series, she bears several similarities to [[Alice]]; both are experts with weapons, both have superior biology to their respective species (humans for Alice, Vampires for Selene), both kill their way through swarms of enemies without getting a scratch, both have little regard for their source material, and both are played by the wives of the directors of their respective film series.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Squirrel Girl from Marvel Comics is another one of these Sues who&#039;s actually popular and enjoyed for it, probably because she&#039;s played entirely for laughs: Doreen Grey is a [[Mutant]] teenage girl with Spider-Man levels of strength/speed/agility, can grow bone knuckles, can talk to squirrels (and have them do her bidding) and has the ability to defeat any villain she wants off-screen. This includes big-name villains like Doctor Doom (she beat him in his first appearance and several times afterwards, and this is a rare instance of a Doom-related incident that was &#039;&#039;not&#039;&#039; smoothed over with the &amp;quot;Just a Doombot&amp;quot; excuse), Ego the Living Planet (who is, like his name suggests, a planet, meaning that a teenage girl beat up a planet), Thanos (who is one of the biggest badasses of the Marvel Universe, but the writers saved his face by replacing him in this instance with a perfect copy of him), Deadpool (whom she calls the mean, mean man; he&#039;s actually scared of her), M.O.D.O.K. and tons of other people. She was once part of a C-list superhero team, but quit because she thought she was holding them back (which she was entirely correct about: she once apologized to them for being late because she had to beat a 100&#039; space dragon) and left for Marvel&#039;s Nexus of the Multiverse: New York. Despite her unapologetic Mary Sue-ness the fans love her and see her as the one spot of light in the otherwise relentlessly [[grimdark]] Marvel Universe, because again, she&#039;s played entirely for laughs and there&#039;s nary a title in Marvel Comics that couldn&#039;t do with more laughs. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Superman]] in the hands of a poor writer. He is morally perfect, one of the strongest beings in the DC universe, and his one weakness that&#039;s supposed to kill him never works &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;ex: he lifts an entire continent of Kryptonite after being stabbed by a dagger made of it&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; thankfully &#039;&#039;Superman Returns&#039;&#039; had so many plotholes that &#039;&#039;Man of Steel&#039;&#039; declared it all non-canon. The only reliable way to nerf him is to have Batman beside him, because Superman always becomes a dumbass when Batman is around (go watch DCAU Justice League to see for yourself). Good writers can avoid falling into this by having him go up against villains who can genuinely threaten him (such as General Zod or Maxima), showing that even with all his vast powers there are things Superman just can&#039;t do (in one tragic story it turned out that even though he can benchpress planets, he can&#039;t stop his parents from dying of cancer) or emphasising that his strong morals are not intrinsic to him, but a product of a happy childhood, caring parents and a network of close friends, and he wouldn&#039;t necessarily have them if he were raised somewhere less pleasant (like, say, Planet Apokolips or the Soviet Union - both actually happened in Elseworlds stories, look it up).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Tauriel, Peter Jackson&#039;s special snowflake from &#039;&#039;The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug&#039;&#039; (a Mary Sue in something related to Tolkien; [[Tolkien|Beren and Luthien are deep and well-written enough to get a pass]], this is a sad day). Not content with pissing on the established characters and story from the book (i.e. the Barrel-escape from Thranduil&#039;s castle is changed, Smaug &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;is much less intelligent than he is in the book...)&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;-Sorry but this is A:not true, B:has nothing to do with Tauriel whom he never meets), Peter also adds unnecessary and over-the-top new characters.  Tauriel&#039;s ridiculously skilled at fighting (even for an elf) and has healing powers. According to all of Tolkien&#039;s books, only a select few elves can heal people such as Lord Elrond Half-Elven, wielder of one of the three Elven Rings of Power and a direct descendant of the Kings of the Noldor; all things which Tauriel lacks. In addition, she&#039;s ship-teased with canon-characters Legolas (who never appears, or even gets mentioned, in the book) and Kili. Though it is worth mentioning Legolas was never supposed to appear in the film adaptation of the Hobbit but was shoe horned in by executives who wanted to cash in on his popularity with fangirls.  At least some of the ship tease between Kili and Tauriel is well handled as well, in particular when Kili tells her stories when locked in prison. Hell, next to the Uber competent Warrior Legolas became in the films, Tauriel is tame.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Star Trek|Wesley Crusher]]. Wesley FUCKING Crusher. Originating from the same franchise as the original Mary Sue, Wesley is a very young ensign training to be an officer in Starfleet, where he&#039;s earned the admiration of many of the bridge officers. He became something of a protege to Captain Picard, who was impressed by Wesley after he showed that he had learned all the controls at the captain&#039;s chair when they first met. &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;While not morally perfect or incorruptible Wesley is as close as he can be in most cases&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; He&#039;s only moral by Gene Roddenberry&#039;s standards &#039;&#039;(which were messed up beyond belief, the man thought it was okay to be a prima donna director to a point that made even Stanley Kubrick and James Cameron look tame but not for children to grieve over dead loved ones, and that&#039;s not getting into his corporate shyster practices, anti-religious prejudices and sexism; seriously we&#039;re not making any of that up)&#039;&#039;, by a normal person&#039;s, he&#039;s smug and egocentric, along with his [[Deus Ex Machina]] techno skills, which are shown off by making the rest of the crew look useless. He notably also gets the Enterprise into danger before getting it out of it, and never gets called out for it. Many people thought that he was an insufferable little shit, among them Wil Wheaton (the actor who PLAYED the guy).  Wesley is even named after Gene Roddenberry; Wesley is Gene&#039;s middle name - or to give Gene&#039;s full name, Eugene &#039;&#039;Wesley&#039;&#039; Roddenberry.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Loli|Young main characters]] in crappy [[Asians|Japanese]] [[anime|animes]] and [[manga]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Main characters from Japanese [[Isekai]] light novels. Usually they were nerds or losers who only interest in a particular underrated hobby/talent in their world, but became a fucking skyrim tier powerhouse once they enter the so-called mysterious otherworld. Upon entering, they became super powerful since their somewhat boring talent suddenly becomes a miracle to the other world residents thus making the main character successful. It is a trend that they will done the following to prove their superiority: wrecking Saturday cartoon villain tier antagonist (usually a reference to the main character&#039;s childhood bully) that made even [[Ahriman]] looks good, instantly gained many female party members because the main character was an unpopular virgin in their original world(and no males allow, they are yucky), using their otaku knowledge to solve every problem that was deems unsolvable in the other world(more reason that their useless hobby/talent that was deemed useless has more use in the otherworld). The other world usually consist the cliches of JRPG world: [[Medieval Stasis]], fantasy creatures like dwarves and elves, old European like hierarchy and cultures, monsters, JRPG mechanic. One of many trend of isekai protagonist is that almost all of them have tragic background featuring how they were bullied in high school or parent suicide or truck-kun or some typical Japanese cliches of tragic. There are also many situations where authors would made the protagonist suffer by have him stuck in a misunderstood situation, setup by the unlikable villain as an attempt to make him look good. Then again, these kind of self fulfilling characters are authors self insert whom was a victim of a depressing citizens of their society, or they thought. There are a few exceptions to this such as Ainz Ooal Gown, Kazuma Satou or Kazuya Souma who are thrown into situations that requires far more intelligence, planning and Indy Polys than your typical light novel protagonist can muster. Some try to subvert this with mixed results. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Judging from the rest of the list, [[Skub|any character you don&#039;t like.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Works with more than too many of them===&lt;br /&gt;
*[[In Nomine]]&#039;s Superiors may or may not qualify; if they do, they do so as a block, thus placing them here. The problem here is that each Superior is an NPC made to more or less &#039;&#039;&#039;be&#039;&#039;&#039; their entire organization (&#039;&#039;most&#039;&#039; PCs report directly to at least one of them), and thus needs to be larger-than-life. Ultra high-powered NPCs plus Strong Personalities plus Needing to Show Up Frequently is a formula only in need of a small amount Bad Writing or Poor GMing to go into hardcore Suedom. On the &amp;quot;possibly further from Suedom&amp;quot; side, all the Superiors have exploitable character flaws, but the result is still an edifying example of why High Powered NPCs are a problem.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Sonichu, made by [[Chris-Chan|you-know-who]]. To make a long article short, just about anyone who is friends with the author or from some franchise &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;s/he/it&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; likes gets to be overwhelmingly hax and unbound by the laws of morality, everyone who isn&#039;t is pretty much either nonexistent or very very evil.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Twilight&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Twilight|Bella Swan]]: Though she is a pretentious, manipulative, male-dependent, self-pitying downer who takes her parents for granted and makes no time for her friends, Bella is adored by all. Her first day of school is supposedly hard for her, despite the fact that every person she meets instantly presents her with a best friend badge, and/or falls in love with her.  She&#039;s also clumsy EXCEPT when there&#039;s a moment where she&#039;ll die if she does something clumsy.  Add being a painfully obvious author surrogate and even being the product of one of the author&#039;s dreams (S Meyer admitted that herself), &amp;quot;clumsy&amp;quot; Bella is the Mary Sue of her generation.&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Twilight|Edward Cullen]]: This character is the reason the popularity of vampires took a massive hit when the book came out.  Possibly the most rage-inspiring aspect is he introduced the idea that vampires [[FAIL|SPARKLE HARMLESSLY LIKE DIAMONDS IN SUNLIGHT]]!  He can read minds, is near impossible to kill, doesn&#039;t have the vampire weakness to holy objects despite seeing himself as an abomination against God, doesn&#039;t feed off humans despite his literal bloodlust except for criminals or &amp;quot;those who deserve to die&amp;quot;, always fashionable and multi-talented.  Despite being a textbook case of an emotionally abusive and controlling boyfriend to Bella, he&#039;s always treated as having the moral high ground... except when he refuses to make Bella a vampire, but that gets swept under the rug as soon as he changes his mind.&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Twilight|Jacob Black]]: A werewolf from the Twilight franchise.  He commits date rape on Bella (forcing a kiss), trolls the vampires and switches sides between the werewolves and the vampires without consequence.  The worst part is when he [[FATAL|falls in love with Bella&#039;s and Edward&#039;s newborn daughter because of a vision, practicing wife husbandry on her as soon as she can walk and talk... and all the other characters are fine with this]].  The story also gushes about his looks to the point that the movie doesn&#039;t go five minutes without the character taking off his shirt and the camera focusing on his muscles.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*Warhammer unfortunately has several examples, many of them a result of Matt Ward&#039;s bad writing.  They get much better in the hands of more skilled writers, or in [[If the Emperor had a Text-to-Speech Device|parodies]].&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Cato Sicarius]]. Seriously this guy is Mary Sue&#039;s Mary Sue. He was born to a noble house on Talassar, trained with a sword as soon as he could hold one, inducted into the Ultramarines. He got commendation after commendation going from sergeant to company champion to Captain of the 2nd Company in several decades. He refined lightning assaults to near perfection and knows what to do after giving the battlefields a quick glance. He leads a company of mini Sues, each squad having some title for some great feat; their devastators having destroyed a titan, and a tactical squad that hasn&#039;t taken a casualty in close to 100 years. He is not only captain of the 2nd but &amp;quot;Master of the Watch&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Knight Champion of Macragge&amp;quot;, &amp;quot;Grand Duke of Talassar&amp;quot;, and &amp;quot;High Suzerain of Ultramar&amp;quot;, seriously those last two titles are [[pretend|completely made up]]. He&#039;s a complete dick, valuing glory for himself and his company over all else, admitting to his men that he didn&#039;t care about planet Damnos when they were battling the Necrons over it (where he got his ass handed to him by a no-name Necron Lord). He also decided to appoint himself judge, jury, and executioner, to judge Uriel Ventris when he broke from the Codex, even though they&#039;re the same rank and only the Chapter Master has the right to do stuff like that. Oh yeah that reminds me, to top it all off most of the chapter thinks he&#039;s next in line to be Chapter Master, instead of Captain Agemman of the first company, even though he&#039;s got much (see fuck-tons) more experience than Sicarius. Add all that to the Mary Sue-ness of being a Space Marine and being in the Ultramarines and it reaches critical levels.&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Eldrad|Eldrad Ulthran]], and what&#039;s worse: he knows he is, and is a complete dick about it.  Though he was recently imprisoned by his Craftworld for trying to help the Imperium and messing up Ynnead&#039;s ascension.&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Kaldor Draigo]]. Wrote his mentor&#039;s name into Mortarion&#039;s heart without contracting Spess Aids, or being fucking destroyed by said primarch which, of those 20(21?) can roll through a squad of Custodes without too much effort, got schllupped into the Warp and somehow remains pure.&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Marneus Calgar]], especially post-Ward.  Killing an Avatar of Khaine by punching its chest in and not getting seriously hurt in said fight with one.  An Avatar of Khaine is supposed to be as hard to kill as a Bloodthirster, something that takes a Primarch or a Bio-titan to beat in a one-on-one fight (then again, Games Workshop loves [[Worf|worfing]] Avatars, and Space Marines are their Creator&#039;s Pet). Calgar had his arms and legs chopped off by the Swarmlord, which didn&#039;t kill him due to Plot Armor, and he leads the Ultramarines, themselves considered a Mary Sue chapter in a Mary Sue faction (see the Space Marine entry on this page). These are just the first few examples.&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Captain Matthias Ward]], I am the better Mary-Sue.&lt;br /&gt;
**The [[Primarch]]s &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;and their [[Warhammer High|daughters]].&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;{{BLAM|&#039;&#039;&#039;THOSE WORDS ARE BLASPHEMY!!!!!!!! /tg/ can only create perfection!&#039;&#039;&#039;}} (To be fair, the daughters are only Sues in that they inherited their Sue traits from their fathers.)&lt;br /&gt;
**[[Uriel Ventris]] - despite initially coming off as a subversion of Wardian Ultramarines-are-the-best Mary Sue bullshit, he quickly devolves into [[Skub|Ultramarines are the worst unless they use the Codex to wipe their asses and act like Space Wolves]] - which is pretty much limited to - guess who? - McNeill&#039;s OC-Do-Not-Steal Special Snowflake Ventris.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*World of Warcraft:&lt;br /&gt;
**Kalecgos (AKA Kalec), blue dragon who can disguise himself as a human-elf hybrid; from [[World of Warcraft|World of Warcrabs]]. Ham-fistedly inserted into the Blood Elves&#039; redemption story arc as an enabler. Later he takes over the blue dragonflight even though he&#039;s not the oldest, wisest or most powerful blue dragon, but simply because he was the only surviving named blue dragon with anything approaching a personality. Later he hooks up with Jaina Proudmoore, a powerful human mage/noblewoman/faction leader introduced in Warcraft III. She does this in spite of their vast age difference (which made her reject an Elven prince who loved her). &lt;br /&gt;
**Jarod Shadowsong, [[World of Warcraft|World of Warcamp]].  Shoehorned into the setting in books &amp;quot;War of the Ancients&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Wolfheart&amp;quot; written by Richard Knaak.  Brother to canon character Maiev Shadowsong, love interest to Shandris Feathermoon, who is Tyrande&#039;s adopted daughter (both characters canon since WC3, Shandris in case you don&#039;t recognise is that one Elf archer with a unique model present in the first two and last Night Elf missions in RoC).  His mere presence raises morale so much that people &amp;quot;automatically fight harder and obey him with greater swiftness&amp;quot;. Survives a one-on-one fight against Archimonde, a demon lord who can destroy cities single-handedly because he suddenly decided to toy with Jarod even though time was of the essence.  Various Night Elves and even DEMIGODS place themselves under his command!  He spends thousands of years after the first fight against the Burning Legion resting on his laurels and doesn&#039;t show up when the Burning Legion invade the second time, but no-one calls him out on this in-universe.  Also Shandris&#039; love for him?  She hadn&#039;t seen, heard of or spoken to Jarod for &#039;&#039;thousands of years&#039;&#039; and he was also &#039;&#039;married to someone else&#039;&#039;, but apparently Shandris still loved him after all that time.&lt;br /&gt;
**Krasus (AKA Korialstraz) from [[World of Warcraft|World of Warcrack]], mainly due to the author&#039;s overuse of him, and said author is also Richard Knaak.  An elf who&#039;s secret identity is he&#039;s really a dragon, and one of the oldest living dragons. One of the leaders of the Kirin Tor. Consort/Adviser of the Dragon Queen, he might as well be the Dragon King considering how much importance she puts on him. He also  gets sent back in time to partake of a historical event despite the fact HIS YOUNGER SELF WAS AROUND IN THAT TIME. He also set up another Mary Sue in Warcraft, Rhonin (NOTE; both characters were created by the same author).&lt;br /&gt;
**Rhonin, archmage of the Kirin Tor, [[World of Warcraft|World of Warcrap]].   By Richard Knaak again, Blizzard Entertainment&#039;s equivalent of [[Robin Cruddace|Robin Cruddace]].  Knaak made up a new member of the famous Windrunner family just for Rhonin to hook up with. They have half-elf kids who are blessed by dragons despite the fact they&#039;ve done nothing to earn it (the player characters have done more, but they don&#039;t get anything like that; just a few trinkets that will be rendered obsolete by the next expansion), not to mention that those half-elf kids are one of the very rare examples of human-elf hybrids in WoW (the other is Arator the Redeemer, son of legendary characters all the way back in Warcraft 2 - human paladin Turalyon and elven general Alleria).  Even the name Rhonin is just the title &amp;quot;Rōnin&amp;quot; (referring to a Samurai with no master during Japan&#039;s feudal period) with a few changes to anglicize the name (and, of course, the character doesn&#039;t even look Japanese).  He gets sent back in time to partake in the first fight against the Burning Legion for no other reason than Knaak wanted Rhonin to be there. He does practically nothing in the game, yet everyone says he&#039;s a great hero; even then, he didn&#039;t do half the things they praise him for.&lt;br /&gt;
**Sylvanas Windrunner from [[World of Warcraft]] (The trend is now a bullet train into Edgytown): Started out as a Fantasy counterpart for Sarah Kerrigan, she&#039;s been turning into Fantasy Hitler/Mengele (or rather, was from the beginning).  Originally a High Elf ranger in Warcraft III who is killed and turned into a Banshee by Arthas. She sets up the Undercity as a fortress/Horde-run concentration camp for Alliance captives, and has free reign of atrocities ranging from slavery to genocide.  Her Royal Apothecary kidnapped innocents to experiment upon under her watch, torturing them for fun and science. Now that doing bad things upsetting some players does definitely not qualify for Mary Sue&#039;dom, but the problem becomes obvious as the plot advances. She was already under suspicion before the Wrathgate Incident (she knew about the plague, but not that it would be used on the Horde too), invaded Gilneas, nuked Southshore, waged a torture-filled genocidal campaign on the Humans, manipulated the Horde (to join them in the first place in order to use them as tools), built a Cult of Personality around herself, employed the Val&#039;kyr (which seems to be a case of &amp;quot;Even Chaos has standards&amp;quot; when seen by pragmatic Death Knight Thassarian), resurrected those who she killed against their will despite not liking when it happened to her, shot and killed Liam Greymane then taunted his father Genn about it, attempted to steal the Scythe of Elune to enslave the Worgen to expand her personal army and made some kind of deal with the devil to get the Val&#039;kyr in the first place. The closest she got to any kind of punishment was Lor&#039;thermar threatening to kill her if she raised the Horde&#039;s dead as Forsaken, stating he&#039;d leave her to the Alliance if she tried it on their dead and calling her out on several of her actions in Mists of Pandaria - rather weaksauce given the almighty kicking they were giving Garrosh throughout that expansion pack, making him out to be evil incarnate. In Legion, after retreating from the Broken Shore, the crowning moment of Mary Suedom occurs when she ends up being named the next Warchief of the Horde with Vol&#039;jin&#039;s dying words, followed by her abandoning the fight against a world-destroying demon army so she can find a way to cheat death, and everyone in the Horde is okay with this.  In the next expansion, the Horde forced the Night Elves out of Kalimdor in the War of Thorns, with Sylvanas pulling an Arthas by forcing the dying commander to watch her burn Teldrassil, an action worse than Garrosh&#039;s Bombing of Theramore because Theramore was a military target while the Night Elves had surrendered and Teldrassil was inhabited only by non-combatants.  Then the writers give her plot armor by having &amp;quot;never forsake honor&amp;quot; Saurfang save her life by dealing a dishonorable blow to her opponent, as Sylvanas&#039; atrocities grow barely anyone from the Horde turns against her, and pulling new powers out of their asses for her.  Then she pulls an admittedly cunning trap and Blight-bombs Lorderaen when the Alliance take it from the Forsaken in retaliation (only turning the tide thanks to Jaina).  After this she gets more unexplained new powers that allow her to one-shot Saurfang and solo Lich King Bolvar and a horde of undead in the lead-up to the new expac.  The Mary Sue reason on top of all this? She never suffers any &#039;&#039;(literally, ANY)&#039;&#039; setback except Greymane ruining her Val&#039;kyr agenda. All her atrocities and horrors are ignored or turned into heroism, and what&#039;s worse, she automatically pulls out the next phase of her agenda out of her ass like some Pentagon&#039;s high command after snorting a line of coke each. Her Forsaken, despite horrendous losses and ban on raising unwilling dead, somehow destroys each and everything with a shred of goodness around her...only for her to get raised to Warchief status like some spoiled prepubescent princess. This issue is compounded by the fact that Sylvanas has a very vocal fanbase and she&#039;s the Creator&#039;s Pet of at least two of Warcraft&#039;s dev team, lead quest writer David Kosak and Creative Director Alex Afrasiabi (the latter who insists [[Skub|she&#039;s not evil and that there&#039;s still a lot more to her story]]).  &lt;br /&gt;
**Thrall, the (in)famous Orc Warchief from &#039;&#039;[[Warcraft]]&#039;&#039;. Started out cool in WC3 as an Orc orphan raised in a human internment camp who escaped with help from a friend, he led the Orcs because he was the former Warchief&#039;s son and a powerful but not story-breaking shaman.  By having his forces fight alongside the trolls and Tauren and save them from their enemies he made allies. Though he fucked up by sending Grommash to collect resources from Ashenvale (antagonizing the Night Elves, giving the demons an opportunity to corrupt the Orcs and leading to the death of a demigod who would&#039;ve been a great help against the Burning Legion), with a lot of help from some allies and another demi-god he sets things right and they kick the Burning Legion&#039;s demonic asses off of Azeroth.  He still holds the line against threats and tries to make peace, but he&#039;s a bit too forgiving of trouble-makers in the Horde (see Sylvanas above and Garrosh below).  In the Cataclysm expansion for World of Warcramps, he became Azeroth&#039;s premiere shaman and leader of half the world while appointing the &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;[[Skub|VERY CONTROVERSIAL]]&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;balls to the wall violent and universally hated&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; patriotic warmonger Garrosh Hellscream as Warchief of the Horde; despite the protests of several others &#039;&#039;including Garrosh himself&#039;&#039; (who was uncertain he could handle the responsibility of such a role at the time). Takes over as Aspect of Earth from a borderline demigod, and even deals a crippling blow to him when he&#039;s empowered by the Old Gods. Even people that were fans of Thrall during Warcraft III have started to get sick of him.&lt;br /&gt;
*** The writers appear to have realized what kind of monster they unleashed in Cataclysm and every expansion since has given him a kicking in some way. In Mists of Pandaria Garrosh kicks his ass just before his final fight with the players. In Warlords of Draenor he gets relegated to the sidelines and has [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHwiEbXqh3k another fight with Garrosh], which features a memetastic sequence in which Garrosh pummels his dumb ass while listing his failures. He wins the fight only by cheating and using his shaman powers, and Legion (the expansion) reveals the Elemental Spirits have nerfed him for his blatant haxxing. Even when he begins getting his powers back, you only see that happen if you&#039;re a shaman, and he ends up becoming your bitch. Even his big fancy Doomhammer gets misplaced so it can become an Artifact weapon for Enhancement shamans.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
==Mary Sue Races==	&lt;br /&gt;
While not every member of a race is a Mary Sue, [[Chakat|with one or two exceptions]], sometimes whole races are considered Mary Sues because they have huge amounts of plot armor and are idealized beyond reason.  They were put here as the Mary Sue list was originally conceived for characters.  Also, please list them in alphabetical order.&lt;br /&gt;
 		&lt;br /&gt;
* Although some might find this as [[Skub|arguable,]] the characteristics describing the Asari race in [[Bioware|Mass Effect]] are blatantly Mary-Sue. Although not every Asari is a Mary Sue (though some are), when it comes to the general race as a whole, oh boy does their &#039;Sueness&#039; reach Chakat levels. Examples on what makes them a Mary Sue includes having the second longest lifespan behind the Krogan (over 1000 years, plus they lack the Krogans violent nature which can easily waste their long lifespans), all of them are biotic users, every one in the game is intelligent, founders of the council, considered sexy by many other species despite being a monogendered species (even Salarians, who lack a sex drive and mate by necessity), and are deliberately oversexualised by the developers so they can be [[Rule 34|Rule 34&#039;ed to death]]. Their race as a whole is portrayed as peace loving hippies, the best diplomats, the most respected species in the galaxy as well as having a serious case of &amp;quot;Holier/Morally Superior then thou&amp;quot; attitude.  Their ship the &amp;quot;Destiny Ascension&amp;quot; is the largest and most powerful ship in the Citadel fleet and their ships perversely resemble a lady privates because you know they all look like &amp;quot;wominz&amp;quot;.  Thessia, their homeworld, is regarded as the &amp;quot;jewel&amp;quot; of the galaxy (instead of the fucking Citadel) as well as having the largest amount of Eezo which partially explains how their entire race is biotics.  Any asari can &#039;Read&#039; most people&#039;s minds and inner-thoughts with near complete-accuracy, though only if that person agrees to it (they can literally mindfuck you).  Furthermore with their way of reproduction, since they are monogendered (Meaning their all female) a lot of newcomers in Mass Effect start to scratch their heads on how they manage to get each other pregnant without any physical evidence of having a dick (Although one of the hypothesis is that they might actually screw around with the local fauna AKA Bestiality). However the fluff states this as Parthenogenesis, for those that don&#039;t know what it is, think of them as chickens....which is actually hilarious if you seriously put the comparison in context.  Another odd thing about their reproduction is that somehow the Asari have the capability of getting pregnant from just about &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Anyone&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;. [[Chakat|Do those traits sound fucking familiar to you?]] So all in all, not only are they a holy (unholy?) fusion of a smurf, elf and a monster girl, but they also commit in sweaty Lesbian/Bestiality/Xenoality orgies with almost everyone, turning the Asari race into nothing more then a giant Whorehouse for Aliens and Humans to fap in a hundred dozen ways and yet they are still &#039;&#039;okay&#039;&#039; with that....&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;Slaneesh approve of this!&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; {{BLAM|&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;BLAM! BLAM! DOUBLE HERESY!&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;}} But to be fair, at least Asari aren&#039;t [[Avatar|furries]] or physical [[Chakat|hermaphrodites]]. 		&lt;br /&gt;
** Amusingly enough, the third game reveals that the only reason Asari are so much more advanced than the other races is because the Protheans (the super-advanced precursor race) were deliberately manipulating them and sneaking tech to them in their ancient history in order to give them a boost (such as genetically engineering them to be a race of skilled biotics and [[STC|leaving instruction manuals on how to create all sorts of advanced technology and deal with the other races in their &amp;quot;beacons&amp;quot;]]).  The hope was that if they were given enough a headstart, the Asari would be able to unite and lead the other races to victory against the Reapers (in other words, they were deliberately &#039;&#039;trying&#039;&#039; to make the Asari Mary Sues in order to give the next cycle an advantage over the Reapers). Instead the Asari kept that knowledge to themselves and used it to become the most powerful race in the galaxy.  When the Reapers showed up, the Asari buried their heads in the sand like the smurf elf pussies they are on their homeworld, leaving the other races to fend for themselves, than promptly got their asses kicked by the Reapers (Which they probably deserved it for being such [[Eldar|self-righteous and selfish cockbags]]). Perhaps one of the few instances of a Mary Sue being both invoked and subverted.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Angry Marines]]. When was the last time YOU heard of an Angry Marine LOSING? Thought no-{{BLAM}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{BLAM|+The current author has been executed by the Inquisition to prevent the total destruction of the Imperium of Man by Angry Marines. Thank you and have a nice day.+}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* The Draka, once human, then Posthuman slaver empire from the Domination Series by S.M Stirling, collapsing the &amp;quot;Bullying, slaving, torture-happy, heartless Karma Houdini asshole who is the channelized catharsis of the author rather than genuine art.&amp;quot; shtick into a black hole the size of the galaxy. South African British colony turns into a nation of literal &amp;quot;[[Drow]] in human skin&amp;quot; when due to (mis)fortune, every losing side from wars against tyranny gets exiled to Drakia, the British colony named after Francis Drake. Turning chattel slavery into a race-wide, airtight regulated franchise in the case of blacks, they exploit entire Africa by taking the colonies belonging to the enemies of British people. Unifying in a Spartan way of life, completely shedding any morality in the case of slave control, eventually Draka Dominion declares independence from the British Crown, and turns entire Africa into a mega plantation with industrial giants enticed by obscene handouts exploited from Africa. The Draka then adopt Nietzschean ideals, and declare every non-Draka a slave, or a potential slave. Somehow the First World War results in Ottoman Empire being overran by them, and eventually the Draka start turning white people into slaves starting from Italy with approval of Hitler and employ black slave soldiers who are given ample living standards and items with free rape of anyone that is captured.&lt;br /&gt;
** This (Post-World War 2) is where the story turns from an [[Edgy]] /pol/-fanfic to pants-on-head retarded FAPfic. Though the series display a very detailed alternate history AND technological evolution (steamer cars phased out far later than combustion engine driven ones), the Draka&#039;s endless S&amp;amp;M laden plantation slave bitch fantasy hits overdrive and they simultaneously conquer Russia, Europe minus , and entire CHINA with black soldiers and their white masters that were, mind you, from an Africa that wasn&#039;t overpopulated but ecologically protected. They do not lose one, ONE battle while rampaging and raping and enslaving. Their methods are extremely savage: impalement and rape are regular actions at every resistance, and the black soldiers can take out any psychosis forming from mass atrocities on other slaves back home, every capture tortured until completely broken before being enslaved. Their research facilities have *zero* ethics, using up millions of humans in torturous experiments to develop fantastic drugs, bioweapons and medications since, well, their citizens are drilled from age 2 to 18 with a Nietzsche-on-crack ideology to circumvent a sudden case of conscience to heart. Eventually they change the Draka Citizen DNA to that of an immortal superhuman species, destroy the rest of non-Draka armies with [[/pol/|weaponized AIDS]] and make all slaves into docile abhumans and take over the rest of the world, rape all the women and men, destroy every monument and cultural heritage not belonging to them, turn the USA into a hunting reserve to hunt humans like animals (and eat them sometimes). Then the Draka expand into alternate universes, infiltrating our world and its parallel versions and start taking them over as well and enjoying immortal, eternal exploitation of everyone everywhere forever. What the entire US and UK plus the rest of Asia, Japan, Southeast Asia does is to create an Alliance that walks on eggshells and fucks up every espionage action against the Draka, loses every battle and ends up escaping to Alpha Centauri. S.M Stirling eventually writes a sequel where an alternate Earth has the [[Humanity&#039;s_Last_Stand|human Alliance win for a a change]], but the damage is already done. We are graced with the endless plantation BDSM fetish fantasy of bisexual, blonde, white, transhuman, constantly horny blue-eyed men and women fucking their farm slaves of either gender and make them work their asses off after breaking them in of every little inch of their personalities. A particularly nasty lesbian Draka is Stirling&#039;s Creator Pet: she manages to capture the sister of an American soldier who killed her lover and makes her a slave. She tortures her with a mental chip for years to destroy her brain, forcing her to bear her lover&#039;s clone children, and rapes her mentally, and eventually, physically. And her side wins the war, the girl escapes an old ruined wreck into space(albeit back to her brother), and our bitch spends her long, long life to torture and kill surviving Alliance holdouts for fun, happily raping, killing and torturing ever after. Seriously, even Kosak had more of a shred of decency, Stirling.&lt;br /&gt;
 		&lt;br /&gt;
* The [[Drow]] from [[Drowtales]]. Their Mary Sue factor isn&#039;t even funny. Shaped by several inputs from several authors, their Drow are the best example of how too many cooks ruin a soup as well as the main author&#039;s high school misantrophy hitting overdrive. The Drowtales&#039; Drow are practically immortal, have regenerating limbs, never menstruate, possess metals that are impenetrable to other sentient beings and virtually twice as big and a thousand times as powerful as other races to the point of a few drow kids on an adventure can butcher a city with innocents to save their friend who was about to be killed for its blood, since humans, hunted and enslaved, are desperate to the point of killing elves for their blood just to have an edge. Their houses in underworld have all the modern technology complete with giant walkers and submarines, modern machinery, PARTICLE RIFLES and magitech street lights, but somehow they need human and other races as slaves and this need is shown as just and necessary right at the beginning with the &amp;quot;good&amp;quot; faction&#039;s &amp;quot;surface raiders&amp;quot; murdering an entire village and taking women and children to slave markets because the poor widdle drow need slaves and &amp;quot;It&#039;s just their unique morality&amp;quot;. And the way the webcomic shows them as tragic beings is the cherry on top: I didn&#039;t know it was so tragic and sad when the humans counterattack to save their raided relatives from your homes, locked in to be sold as slaves.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* ALL [[Chakat|Chakats!]] The entire fucking race are distilled and purified Mary Sues, sometimes warping stories they are even mentioned in passing.  Not just [[monstergirls|feline-centaur]] [[/d/|dick-girls]](Sick Fucks), they&#039;re also each master psionicists with faster-than-light mind-reading, able to cure deep neurotic complexes with a good deep dickin&#039;, strongest and most stable form of &#039;Taurs&#039;, considered as the most &amp;quot;beautiful thing in the universe&amp;quot; despite looking exactly like lions with the fact that they have dicks, morally perfect to the extreme, nobody technically hates them, their breast milk can turn the most feeble human into mini-Arnold Schwarzeneggers and every non-Chakats seem to have a unnatural and unhealthy lifestyle on trying to &amp;quot;Do it&amp;quot; with them. Despite the fact that there are hundreds of &#039;&#039;other&#039;&#039; Catgirls outside of this furfag heresy, that are more attractive, cuter and prettier then them with the added benefit that they are actually female, [[HERESY|not hermaphrodite abominations]].&lt;br /&gt;
 		&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Elf|Elves]] are often portrayed this way in fiction(Look above at Drowtales), though there are exceptions and it&#039;s becoming rarer for elves to be portrayed as Mary Sues.  A lot of their sueness comes from how idealized they are.  They&#039;re always beautiful, sometimes even without making an effort, either immortal or have very long lifespans and can only die from violence.  They&#039;re often considered to have the moral high ground yet also be condescending to the younger races, but the elves contempt kept getting justified in some stories.  Some have the natural ability to make anything beautiful from even the most base materials, naturally have great magical ability, and are often favored by their gods.  However, there are evil elves in fiction and some elves who are morally good without being Mary Sues. Then there are curvy anime rapebait elves (often dark elves) who get high on male smells and secretions and turn into thicc fuckdolls taking massive amounts of dicking. &lt;br /&gt;
	&lt;br /&gt;
*[[Doctor Who|Whoverse Humanity]] takes this up to a 100 million in this case. Depending on the timeline, Humanity not only manage to become the dominant ruler of the multi-galaxy not once, but [[What|&#039;&#039;&#039;Five Fucking Times!&#039;&#039;&#039;]] Without any indication on how they manage to conquer the Galaxy, thriving with hostile Aliens that could LOLStomp the Necrons, Eldar, Orks, Tau, Tyranid, Chaos in all it&#039;s forms and the Imperium &#039;&#039;combined&#039;&#039;. Furthermore not only are they one of the [[Imperium of Man|most numerous species in the Universe,]] but also one of the most adaptable and longest lasting race, as seen when they are one of the [[Grimdark|few species still alive near the end of the fucking Universe.]] To give you an idea on how fucking ludicrous Humanity got within Doctor Who, in just 500 years from present day, Humanity was already a major force in the Galaxy ([[Star Trek|Compare this to most Sci-Fi timelines]] [[Bioware|where Humanity either just started to explore their surroundings]] [[Halo|or already establish a small and insignificant area]]), as well as having weapons that could make [[Strike Legion]] seem useless in comparison, and when you take note on how short the timeline distance is between the present day and the end of the Universe, it just makes you say to yourself....the Fuck? Compare this to say [[Star Wars]] in which they have the excuse of not knowing how long Humanity has been space traveling, or [[WH40K]] where the thousands of years gap of slow progress before the Warp Drive was invented seem much more plausible then this absurd scenario. You know Humanity is a Mary Sue when even the near-death of the Universe can&#039;t kill them off....until a certain Dues Ex Machina appeared. To be fair, they only gain their Sueness momentum when a certain Time Lord keep on foiling the plans of countless Aliens attempting to conquer and crush humanity in various stages in time; either that or because the Doctor has a unusually unhealthy Humanophile fetish. They are probably one of the few examples of a &amp;quot;Accidental Mary Sue&amp;quot;, in which the Doctor, with his fancy Time gizmos and intellect, unintentionally guided Humanity to such power levels by either saving their asses from certain doom or altering the timeline so they won&#039;t fuck up, due to his love of Humans. Granted Whoverse Humanity is definitely far from morally perfect (A substantial amount of Whoverse villains are Humans and the multiple Human Empires itself are morally questionable at best. The Timelords themselves are hardly better than the Daleks at times.), the main point of contention is how influentially powerful they are for such a young race while at the same time, disregarding other more ancient and more powerful races (Silurian, Cybermen, Sontarian, Ice Warriors, etc) that should be the one having more galactic screen time and hegemony then them. &lt;br /&gt;
**Whoverse humanity Mary Sueness can&#039;t really be blamed on any one author. It&#039;s basically what happens when the newer writers don&#039;t want to change or retcon forty year old fluff.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Dwarves as seen in the Artemis Fowl series. While virtually all dwarven exploits described are performed by one Mulch Diggums, most of his Mary Sueness is excused as &amp;quot;dwarven racial talents.&amp;quot; His spit can harden into a glowing substance that&#039;s strong enough to resist high speed impacts, he can fart hurricanes and shit cannonballs, he can dig a self sealing tunnel through any earth-like substance as fast as a man can run, drink water with his pores, use said pores like suction cups if he&#039;s thirsty, hear better than a stethoscope, and has tremorsense to at least a hundred feet. Dwarves are also described as having access to the fairy magic (Common uses include instant healing, invisibility, and mid-grade mind control), but Mulch gave that up to steal things instead. This despite no readily apparent level adjustment, nor any mention of useful powers before those same powers are necessary, puts this race quite firmly in this category.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* LeShay are a race that appeared as a monster in the D&amp;amp;D 3th edition book [[Epic Level Handbook]] and have been completely forgotten about since then like most of what was in that book.  They are described as being to elves what elves are to humans only more so.  That sentence alone should immediately set off red flags.  LeShay are extremely powerful immortals resembling albino elves who are survivors from a civilization that was erased from history.  Whoever it was that came up with this race probably did not intend for them to be Mary Sues and the concept of them actually isn&#039;t that bad, but they probably would have ended up as Mary Sues if any bad writers had gotten a hold of them.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* The Mandalorians in the Star Wars Expanded Universe, depending whose writing them. While good under the correct writers, under some of the bad ones (Hint, it involves Karen fucking Traviss), they compete with badly written expanded universe Jedi and Sith for the position of Star Wars&#039; Ultrasmurfs. In the expanded universe ALL mandos are elite warrior mercenaries, skilled enough to take out armed enemies with their bare hands and usually packing enough fire power to level a building. They&#039;re so badass in fact that they&#039;re known to hunt Jedi for fucking sport because they&#039;re the only thing that&#039;ll give&#039;m a real challenge. Experienced jedi hunters can be good enough to fight them head on despite all their force powers and saber swinging because they have the right gear and experience to counter it. Bear in mind that Mandos do not use the force in anyway. Karen Traviss also writes them with the Mary Sue trait of always being right and people agreeing with them for things they call the Jedi out for that they didn&#039;t even do, like create the clone army, and makes them out to be the pinnacle of civilization despite being warmongers with a history of allying with the Sith and trying to conquer the galaxy themselves. 	&lt;br /&gt;
** The most famous Mandalorian, Boba Fett, generally avoids becoming this trope and is just a plain badass (as a bonus he rarely if ever engages in the dick-stroking egomania of Traviss&#039;s Mandies), but under bad writers his badassitude can push into this. His father Jango Fett follows this same idea; in fact his origin story partly involves his old merc group of Mandalorians getting slaughtered by a group of Jedi in a moment that reads sort of like &amp;quot;fuck you Karen Traviss&amp;quot;. Sure, Jango kills six Jedi with his bare hands in that massacare, but the Jedi he killed were not decades old masters and he is (as an individual) supposed to be that good. The fact that he managed that made Palpatine choose him as the Clone Army template donor.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Avatar|All Na&#039;vi]], the blue-skinned eco-humping gobshites.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* Smurfs. They&#039;re portrayed as a peace-loving, quasi-communist society who always come out on top in their primary conflict with an evil wizard family and are idealized to the point of ridiculousness. They&#039;re also friends with animals and never have to worry about being eaten even though they&#039;re the size of large mice. [[Skub|Then &#039;&#039;again&#039;&#039;]], most of the other conflicts they encounter are usually due to one or more of their clan fucking something up in accordance with their [[Derp|singular personality trait]], and overall they seem collectively naive about things to the point of gullibility. Said approach is likely designed to promote the usual aesop of teamwork and the importance of family, so it could be far worse.&lt;br /&gt;
 		&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Twilight|Vampires in a certain book series]]. Even though they were as gay as fuck (which damaged the reputation of actual vampires).&lt;br /&gt;
** [[Vampire]]s in general. They were often portrayed by writers as hard to kill monster that is able to use magic, good at many martial arts, good swordsman, master scholar, good charismatic looking in appearance, living in big castles while commanding other monsters like they were their servants or slaves, making them the Elves of the monster world by that definition. Seriously, some writers even give them plot armor to get past their weaknesses of holy objects, divine power or sunlight (though the former usually depends on the author&#039;s attitude towards religion).&lt;br /&gt;
** Probably one of the best exceptions of this is Count Orlock from the classic silent film &#039;&#039;Nosferatue.&#039;&#039; Whereas nowadays vampires get the treatment of being oh-so-sexy, suave, charismatic, pitiable creatures whose lives suck despite being immortal, undead bloodsuckers, Orlok is just a hideous predatory monster out to drink blood and feed. No charisma, no suave, nothing to pity, nothing to feel empathy for. In short, straight-ahead horror vampires done completely right.&lt;br /&gt;
** By contrast, the vampires of the House of Night series by mother and daughter team P. C. and Kristen Cast are far worse examples than even Twilight&#039;s bastardization. To clarify, vampires worship the goddess Nyx who is the only real goddess, are selected by a tracker when they are a human teen, are the poor, oppressed minorities of the world even though literally almost every famous person in human history was a vampire, will become utterly handsome and beautiful unless they reject the Change in which case they are afforded no sympathy as they die due to events outside their control, every negative stereotype is because of stupid humans, they can never due anything bad...in short, vampires done so badly that Twilight is more believable as good vampire literature. Seriously.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Somewhat Special Cases ==&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are a few cases of characters who could be referred to in-universe as a Sue, or serve as a non-joking deconstruction of the idea, or are referred to above sufficiently to be worth describing, but aren&#039;t actually Sues. (Characters who veer in and out of Suedom depending on the writer or episode go on the main list, BTW.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* The Crimson King from Stephen King&#039;s Dark Tower series. He&#039;s talked up as a big threat, and his plan legitimately threatens the universe; but when confronted, he turns out be a paper tiger, whose chief power was getting so many people and monsters working on one page on his plan to destroy the world, and was otherwise actually rather mediocre compared to them. Given the heavy theme of &#039;&#039;&#039;disappointment&#039;&#039;&#039; in both the series as a whole and the last book of it in particular, this sorta worked on a meta level, but was very, well, disappointing. (For the reason he&#039;s included here, see Darkseid above.)&lt;br /&gt;
* Jonathan, from the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode &amp;quot;Superstar&amp;quot;, provides a pretty good case study of the in-universe Mary Sue.&lt;br /&gt;
*Momonga/Ainz Ool Gown from Overlord boarders on Mary-Sueish and is the protagonist of an [[Isekai]] work, but is also a decent deconstruction of invincible Villain Sues at the same time.  He is transported to a fantasy world as his [[Lich]] MMO avatar, along with his Guild Hall and all its NPCs, now alive.  He&#039;s still a no-life (literally) Japanese salary man, but finds he has lost his humanity and feelings, all the better to pretend to be (and eventually become) the overlord his adoring minions expect.  These expectations pressure him to conquer the world with his gamer skills, system knowledge and corporate experience, min-maxing his way to success whilst bullshitting people that he&#039;s an evil mastermind.  He still has many advantages however in resources, magic and diplomacy (substituting sales pitches for evil monologues, surprisingly easy) compared to all other characters so far.  This results in him single-handedly winning wars, having an Empire become a vassal state almost by accident, and annexing a whole town from a neighbouring kingdom to rule over (Word of god is that no other YGGDRASIL players will appear).  Being by many definitions OP, drama arises from him not having complete control and knowledge of his minions&#039; actions. Though fanatically loyal they are constantly guessing his true intentions to try and impress him, misinterpreting his commands, and in some cases almost outright deceiving him.  Two such examples are Ainz&#039;s advisor Albedo plotting behind his back to kill other Supreme Beings that he wants alive and unharmed, and Demiurge harvesting human captives to make magical items (Ainz himself mistakenly thinks Demiurge is only using animals because Demiurge refers to humans as animals on account of his contempt for mortal races).  Both are in part because of Ainz&#039;s actions, and in any case, he has ordered equally terrible things himself.  Furthermore, while most of Ainz&#039;s female guardians lust after him, even this is deconstructed; Albedo&#039;s a succubus - so lust is par the course - and yandere for Ainz because he altered her code in YGGDRASSIL to change her from &amp;quot;slut&amp;quot; to &amp;quot;in love with Momongo&amp;quot; as a joke, Shalltear wants Ainz because he&#039;s a walking skeleton and she&#039;s a necrophile (and not to Ainz&#039; taste being a loli vampire; yeah, Shalltear&#039;s in-universe creator is a major /d/eviant, and held in higher esteem than Ainz by Shalltear) and Aura keeps a lid on her crush (Aura&#039;s also not to Ainz&#039;s taste being a flat-chested teenage elf) - ultimately, the fact that Ainz is a walking skeleton means he&#039;s unable to fulfill their desires/consummate his own.&lt;br /&gt;
:*TL:DR: Ainz&#039;s skills as a salary man and a competitive gamer don&#039;t translate well to politics or world conquest.  Without his own gamebreaking powers, his almost as powerful loyal NPCs, his skull poker face and incompetence from some of the enemy commanders, Ainz&#039;s plans wouldn&#039;t have worked nearly as well.&lt;br /&gt;
* The Monkey King, from [[Mythology|Journey To The West]], if one assumes he isn&#039;t a religious figure and thus safe to include in this list, is interesting in that while he&#039;s very close to being a Mary Sue, several factors drag him away from the classification:&lt;br /&gt;
*#He&#039;s charged with protecting an unworldly monk, along with a horse, an idiot, and a SUPER idiot. Rescuing them is most of what he does in the main body of the story.&lt;br /&gt;
*#He&#039;s repeatedly shown as being outwitted by the Buddha. While he&#039;s more clever than anybody else besides the Buddha, the implication is clear: there &#039;&#039;&#039;are&#039;&#039;&#039; people better than him.&lt;br /&gt;
*#If one cares to dip into a religious reading, one can see in his introduction the clear Buddhist message &amp;quot;No matter how awesome you are, you are still trapped in the machinations of Desire and Karma&amp;quot;; alternately, even if you don&#039;t care for religion, there&#039;s also the message &amp;quot;make enough of a nuisance of yourself, and your enemies will eventually slap you down even if it means _____&amp;quot; (in the case of the Monkey King, swallowing their pride and asking help from somebody they dislike). (In other words: A deconstruction of certain kinds of Mary Sues, before the idea of a &amp;quot;Mary Sue&amp;quot; was even created.)&lt;br /&gt;
* [[The Raven Queen]] is a fairly good example of why &amp;quot;Mary Sue&amp;quot; accusations, unless taken from a Author Centered or Functional perspective, are somewhat useless. TRQ hits many Mary Sue buttons, and thus is sometimes accused of being a Sue; &#039;&#039;HOWEVER,&#039;&#039;:&lt;br /&gt;
** She&#039;s never the protagonist, and when she does appear, she&#039;s treated the same as any of the other deities in 4e. Accusations of Functional Suedom thus sort of fall flat.&lt;br /&gt;
** While she may hit some Authorial-Centered (or Doyalist) definitions of the term, it&#039;s probably more appropriate to compare her to just about any other non-monster female character in 4th Edition D&amp;amp;D in this context--while she is obviously designed to attract those who are attracted to a certain kind of woman, so are all the other non-monster females (to quote a famous demotivator, &amp;quot;RPG Artwork: Let&#039;s face it, a lot of it is porn. (Pretty odd porn, too.)&amp;quot;).&lt;br /&gt;
** She is no longer an example at all due to her backstory being completely rewritten in 5th edition to make her fit in with the setting better.  She is no longer even a god since her attempt to become one was sabotaged, turning her into a phantom with a craving for knowledge and memories.&lt;br /&gt;
* Saitama from One-Punch Man. A manga/anime/webcomic that satirizes comic book super heroes. As the title says he able to defeat just about any opponent with one punch (with a few exceptions that require two or, rarely, three). While stronger than most of the &amp;quot;S-Class heroes&amp;quot; (the highest rank in the Hero Association), at the start of the series Saitama&#039;s personal life pretty much sucked. He had to pinch pennies to eat and had no knowledge of the Hero Association until he was notified by others of it&#039;s existence. As most can easily guess his strength makes most fights unsatisfying for him. Even the arc villains who force him to use his Serious Series techniques will leave him bored. Since nobody knew who he was until recently. Credit for his work went to other people and the super hero name he was given by the association is &amp;quot;Caped Baldy&amp;quot;. &lt;br /&gt;
** Just to be clear, the main reason why he&#039;s not actually a Sue has to do with the usual focus of the series: That Saitama gets no satisfaction from his lopsided victories, and the fact that the World&#039;s Strongest Man is something of a pathetic loser.&lt;br /&gt;
* Rick Sanchez from Rick and Morty.  When it comes to his (seemingly) limitless ability to invent crazy sci-fi tech and to get himself out of virtually every tough spot, not to mention with getting away with being a colossal jerk to everyone around him, Rick could qualify as an anti-Sue. But his character is far from perfect, and he often falls under a combination of archetype and deconstruction.  As a person, he is an older man who’s had a tough break (divorce and the death of a close family member in some parallel universe), and the fact that he has all this tech and that he either can&#039;t solve his personal problems or prevent new ones from occurring.  Though the fact that he can be funny, the handful of moments of his positive qualities and being a fictional character do contribute to his likability.&lt;br /&gt;
** Again, to be clear: Rick&#039;s antics would probably qualify him for the main list, but the show is very clear on a few points that move him here: First, Rick is an asshole, and not the type you want to be, either (it&#039;s almost directly stated that his assholery grows from some pretty grim experiences and knowledge); second, Rick is not somebody you want to be, nor be around; and third, the writers realize that he&#039;s both of the above.&lt;br /&gt;
* The main casts of [[Star Trek]] TOS and TNG (besides Wesley due to being Rodenberry&#039;s self insert, above)--in particular, James T. Kirk when not written by William Shatner-- provide a good reference line for Suedom. Although they are usually right by authorial fiat, there are several points that point the other way from Suedom: &lt;br /&gt;
*#They are also usually allowed to be wrong about an issue, at least initially (and rarely, but enough to be worth mentioning, all the way to the end of the story)&lt;br /&gt;
*#The fact that the focus is usually on the scenario presented, rather then the perfectness of the characters&lt;br /&gt;
*#They all have character flaws (even Kirk&#039;s &amp;quot;No Such Thing As A No Win Situation&amp;quot; attitude is presented as something that &#039;&#039;could&#039;&#039; get him and his crew killed one day)&lt;br /&gt;
*#They are not omni-compitent, even within their field--even Kirk has been outmaneuvered on occasion&lt;br /&gt;
*#Most importantly, the writing is usually of sufficient quality to not make their perfectness an issue (except, in Kirk&#039;s case, for works written by William Shatner)&lt;br /&gt;
*#Notably, as part of #2 and #5, there is no &amp;quot;right&amp;quot; solution to many of the situations beyond &amp;quot;survival&amp;quot;; the audience is usually allowed to draw its own conclusions about the morality of the situation, something usually lacking in the writing of the type of author who perpetrates a Sue.&lt;br /&gt;
** Combined, these points make them a good reference line for &amp;quot;hyper-competent&amp;quot; characters: Beyond here may lie Suedom&lt;br /&gt;
* At first glance, Tsukiko from [[Order of the Stick]] seems like a textbook Mary Sue, given the LONG list of Mary Sue boxes she ticks: Heterochromatic eyes, great beauty, skimpy clothing, unusually skilled for her young age, Japanese name meaning &amp;quot;moon child&amp;quot;, oppressed by a stuck-up society not understanding her greatness etc. But in reality, Rich Burlew wrote her as a satirization and deconstruction of the Mary Sue archetype and the mindset that often creates such characters. The &amp;quot;misunderstanding&amp;quot; in question? They threw her in jail for &#039;&#039;&#039;literal&#039;&#039;&#039; corpsefucking. (Yes, she&#039;s a necrophiliac, and it&#039;s treated as being just as gross as it is IRL.) Great beauty? Nobody cares, and it doesn&#039;t make her a good person by default. Sees good in the bad guys that nobody else does? It&#039;s based on deliberately ridiculous logic that is completely wrong anyway. ([[What|The living are jerks, and the undead are the opposite of the living, ergo the undead must be good people]], she claims, the batshit insanity of which is called out for what it is. Also, she thinks that Xykon is some kind of Edward Cullen type-guy, as opposed to the Chaotic Evil Lich Sorcerer he &#039;&#039;actually is&#039;&#039;.) A bad guy becomes a complete dumbass to accommodate her genius? Nope, Redcloak only let her have her way so his own, far more subtle machinations could avoid having attention drawn to them, and when she forces his hand he gladly demonstrates to her that she was completely outclassed by him the whole time. And to really drive home how wrong about herself she was, when she dies nobody on Team Evil gives a damn except the Monster in the Darkness, which only seems to have happened because he/she/whatever is the resident softie of the team. Also, Redcloak let her die at the hands of her own wights, [[Slaanesh|simultaneously her surrogate children, minions and lovers]], after controlling them, removing her ring that made her immune to level drain and giving her a &amp;quot;You suck!&amp;quot; speech about how undead are not people, just complex weapons, her thinking otherwise doesn&#039;t make it so and if she ever thought he was powerless before her, she was dead wrong, for a delicious dose of karma.&lt;br /&gt;
** TL;DR version: Tsukiko is a parody of a Sue, who is shown to be objectively deluded about everything.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category:Mary Sue]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:7C71:43FB:2FAE:70A9</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Star_Trek&amp;diff=448126</id>
		<title>Star Trek</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Star_Trek&amp;diff=448126"/>
		<updated>2020-01-11T16:42:29Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:7C71:43FB:2FAE:70A9: /* The Orville */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{cleanup}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Enterprise.jpg|thumb|500px|right|If you aren&#039;t already hearing the theme song you might not belong here.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds. To seek out new life and new civilizations. To boldly go where no man has gone before!|James T. Kirk, third captain of the starship USS Enterprise}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; is a multimedia science-fiction series and one of the cornerstones of nerdy media properties, and one of the few to crossover into mainstream popularity (alongside &#039;&#039;[[Star Wars]]&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;[[Doctor Who]]&#039;&#039; and a few others). It&#039;s also one of the longest-running science fiction franchises, as it began when the the first episode of The Original Series aired in 1966, and since then has had over 50 years of geek history spanning several generations. Needless to say, it&#039;s had a huge influence on all things sci-fi, and, by extension, [[/tg/]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Originally, &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; was [[noblebright]] beyond noblebright and, in many ways, was the polar opposite of &#039;&#039;[[Warhammer 40,000|Warhammer 40K&#039;s]]&#039;&#039; [[grimdark]]. The more recent reboot films, however, have taken a much, &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; more grimdark tone, which is delightfully [[skub]]tastic.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Games ==&lt;br /&gt;
There&#039;s been plenty of tabletop games and [[/v/|vidya gaems]] featuring &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; without being merchandising bullshit (see: themed &#039;&#039;[[Monopoly]]&#039;&#039; sets), including one of the earliest action multiplayer wargame: &#039;&#039;Netrek&#039;&#039;. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Adventure Gaming in the Final Frontier&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1978) The very first Trek tabletop [[RPG]]. Written by, I shit you not, Michael Scott. Groggy (grokky?) as all hell, and due for an OSR.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Star Fleet Battles]] (SFB)&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1979-) The crunchiest starship combat game you&#039;re ever going to find outside of a computer. Based on the original series and not any of the later series, for licensing reasons. Takes some liberties with the setting, which (combined with the aforementioned licensing) is why &amp;quot;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;&amp;quot; isn&#039;t actually in the title. It&#039;s had its own video game spinoff in the form of Starfleet Command. The series died when the last company owned by Interplay broke up in the early 2000s.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: The Role Playing Game&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1982-1989) Made by [[FASA]], essentially &#039;&#039;[[Traveller]]&#039;&#039;-lite, or a happier, shinier &#039;&#039;[[Rogue Trader]]&#039;&#039;. Hasn&#039;t aged terribly well, what with having been made when the only canonical &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; materials to work with were the original and animated series, the first four films, and a couple of now non-canon novels. If you try to dust it off, expect tons of conflict with the rest of the show. Died as they were trying to update it for &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, because Paramount&#039;s corporate suits (surprise, surprise) had no idea what an RPG actually entailed and were worried about violence, and getting their cut, and... oh you know the drill by now. Welcome to the 80&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Starship Tactical Combat Simulator&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1983) FASA designed this, so it feels like &#039;&#039;[[Battletech]]&#039;&#039; but not as good.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Prime Directive&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1993-2008) The most successful tabletop RPG line (but that&#039;s not saying much), it&#039;s actually still in print. Produced by Amarillo Design Bureau, so again no direct name-dropping of &amp;quot;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;.&amp;quot; Lasted as long as it did by constantly evolving, in Borg-like fashion, to adapt to the current zeitgeist. Has had 4 editions, with the second using [[GURPS]], the third using [[Wizards of the Coast|d20]], and the fourth [[d20 Modern]].&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek [[Card_Game|CCG]]&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1994-2007, 2011-2014, 2013-2015, 2018-) There&#039;s been a few of these, most notably the games released by [[Decipher]], but never globally popular. They also suffered from game balance problems from fans wanting their fave character, but needing extra rules for their quirks. There&#039;s also the problem of putting numbers to character stats, such as one game that asserted that [[Heresy|Picard having about twice the integrity of a Klingon pig]]. Later versions are &amp;quot;deck-building&amp;quot; games to try to cash in on the popularity of &#039;&#039;[[Dominion]]&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;[[Thunderstone]]&#039;&#039;. And now virtual CCGs are the order of the day.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: The Next Generation Role Playing Game&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1998-1999) The next attempt, made by Last Unicorn Games. Won an award for best new game, which makes it a complete shame that no one has ever played it.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Red Alert&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2000) A Diskwars game themed to &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Roleplaying Game&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2002-2005) When [[Decipher]] had the CCG license, they decided, &amp;quot;What the hell, let&#039;s make an RPG, too.&amp;quot; It, like so many of its predecessors, died unnoticed and unmourned.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Online&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2010-) An [[MMORPG|MMO]]. Decent gameplay mechanics, especially starship combat. Storyline leaves something to be desired, especially when the ostensibly [[Noblebright|peaceful]] Federation trades shots at least once with every other faction in the galaxy.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Call To Arms: Star Trek&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2011) [[Mongoose_Publishing|Mongoose]]&#039;s license for &#039;&#039;Babylon 5&#039;&#039; expired, so they collaborated with Amarillo Design Bureau (the &#039;&#039;Star Fleet Battles&#039;&#039; guys), re-themed the game to Star Trek along with improving the system to make it more nifty. Less micro-management than SFB, and ships get some cinematic feats.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Expeditions&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2011) Ignore the tie-ins to the movie, Reiner Knizia designed this. Explore the gameboard, flip over missions, try to have the proper crew to get victory points.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Fleet Captains&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2011) Tile flipping, exploring, and spaceships fighting over resources&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Attack Wing&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2013-) [[WizKids]] license the flightpath system from [[Fantasy Flight Games]] and adds &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; to the mix, [[Skub]] ensues. The game has been consistently plagued with balance issues, to the point that the rules errata is more than ten times longer than the actual rules. The actual current rules for things like the Borg special movement and fighter squadrons are completely different than the rules as written.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Ascendancy&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2016-) 4X table top boardgame from GaleForce9. Most of the races are represented, though the base set only has the Federation, Klingons and Romulans. Andorians, Vulcans, Cardassians and Ferengi can be purchased as expansions. There is even a Borg expansion that turns the game semi-coop as everyone tries real hard not to be assimilated. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Adventures&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2017-) The latest attempt at an RPG, by Modiphius, coming out soon to tentative praise. It also comes with a whole range of miniatures of the various crews from the show.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== So why should I care? ==&lt;br /&gt;
Because between them, these six TV series and their assorted spinoff movies, books, etc. can provide inspiration for any sci-fi game you could care to run. If you want light-hearted action, look at the sort of things that happened in &#039;&#039;TOS&#039;&#039; or &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; to get the crew into some dangerous situation. If you want a charismatic villain, look at Gul Dukat or the Borg Queen. If you want moral issues and debates, look at the shit that happened to Voyager and remove all the transparent deck-stacking and cheesy moralizing (or you could read any decent SF book/watch a &#039;&#039;Twilight Zone&#039;&#039; episode written in the previous 50 years, if you don&#039;t need your source material to be served at a 2nd grade level). Like [[Tolkien]] is to fantasy it&#039;s a prime gateway drug to science fiction and especially science fiction which is more than &amp;quot;action movie IN SPACE!&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Not to mention in any sci-fi RPG with remotely free-form rules you&#039;re likely to encounter &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; fanboys, so you might as well know what they&#039;re talking about. The unholy spawn of a Trekkie and a [[Furry]] is known as a [[Chakat]], and you should fear it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
At its best &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; is thoughtful, optimistic futurism with a positive human element and brings you to strange new worlds in the grand tradition of speculative fiction which is accessible to even the layman. At its worst &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; is arrogant, smug, hypocritical, preachy, dull, sloppy and prone to the strawman fallacy.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Setting ==&lt;br /&gt;
Here&#039;s the Cliff&#039;s Notes on &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;. A couple of general warnings; firstly, &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; likes to &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; take its &amp;quot;racial themes&amp;quot; bits just a little too far. Second, despite this, it&#039;s rare for an entire race to be completely irredeemable the way many fictional aliens are: there are heroic and sympathetic characters from nearly every race listed below, able to put more-positive spins on their racial themes. Thirdly, aside from very occasional appearances by [[H.P. Lovecraft|aliens who are so bizarre that humankind can barely comprehend them]], all of the aliens look like dudes with rubber masks on (because they are). In real life, this was because there was no budget for anything else, but in-universe it&#039;s been explained by some kind of [[Old Ones|Precursor]] race who seeded all of the planets with their broadly humanoid DNA, and every race evolved slightly differently from there. There isn&#039;t much [[fluff]] on what these precursors were like, and some of it was contradictory, and Gene Roddenberry didn&#039;t like the idea (although he still had to work with the rubber forehead stuff). The good news for fa/tg/uys who like [[homebrew]] is that this makes it fairly easy to write [[d20 system]] rules for all of the races - after all, most &#039;&#039;D&amp;amp;D&#039;&#039; races are just humans with rubber masks on...&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== A Composite Creation ===&lt;br /&gt;
This is a general note that one should consider: Star Trek was created in pretty much the opposite way as The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien worked out a bunch of linguistic stuff and general history of Arda in his spare time, then decided to use that as the basis for some stories that he eventually gave to some publishers which in the end sold quite well. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Roddenberry by contrast pitched a very broad general idea (it&#039;s the future, things are good, we got guys some on a ship exploring space; a &amp;quot;wagon train to the stars&amp;quot;) to the networks who eventually took it up on it and had him work with a variety of writers and actors who added to this rough skeleton of an idea in a process that would continue on to this day. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
This is not to knock either approach, but both have their advantages and disadvantages. In regards to Star Trek, a franchise which relies mostly on an episode of the week format that&#039;s been going on for more than half a century this means that the canon is a fucking mess. There were numerous people at the helm and many of them had often very different ideas about what should be done that were just thrown out to see what stuck, many of which were contradictory and some of which we&#039;d frankly rather forget. In general fans and fluff writers have been spending a whole lot of time trying to straighten out things and much of the lore is basically a rough consensus of what people like and what fits in with it. Later series got more systematic about this, but there are still points of contention and a lot of flat out contradictions due to its scattershot nature.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Factions ===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Federation&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Federation_Ships.jpg|thumb|500px|left|Starfleet&#039;s ships of the Line (primary timeline)]]&lt;br /&gt;
Might as well talk about that main faction. The United Federation of Planets is what the [[Tau]] think they are. Its backstory is that in the distant future of the 1990s, [[God-Emperor of Mankind|übermensch]] [[Space Marines|created by genetic engineering]] began conquering the Earth. The [[Imperial Guard|normies]] fought back and won through sheer numbers, cryogenically freezing the Augments and kicking them out of Earth, but the damage and mass political unrest of World War III got half the planet nuked. This was why genetic engineering was banned. Fortunately, in 2063, a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;drunken asshole&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; heroic visionary named Zefram Cochrane created humanity&#039;s first warp drive (though it functioned based on the principle that gravity bends space-time, and was therefore more akin to an Alcubierre drive than anything that&#039;s dependent on the [[Warp]]) and made first contact with the Vulcans. The Vulcans eventually helped humanity rebuild and overcome poverty, disease, war and hunger. With its Earthly problems solved, man turned to the stars and found out its three closest neighbors were [[Imperium of Man|racist xenophobic dicks trying to murder each other]]. Since any war between them would&#039;ve swept up puny little Earth and gotten it glassed, humans decided to force their neighbors to sit down and talk things out. Incredibly, it worked, and the United Federation of Planets was born.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Federation is a commie [[noblebright]] hippieland society with a strong democratic government ([[Mary Sue|pretty much Roddenberry&#039;s idea of utopia]]). As a result, Federation citizens work not because they have to, but because they want to. However, despite their advanced technology, transhumanism, that is intentionally making [[Space Marines|SPESS MEHREENS]] and mutants like the infamous antagonist Khan Noonien Singh, is illegal.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Federation&#039;s Navy is almost always called Starfleet. It&#039;s a mix between a military, a coast guard and a space agency, and usually rates scientific research as a higher priority than defense. One of its quirks is that it doesn&#039;t subscribe to the &amp;quot;bigger is better&amp;quot; policy used in most [[Warhammer 40K|sci-fi]], and even by most of the other &#039;&#039;Star Trek factions&#039;&#039;. If the Federation &#039;&#039;does&#039;&#039; make a large ship, it&#039;s because they want it to have a daycare, swimming pool and ice cream bar. If they want a warship, they&#039;ll take a little gunship half the size of a modern day destroyer and pack it with enough antimatter nukes and guns to exterminate a solar system. In some cases, especially when dealing with ships from several centuries into the future, the ship is bigger on the inside than on the outside [[Creed|allowing it to hide a vast array of powerful armaments, &#039;&#039;space-bending&#039;&#039; equipment, and even whole planetary landscapes]]. They can get away with this because they out-tech almost everyone else by a country mile. The reason for the series&#039; infamous &amp;quot;technobabble&amp;quot; is that &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;even &#039;&#039;they&#039;&#039; don&#039;t know everything their tech can do!&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; their technology is always evolving, and they know it so well that they can often use it in ways that even the original in-show design schematics did not intend.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In theory, Starfleet follows a rule called the &amp;quot;Prime Directive&amp;quot;, which says that you&#039;re not allowed to interfere with low-tech races (&amp;quot;low-tech&amp;quot; being defined as &amp;quot;not having invented the warp drive&amp;quot;, since warp technology apparently follows naturally from the laws of physics) or else things like turning the locals into Nazis might happen. The Original Series talked about this rule all the time, and Captain Kirk threw it aside whenever there was a sexy alien babe in sight. From &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; onward, it tended to instead be brought up whenever a hack writer needed a reason for the heroes to &#039;&#039;not&#039;&#039; instantly resolve a given problem with their superior technology or a way of making our heroes look like assholes for following it rigidly (yes, we could save this species from extinction but that would be interfering with the cosmic plan!), though there were a few good episodes that took it seriously.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Some of the more important member races are:&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Humans]]: You know &#039;em, you love &#039;em. Comprise seemingly 90% of Starfleet for reasons in no way related to the cost of makeup/CGI.&lt;br /&gt;
* Vulcan: The Original [[Eldar|Space Elves]], very emotional, especially during &amp;quot;pon&#039;farr&amp;quot; (see below), who followed the teachings of an enlightened sage and embraced logic and rationalism after their emotions nearly led to them [[Slaanesh|wiping themselves out]]. They are what the average race of fantasy elves think they are, except on &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; because the writers wanted to artificially inject tension into the show (some of that was retconned to be a Romulan plot). Occasionally enter a state called &amp;quot;pon&#039;farr,&amp;quot; where they need to either [[Dark Eldar| fuck something half to death]], kill it with the nearest sharp object, or die of a brain aneurysm to let out all that pent-up emotional tension. Fa/tg/uys may recognize this as the sensation they feel every time [[Games Workshop]] puts out a new army book. Pretty bro-tier overall.&lt;br /&gt;
* Andorians: Blue dudes with antennae and constant fits of passion, the polar opposite of Vulcans and their one time foes. Pretty much fa/tg/uys, right down to the romantic streak, in the technical sense. Also, they live underground on a diet of meatbread and rage. Most of what defined them happened in Enterprise as they rarely showed up in the TNG-era, and even then did so as set dressing, allegedly because one of the showrunners hated their antennae and banned anyone from using them.&lt;br /&gt;
* Tellarites: Space [[Dwarf|Dorfs]]; like insulting everyone and arguing a lot (no, really, petty insults are considered a polite gesture in Tellarite culture), mostly because the very first tellarite ever shown in the series got in an argument with Spock&#039;s dad and now it&#039;s their whole racial thing.  “Sarek said something in a scene once that was meant to demonstrate that he was stand-offish and kinda rude, but we like Sarek so it&#039;s now the defining attribute of this species.”  It&#039;s all in good fun you understand, your confidence in your ideas and actions should be sturdy enough to withstand honest assessment and critique.&lt;br /&gt;
* Betazoids: Invariably attractive humanoid aliens with telepathic powers. Half-betazoid, half-humans apparently only have &amp;quot;empathic&amp;quot; powers, so they are well-regarded by Starfleet captains for their ability to point out the obvious and fill out the tight bodygloves that make up the Starfleet uniform in a pleasing manner, especially since theirs seem to come in a custom cut for reasons entirely unrelated to Roddenberry&#039;s erection. Their homeworld is like dropping a really hippie college and Space Vegas into a blender.&lt;br /&gt;
* Trill: Originally a one-off race introduced as a sapient parasite that possesses and controls a barely, or even unintelligent humanoid host, they were radically reworked in &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;, right down to losing their rubber foreheads in favor of spots. Now, the host is itself an intelligent humanoid, and some, but not all, of their kind are able to willingly merge with a symbiont (because someone can&#039;t spell) that allows them to access a mixture of the memories and personalities of all previous hosts, though in a way that, theoretically, enhances the host&#039;s personality rather than destroying it or subsuming it. Then, when they die, they can pass on the symbiont to another host, theoretically one they mentored. Also, because the makeup artist didn&#039;t want to ruin the leads&#039; good looks on DS9, they went from having a rubber forehead to some spots.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Klingon Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[Image:Batleth.jpg|thumb|right|A Bat&#039;Leth (sword of honor), one of several types of Klingon bladed weapons. Frequently mocked IRL for being a poorly designed weapon.]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Commissar|&#039;&#039;&amp;quot;It is a good day to die!&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Federation&#039;s main rival and (movie era and afterwards) the quintessential &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; race of lumpy foreheaded aliens. Originally they were a rough analogue to the Russians (though they took some elements from [[Communism|communist China]]) in a rough cold war allegory with the Federation (even though the Federation are as commie as they come, though admittedly much of that came around in the TNG era). Their defining feature was that they were militaristic and imperialistic while the Federation was scholarly and respected liberty. This gradually moved more and more into them becoming Imperial Japan/[[Vikings]] In SPESSS obsessed with honor, fighting and dying honorably in battle while worshiping at the altar of [[Sigmar|warrior Jesus]], even as they turned from the Federation&#039;s bitter enemies into that friend who&#039;s fun to be around when he&#039;s not getting into drunken bar fights. You see shades of it in during the movie era and it became more and more prominent through &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, culminating in &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;. Do not make the mistake of thinking that Klingons are nothing more than barbaric savages however; with Worf being part of the crew, and with &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; dealing with Klingon politics an awful lot we can see Klingon society as it truly is. Even so they do often wander into self parody territory.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Klingons, in their current iteration, are a feudal society ruled by a council made up of the most powerful families. Klingon society holds very little value on things such as currency and material gain (which results in the Klingon empire [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q65l7RHUx2A having a very simplistic understanding of economics]), believing that anything you acquire without some form of blood, sweat and/or tears on your part is a pathetic and dishonorable way of going about things, much the same way many cultures used to hurl abuse at merchants and bankers. Another thing to keep in mind is that a Klingon&#039;s reputation is literally everything. This can be easily seen in the episode &amp;quot;The House Of Quark&amp;quot; where dying honorably can literally change the outcome of an entire noble house, later when the Grand Council is visibly disgusted at D&#039;Ghor. No respectable Klingon uses &#039;&#039;money&#039;&#039; to defeat his opponents. And no respectable Klingon would be so eager to perform an execution of an unarmed Ferengi in what was supposed to be an honorable duel. Klingons are still capable of being cunning and crafty however, and having a high diplomacy score is viewed as honorable as they still have examples of cunning and clever heroes tricking boorish and stupid monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Warhammer 40000|Klingons often carry swords into battle in an age of energy beam guns]]. In-universe, this is less suicidal than it sounds in the context of boarding actions and tight starship corridors. The Bat&#039;leth is actually a rather shitty weapon. The Mek&#039;leth is noted to be better in most situations. They use the same Disruptor weapons as the Romulans, and at one point used similar starship designs. While is explained as the result of a temporary and unholy alliance, given the eventual animosity between the two races, it was just an excuse to reuse props on a limited budget.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Klingons are tied with the Vulcans and the Borg as being the most prominent and recognizable non-human species in Star Trek. Beloved of the Internet and the general public, to the point that there are published books like &amp;quot;A Klingon Christmas&amp;quot; in the world. The Klingons have their own constructed language. If you are ever worrying that you might not be a nerd, learning Klingon will solve that problem for you. Please note that this is in general considered by experts to be pathognomonic of [[Chris Chan|autism]]. You have not experienced Shakespeare until you hear it in the original Klingon.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Romulan Star Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&amp;quot;It&#039;s always chess with the Romulans&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
You know those [[Eldar|Vulcans]]? Well a few thousand years ago, as their planet was ravaged by war, some of them turned to intense emotional control and logic to tame their murderous passions, while most others left the planet altogether, founding a colony on the planet Romulus and dubbing themselves [[Dark Eldar|Romulans]]. Since said planet shares a name with a mythical figure known for founding [[Roman Empire|a city which built a vast empire]], and they had warp drive while those around them did not, you probably know that they turned to building an empire of their own. They hold the second place of prominence as immediate rivals to the Federation. Comically, they actually have better emotional control than the average Vulcan, since they gene-engineered most of their problems away years ago, and don&#039;t have to deal with the emotional blowback from pon&#039;farr. The downside is that they lost some of their cousins&#039; niftier powers, like mind reading and being able to transfer their soul into another person for safekeeping. Although Star Trek Online also revealed that their trip to Romulus was a terrible ordeal, and their gene-engineering was taking during that time resulting in them losing most emotions save for bitterness of being &amp;quot;forced out&amp;quot;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The difference between the Klingons and the Romulans is basically the difference between Gork and Mork, or Khorne and Tzeentch. Klingons will fight you up front with simple brute force. Romulans are sneakier guys, preferring to fight you when you&#039;re not looking with spies, cloaked ships and complex plots behind the scenes and playing the long game. There is a lot of political infighting among them, though where the Klingons would duel to the death Romulans would seek to discredit their rivals, have them die in unfortunate &amp;quot;accidents&amp;quot; or disappear. This difference has left both Romulans and Klingons with a big hate-boner for each other, to the Romulans the Klingons are crude brutish barbarians and to the Klingons the Romulans are a pack of scheming cowardly weaklings.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Like the Klingons, they served as a rough Cold War allegory. In this case, they were rough analogs to Communist China (as seen by 1960s Americans), a distant horde of inscrutable and potentially dangerous Orientals who generally were unseen and projecting vague menace, but when encountered face-to-face could pack quite a punch indeed: the first major Interstellar War that Star Trek Earth fought was with the Romulans, which was fought entirely in space with neither side ever seeing the other face to face. Afterwards they set up a &#039;Neutral Zone&#039; between the Federation and the Romulan Empire that no one even tried to cross for a century. From the Original Series onward, they frequently squabble and bicker with the Federation, before joining forces with them to fight the Dominion in &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039; and having their government devastated in &#039;&#039;Nemesis&#039;&#039;. Finally, Romulus itself got caught in a supernova as part of the Ambramsverse&#039;s backstory.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ferengi Alliance&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[Image:GW_Ferengi.jpg|thumb|left|A typical ferengi engaged in typical ferengi activities]]&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&amp;quot;A Ferengi without profit is no Ferengi at all.&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;-Eighteenth Rule of Acquisition&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Introduced in &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;s&#039;&#039; early days as the villains for the series, and what [[/pol/]] thinks Jews are. Some Jewish people have actually complained about their being subliminally Jewish and thus anti-Semetic, specifically mentioning that they were moneyhungry, lascivious, and ugly, and their large ear lobes were stand-ins for the sterotypical Jewish nose ([https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/made-by-history/wp/2018/08/14/science-fictions-anti-semitism-problem/?noredirect=on more on that here, we&#039;re not shitting you]), based on an old medieval stereotype that was enforced to prevent them owning land or assets. The idea was to make a caricature of capitalism as a contrast with the techno-communist Federation. This might have worked if these were not [[FAIL|&#039;&#039;TNG&#039;s&#039;&#039; early days]]. Instead they overshot the mark by a light year or so, on top of other bad decisions, and you got a race of short (Gene wanted to make an evil short race as big evil races were overplayed), big-eared, [[goblin]]-like losers about as threatening as a grumpy pug. Over the first and second seasons they tried to make these guys threatening, but they fell flat on their face every time. Eventually the writers just said &amp;quot;fuck it&amp;quot; and the Ferengi got demoted to comic relief species, and their status as terrible enemies was demoted to propaganda designed to scare the Federation while the Ferengi government tried to figure out what to make of a species that rejected the acquisition of wealth as a goal. The Ferengi had some good moments in the later seasons of &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, but most of the best stuff that fleshed them out came from &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;, which had an [[awesome]] Ferengi bartender named Quark as a major character. For an idea of what the Ferengi might have been like if the writers had their shit together, look up the Druuge of [[Star Control|Star Control II]] or the Magog Cartel from Oddworld.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ferengi religion is only hinted upon in &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;, but what is seen implies a simplistic system based on financial success. Ferengi all follow a rulebook/canon known as the Rules of Acquisition, which can be described as Ayn Rand IN SPACE and condensed into the form of Confucius&#039; Analects. There are 285 of these, each a short piece of advice on how to stay in the black. Examples include &amp;quot;Peace is good for business,&amp;quot; &amp;quot;War is good for business,&amp;quot; &amp;quot;Never have sex with the boss&#039;s daughter,&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Dignity and an empty sack is worth the sack.&amp;quot; The first, and most important, of these is &amp;quot;Once you have their money, you never give it back.&amp;quot; Sometimes, the Ferengi Randian spirituality extends into outright interpretations of the afterlife: according to some, the afterlife consists of the Divine Treasury and the Vault of Eternal Destitution, which are respectively analogous to Heaven and Hell. Entrance into one or the other depends on one&#039;s business ventures at the time of death; those that were turning a profit are allowed to enter the Divine Treasury, and the rest are damned to the Vault.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ferengi government is ruled over by a Grand Nagus, a mix between a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;pope&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;chief rabbi and a CEO, and he basically treats his civilization like some sort of company, with citizens regarded as workers. Directly below him is the Ferengi Commerce Authority, a [[what|quasi-religious]] organization dedicated to ensuring that correct business practices were followed and correct moral behavior was shown (including keeping the proles in line), although to the Ferengi, these are one and the same. The agents of the FCA are the Liquidators, who are essentially Inquisitors crossed with IRS auditors on steroids. Be afraid. Be very afraid. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ferengi females have no rights and are mentioned as [[PROMOTIONS|not even being allowed to wear clothes]], which leads to [[That Guy|boorish behavior]] on the part of Ferengi towards just about any species. Of course, we see female Ferengi on the show who push that envelope, but it seems that overall &amp;quot;regressive&amp;quot; does not even begin to describe the gender relationships in their culture. Quark&#039;s mother, a social climber who marries the head of their government, begins pushing through a women&#039;s rights movement during DS9, which proves more successful as time goes on.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Borg Collective&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[Image:Borg cube.jpg|300px|thumb|right|The Borg have assimilated and improved your [[d6|die]]. It always rolls six. Crap your pants, &#039;cause resistance is futile.]]&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|We are the Borg. Lower your shields and surrender your ships. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your culture shall adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.|The Borg&#039;s opening hail. This is not a boast or a brag, it&#039;s them simply explaining you how things are going to go down.}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|One other thing. You may encounter Enterprise crew members who&#039;ve already been assimilated. Don&#039;t hesitate to fire. Believe me, you&#039;ll be doing them a favour.|Picard going full [[grimdark]].}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Ferengi were utter failures as serious villains, so they needed something to fill that gap. Thus they made the Borg, an aggressive [[Tyranid|hive-minded]] collective of hyper-adaptive, [[Necron|regenerating]] cyborgs that assimilates entire species into itself in its attempt to improve and evolve. Shit, that&#039;s like coming up with [[Warforged]] while trying to replace [[Kender]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In many ways, the Borg are the truest dark reflection of the Federation, and despite their name, they&#039;re not Swedish. While the Feds want you to join their little club on your own, to &amp;quot;add your culture to the galactic community,&amp;quot; the Prime Directive means they will ultimately accept you turning them down, even if you have shit they really want. The Borg say &amp;quot;fuck that&amp;quot; and just absorb you. While the Federation believes everyone should work together [[Tau|for the greater good]], they still have a very strong sense of individualism and a culture of personal accomplishment (unless your individual belief happens to run counter to the Federation&#039;s principles anyway, in which case you&#039;re just WRONG because the Federation is the best). The Borg pool all their minds together into a massive collective consciousness in the pursuit of group perfection, becoming an almost-literal personification of techno-capital. The Federation is all about beauty and tranquility and all that hippie stuff, and their tech is eco-friendly and dolphin-safe. Borg [[Tyranids|strip mine entire planets and drain entire oceans]] in the name of growth and efficiency.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Your standard Borg [[cube]] is a huge multi-kilometer [[Firaeveus Carron|metal box]] (yes, bigger than most [[Imperial Navy]] cruisers) able to go up against an entire Federation warfleet and win. That&#039;s right, one of their ships could threaten the entire Federation and [[Exterminatus]] Earth. When done right, [[Necron|they are a cold, calculating, nigh-unstoppable force, a threat to all life]] that wants to retain free and distinct personalities (although they will ignore a single person if not on an assimilation mission, as what they really want is to absorb whole civilizations). Apparently, in Picard&#039;s nightmare in &#039;&#039;First Contact&#039;&#039;, the Borg assimilation process includes a surgical [[Grimdark|drill through the eye. While awake.]] Of all the stuff to come out of the TNG Era they are undoubtedly the most well recognized in mass pop culture.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Unfortunately the got a bad downgrade during &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; (the Borg Queen blew up cubes full of tens of thousands of drones because a few of them have been severed from the Hive Mind), but even there they were frequently not to be messed with. One amusing thing to note for people that haven&#039;t watched &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;: the Borg were actually only in six episodes (and three were breakaway drones) and one movie, yet they&#039;re arguably the franchise&#039;s most famous pure villains aside from Khan. Goes to show how good they were when written properly. Then in &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; they get their shit completely pushed in when they discover a new race of extradimensional aliens which they label Species 8472, which were immune to being assimilated, and had to ask the Federation for help in dealing with them. [[Necron#Regarding_Fluff_Change_-_Sore_Butts_Everywhere.|Wait, this sounds familiar...]]&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Cardassian Union&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Introduced in &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, they are third fiddle to the Klingons and the Romulans. If the Klingons are hypothetically-honorable techno-barbarian warriors and the Romulans are an empire of civilized and refined but sly and ruthless expansionists, the Cardassians are essentially scaly fascists re-enacting &#039;&#039;[[1984]]&#039;&#039; IN SPACE. Their trials announce the outcome at the beginning, and the defense attorney is executed if he wins. Also, THERE ARE FOUR LIGHTS!&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Originally a race of peaceable, spiritual artists called the Hebitians (ironically not dissimilar to the Bajorans), modern Cardassia was born in hunger and desperation when their homeworld began to suffer simultaneous mass famine, pandemic, resource depletion, and ecological collapse. A military junta seized power, figuratively and literally auctioned off the soul of their culture through liquidating all the planet&#039;s art and religious artifacts into cold hard cash, and turned the Cardassians into the opportunistic imperialists they are today.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Despite being a whole lot weaker than the Federation, the Cardassians manage to hold their own, partly because what they lack in resources and raw power is made up for by a combination of intense cunning and high charisma stats. Compared to the equally deceptive Romulans, the Cardies are more likely to flash you a smile while tickling your ribs with a knife. They&#039;ll use any tool they can to gain the upper hand and while that often means unpleasant and terminal sessions in dark rooms, strip mined planets and the enslavement of entire species, they&#039;ll gladly become your bestest buddy if it would achieve their goals. Their intelligence service, the Obsidian Order, is also one of the most ruthlessly efficient organizations in the entire sector, managing to outscale the Romulan Tal Shiar when it comes to producing magnificent bastards and manipulating the politics of entire worlds to their advantage. Unlike the Romulans or the Klingons, they don&#039;t tolerate the sort of literal infighting that is rampant in both those states, that shit only serves to weaken &#039;&#039;&#039;GLORIOUS CARDASSIA&#039;&#039;&#039; and needs to be stamped out with ruthless efficiency. Exposing that someone who just happens to be your enemy as being a dangerous subversive is just a benefit, although this can result in both sides of a conflict shouting &amp;quot;For Cardassia!&amp;quot; as they charge each other. Sort of how Democrats and Republicans are both for America, yet oppose each other.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Cardassia has a very fluid hierarchical government, similar to the political realities of post-Stalin but pre-Collaspe Soviet Russia. Broadly speaking, there are three different facets of the government: the Central Command (which holds all the power) the Obsidian Order (who holds the least amount of power, but controls the most puppets) and the Detapa Council (similar to the [[High Lords of Terra]] and just as worthless). Cardassian society holds a very strict view of family, placing family just below the needs of the State.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The State holds a semi-divine mythical status in the eyes of its citizens, with it being viewed as impossible for the State to ever make mistakes. The ideal Cardassian life was one of complete loyalty and servitude to the State and family, with the &amp;quot;repetitive epic,&amp;quot; detailing how generations of Cardassians go on to serve both in exactly the same way over and over seen as the height of their culture. The Cardassian government is assumed to be omniscient, omnipotent, and benevolent by pretty much every Cardassian, with all Cadassians gladly giving of themselves to the State. Such was this level of belief that when Picard was tortured by the Obsidian order, the torturer saw nothing wrong with bringing his daughter to work because he was working for the State, and therefore the torture of Picard could never be disturbing or wrong. That&#039;s why their trials announce their sentences at the beginning and execute the defense attorney if he wins; their &amp;quot;trials&amp;quot; are more excuses to show off the power and infallibility of the State to the masses than actually determine guilt or innocence.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As far as plot significant activities went, they had a war with the Federation a few years before &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; which ended in the creation of a Demilitarized Zone between the two powers and (significant to &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;) abandoning the previously occupied planet of Bajor they had exploited for resources. After a disastrous war with the Klingons and The Maquis led to a popular revolution and overthrow of the existing government, one leader seized power, declared himself absolute leader, and joined the Dominion towards the end of &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;, which was some serious bad news for the &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; crew.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bajoran Republic&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
The Bajorans are a species native to the Planet Bajor. They were, until shortly before the events of &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;, under a brutal occupation by the Cardassians who strip mined their planet. They had a fighting resistance which veered in and out of being considered terrorists and all in all were often represented as Palestinians IN SPEHSS. After that, they got their independence, although they&#039;re thinking about joining the Federation. The Bajorans have one system and are technologically backwards; the Federation is technically breaking the Prime Directive by interacting with them, but as they&#039;ve spent years under the oppression of a warp-capable species, they can probably handle it. Also &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; proves that ancient Bajorans managed to travel at warp speeds to Cardassia using solar sails and an enormous amount of luck, which technically makes them a warp-capable species. The only reason why they are significant in terms of the politics of &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; is that they have a wormhole near their planet, which has some timey-wimey aliens living it that they worship as gods, and serves as the only way to get to or from the Gamma Quadrant that won&#039;t take decades, making it strategically priceless. Hilariously, this was discovered almost immediately after the Cardassians &#039;&#039;thought&#039;&#039; they&#039;d extracted everything of value from the Bajorans and peace&#039;d out, certain that the system was no longer worth the PR hit they were taking from it, only to get burned by some harsh seller&#039;s remorse. Also, their species has the oldest civilization (roughly a half-million years) of any major &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; race, and the wormhole aliens have gifted them some cool shit, like the Orb of Time.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The big thing that makes the Bajorans unique is that they actually have a serious religion going on -the human race is depicted as mostly non-religious. They&#039;re also probably one of the most accurate depictions of any highly religious alien race in a sci-fi franchise, because they are divided between the majority who interpret their religion as [[Noblebright|peace and love]], and a small but loud minority of bastards who interpret it as [[Grimdark|condoning acts of terrorism]]. A blatant attempt to simulate Israelis for criticism, although that can apply to many religions nowadays.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Dominion&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
A vast empire which exists on the other side of the galaxy in the Gamma Quadrant. The Dominion is ruled over by a species of liquid shapeshifters called The Founders.(aka Changlings aka Odo&#039;s people) They have at their disposal a military composed of two genetically engineered species that worship the Founders as gods: the short and articulate Vorta who serve as ambassadors, bureaucrats, and political commisars and the big brutal Jem&#039;hadar, who are vat grown, drug addicted, cannon fodder. These oversee a large number of vassal races, including (as of later seasons of &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;) the Cardassians.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders were once (according to them anyway) a peaceful, kind civilization of explorers who wished to see the galaxy, explore strange new worlds, and seek out new forms of life. Unfortunately, they did this in the wrong neighborhood, and quickly ran into species who did not tolerate others. The fact that the Founders were shapeshifters capable of mimicking almost anyone did not help either. Paranoia, mutual mistrust, and some very bad things eventually led to the Founders deciding &amp;quot;fuck this&amp;quot; and moving their planet into a nebula so nobody would bother them. So more or less, a [[Grimdark|grimmer]], [[Grimdark|darker]], counterpart to the Federation, but with spookier Real Aliens.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders are obsessed with order and are both extremely racist and xenophobic, and believe that all alien life is inherently untrustworthy and evil, and the best thing to do is conquer/enslave them before they do the same to them. They don&#039;t care about the rights of &amp;quot;Solids&amp;quot;, and will happily ignore any sense of decency when convenient. This can be seen when The Dominion runs a simulation of the Dominion dominating the Alpha Quadrant. When O&#039;Brien is assaulted by a Jem&#039;Hadar and severely beaten to the point of needing emergency teleportation to medical (the crime being &amp;quot;disrespectful&amp;quot;), the Founders (disguised as Federation Officers) do not press charges, and when Sisko comes barging in demanding answers, dismiss him with little concern about their own soldiers brutalizing citizens. Their overall ideology could be thought of as Thomas Hobbes IN SPACE: people are inherently evil and the only way to make a better world is to impose order upon them through brute force from a position of absolute, unquestioned power.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders, when not wandering around in various forms, tend to spend their time in a massive ocean literally made up of countless billions of Founders, something which is referred to as the Great Link. According to the Founders, this allows them to share information with each other and come to peaceful decisions. This is rapidly proved to be bullshit; when a separated-at-birth one of their own merged into the Great Link to share his memories of the Federation as peaceful and tolerant space hippies, not only did the Founders ignore his memories, but actively fucked with his mind in an attempt to turn him into a sleeper agent. And even if it weren&#039;t, it shows their hypocrisy through their willingness to share freedom and liberty among themselves while depriving all their various slaves and conquered peoples of the same.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders are massive dicks, even to their own people. Failure among Jem&#039;Hadar is rewarded with slow and painful death from deprivation of the drug they&#039;re created to need and their lifespans are incredibly short. To be even bigger dicks, the Vorta have no sense of taste and can&#039;t appreciate beauty. Not to make them better diplomats, but because they were raised from a primitive stone-age ape tribe, and the Founders think they shouldn&#039;t be ever allowed to forget that. (On the plus side, they did give the Vorta an immunity to poison that would make [[Mortarion]] himself jealous. [https://youtu.be/rACCZaBcq1g?t=1m29s Observe.]) This may also stem from their own neuroses: the Founders themselves have almost no bodily needs at all and require no nourishment, so they design their slaves to be like them. Notably, Vorta tend to come in [[Paranoia|packs of clones; a new one is activated when an old one dies, and they retain some memories and personality between &amp;quot;lives,&amp;quot;]] further hammering home how expendable they are to their makers.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
And both races are literally engineered to love their makers for what they have done to them and worship and revere them as gods.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Continuing from the Cardassian Union section because the fate of both powers are linked in DS9. After joining the The Dominion. Everything was going seemingly for them and their leader Gul Dukat. They figured out how t bring down the minefield block the worhole created by the Starfleet crew of Deep Space Nine. (The Cardassians use its old name Terok Nor while in charge.)&lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
However doing the start of the sixth season the Founders learn that their not the only &amp;quot;gods&amp;quot; in the Galaxy. As the Sisko convinces the Bajoran Prophets to remove the Jem&#039;Hadar reinforcements in transit. Forcing them to retreat back to Cardassian Space and Dukat&#039;s old friend Damar shoots Dukat&#039;s half Bajorion daughter Ziyal. Forcing Dukat off the deep end as the sod loses his sanity and jumps off after his rehab transport is destroyed by the Jem Hadar, and ends up fighting an injured Benjamin Sisko after being forced to hide inside some caverns on a hell world. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
After escaping he allows one of the evil wormhole aliens to possess him, kills Jadzia Dax, forgives Damar for killing a family member. Creates a cult of Bajorions dedicated to the Pai-Wraths,than abandons the cult when Major Kira scrambles the suicide pills in with his fake. Has sex with an old woman and becomes a demi-god. Bent on buring the universe despite the fact that his own people suffered heavily under the rule of the Dominion. After getting a final bitch slap from the Sisko who gets to have a happy ending living with his alien parents. While Dukat is trapped in the Fire Caves on Bajor.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
His old friend Damar despite murdering a half breed woman is a lot more sane. Lacking Dukat&#039;s Crimisa things get worse for him and the Cardassians under Dominion rule. Most of their victories are off screen such as taking over Betazed. One of the none few major non founding planets of the Federation. This forces the Sisko to bring the Romulans into the war to on the side of the Klingon-Federation alliance. With some underhanded methods from a  former member of the Cassidian Obsidian Order(Elim Garak). I.e. blow up a Romulan Senator&#039;s shuttlecraft and tricking the pointy ears into thinking a damaged but fake datarow was the real deal. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Thus the blame for his death will be switched from the Feds and pals are shifted to the Cardassians. By the final season this leads to the Dominion finding new best buds in the form of The Breen. Damar decides he has enough of the bullshit and in the ultimate irony that his status of his people are now no different from the Cardassian Occupation of Bajor. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
So after the Breen score the Domain a temporary victory over the Federation Alliance. Damar and his Cardi buds destroy a Dominion cloning facility. Just so he can stick it to his &amp;quot;friend&amp;quot; the Vorta, Weyoun. Leaving them and the Klingons being the only thing stopping The Dominion from steamrolling the Alpha Quadrant. As one small Bird of Way was immune to the Breen energy dampening weapon due to modding its warp core. Gowron, due to being a moron who did nothing to change course after his most trusted advisor(Martok) turned out to be a Founder and the first time the Jem Hadar kicked their asses during the Klingon-Cardassian War. Decides to take glory for himself and discredit General Martok(who now how his pre Dominion internment job). This goes as badly as your thinking. Forcing Worf(now a legitimate badass compared to TNG) to kill him and turning the role of Chancellor to Martok.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Meanwhile the Feds decided to help out Damar&#039;s resistance by sending him Colonel Kira(who now has the rank of a Starfleet Commander), Odo and Garak(Ziyal&#039;s former simi-boyfriend). The resistance eventually get their hands on one of the Breen Energy Dampeners. During some infighting Damar realizes that the restoring the old Cardassia is pointless. Killing one of his old friends. The Breen and Jem&#039;hadar do eventually one up the resistance. But not before their brutality turns more Cardassian against them. So during the final space battle this makes the Cardi military switch sides.&lt;br /&gt;
Damar is killed during the final raid on Dominion HQ. Focing Kira and Garak to lead the final push into the compound.&lt;br /&gt;
The War between the Alpha Quadrant Alliance and The Dominion is ended when Odo offers to share the cure to the disease created by Section 31(the Federation&#039;s answer to the Tal Shiar and Obsidian Order) passed on he forced to return to the great Link the first time. While also promising to join the Great Link. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
With all their advanced technology. One would think the Founders would have discovered a cure before being handed one. But the bad guys being just as flawed as everyone else is a common theme in Star Trek. Even in Star Trek Online despiste Odo being the one in charge a few decades later. As their Ambassador to the Federation. The experiments of the Founders sketchy past cause them and everyone else huge headaches including the dishonorable mention of the revived True Way.&lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Species 8472&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
The one and only race in the galaxy even the Borg don&#039;t want to fuck with. Introduced in Voyager, Species 8472 are three-legged creatures that live in a space called Fluid Space. It&#039;s similar to the [[Eye of Terror]] for the fact that it connects to an alternate dimension and [[Khorne|everyone will be ripped apart upon entering.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
When the Borg first came around to try and assimilate them they were completely obliterated in a war in which 4 million Borg were killed in the first few days at the cost of almost no members of Species 8472. This war was such a roflstomp that the Borg were forced to call on the Federation for help. [[Tau|The Federation being the better people swallowed their pride and decided to help their sworn enemies,]] [[Eldrad|but were dicks and sent only one ship.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Species 8472 fought with fast moving, small ships and devastating beam weapons so the small ship of the Federation could keep up with them and helped the Borg force the species back into Fluid Space. The Federation were the villains on this one. That said, they eventually came to an accord with Species 8472, preventing further wars between the denizens of Fluid Space, except in lots and lots of video games that want to use a fresh antagonist.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
That and that in &#039;&#039;Star Trek Online&#039;&#039;, [[Awesome|they look like the fucking Predator.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===The Q===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Q are a race of beings who have elevated themselves to the point where they are basically gods. Most of them do not interact directly with the younger races, who they tend to consider with disdain- if they consider them at all. However a few of them take a more enlightened view, and one in particular has been known to fuck with individual humans from time time. They are mostly a TNG thing, and even there they work mostly by grace of John de Lancie&#039;s acting chops as a counterpoint to the charisma of Patrick Stewart, as de Lancie played the &#039;&#039;character&#039;&#039; Q, an all-powerful epic [[troll]] (no, not the fantasy kind) who&#039;s occasionally [[Tzeentch]]ian games sometimes appeared to be for his own amusement and sometimes acted as education or event protection to the human race. Various subplots involving the Q &#039;&#039;species&#039;&#039; range from somewhat thought provoking to mildly entertaining to ridiculous and banal, but the classic episodes that highlighted the charisma and chemistry of the two actors were often quite excellent.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== The Mirror Universe ===&lt;br /&gt;
Not so much of a faction as an alternate setting, this is a parallel universe in which [[Alternate History|things have gone differently]] in Earth&#039;s History. The main point of divergence appears to occur when the Vulcan scientists who landed at Bozeman, Montana in 2063 are not welcomed with alcohol and music but instead are killed and have their ship looted. It is equally clear that where the main universe is Noblebright the Mirror Universe is Grimdark. Instead of a peace loving Federation searching for knowledge and friendly cooperation for the betterment of all, Earth gave rise to the &#039;&#039;Terran Empire&#039;&#039; which seeks out new life and civilizations to conquer and enslave, as it had done with the Klingons. Pretty much it&#039;s the PG-13 version of the Imperium of Man with a bit more Grimderp. Junior officers get promoted by killing their superiors, those that fail at that get thrown in the agony booth for their troubles and Emperor gets the job by usurping the previous incumbent. In general everyone in the Mirror Universe is a selfish asshole version of themselves and following comic book logic the uniforms for the female characters are more revealing. Occasionally people can cross over from one universe to the next due to technobabble and cause mischief in either realm.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Originally it was a one off TOS setting for an episode of the week, but it was brought back in a few novels and some romps in Deep Space Nine in which [[Fail|the Terran Empire had fallen]]. In Enterprise&#039;s fourth season it got a two parter that was pretty good and would have been an annual thing if the show had been renewed, this one having little crossover with the main universe (a ship from TOS ended up in the Mirror Universe and is salvaged after all it&#039;s crew have died). We also went there in Discovery, for better or worse.  Voyager never did the mirror universe, but instead got a homage episode with some alien historians in the far future getting the details wrong like historians tend to.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== The Star Trek Crew ==&lt;br /&gt;
Whether the focus of the show is exploration, manning a space station in an important locale or trying to get home, all Star Trek series have a basic set up of casting and focus: namely on a collection of people who are usually the senior most officers on the ship. If you decide to make a Star Trek inspired game take this into consideration.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Captain&#039;&#039;&#039;: Big cheese. Makes the hard decisions. Needs to be able to talk, think or fight out of situations as needed. The third option fetishist finding the balance between empathy and reason. (Two least skubby examples: Kirk and Picard, but the skub will fly hard if you say one is better than the other, sufficed to say that people like both of them alot but for different reasons)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The First Officer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Second in command and trusted advisor.  Added after the original series, where the role was combined with and split between two others. (Two least skubby examples: Riker and Kira)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Science Officer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Got high Int stats. Can analyze the situation and work out solutions. The voice of reason. Almost never human. (Two least skubby examples: Data and Spock)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Engineer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hard working technically minded guy who gets shit done. (Two least skubby examples: Scotty and Geordi)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Doctor&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ship&#039;s healer with a secondary scientific role. The voice of empathy, whether prickly or serene. (Two least skubby examples: Bones and the EMH Doctor)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Security Officer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rough and tumble no-nonsense sort whose job it is to keep these guys alive when diplomacy fails, which it often does. Often has to juggle providing ship&#039;s security with working the tactical station on the bridge in a crisis.  (Two least skubby examples: Worf and Odo)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Helmsman&#039;&#039;&#039;: Got mad spacecraft piloting skills, either full-sized starships, shuttles, or fighters. (Two least skubby examples: Sulu and Tom Paris)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Other Guy&#039;&#039;&#039;: A crewmember whose role doesn&#039;t cleanly map onto other positions, a role often restricted to a single show.  Example positions include communications officer, ship&#039;s councilor, transporter chief, and linguist. (Two Least skubby examples: Uhura and Troi)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Outsider&#039;&#039;&#039;: Someone who is a passenger and regular cast member, but exists outside the organization, looking in and commenting.  Usually works a side-job, like tailor, bartender, or cook.  Either a beloved fan-favorite or utterly despised, there is no middle ground.  (Two Least skubby examples: Guinan and Quark)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Some of these hats may be worn by more than one character, some may be worn by no one at all.  This is especially true in the original series, which had a smaller cast overall, and which put less emphasis on an ensemble and more on the main trio of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy.  The usual roles and character dynamics were instead set down by &#039;&#039;The Next Generation&#039;&#039;, which later series generally copied.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== The Shows ==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;The Original Series&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Created in 1966 by legendary sci-fi [[spiritual liege]] and money-grubbing sexist lounge lizard Gene Roddenberry and pitched as a &amp;quot;Wagon Train to the stars&amp;quot;, it&#039;s a pulpy adventure sci-fi, full of fistfights, sword fights, and hammy speeches.  (The guns never work.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The USS &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; is tasked by the Federation to go on a five year mission to explore space: the final frontier, to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations and boldly go where no man has gone before, though due to budget constraints, her crew often finds that man has in fact gone there before. Or at least something that looks exactly like a man but is actually an [[Xenos|Alien]]; most episodes split the difference. James T. Kirk sleeps with [[Hot Chicks|hot alien babes]] who either die tragically or leave tearfully at the end of the episode, but it&#039;s &#039;k because he&#039;s too in love with the Enterprise to ever love a mere &#039;&#039;woman&#039;&#039; more. Mr. Spock and Dr. McCoy are cold and logical and rash and emotional respectively, and their constant friction must be resulting in the best make-up sex in the world, Mr. Sulu and Lieutenant Uhura wait in vain for focus episodes that never come, Ensign Chekhov suffers horribly to the approval of American Cold War audiences, and Scotty [[gets shit done]]. Uniforms, while iconic, tend to look a bit civilian though. Miniskirts are apparently mandated attire for the ship&#039;s fan-servicey female &amp;quot;yeomen&amp;quot; and others, because 1966. The civilian nature of the attire (including, one must assume, the miniskirts, but they had a visual appeal all their own) were apparently an intentional design decision by Roddenberry who didn&#039;t want uniforms to look military. Further specialness on the part of Roddenberry demanded phasers not look like guns, instead looking like nothing in particular at all (although looking back at them today they look sort of like TV remotes, which would be invented much later), and also (probably the only sensible decision in this category) ships that didn&#039;t look like rockets, giving ships their distinctive and iconic saucer-engineering-nacelles look that still stands out today.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Original Series frequently ran out of budget and entire episodes were filmed using spare costumes belonging to the production company, resulting in a series of extremely goofy excuses to go to planets full of gangsters or [[Nazi]]s. This is often copied by shows who don&#039;t realize it was done out of pure expediency, and nowadays this [[TVTropes|&amp;quot;Planet of Hats&amp;quot;]] gimmick is practically a box to check off when doing sci-fi adventure. The lack of budget also resulted in one of the more memorable inventions; unable to budget for a sequence showing the &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; or a shuttle landing on a new planet every week, the writers instead decided to invent the transporter to &amp;quot;beam&amp;quot; the crew down to planets or between starships. Also worth noting: despite its mediocre critical reception, ratings and eventual cancellation, not to forget the uneven quality of many episodes, especially in the Roddenberry-less third season where poor Fred Freiberger had to come onto a show he didn&#039;t understand and try to get better ratings with less money, &#039;&#039;TOS&#039;&#039; had a hell of a cultural impact thanks to syndication and it has been said that since it entered syndication in 1969, there hasn&#039;t been a 24-hour period without some TV station, in some country, playing Star Trek. Cancellation of The Original Series is now considered one of the worst decisions in TV history, and while much of its silly 60&#039;s campiness is now laughable, it often still manages to teach relevant and important lessons today.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Fun fact: the &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; and each of her 11 sister ships have enough firepower to [[Exterminatus]] a planet by themselves, after getting issued an order called General Order 24. This however is likely a time-consuming task. According to a later DS9 episode, it takes a fleet of 20 warships 1 hour of sustained bombardment to destroy a planets crust and 5 hours of sustained bombardment to destroy a planet down to its mantle. These 20 ships were also in service 100 years after the Enterprise so they were also more powerful. &lt;br /&gt;
Kirk has the distinction of being the only known captain to issue a [[Exterminatus|General Order 24]], because a planet was &#039;&#039;too&#039;&#039; much into wargames (he changed his mind after they dropped wargaming).&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;The Animated Series&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
The often forgotten middle child. More or less &amp;quot;seasons 4-5&amp;quot; of &#039;&#039;TOS&#039;&#039; with the same writing staff and actors, sans poor Walter Koenig. He was replaced by a weird camel person. He learned this at a convention, from a fan, while he was trying to announce he&#039;d be writing an episode, which Gene promptly demanded he rewrite over and over.  Classy. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Being animated allowed the staff to get a lot more creative with the alien designs and plots, and the writing and acting remain... well, top notch is a stretch, but certainly at the same levels as &#039;&#039;The Original Series&#039;&#039;, with the occasional low point. Not &#039;&#039;nearly&#039;&#039; as bad as you&#039;re probably picturing from the name, although still limited by the low budget and primitive, cheap animation techniques of the television era it was aired in. Notably some sci-fi novelists were brought in to write some episodes, such as Larry Niven, and at least one episode, &amp;quot;Yesteryear,&amp;quot; is considered such a pivotal moment in Spock&#039;s development that even people who hate the series enough to consider it all non-canon often make an exception just for that one.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Also, since the series now has no excuse for throwing in lots of Space Puritans and Space Wizards, it of course continued to do so to derptastic results, because by this point it had become traditional. The presence of a straight-up [[furry]] on the bridge, however, is downright unacceptable.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;The Next Generation&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Here&#039;s where it starts getting a little deeper and a little darker, although with a lot of left-wing political subtext turned up to 11. The USS &#039;&#039;Enterprise-D&#039;&#039; (the original and C were destroyed in action while A and B were retired) is, like its predecessor, tasked with going where no-one has gone before, but this time around the problems are less likely to be solved in a single episode. Jean-Luc Picard is the captain and he plots and negotiates his way to victory; Mr. Data is cold and unemotional, though not by choice - as an android, he&#039;d very much like to change that; Riker takes over the captain&#039;s &amp;quot;sleep with alien babes&amp;quot; duties since Picard is married to the job; Worf the Klingon gets beaten up by monsters to show how tough the monsters are, meaning that Worf winds up looking incredibly weak by the end of the show&#039;s run and doesn&#039;t regain his badassery until his run on &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;; Dr. Beverly Crusher is good old Bones minus his temper; Dr. Pulaski is Bones &#039;&#039;plus&#039;&#039; temper; Counsellor Troy is so badly written she becomes a running joke; and Geordi LaForge [[gets shit done]]. Only two things need to be said about helmsman Wesley Crusher: he was [[Mary Sue|Gene Wesley Roddenberry&#039;s shitty self-insert fanfic character]], and his sueness got to the point that even his actor started to hate him within the first season of the show.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Due to the massive success of The Original Series in syndication (and Paramount being [[Rage|pissed off]] by broadcast networks treating their most valuable IP like any other show), TNG was aired through syndication from the beginning. Although the first two seasons were laughably bad, the quality began to improve dramatically after an increasingly cocaine-addled Gene Roddenberry got too sick to keep ruining it and his partner-in-crime Maurice Hurley was thrown out on his ass, a moment often pinpointed via looking for when [[Meme|Riker grew a beard.]] The later seasons are widely considered to represent the apex of the franchise&#039;s episodic formula on the small screen (although &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; gave it a run for its money with a more serialized approach); sadly, this series only got one good movie.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Unlike all the other series so far, &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039; primarily takes place in a fixed location - the titular space station Deep Space Nine, out near the borders of Federation Space. Said space station is near Bajor, which was recently freed from Cardassian occupation, and a wormhole to the other side of the galaxy which allows [[Warp|all sorts of of crazy shit to go down]]. If the other shows are a wagon train, this one&#039;s a border fort.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Benjamin Sisko is the captain, declared Emissary by the nearby Bajorans for making contact with the wormhole aliens they worship, and he successfully hybridizes the blow-the-shit-out-of-whatever-you-can&#039;t-punch Kirk approach with the talk-in-a-very-dignified-way-about-the-philosophy-of-the-thing-and-win-by-rhetoric Picard maneuver, in his ultimately-successful quest to become the baddest motherfucker in space, then literally becomes a space god. Kira the Bajoran ex-&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;terrorist&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;S&amp;gt;&#039;&#039;noble freedom fighter&#039;&#039;&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; (who are we kidding she calls herself a terrorist) struggles to free and rebuild her people while coming to terms with the moral ambiguities of situations she prefers to see in black-and-white, Dr. Bashir works to find his character for several seasons before becoming a highlight, Dax gets often written poorly and has to switch bodies doing it, Odo IS &#039;&#039;Liquid Space Cop&#039;&#039;, Quark runs his bar and [[troll|heckles]] the Federation, Garak pretends to be a tailor while definitely not being a super-spy and dropping killer lines, and Miles O&#039;Brien [[gets shit done]]. Also, Worf wanders in halfway through, and actually gets to punch things instead of just getting punched by them. It&#039;s also a lot more political than other series (though &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; have their moments) and the last series to have Gene Roddenberry&#039;s involvement (with less enthusiasm, in fact often much to the benefit of this particular series thematically, although Roddenberry&#039;s complete departure did not necessarily bode well for the franchise in general.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s the [[Awesome|closest the canon series ever get]] to [[Grimdark]], especially when the Dominion show up. The show has aged remarkably well and the terrorist/freedom fighter debate was repeatedly explored in a very mature and honest way. &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; is the most serialized of all Trek shows and could be considered a forerunner to the golden age of television with its long story arcs and deep character development. Overall, &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; has to be considered the most consistently good Trek show thanks to the excellent writing and fantastic performances from a truly wonderful ensemble cast. At least until the final season, when the writers who made it good were pulled to try and fail to make good movies, heralding the failure that was &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039;.  The finale episodes were mostly okay and tied up the story semi-satisfyingly, though a few die-hard subplots fell flat.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It wasn&#039;t without its controversies however. The show was airing around the same time as another thematically similar sci-fi show, &#039;&#039;Babylon 5&#039;&#039;. Not only that but characters also shared similarities, as did the episodes. Interestingly, beginning of both series, introduction of characters and airing of similar episodes were often too close to each other for one show to copy the other but this did not stop massive [[Rage]] and [[/v/|fanboy wars]] from starting between fans of the two series accusing one another of plagiarism and having an inferior product.  Happily, as time went on and both shows evolved, these hurt feelings have mostly faded.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
How good is &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;? Every Star Trek series and even the reboot movies have pretty much ripped off ideas and concepts established during the series. Famously, within the &amp;quot;Trekker/Trekie&amp;quot; fan community, there&#039;s a little cell of fans who like it better than most other &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;; these fans are typically called &amp;quot;Niners.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Star Trek: Voyager centers around the eponymous USS &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039;, a smallish ship which gets teleported over to the other side of the galaxy. The plot of the series centers on the crew&#039;s efforts to get back home, which COULD have made for an excellent premise. Unfortunately, there were few lasting story arcs, with most episodes being fully self-contained (as well as being littered with far too many episodes featuring holodeck or transporter incidents). As a consequence, despite being completely isolated from the Federation, no matter how bad things got Voyager always appeared in the next episode without a scratch, fully supplied, and with all its shuttlecraft intact. Think &#039;&#039;Gilligan&#039;s Island&#039;&#039; on a starship.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Like &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; it&#039;s a character-driven drama just as often as it is a sci-fi adventure romp, although compared to TNG only a few of the characters are particularly memorable. The captain and arguable &amp;quot;main character&amp;quot; is Kathryn Janeway, a Katharine Hepburn lookalike (I see what you did there) who is stern without being cold, and principled without being inflexible. The fan favorite is a character called &amp;quot;The Doctor&amp;quot; ([[Doctor Who|No relation]]); he&#039;s the solid-light hologram representative of the ship&#039;s emergency medical computer, who has to take on actual medical duties when their chief medical officer was conveniently killed in the pilot episode. Other than this, Chakotay is a peace-loving and spiritually rich indian &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;freedom fighter&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;terrorist&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; [[FAIL|who was written with the help of a special cherokee consultant so native his name was Jamake Highwater and it turned out later on that he was actually jewish and didn&#039;t know dick about native cultures so he made everything up resulting in Chakotay basically being a borderline racist caricature of what you think indians are like. Akoochimoya.]] Tom Paris is an annoying jerk and is counterbalanced by Harry Kim who is the ideal boy-scout, making him only half as annoying and twice as boring. B&#039;elanna Torres tries to perpetuate a lineage of dudes getting shit done but ends up blankly reciting her technobabble, having second degree plasma burns and – worst of all – systematically fails to get shit done whenever the warp core goes nuts. Tuvok tries hard to be as cool as Spock but ends up being a lame version of the n°1 Vulcan who uses logic to justify everything and makes it short for &amp;quot;you are wrong, I am right because I said so.&amp;quot; Kes is passed as a fragile and nice character but it takes a couple of episodes to realize that having a short lifespan does not change the facts: [[powergamer|when you can boil someone to death from the inside of their body, drain life from everything around you to become stronger and do anything you want without knowing how, just by thinking of it]], you are a goddamn Mary Sue. From the fourth season onwards the only character the writers seemed to care about are Seven of Nine, [[Mary Sue|a human woman who recently escaped from Borg control and kept all of her cyborg enhancements but regained her free will]]; another Mary Sue, to be sure, but she&#039;s [[Hot Chicks|hot]], and the other characters are much worse, so that&#039;s not really a bad thing. Fortunately, The Doctor still received a lot of attention from the writers and almost single-handedly made the show watchable. There was also Neelix, who was the apparent inspiration for Jar-Jar Binks, and any sane crew would have pushed him out of an airlock on the first episode. Fans who stuck with the show despite its glaring failings were given one final slap in the face with the &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;controversial&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; shit final season, in which the producers decided &amp;quot;screw steadily crafting a satisfying conclusion to a story which we have wasted for most of the last seven years anyway; lets just ignore it until the final episode and then throw in some shit about trans-warp conduits and time travel, bitches love time travel!&amp;quot; If you did not care about any of the characters or the subplots or time travel making sense (the writers sure didn&#039;t), then the final episode was explosions (and the Borg got a major setback, just don&#039;t think about the setup too hard).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Doctor never once stopped being totally fucking awesome though (enough so to even earn a cameo in First Contact), and the great acting from the cast carries the series from being horrific to &#039;&#039;occasionally&#039;&#039; watchable. Just goes to show that no matter how good your actors are, they can&#039;t make diamonds out of shit.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Overall, most Star Trek fans view Voyager&#039;s legacy with a shrug and a &amp;quot;meh.&amp;quot; Unfortunately, hopes that Voyager&#039;s successor would revitalize the franchise would soon prove to be overly optimistic.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
From the minute the Nickelback-tier theme tune started, Enterprise attempted to take Star Trek in a new direction and was only partially successful in doing so. The series never quite caught its footing, although it still managed to have some enjoyable moments. It was most notable for providing a first-hand view of the key events that directly led to the formation of the Federation. The Federation&#039;s founding races were also featured heavily, with Andorians, Tellarites, and Vulcans all enjoying significant screen time alongside the human characters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s a prequel to the rest of the canon, taking place on the first &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039;, before the Federation was founded and during the period when Earth was still an independent power- so there&#039;s a lot of primitive versions of things from other series. At least the uniforms were pretty cool in an Air Force sort of way. Captained by &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;that guy from &#039;&#039;Quantum Leap&#039;&#039;&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Jonathan Archer, in hindsight the fact that they had to rename him from their original choice of Jeffrey Archer to avoid confusion with the disgraced British MP and author of the same name probably cursed the series with bad karma before it had even begun shooting. In an unusual twist for a &#039;&#039;Trek&#039;&#039; series, his first officer isn&#039;t a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;terrorist&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &#039;&#039;noble freedom fighter,&#039;&#039; however she does share a trait with her &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; predecessor in that the actress who portrayed her frequently criticized the show&#039;s writers in interviews. Other than that, well, Hoshi Sato screams a lot, Travis Mayweather was so dull even the writers forgot he existed, the resident Vulcan T&#039;Pol serves as both the Science Officer and source of sexy fanservice, Malcolm Reed has an accent, Dr Phlox is a weird creepy alien with weird creepy alien moral (and gets surprisingly interesting when given enough screentime, which hardly happened), and Trip also has an accent and [[gets shit done]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Was retooled twice, the third season tries to be &#039;&#039;24&#039;&#039; IN SPACE (stop some guys the Xindi from blowing up Earth) while the 4th season is a massive apology about the last three seasons that tries to fix all the problems they had, and as a result, the only season that&#039;s close to being good.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Unfortunately, the poorly-received final episode is set on the holodeck of the Enterprise-D, which leaves us with the firm impression that the producers would have much rather have just continued making &#039;&#039;The Next Generation&#039;&#039;. Considering the mediocre quality of the &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; movies we got instead, this probably would have worked out better for all involved (Or not since &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; was that; its first episode was even numbered 901, as in Season 9 Episode 1).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Yet despite all this bad directing, subpar plots, and frankly boring episodes, &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; still manages to be moderately enjoyable with occasional moments of awesomeness if you can suffer through a fair few awful spots and aggressive mediocrity almost everywhere else. The focus on founding Federation races like the Andorans was refreshing and the technology level, being somewhere between the original series and the real world present-day, was quite interesting. We also got to see the Vulcans portrayed as arrogant, superior dicks. Which makes a lot more sense than the way they&#039;re usually portrayed as fairly submissive towards humans because they are, obviously and objectively, the superior race. The Klingons certainly still considered themselves to be honorable but the show made it clear that the Klingon notion of honor is rarely analogous to the human concept which was interesting as all hell to watch. There have been a few small nods to it in discovery and the abrams movies.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
And let&#039;s be fucking honest, [[/tg/]] loves 40k and the Xindi arc was about as grimdark as shit gets. And that was awesome.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Also makes a neat pairing with &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; in that they really mess with the Prime Directive and question the Federation.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Discovery&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
----&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;A LOAD OF SOCIAL JUSTICE SHIT!&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Ahem, let&#039;s start again, shall we?&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A new &amp;quot;prequel&amp;quot; series set 10 years before &#039;&#039;The Original Series.&#039;&#039; Run exclusively on CBS&#039; paid streaming service (unless you live outside the US and Canada, in which case you can get it on Netflix) to try and drum up sign-ups and revenue, it features a mix of &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; and Abramstrek aesthetics despite supposedly taking place in parallel to the TOS &amp;quot;The Cage&amp;quot; pilot while [[what|having technology superior to late DS9]] and introducing [[dune|mushroom-based space travel]] that would imply [[retcon|all later events and warp travel would be outdated]]. The trailer has attracted a lot of concern over the fact that Klingons have been completely redesigned to look like slit-nosed ogres wearing ancient Egyptian cosplay, and rumors that the Klingons shown were [[Racial Holy War|primitives who had been trapped in stasis]] proved to be unfounded, so there is no excuse. Not having a cold war to posture about, the new villains are based off of Trump-inspired xenophobia by the admission of the authors. Also the lead character is Spock&#039;s human sister that he never mentioned before, aka the &#039;&#039;exact&#039;&#039; origin of the [[Mary Sue]] which is just fucking depressing. To further reinforce this, there are &#039;&#039;numerous&#039;&#039; examples of dialogue and exposition that serve only to show how the Mary Sue main character was right all along, usually in conjunction with the death of the character that had foolishly disagreed with her. Want a new Star Trek episode about racism and immigration? Try the now-banned [https://youtu.be/3VEZH8bqytA Star Trek Continues]. Want Star Trek with humor, keep an eye out for the upcoming [https://ew-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/ew.com/tv/2018/10/25/star-trek-animated-comedy/amp/?fbclid=IwAR2WN6auDNm5YiunYhaqiu7vt9f-P08AuUjMpLA5LlpUgvTm9_xloJNRYb0 Star Trek: Lower Decks]; want a pseudo-Star Trek show about other modern issues? Try &#039;&#039;The Orville&#039;&#039; below; that&#039;s right, American Dad In Space may right now be a better Star Trek than an actual Star Trek series.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Initial reviews have been... well, it&#039;s shit. The writing is overly convoluted, the massive injection of grimdark into pre-TOS continuity is anathema to the hardcore fans (the &#039;&#039;human&#039;&#039; characters are often the ones doing the nastiest shit, including [[Marines Malevolent|trying to kill a Klingon party by planting an explosive on the corpse of one of their comrades for when they came to collect the dead]]) and the Klingons are so flat and devoid of characterization that they might as well be Larry the Cable Guy lookalikes wearing Trump hats, which is a massive disappointment for a series that promised to put a spotlight on Klingon culture but ended up retconning all the characterization that happened in TNG and DS9. It &#039;&#039;may&#039;&#039; get better with time (remember that it took two seasons for TNG to get really good) but given the release schedule (split between 2017 and 2018 with a long break) it may come too late for the fanbase to care. Currently it&#039;s cause for more fans to lose their shit over whether it&#039;s better or worse than the Abrams movies, which is a new record of [[Skub|Trek Skub]]. Releasing the show on CBS All Access instead of cable or broadcast TV makes it seem that executives don&#039;t really give a shit if the show succeeds or fails, bringing up the question of [[Bioware|whether they&#039;re deliberately putting Star Trek: Discovery in a no-win scenario where, no matter what happens, the executives have an excuse to cancel Star Trek altogether]]. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Other stupid decisions are: not bringing back Bruce Greenwood and Zachary Quinto as Captain Pike and (at this time a likely a Lieutenant Commander) Spock. Who wouldn&#039;t mind taking a pay cut to bring the characters to the small screen. Their ages wouldn&#039;t have mattered either if CBS and Paramount weren&#039;t such cheapskates. As they don&#039;t even care enough to shell out cash for the CGI technology that Marvel Studios uses to make their actors appear younger during flashback scenes. There&#039;s also allegations that large chunks of plot were stolen from previews of an in development indie game.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Naturally, nobody is ever going to let this series live down its unfortunate initials.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Picard&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Set to be a continuation of the original timeline, featuring old man Picard with Patrick Stewart reprising the role. Hopes are not high, but at the very least Patrick Stewart&#039;s presence should make it watchable if nothing else.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are a lot of rumors coming out and if the comics can be considered canon, then the Enterprise F from Star Trek Online is the successor to the Enterprise E. This would strongly link the video game to the main Star Trek universe. That being said, it &#039;&#039;appears&#039;&#039; that the show will not be taking place on a Starfleet ship, and that Picard himself will be acting as a private individual, not as an officer of the Federation. Stay tuned. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Homages ==&lt;br /&gt;
Being a longrunner with a wide audience, Star Trek has gained enough acclaim to have numerous references. In a few cases entire works get made to homage Star Trek. Here are some of the examples.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Galaxy Quest ===&lt;br /&gt;
A sci-fi/comedy film released in 1999, directed by Dean Parisot. It parodies science fiction films and series in general, but particularly &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; and its fandom. The film stars big name actors including Tim Allen, Sigourney Weaver and the late great Alan Rickman. The plot revolves around the cast of a defunct cult television series called Galaxy Quest (for example, Tim Allen played the Kirk/Shatner expy and the late Alan Rickman played the Spock/Nimoy expy). They&#039;re also suffering fatigue that mirrors the experiences of the actual Star Trek actors (Rickman&#039;s character is typecast with his Galaxy Quest character and laments it, similar to how these things happened to the late Leonard Nimoy).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The cast are suddenly visited by actual aliens, who believe the series to be an accurate documentary (it helps that the aliens have no concept of fiction and only the most bare bones idea of lying) and seek their help. They take the actors with them, who find themselves involved in a very real, and dangerous, intergalactic conflict, and unlike the show where it all wrapped up quickly they struggle to learn about and relate to the aliens.  Can these actors find greatness within themselves, and possibly personal redemption?  (Spoiler: yes, and it is incredible.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Built around the basic premise of &amp;quot;What if the cast of &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; ended up on a real spaceship and had to actually do the shit they did in the show?&amp;quot; Featuring a veritable all-star cast of talented comedians and character actors, this is one of the best parodies ever made, and an affectionate love-letter to the franchise as a whole.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Star Wreck: In the Pirkinning===&lt;br /&gt;
Another parody, parodying not only &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; but &#039;&#039;Babylon 5&#039;&#039; as well. The seventh in a series fan movies released in 2005, it&#039;s about Captain Pirk builds a starship called CPP &#039;&#039;Kickstart&#039;&#039;, allies with Russia and takes over the world. He wants to take over more planets but the ships of his P-Fleet aren&#039;t fast enough to travel outside the Solar system. A maggot hole opens and it leads to an alternate reality. Pirk wants to take over the Earth of this reality, which leads to an [[awesome]] space battle between the P-Fleet and the fleet of the space station Babel 13 led by Johnny Sherrypie. The movie features some of the best special effects ever put in a sci-fi movie, which is pretty impressive, considering that this is an amateur film with a very low budget and was rendered in five years in someone&#039;s bedroom. The film is spoken in Finnish but subtitles are available for a wide variety of languages, including Klingon. They also made [https://web.archive.org/web/20070828010927/http://rpg.starwreck.com/ a role-playing game based on it], where your character [[Truenamer|becomes more incompetent]] [[Page 42|as he levels up]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Star Trek: Renegades===&lt;br /&gt;
Kickstarter Trek. The makers submitted their made-for-TV movie pilot to CBS in an attempt to get it made into a legit on-the-air series (and by god it shows), but they were not successful. As a result, while the project limped along for a few years afterward, it has good and bad in equal measure. As a non-official product it also cannot be considered canon. Some characters are actually interesting (about time we saw more of the Breen!) while others are pure Mary Sues (including a male Seven of Nine with a built-in Borg-gun/personal shield/fully-functional hand). Some of the ideas are interesting while others are boring or already-been-done. The CGI is all Hollywood-quality, but the practical effects are okay at best. &lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s obvious that they made this without knowing that they were going to be able to make a TV show or not, and tried to cram the sort of build-up and intrigue we saw in DS9 into a span of 90 minutes. For now though, it&#039;s decidedly meh, and probably a dead project as well since it hasn&#039;t been mentioned on the maker&#039;s website in over a year as of late 2019.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== The Orville ===&lt;br /&gt;
A comedy drama sci-fi television series that began as a homage to Star Trek, created by and starring Seth MacFarlane of &#039;&#039;Family Guy&#039;&#039; infamy-- [[Skub|No wait, come back!]]  The guy&#039;s a huge Trekkie and felt too many shows were up in their ass with grimdark, so he pitched his idea to the execs to make a loving comedic sendup of The Next Generation.  Many of the executive producers and developers are notable industry Trekkies such as David Goodman (who wrote the &#039;&#039;Futurama&#039;&#039; Trek parody episode), or Trek alumni such as Brannon Braga.  First airing in 2017, the series is about the strung-out not-Picard protagonist Captain Edward Mercer, played by MacFarlane himself, of the eponymous not-Enterprise spaceship &amp;quot;The Orville&amp;quot; ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wright_brothers#Orville named after one of the Wright Brothers in a splash of genius]).  His ex-wife Kelly is the first officer while the crew includes the not-T&#039;Pol alien security officer Alara, gay beefy not-Worf alien Bortus, asshole not-Lore android Isaac, and John LaMarr and Gordon Malloy - an even more ridiculous parody of Harry Kim and Tom Paris. They explore the galaxy while dealing with personal problems and fighting various bad guys.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Season one started with a decent pilot about Ed and Kelly reconciling enough to work together, then had peaks and valleys to its final episode.    Like Star Trek, there’s some commentary on real world issues, and while less preachy than &#039;&#039;Discovery&#039;&#039; on some subjects, it&#039;s just as bad or even worse on other subjects.  The totally-not-Black-Mirror&#039;s-&amp;quot;Nosedive&amp;quot; episode &amp;quot;Majority Rule&amp;quot; had good commentary on social currency systems.  The Season trod [[SJW|certain waters]] at times, such as the episode &amp;quot;About a Girl&amp;quot; being a surprisingly well done, Bortus-centered story about gender-fluid/sex-changing aliens... only for episode &amp;quot;Cupid&#039;s Dagger&amp;quot; to poke the hornet&#039;s nest when it revealed Kelly and Ed split because Kelly banged an alien whose seduction included pheromones (raising questions of consent, blame and date rape).  Then, since it’s a Seth MacFarlane show, it has preachiness on atheism exceeding even Star Trek’s, with a quarter of Season 1 episodes all about beating the “Religion is Bad” drum.  On that note there’s the alien race the Krill, the only religious race in the setting, so &#039;&#039;of course&#039;&#039; they’re fanatical devotees of a dangerous religion (a monotheistic one teaching that [[The Culture#Other civilizations|all non-Krill are soulless abominations to be subjugated or destroyed]]); between this and cues from villains like Nosferatu (all deliberate according to the devs, including a pallid reptilian look and being killed by UV sunlight), the Krill seemed set up to be the show’s go-to bad guys.  While there were teething problems with plots, the jokes were hit and miss and the preachiness could grate even for those who agreed with the messages, The Orville did well enough for a second season. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In the second season, Alara was written out of the show halfway through.  The character&#039;s actress, Halston Sage, was rumoured to be dating Seth MacFarlane and given the apparent distance between them later, this may have indicated a breakup which led to her departure from the show.  If the rumor was true, this likely factored into writing Alara out because [[Derp|dating a co-worker and subordinate 20 years younger than you almost never ends well]].  In any event, this change may come back to haunt them as she was one of the more well-received characters.  In other events, Issac turns good at the last minute (becoming not-Data instead of not-Lore) and one episode has a plot hole where the Krill teacher Teleya - captured by Mercer and co. and imprisoned in Season 1 - comes back as part of a strike force targeting Ed with no explanation for her escape.  Speaking of the Krill, they become the &amp;quot;lesser villains that need to team up with the good guys to fight worse villains&amp;quot; cliché, in a possible asspull given all the villainous setup they got in Season 1.  The team up happens because the rest of Issac&#039;s robotic race, introduced this season and called the Kaylons, have gone [[Necrons|Full Skynet]] against organic life.  The cast seems to be gelling better (rumoured friction between Seth and Halston aside), the writers have a better idea of what the show should be and the humour is now used in service of the stories.  The criticized elements were watered down but still remain, and while the show is getting a third season, it was moved from TV to streaming service Hulu.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ultimately, some commend The Orville as a breath of [[Noblebright|fresh air]] in an overly [[Grimdark|stagnant]] genre with good special effects and bouts of genius. Others denounce The Orville as derivative with sophomoric preachiness, clumsy pop-culture references and haphazard writing.  Further criticisms include MacFarlane&#039;s stunt-casting of himself as the main character being the height of vanity and that his interactions with ex-wife character Kelly are uncomfortable to watch from the word &amp;quot;go.&amp;quot;  Some think both its supporters and detractors have a point. Trekkies are equally divided on the show; many Trekkies [[butthurt]] over Discovery endorse The Orville, a significant number of Discovery fans hate The Orville while a small and overlooked group quietly enjoys both.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As always, stay tuned for how this turns out.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Films ==&lt;br /&gt;
As a general rule, the even-numbered ones aren&#039;t complete shit.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: The Motion Picture&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: AKA: The Slow Motion Picture, or the Motionless Picture. A giant space whatsit is flying towards Earth, the mostly-retired crew has to go figure out what&#039;s going on and stop it.  Old school sci-fi geeks like the ideas, but terrible pace and interminable special effects that were clearly meant to capitalize on &#039;&#039;2001: A Space Odyssey&#039;&#039; while failing to understand what people like about that movie kill them dead for everyone else. Besides the uniform worn by Kirk, the uniforms also look like pajamas. So no wonder they were changed only a movie later. Features an entirely bald female alien who is [[What|so good at sex that she has to swear an oath not to get it on with the crew]]. Really. This is canon.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: As Kirk starts to feel his age, a one-off villain from the show makes a dramatic reapperance: [[Meme|KKKHHHAAAAAAAAAAAANNNN!!!!]] Widely considered the best of all the films, and the only one considered a straight up great film, no qualifiers. If you haven&#039;t seen it, see it. So good many later movies in the franchise just try to rip it off instead of finding their own identities. Interesting fact: due to time constraints, actors of Kirk and Khan weren&#039;t available at the same time. So the entire script was written so that Kirk and Khan never need to meet face-to-face. But you&#039;d never notice if it weren&#039;t pointed out to you. Roddenberry screeched autistically and objected to some of the actions of his characters, including Kirk shooting a [[Enslavers|brain eating space parasite]] rather than &amp;quot;[[Noblebright|keeping it for study]].&amp;quot; The fact that his strongest objections came to the most [[win]] of the films says a great deal about his deprecating value to the franchise around the TNG era. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek III: The Search for Spock&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Where is Spock? &#039;&#039;He&#039;s on Genesis.&#039;&#039; ALL AHEAD FULL! Not really bad, just mediocre and run of the mill compared to the superior films that surround it. It was also saddled with the misfortune of undoing some of the previous film&#039;s more-daring decisions, and having its only daring decision reversed a film later. If you had to say that any film broke the &amp;quot;odd numbers suck&amp;quot; rule, it would be this one. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The crew of the &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; travels back in time to save the whales. No, literally and unironically. Scott tries to talk to a computer through the mouse, Spock nerve-pinches a punk on a bus in San Francisco, and somehow it works, creating something perhaps not quite in the genre intended but a classic in sci-fi dramedy. &#039;&#039;The Voyage Home&#039;&#039; is a zany comedy romp beloved by the general public and fandom alike, leaving only the most intractable fanbois to bitch and moan.  Nimoy directed this one but there was a contract stipulation that Shatner would get whatever Nimoy got, thus leading to...&lt;br /&gt;
* &amp;lt;del&amp;gt;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek V: The Final Frontier&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;:&amp;lt;/del&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;The epitome of the &amp;quot;odd-numbered Star Trek films suck&amp;quot; rule.&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; {{BLAM|Lies! There is no}} &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek V&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;{{BLAM|! It was not called}} &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;The Final Frontier&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;{{BLAM|! It was not directed by Kirk&#039;s egotistical actor and did not have a plot that could literally be summarized as &amp;quot;Kirk is betrayed by his incompetent crew, yet goes on to fight God and win!&amp;quot; The films mysteriously moved from four to six and &#039;&#039;we are all improved because of this!&#039;&#039;}}&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Space Cold War ends amidst searing mystery and drama. The sendoff for the original cast, except Kirk who got a worse send-off a movie later. Gene Roddenberry watched it, hated it, and was going to seek legal advice but died a week later. And good riddance to that, because it&#039;s a pretty sweet political thriller if your hippie-panties don&#039;t get into a twist at the thought that the Federation isn&#039;t a perfect place full of perfect people. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Generations&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malcolm McDowell blows up planets to get into a magic space ribbon to live forever, no it does not make any more sense in context. An already-weak story hamstrung by its obsession with being daring and unconventional rather than good. Also, Kirk dies on the bridge in the most face-palming manner possible.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek First Contact&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; crew face off with the Borg to ensure the future happens. Lots of action, a script that sparks with energy and snark, and some quite effective performances make this the only good &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; movie. It sadly is also the only appearance of the Defiant on screen, doing a pretty decent job of fighting the Borg before the Enterprise E saves the day of course. The Borg Queen was also introduced here before Voyager, ruining what could have been a good idea. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Insurrection&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you thought the [[Avatar|Na&#039;vi]] were a bunch of badly-written [[Mary Sue]]s, you ain&#039;t seen nothing yet! B-b-b-baby you ain&#039;t seen n-n-n-nothing yet! Also, Riker shaves his beard, and that&#039;s basically a war crime.  Aged from terrible to forgettably bad thanks to that one scene of Picard and Data singing &#039;&#039;HMS Pinafore&#039;&#039; going memetic.    &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Nemesis&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The last stand of the &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; cast, ending not with a bang but a whimper. It also required amending the even=good/odd=bad rule to &amp;quot;&#039;&#039;Galaxy Quest&#039;&#039; counts as a &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; film so this one is also odd.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2009): Alternate timeline &amp;quot;reboot&amp;quot; (sideboot?) with the original crew, albeit with new younger actors. Timey-wimey shit happens and old prime timeline Spock (reprised by old Leonard Nemoy) is hurled back in time along with a bunch of Romulan assholes. The dickbag Romulans begin fucking shit up, slightly altering history in a way that ensures gratuitous lens flare. [[skub| Skubtastic]], but at least watchable, which is more than &#039;&#039;most&#039;&#039; odd-numbered films can muster. If you still even count it as odd, without the &#039;&#039;Galaxy Quest&#039;&#039;-amendment.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Into Darkness&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Some [[edgy]] shit. The second of the alternate timeline &#039;&#039;Trek&#039;&#039; films. Terrorism, conspiracy and flapdoodle. Even more skubtastic, but generally considered worse than its predecessor, partially because (like &#039;&#039;Nemesis&#039;&#039;) it tries to be a remake of &#039;&#039;The Wrath of Khan&#039;&#039; and having Kirk at his most punchable.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Beyond&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Controversial, but more in a question of whether it&#039;s decent or quite good.  Lots of good character stuff and a decent story revolving around a race of mysterious space pirates trying to conquer a colony, but the action photography is poorly-lit shaky-cam horseshit and the sound work is awful.  If it&#039;s the last &amp;quot;Kelvin Timeline&amp;quot; movie, as it seems it will be, at least it ended on a good note.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Novels ==&lt;br /&gt;
Like most long time franchises &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; has a massive line of books. Unlike most they&#039;re basically just fanfics as nothing but the show and the movies is canon so the writers can do whatever they want. This changed after &#039;&#039;Nemesis&#039;&#039; since they might never have another show or movie in the &amp;quot;Prime&amp;quot; universe, so the writers got their shit together and wrote a group of books as a tight community very close to the shows. The relaunch novels are a continuation of the show they&#039;re about. Also there&#039;s the &#039;&#039;Titan&#039;&#039; book series which is about Riker and Troi getting their own ship, which happens to be staffed by every race in the Federation including living rocks, [[awesome|space dinosaurs]] that smell like [[meatbread|toast]] and a [[what|space cyborg ostrich]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During yet another novel continuity (Star Trek: Destiny), the Borg go nuts and eat Pluto... yeah... and then they finally get sick of the Federation somehow managing to not get assimilated all the time, so they finally just send every last cube they have with orders to Exterminatus the absolute SHIT out of the entire Alpha Quadrant. Pretty much every important character from TNG, DS9, and Voyager has to team up to stop them, and even then the Federation still gets its shit kicked in and winds up having to rely on a vaguely ridiculous deus ex machina to win, and [[Grimdark|billions of people still die and dozens of planets are blown to shit]]. It was pretty insane.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Then all the Federation&#039;s main enemies get together to form an anti-Federation and start poking the bear, all the while telling their allies that they&#039;re somehow warmongering dicks, Section 31 gets its cover blown in a big way, and Riker gets promoted to Admiral. Also, a lot of the newer TNG novels have been devoted to following up on one-shot aliens from the show, like the guys that sent out the probe that made Barclay super-smart and those fish monks that were abducting crewmembers for experiments. Now that the Picard show is coming out, though, this will all presumably be chucked in the dustbin.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Video Games ==&lt;br /&gt;
=== Star Trek Online ===&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;Star Trek Online&#039;&#039; is the free-to-play online game built by Cryptic Studios and run by Perfect World. With an official license CBS, recurring characters voiced by various Trek alumni, and recently a license to include references to the reboot chronology (officially known as the &amp;quot;Kelvin Timeline&amp;quot;), it&#039;s the closest existing thing to an &amp;quot;official&amp;quot; continuation of the &amp;quot;Prime&amp;quot; timeline, and contains history and fluff extending nearly 40 years from the end of Star Trek: Nemesis.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Taking place in the 25th century (around the year 2409-2410), the Hobus supernova (the event that kicked Nero and Spock into the past during Star Trek 2009) has devastated the Romulans, and its near-collapse and fragmentation causes tensions between a resurgent Klingon Empire and the Federation. The tensions blow up into a war, with members of a new, nicer, breakaway Romulan Republic playing both sides in exchange for development aid.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The game contains deep cuts from all over Trek lore, and answers questions about what happened to various key characters, including Data (took over the Enterprise-E, then retired), the Enterprise (now an even bigger ship run by Andorian captain Shon), and the Voyager crew (it took Harry Kim 30 years to make Captain lol). Raises barely-shown, unnamed, and otherwise obscure races to new prominence as big bad foes, including the Iconians (ancient aliens with god complexes who mutated into energy beings, currently live in dyson spheres and were only defeated by predestination paradox), Tzenkethi (4-armed halo guys whose weak points are the FRONT of their shields), and Na&#039;kuhl (the alien nazis from Enterprise as time-traveling terrorists who blame the Federation for a throwaway event that happened in TNG&#039;s beach episode).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ostensibly free to play, but don&#039;t let that fool you... the &#039;&#039;not-so-micro&#039;&#039;transactions are the only reason the lights stay on.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Starfleet Command ===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;Starfleet Command&#039;&#039; was a series real time space battle games by Interplay based on the much older tabletop game Star Fleet Battles.  It came out in 1999 and was followed by several sequels and expansions.  Gameplay was much like &#039;&#039;Battlefleet Gothic&#039;&#039;, but with the player only controlling one ship.  SFC remains Interplay&#039;s best selling game, topping even &#039;&#039;Baldur&#039;s Gate&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Armada ===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A series of low effort RTS&#039;s churned out by Activision in 2000.  Tried to take on both &#039;&#039;Homeworld&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;Age of Empires&#039;&#039;, both of which have recently gotten HD remakes and &#039;&#039;Armada&#039;&#039; hasn&#039;t so that should tell you all you need to know.  However, for one of the first 3D model space RTS&#039;s it was surprisingly easy to mod, resulting in many ship mod packs being made for it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Would you like to know more? ==&lt;br /&gt;
And oh Lordy, is there more...&lt;br /&gt;
*[http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/ Main Memory Alpha: A &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; wiki]&lt;br /&gt;
*[http://memory-beta.wikia.com/wiki/ Main Memory Beta: The flip-side of Memory Alpha for the less than official stuff]&lt;br /&gt;
*[http://sfdebris.com/ SF Debris: opinionated episode reviews, has some non &#039;&#039;Trek&#039;&#039; stuff as well]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category: Television]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:7C71:43FB:2FAE:70A9</name></author>
	</entry>
	<entry>
		<id>http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Star_Trek&amp;diff=448125</id>
		<title>Star Trek</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://2d4chan.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=Star_Trek&amp;diff=448125"/>
		<updated>2020-01-11T16:42:01Z</updated>

		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;2406:3400:20F:FFC0:7C71:43FB:2FAE:70A9: /* The Orville */&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;hr /&gt;
&lt;div&gt;{{cleanup}}&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Enterprise.jpg|thumb|500px|right|If you aren&#039;t already hearing the theme song you might not belong here.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds. To seek out new life and new civilizations. To boldly go where no man has gone before!|James T. Kirk, third captain of the starship USS Enterprise}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; is a multimedia science-fiction series and one of the cornerstones of nerdy media properties, and one of the few to crossover into mainstream popularity (alongside &#039;&#039;[[Star Wars]]&#039;&#039;, &#039;&#039;[[Doctor Who]]&#039;&#039; and a few others). It&#039;s also one of the longest-running science fiction franchises, as it began when the the first episode of The Original Series aired in 1966, and since then has had over 50 years of geek history spanning several generations. Needless to say, it&#039;s had a huge influence on all things sci-fi, and, by extension, [[/tg/]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Originally, &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; was [[noblebright]] beyond noblebright and, in many ways, was the polar opposite of &#039;&#039;[[Warhammer 40,000|Warhammer 40K&#039;s]]&#039;&#039; [[grimdark]]. The more recent reboot films, however, have taken a much, &#039;&#039;much&#039;&#039; more grimdark tone, which is delightfully [[skub]]tastic.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Games ==&lt;br /&gt;
There&#039;s been plenty of tabletop games and [[/v/|vidya gaems]] featuring &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; without being merchandising bullshit (see: themed &#039;&#039;[[Monopoly]]&#039;&#039; sets), including one of the earliest action multiplayer wargame: &#039;&#039;Netrek&#039;&#039;. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
*&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Adventure Gaming in the Final Frontier&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1978) The very first Trek tabletop [[RPG]]. Written by, I shit you not, Michael Scott. Groggy (grokky?) as all hell, and due for an OSR.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;[[Star Fleet Battles]] (SFB)&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1979-) The crunchiest starship combat game you&#039;re ever going to find outside of a computer. Based on the original series and not any of the later series, for licensing reasons. Takes some liberties with the setting, which (combined with the aforementioned licensing) is why &amp;quot;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;&amp;quot; isn&#039;t actually in the title. It&#039;s had its own video game spinoff in the form of Starfleet Command. The series died when the last company owned by Interplay broke up in the early 2000s.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: The Role Playing Game&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1982-1989) Made by [[FASA]], essentially &#039;&#039;[[Traveller]]&#039;&#039;-lite, or a happier, shinier &#039;&#039;[[Rogue Trader]]&#039;&#039;. Hasn&#039;t aged terribly well, what with having been made when the only canonical &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; materials to work with were the original and animated series, the first four films, and a couple of now non-canon novels. If you try to dust it off, expect tons of conflict with the rest of the show. Died as they were trying to update it for &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, because Paramount&#039;s corporate suits (surprise, surprise) had no idea what an RPG actually entailed and were worried about violence, and getting their cut, and... oh you know the drill by now. Welcome to the 80&#039;s.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Starship Tactical Combat Simulator&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1983) FASA designed this, so it feels like &#039;&#039;[[Battletech]]&#039;&#039; but not as good.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Prime Directive&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1993-2008) The most successful tabletop RPG line (but that&#039;s not saying much), it&#039;s actually still in print. Produced by Amarillo Design Bureau, so again no direct name-dropping of &amp;quot;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;.&amp;quot; Lasted as long as it did by constantly evolving, in Borg-like fashion, to adapt to the current zeitgeist. Has had 4 editions, with the second using [[GURPS]], the third using [[Wizards of the Coast|d20]], and the fourth [[d20 Modern]].&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek [[Card_Game|CCG]]&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1994-2007, 2011-2014, 2013-2015, 2018-) There&#039;s been a few of these, most notably the games released by [[Decipher]], but never globally popular. They also suffered from game balance problems from fans wanting their fave character, but needing extra rules for their quirks. There&#039;s also the problem of putting numbers to character stats, such as one game that asserted that [[Heresy|Picard having about twice the integrity of a Klingon pig]]. Later versions are &amp;quot;deck-building&amp;quot; games to try to cash in on the popularity of &#039;&#039;[[Dominion]]&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;[[Thunderstone]]&#039;&#039;. And now virtual CCGs are the order of the day.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: The Next Generation Role Playing Game&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (1998-1999) The next attempt, made by Last Unicorn Games. Won an award for best new game, which makes it a complete shame that no one has ever played it.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Red Alert&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2000) A Diskwars game themed to &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Roleplaying Game&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2002-2005) When [[Decipher]] had the CCG license, they decided, &amp;quot;What the hell, let&#039;s make an RPG, too.&amp;quot; It, like so many of its predecessors, died unnoticed and unmourned.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Online&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2010-) An [[MMORPG|MMO]]. Decent gameplay mechanics, especially starship combat. Storyline leaves something to be desired, especially when the ostensibly [[Noblebright|peaceful]] Federation trades shots at least once with every other faction in the galaxy.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Call To Arms: Star Trek&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2011) [[Mongoose_Publishing|Mongoose]]&#039;s license for &#039;&#039;Babylon 5&#039;&#039; expired, so they collaborated with Amarillo Design Bureau (the &#039;&#039;Star Fleet Battles&#039;&#039; guys), re-themed the game to Star Trek along with improving the system to make it more nifty. Less micro-management than SFB, and ships get some cinematic feats.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Expeditions&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2011) Ignore the tie-ins to the movie, Reiner Knizia designed this. Explore the gameboard, flip over missions, try to have the proper crew to get victory points.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Fleet Captains&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2011) Tile flipping, exploring, and spaceships fighting over resources&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Attack Wing&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2013-) [[WizKids]] license the flightpath system from [[Fantasy Flight Games]] and adds &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; to the mix, [[Skub]] ensues. The game has been consistently plagued with balance issues, to the point that the rules errata is more than ten times longer than the actual rules. The actual current rules for things like the Borg special movement and fighter squadrons are completely different than the rules as written.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: Ascendancy&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2016-) 4X table top boardgame from GaleForce9. Most of the races are represented, though the base set only has the Federation, Klingons and Romulans. Andorians, Vulcans, Cardassians and Ferengi can be purchased as expansions. There is even a Borg expansion that turns the game semi-coop as everyone tries real hard not to be assimilated. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Adventures&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2017-) The latest attempt at an RPG, by Modiphius, coming out soon to tentative praise. It also comes with a whole range of miniatures of the various crews from the show.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== So why should I care? ==&lt;br /&gt;
Because between them, these six TV series and their assorted spinoff movies, books, etc. can provide inspiration for any sci-fi game you could care to run. If you want light-hearted action, look at the sort of things that happened in &#039;&#039;TOS&#039;&#039; or &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; to get the crew into some dangerous situation. If you want a charismatic villain, look at Gul Dukat or the Borg Queen. If you want moral issues and debates, look at the shit that happened to Voyager and remove all the transparent deck-stacking and cheesy moralizing (or you could read any decent SF book/watch a &#039;&#039;Twilight Zone&#039;&#039; episode written in the previous 50 years, if you don&#039;t need your source material to be served at a 2nd grade level). Like [[Tolkien]] is to fantasy it&#039;s a prime gateway drug to science fiction and especially science fiction which is more than &amp;quot;action movie IN SPACE!&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Not to mention in any sci-fi RPG with remotely free-form rules you&#039;re likely to encounter &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; fanboys, so you might as well know what they&#039;re talking about. The unholy spawn of a Trekkie and a [[Furry]] is known as a [[Chakat]], and you should fear it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
At its best &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; is thoughtful, optimistic futurism with a positive human element and brings you to strange new worlds in the grand tradition of speculative fiction which is accessible to even the layman. At its worst &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; is arrogant, smug, hypocritical, preachy, dull, sloppy and prone to the strawman fallacy.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Setting ==&lt;br /&gt;
Here&#039;s the Cliff&#039;s Notes on &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;. A couple of general warnings; firstly, &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; likes to &#039;&#039;really&#039;&#039; take its &amp;quot;racial themes&amp;quot; bits just a little too far. Second, despite this, it&#039;s rare for an entire race to be completely irredeemable the way many fictional aliens are: there are heroic and sympathetic characters from nearly every race listed below, able to put more-positive spins on their racial themes. Thirdly, aside from very occasional appearances by [[H.P. Lovecraft|aliens who are so bizarre that humankind can barely comprehend them]], all of the aliens look like dudes with rubber masks on (because they are). In real life, this was because there was no budget for anything else, but in-universe it&#039;s been explained by some kind of [[Old Ones|Precursor]] race who seeded all of the planets with their broadly humanoid DNA, and every race evolved slightly differently from there. There isn&#039;t much [[fluff]] on what these precursors were like, and some of it was contradictory, and Gene Roddenberry didn&#039;t like the idea (although he still had to work with the rubber forehead stuff). The good news for fa/tg/uys who like [[homebrew]] is that this makes it fairly easy to write [[d20 system]] rules for all of the races - after all, most &#039;&#039;D&amp;amp;D&#039;&#039; races are just humans with rubber masks on...&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== A Composite Creation ===&lt;br /&gt;
This is a general note that one should consider: Star Trek was created in pretty much the opposite way as The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien worked out a bunch of linguistic stuff and general history of Arda in his spare time, then decided to use that as the basis for some stories that he eventually gave to some publishers which in the end sold quite well. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Roddenberry by contrast pitched a very broad general idea (it&#039;s the future, things are good, we got guys some on a ship exploring space; a &amp;quot;wagon train to the stars&amp;quot;) to the networks who eventually took it up on it and had him work with a variety of writers and actors who added to this rough skeleton of an idea in a process that would continue on to this day. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
This is not to knock either approach, but both have their advantages and disadvantages. In regards to Star Trek, a franchise which relies mostly on an episode of the week format that&#039;s been going on for more than half a century this means that the canon is a fucking mess. There were numerous people at the helm and many of them had often very different ideas about what should be done that were just thrown out to see what stuck, many of which were contradictory and some of which we&#039;d frankly rather forget. In general fans and fluff writers have been spending a whole lot of time trying to straighten out things and much of the lore is basically a rough consensus of what people like and what fits in with it. Later series got more systematic about this, but there are still points of contention and a lot of flat out contradictions due to its scattershot nature.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Factions ===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Federation&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[File:Federation_Ships.jpg|thumb|500px|left|Starfleet&#039;s ships of the Line (primary timeline)]]&lt;br /&gt;
Might as well talk about that main faction. The United Federation of Planets is what the [[Tau]] think they are. Its backstory is that in the distant future of the 1990s, [[God-Emperor of Mankind|übermensch]] [[Space Marines|created by genetic engineering]] began conquering the Earth. The [[Imperial Guard|normies]] fought back and won through sheer numbers, cryogenically freezing the Augments and kicking them out of Earth, but the damage and mass political unrest of World War III got half the planet nuked. This was why genetic engineering was banned. Fortunately, in 2063, a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;drunken asshole&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; heroic visionary named Zefram Cochrane created humanity&#039;s first warp drive (though it functioned based on the principle that gravity bends space-time, and was therefore more akin to an Alcubierre drive than anything that&#039;s dependent on the [[Warp]]) and made first contact with the Vulcans. The Vulcans eventually helped humanity rebuild and overcome poverty, disease, war and hunger. With its Earthly problems solved, man turned to the stars and found out its three closest neighbors were [[Imperium of Man|racist xenophobic dicks trying to murder each other]]. Since any war between them would&#039;ve swept up puny little Earth and gotten it glassed, humans decided to force their neighbors to sit down and talk things out. Incredibly, it worked, and the United Federation of Planets was born.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Federation is a commie [[noblebright]] hippieland society with a strong democratic government ([[Mary Sue|pretty much Roddenberry&#039;s idea of utopia]]). As a result, Federation citizens work not because they have to, but because they want to. However, despite their advanced technology, transhumanism, that is intentionally making [[Space Marines|SPESS MEHREENS]] and mutants like the infamous antagonist Khan Noonien Singh, is illegal.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Federation&#039;s Navy is almost always called Starfleet. It&#039;s a mix between a military, a coast guard and a space agency, and usually rates scientific research as a higher priority than defense. One of its quirks is that it doesn&#039;t subscribe to the &amp;quot;bigger is better&amp;quot; policy used in most [[Warhammer 40K|sci-fi]], and even by most of the other &#039;&#039;Star Trek factions&#039;&#039;. If the Federation &#039;&#039;does&#039;&#039; make a large ship, it&#039;s because they want it to have a daycare, swimming pool and ice cream bar. If they want a warship, they&#039;ll take a little gunship half the size of a modern day destroyer and pack it with enough antimatter nukes and guns to exterminate a solar system. In some cases, especially when dealing with ships from several centuries into the future, the ship is bigger on the inside than on the outside [[Creed|allowing it to hide a vast array of powerful armaments, &#039;&#039;space-bending&#039;&#039; equipment, and even whole planetary landscapes]]. They can get away with this because they out-tech almost everyone else by a country mile. The reason for the series&#039; infamous &amp;quot;technobabble&amp;quot; is that &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;even &#039;&#039;they&#039;&#039; don&#039;t know everything their tech can do!&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; their technology is always evolving, and they know it so well that they can often use it in ways that even the original in-show design schematics did not intend.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In theory, Starfleet follows a rule called the &amp;quot;Prime Directive&amp;quot;, which says that you&#039;re not allowed to interfere with low-tech races (&amp;quot;low-tech&amp;quot; being defined as &amp;quot;not having invented the warp drive&amp;quot;, since warp technology apparently follows naturally from the laws of physics) or else things like turning the locals into Nazis might happen. The Original Series talked about this rule all the time, and Captain Kirk threw it aside whenever there was a sexy alien babe in sight. From &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; onward, it tended to instead be brought up whenever a hack writer needed a reason for the heroes to &#039;&#039;not&#039;&#039; instantly resolve a given problem with their superior technology or a way of making our heroes look like assholes for following it rigidly (yes, we could save this species from extinction but that would be interfering with the cosmic plan!), though there were a few good episodes that took it seriously.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Some of the more important member races are:&lt;br /&gt;
* [[Humans]]: You know &#039;em, you love &#039;em. Comprise seemingly 90% of Starfleet for reasons in no way related to the cost of makeup/CGI.&lt;br /&gt;
* Vulcan: The Original [[Eldar|Space Elves]], very emotional, especially during &amp;quot;pon&#039;farr&amp;quot; (see below), who followed the teachings of an enlightened sage and embraced logic and rationalism after their emotions nearly led to them [[Slaanesh|wiping themselves out]]. They are what the average race of fantasy elves think they are, except on &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; because the writers wanted to artificially inject tension into the show (some of that was retconned to be a Romulan plot). Occasionally enter a state called &amp;quot;pon&#039;farr,&amp;quot; where they need to either [[Dark Eldar| fuck something half to death]], kill it with the nearest sharp object, or die of a brain aneurysm to let out all that pent-up emotional tension. Fa/tg/uys may recognize this as the sensation they feel every time [[Games Workshop]] puts out a new army book. Pretty bro-tier overall.&lt;br /&gt;
* Andorians: Blue dudes with antennae and constant fits of passion, the polar opposite of Vulcans and their one time foes. Pretty much fa/tg/uys, right down to the romantic streak, in the technical sense. Also, they live underground on a diet of meatbread and rage. Most of what defined them happened in Enterprise as they rarely showed up in the TNG-era, and even then did so as set dressing, allegedly because one of the showrunners hated their antennae and banned anyone from using them.&lt;br /&gt;
* Tellarites: Space [[Dwarf|Dorfs]]; like insulting everyone and arguing a lot (no, really, petty insults are considered a polite gesture in Tellarite culture), mostly because the very first tellarite ever shown in the series got in an argument with Spock&#039;s dad and now it&#039;s their whole racial thing.  “Sarek said something in a scene once that was meant to demonstrate that he was stand-offish and kinda rude, but we like Sarek so it&#039;s now the defining attribute of this species.”  It&#039;s all in good fun you understand, your confidence in your ideas and actions should be sturdy enough to withstand honest assessment and critique.&lt;br /&gt;
* Betazoids: Invariably attractive humanoid aliens with telepathic powers. Half-betazoid, half-humans apparently only have &amp;quot;empathic&amp;quot; powers, so they are well-regarded by Starfleet captains for their ability to point out the obvious and fill out the tight bodygloves that make up the Starfleet uniform in a pleasing manner, especially since theirs seem to come in a custom cut for reasons entirely unrelated to Roddenberry&#039;s erection. Their homeworld is like dropping a really hippie college and Space Vegas into a blender.&lt;br /&gt;
* Trill: Originally a one-off race introduced as a sapient parasite that possesses and controls a barely, or even unintelligent humanoid host, they were radically reworked in &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;, right down to losing their rubber foreheads in favor of spots. Now, the host is itself an intelligent humanoid, and some, but not all, of their kind are able to willingly merge with a symbiont (because someone can&#039;t spell) that allows them to access a mixture of the memories and personalities of all previous hosts, though in a way that, theoretically, enhances the host&#039;s personality rather than destroying it or subsuming it. Then, when they die, they can pass on the symbiont to another host, theoretically one they mentored. Also, because the makeup artist didn&#039;t want to ruin the leads&#039; good looks on DS9, they went from having a rubber forehead to some spots.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Klingon Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[Image:Batleth.jpg|thumb|right|A Bat&#039;Leth (sword of honor), one of several types of Klingon bladed weapons. Frequently mocked IRL for being a poorly designed weapon.]]&lt;br /&gt;
[[Commissar|&#039;&#039;&amp;quot;It is a good day to die!&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Federation&#039;s main rival and (movie era and afterwards) the quintessential &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; race of lumpy foreheaded aliens. Originally they were a rough analogue to the Russians (though they took some elements from [[Communism|communist China]]) in a rough cold war allegory with the Federation (even though the Federation are as commie as they come, though admittedly much of that came around in the TNG era). Their defining feature was that they were militaristic and imperialistic while the Federation was scholarly and respected liberty. This gradually moved more and more into them becoming Imperial Japan/[[Vikings]] In SPESSS obsessed with honor, fighting and dying honorably in battle while worshiping at the altar of [[Sigmar|warrior Jesus]], even as they turned from the Federation&#039;s bitter enemies into that friend who&#039;s fun to be around when he&#039;s not getting into drunken bar fights. You see shades of it in during the movie era and it became more and more prominent through &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, culminating in &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;. Do not make the mistake of thinking that Klingons are nothing more than barbaric savages however; with Worf being part of the crew, and with &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; dealing with Klingon politics an awful lot we can see Klingon society as it truly is. Even so they do often wander into self parody territory.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Klingons, in their current iteration, are a feudal society ruled by a council made up of the most powerful families. Klingon society holds very little value on things such as currency and material gain (which results in the Klingon empire [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q65l7RHUx2A having a very simplistic understanding of economics]), believing that anything you acquire without some form of blood, sweat and/or tears on your part is a pathetic and dishonorable way of going about things, much the same way many cultures used to hurl abuse at merchants and bankers. Another thing to keep in mind is that a Klingon&#039;s reputation is literally everything. This can be easily seen in the episode &amp;quot;The House Of Quark&amp;quot; where dying honorably can literally change the outcome of an entire noble house, later when the Grand Council is visibly disgusted at D&#039;Ghor. No respectable Klingon uses &#039;&#039;money&#039;&#039; to defeat his opponents. And no respectable Klingon would be so eager to perform an execution of an unarmed Ferengi in what was supposed to be an honorable duel. Klingons are still capable of being cunning and crafty however, and having a high diplomacy score is viewed as honorable as they still have examples of cunning and clever heroes tricking boorish and stupid monsters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Warhammer 40000|Klingons often carry swords into battle in an age of energy beam guns]]. In-universe, this is less suicidal than it sounds in the context of boarding actions and tight starship corridors. The Bat&#039;leth is actually a rather shitty weapon. The Mek&#039;leth is noted to be better in most situations. They use the same Disruptor weapons as the Romulans, and at one point used similar starship designs. While is explained as the result of a temporary and unholy alliance, given the eventual animosity between the two races, it was just an excuse to reuse props on a limited budget.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Klingons are tied with the Vulcans and the Borg as being the most prominent and recognizable non-human species in Star Trek. Beloved of the Internet and the general public, to the point that there are published books like &amp;quot;A Klingon Christmas&amp;quot; in the world. The Klingons have their own constructed language. If you are ever worrying that you might not be a nerd, learning Klingon will solve that problem for you. Please note that this is in general considered by experts to be pathognomonic of [[Chris Chan|autism]]. You have not experienced Shakespeare until you hear it in the original Klingon.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Romulan Star Empire&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&amp;quot;It&#039;s always chess with the Romulans&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
You know those [[Eldar|Vulcans]]? Well a few thousand years ago, as their planet was ravaged by war, some of them turned to intense emotional control and logic to tame their murderous passions, while most others left the planet altogether, founding a colony on the planet Romulus and dubbing themselves [[Dark Eldar|Romulans]]. Since said planet shares a name with a mythical figure known for founding [[Roman Empire|a city which built a vast empire]], and they had warp drive while those around them did not, you probably know that they turned to building an empire of their own. They hold the second place of prominence as immediate rivals to the Federation. Comically, they actually have better emotional control than the average Vulcan, since they gene-engineered most of their problems away years ago, and don&#039;t have to deal with the emotional blowback from pon&#039;farr. The downside is that they lost some of their cousins&#039; niftier powers, like mind reading and being able to transfer their soul into another person for safekeeping. Although Star Trek Online also revealed that their trip to Romulus was a terrible ordeal, and their gene-engineering was taking during that time resulting in them losing most emotions save for bitterness of being &amp;quot;forced out&amp;quot;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The difference between the Klingons and the Romulans is basically the difference between Gork and Mork, or Khorne and Tzeentch. Klingons will fight you up front with simple brute force. Romulans are sneakier guys, preferring to fight you when you&#039;re not looking with spies, cloaked ships and complex plots behind the scenes and playing the long game. There is a lot of political infighting among them, though where the Klingons would duel to the death Romulans would seek to discredit their rivals, have them die in unfortunate &amp;quot;accidents&amp;quot; or disappear. This difference has left both Romulans and Klingons with a big hate-boner for each other, to the Romulans the Klingons are crude brutish barbarians and to the Klingons the Romulans are a pack of scheming cowardly weaklings.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Like the Klingons, they served as a rough Cold War allegory. In this case, they were rough analogs to Communist China (as seen by 1960s Americans), a distant horde of inscrutable and potentially dangerous Orientals who generally were unseen and projecting vague menace, but when encountered face-to-face could pack quite a punch indeed: the first major Interstellar War that Star Trek Earth fought was with the Romulans, which was fought entirely in space with neither side ever seeing the other face to face. Afterwards they set up a &#039;Neutral Zone&#039; between the Federation and the Romulan Empire that no one even tried to cross for a century. From the Original Series onward, they frequently squabble and bicker with the Federation, before joining forces with them to fight the Dominion in &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039; and having their government devastated in &#039;&#039;Nemesis&#039;&#039;. Finally, Romulus itself got caught in a supernova as part of the Ambramsverse&#039;s backstory.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Ferengi Alliance&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[Image:GW_Ferengi.jpg|thumb|left|A typical ferengi engaged in typical ferengi activities]]&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&amp;quot;A Ferengi without profit is no Ferengi at all.&amp;quot;&#039;&#039;-Eighteenth Rule of Acquisition&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Introduced in &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;s&#039;&#039; early days as the villains for the series, and what [[/pol/]] thinks Jews are. Some Jewish people have actually complained about their being subliminally Jewish and thus anti-Semetic, specifically mentioning that they were moneyhungry, lascivious, and ugly, and their large ear lobes were stand-ins for the sterotypical Jewish nose ([https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/made-by-history/wp/2018/08/14/science-fictions-anti-semitism-problem/?noredirect=on more on that here, we&#039;re not shitting you]), based on an old medieval stereotype that was enforced to prevent them owning land or assets. The idea was to make a caricature of capitalism as a contrast with the techno-communist Federation. This might have worked if these were not [[FAIL|&#039;&#039;TNG&#039;s&#039;&#039; early days]]. Instead they overshot the mark by a light year or so, on top of other bad decisions, and you got a race of short (Gene wanted to make an evil short race as big evil races were overplayed), big-eared, [[goblin]]-like losers about as threatening as a grumpy pug. Over the first and second seasons they tried to make these guys threatening, but they fell flat on their face every time. Eventually the writers just said &amp;quot;fuck it&amp;quot; and the Ferengi got demoted to comic relief species, and their status as terrible enemies was demoted to propaganda designed to scare the Federation while the Ferengi government tried to figure out what to make of a species that rejected the acquisition of wealth as a goal. The Ferengi had some good moments in the later seasons of &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, but most of the best stuff that fleshed them out came from &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;, which had an [[awesome]] Ferengi bartender named Quark as a major character. For an idea of what the Ferengi might have been like if the writers had their shit together, look up the Druuge of [[Star Control|Star Control II]] or the Magog Cartel from Oddworld.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ferengi religion is only hinted upon in &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;, but what is seen implies a simplistic system based on financial success. Ferengi all follow a rulebook/canon known as the Rules of Acquisition, which can be described as Ayn Rand IN SPACE and condensed into the form of Confucius&#039; Analects. There are 285 of these, each a short piece of advice on how to stay in the black. Examples include &amp;quot;Peace is good for business,&amp;quot; &amp;quot;War is good for business,&amp;quot; &amp;quot;Never have sex with the boss&#039;s daughter,&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;Dignity and an empty sack is worth the sack.&amp;quot; The first, and most important, of these is &amp;quot;Once you have their money, you never give it back.&amp;quot; Sometimes, the Ferengi Randian spirituality extends into outright interpretations of the afterlife: according to some, the afterlife consists of the Divine Treasury and the Vault of Eternal Destitution, which are respectively analogous to Heaven and Hell. Entrance into one or the other depends on one&#039;s business ventures at the time of death; those that were turning a profit are allowed to enter the Divine Treasury, and the rest are damned to the Vault.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ferengi government is ruled over by a Grand Nagus, a mix between a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;pope&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt;chief rabbi and a CEO, and he basically treats his civilization like some sort of company, with citizens regarded as workers. Directly below him is the Ferengi Commerce Authority, a [[what|quasi-religious]] organization dedicated to ensuring that correct business practices were followed and correct moral behavior was shown (including keeping the proles in line), although to the Ferengi, these are one and the same. The agents of the FCA are the Liquidators, who are essentially Inquisitors crossed with IRS auditors on steroids. Be afraid. Be very afraid. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ferengi females have no rights and are mentioned as [[PROMOTIONS|not even being allowed to wear clothes]], which leads to [[That Guy|boorish behavior]] on the part of Ferengi towards just about any species. Of course, we see female Ferengi on the show who push that envelope, but it seems that overall &amp;quot;regressive&amp;quot; does not even begin to describe the gender relationships in their culture. Quark&#039;s mother, a social climber who marries the head of their government, begins pushing through a women&#039;s rights movement during DS9, which proves more successful as time goes on.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Borg Collective&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
[[Image:Borg cube.jpg|300px|thumb|right|The Borg have assimilated and improved your [[d6|die]]. It always rolls six. Crap your pants, &#039;cause resistance is futile.]]&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|We are the Borg. Lower your shields and surrender your ships. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your culture shall adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.|The Borg&#039;s opening hail. This is not a boast or a brag, it&#039;s them simply explaining you how things are going to go down.}}&lt;br /&gt;
{{Topquote|One other thing. You may encounter Enterprise crew members who&#039;ve already been assimilated. Don&#039;t hesitate to fire. Believe me, you&#039;ll be doing them a favour.|Picard going full [[grimdark]].}}&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Ferengi were utter failures as serious villains, so they needed something to fill that gap. Thus they made the Borg, an aggressive [[Tyranid|hive-minded]] collective of hyper-adaptive, [[Necron|regenerating]] cyborgs that assimilates entire species into itself in its attempt to improve and evolve. Shit, that&#039;s like coming up with [[Warforged]] while trying to replace [[Kender]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In many ways, the Borg are the truest dark reflection of the Federation, and despite their name, they&#039;re not Swedish. While the Feds want you to join their little club on your own, to &amp;quot;add your culture to the galactic community,&amp;quot; the Prime Directive means they will ultimately accept you turning them down, even if you have shit they really want. The Borg say &amp;quot;fuck that&amp;quot; and just absorb you. While the Federation believes everyone should work together [[Tau|for the greater good]], they still have a very strong sense of individualism and a culture of personal accomplishment (unless your individual belief happens to run counter to the Federation&#039;s principles anyway, in which case you&#039;re just WRONG because the Federation is the best). The Borg pool all their minds together into a massive collective consciousness in the pursuit of group perfection, becoming an almost-literal personification of techno-capital. The Federation is all about beauty and tranquility and all that hippie stuff, and their tech is eco-friendly and dolphin-safe. Borg [[Tyranids|strip mine entire planets and drain entire oceans]] in the name of growth and efficiency.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Your standard Borg [[cube]] is a huge multi-kilometer [[Firaeveus Carron|metal box]] (yes, bigger than most [[Imperial Navy]] cruisers) able to go up against an entire Federation warfleet and win. That&#039;s right, one of their ships could threaten the entire Federation and [[Exterminatus]] Earth. When done right, [[Necron|they are a cold, calculating, nigh-unstoppable force, a threat to all life]] that wants to retain free and distinct personalities (although they will ignore a single person if not on an assimilation mission, as what they really want is to absorb whole civilizations). Apparently, in Picard&#039;s nightmare in &#039;&#039;First Contact&#039;&#039;, the Borg assimilation process includes a surgical [[Grimdark|drill through the eye. While awake.]] Of all the stuff to come out of the TNG Era they are undoubtedly the most well recognized in mass pop culture.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Unfortunately the got a bad downgrade during &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; (the Borg Queen blew up cubes full of tens of thousands of drones because a few of them have been severed from the Hive Mind), but even there they were frequently not to be messed with. One amusing thing to note for people that haven&#039;t watched &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;: the Borg were actually only in six episodes (and three were breakaway drones) and one movie, yet they&#039;re arguably the franchise&#039;s most famous pure villains aside from Khan. Goes to show how good they were when written properly. Then in &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; they get their shit completely pushed in when they discover a new race of extradimensional aliens which they label Species 8472, which were immune to being assimilated, and had to ask the Federation for help in dealing with them. [[Necron#Regarding_Fluff_Change_-_Sore_Butts_Everywhere.|Wait, this sounds familiar...]]&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Cardassian Union&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Introduced in &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039;, they are third fiddle to the Klingons and the Romulans. If the Klingons are hypothetically-honorable techno-barbarian warriors and the Romulans are an empire of civilized and refined but sly and ruthless expansionists, the Cardassians are essentially scaly fascists re-enacting &#039;&#039;[[1984]]&#039;&#039; IN SPACE. Their trials announce the outcome at the beginning, and the defense attorney is executed if he wins. Also, THERE ARE FOUR LIGHTS!&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Originally a race of peaceable, spiritual artists called the Hebitians (ironically not dissimilar to the Bajorans), modern Cardassia was born in hunger and desperation when their homeworld began to suffer simultaneous mass famine, pandemic, resource depletion, and ecological collapse. A military junta seized power, figuratively and literally auctioned off the soul of their culture through liquidating all the planet&#039;s art and religious artifacts into cold hard cash, and turned the Cardassians into the opportunistic imperialists they are today.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Despite being a whole lot weaker than the Federation, the Cardassians manage to hold their own, partly because what they lack in resources and raw power is made up for by a combination of intense cunning and high charisma stats. Compared to the equally deceptive Romulans, the Cardies are more likely to flash you a smile while tickling your ribs with a knife. They&#039;ll use any tool they can to gain the upper hand and while that often means unpleasant and terminal sessions in dark rooms, strip mined planets and the enslavement of entire species, they&#039;ll gladly become your bestest buddy if it would achieve their goals. Their intelligence service, the Obsidian Order, is also one of the most ruthlessly efficient organizations in the entire sector, managing to outscale the Romulan Tal Shiar when it comes to producing magnificent bastards and manipulating the politics of entire worlds to their advantage. Unlike the Romulans or the Klingons, they don&#039;t tolerate the sort of literal infighting that is rampant in both those states, that shit only serves to weaken &#039;&#039;&#039;GLORIOUS CARDASSIA&#039;&#039;&#039; and needs to be stamped out with ruthless efficiency. Exposing that someone who just happens to be your enemy as being a dangerous subversive is just a benefit, although this can result in both sides of a conflict shouting &amp;quot;For Cardassia!&amp;quot; as they charge each other. Sort of how Democrats and Republicans are both for America, yet oppose each other.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Cardassia has a very fluid hierarchical government, similar to the political realities of post-Stalin but pre-Collaspe Soviet Russia. Broadly speaking, there are three different facets of the government: the Central Command (which holds all the power) the Obsidian Order (who holds the least amount of power, but controls the most puppets) and the Detapa Council (similar to the [[High Lords of Terra]] and just as worthless). Cardassian society holds a very strict view of family, placing family just below the needs of the State.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The State holds a semi-divine mythical status in the eyes of its citizens, with it being viewed as impossible for the State to ever make mistakes. The ideal Cardassian life was one of complete loyalty and servitude to the State and family, with the &amp;quot;repetitive epic,&amp;quot; detailing how generations of Cardassians go on to serve both in exactly the same way over and over seen as the height of their culture. The Cardassian government is assumed to be omniscient, omnipotent, and benevolent by pretty much every Cardassian, with all Cadassians gladly giving of themselves to the State. Such was this level of belief that when Picard was tortured by the Obsidian order, the torturer saw nothing wrong with bringing his daughter to work because he was working for the State, and therefore the torture of Picard could never be disturbing or wrong. That&#039;s why their trials announce their sentences at the beginning and execute the defense attorney if he wins; their &amp;quot;trials&amp;quot; are more excuses to show off the power and infallibility of the State to the masses than actually determine guilt or innocence.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As far as plot significant activities went, they had a war with the Federation a few years before &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; which ended in the creation of a Demilitarized Zone between the two powers and (significant to &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;) abandoning the previously occupied planet of Bajor they had exploited for resources. After a disastrous war with the Klingons and The Maquis led to a popular revolution and overthrow of the existing government, one leader seized power, declared himself absolute leader, and joined the Dominion towards the end of &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;, which was some serious bad news for the &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; crew.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Bajoran Republic&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
The Bajorans are a species native to the Planet Bajor. They were, until shortly before the events of &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;, under a brutal occupation by the Cardassians who strip mined their planet. They had a fighting resistance which veered in and out of being considered terrorists and all in all were often represented as Palestinians IN SPEHSS. After that, they got their independence, although they&#039;re thinking about joining the Federation. The Bajorans have one system and are technologically backwards; the Federation is technically breaking the Prime Directive by interacting with them, but as they&#039;ve spent years under the oppression of a warp-capable species, they can probably handle it. Also &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; proves that ancient Bajorans managed to travel at warp speeds to Cardassia using solar sails and an enormous amount of luck, which technically makes them a warp-capable species. The only reason why they are significant in terms of the politics of &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; is that they have a wormhole near their planet, which has some timey-wimey aliens living it that they worship as gods, and serves as the only way to get to or from the Gamma Quadrant that won&#039;t take decades, making it strategically priceless. Hilariously, this was discovered almost immediately after the Cardassians &#039;&#039;thought&#039;&#039; they&#039;d extracted everything of value from the Bajorans and peace&#039;d out, certain that the system was no longer worth the PR hit they were taking from it, only to get burned by some harsh seller&#039;s remorse. Also, their species has the oldest civilization (roughly a half-million years) of any major &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; race, and the wormhole aliens have gifted them some cool shit, like the Orb of Time.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The big thing that makes the Bajorans unique is that they actually have a serious religion going on -the human race is depicted as mostly non-religious. They&#039;re also probably one of the most accurate depictions of any highly religious alien race in a sci-fi franchise, because they are divided between the majority who interpret their religion as [[Noblebright|peace and love]], and a small but loud minority of bastards who interpret it as [[Grimdark|condoning acts of terrorism]]. A blatant attempt to simulate Israelis for criticism, although that can apply to many religions nowadays.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;The Dominion&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
A vast empire which exists on the other side of the galaxy in the Gamma Quadrant. The Dominion is ruled over by a species of liquid shapeshifters called The Founders.(aka Changlings aka Odo&#039;s people) They have at their disposal a military composed of two genetically engineered species that worship the Founders as gods: the short and articulate Vorta who serve as ambassadors, bureaucrats, and political commisars and the big brutal Jem&#039;hadar, who are vat grown, drug addicted, cannon fodder. These oversee a large number of vassal races, including (as of later seasons of &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;) the Cardassians.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders were once (according to them anyway) a peaceful, kind civilization of explorers who wished to see the galaxy, explore strange new worlds, and seek out new forms of life. Unfortunately, they did this in the wrong neighborhood, and quickly ran into species who did not tolerate others. The fact that the Founders were shapeshifters capable of mimicking almost anyone did not help either. Paranoia, mutual mistrust, and some very bad things eventually led to the Founders deciding &amp;quot;fuck this&amp;quot; and moving their planet into a nebula so nobody would bother them. So more or less, a [[Grimdark|grimmer]], [[Grimdark|darker]], counterpart to the Federation, but with spookier Real Aliens.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders are obsessed with order and are both extremely racist and xenophobic, and believe that all alien life is inherently untrustworthy and evil, and the best thing to do is conquer/enslave them before they do the same to them. They don&#039;t care about the rights of &amp;quot;Solids&amp;quot;, and will happily ignore any sense of decency when convenient. This can be seen when The Dominion runs a simulation of the Dominion dominating the Alpha Quadrant. When O&#039;Brien is assaulted by a Jem&#039;Hadar and severely beaten to the point of needing emergency teleportation to medical (the crime being &amp;quot;disrespectful&amp;quot;), the Founders (disguised as Federation Officers) do not press charges, and when Sisko comes barging in demanding answers, dismiss him with little concern about their own soldiers brutalizing citizens. Their overall ideology could be thought of as Thomas Hobbes IN SPACE: people are inherently evil and the only way to make a better world is to impose order upon them through brute force from a position of absolute, unquestioned power.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders, when not wandering around in various forms, tend to spend their time in a massive ocean literally made up of countless billions of Founders, something which is referred to as the Great Link. According to the Founders, this allows them to share information with each other and come to peaceful decisions. This is rapidly proved to be bullshit; when a separated-at-birth one of their own merged into the Great Link to share his memories of the Federation as peaceful and tolerant space hippies, not only did the Founders ignore his memories, but actively fucked with his mind in an attempt to turn him into a sleeper agent. And even if it weren&#039;t, it shows their hypocrisy through their willingness to share freedom and liberty among themselves while depriving all their various slaves and conquered peoples of the same.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Founders are massive dicks, even to their own people. Failure among Jem&#039;Hadar is rewarded with slow and painful death from deprivation of the drug they&#039;re created to need and their lifespans are incredibly short. To be even bigger dicks, the Vorta have no sense of taste and can&#039;t appreciate beauty. Not to make them better diplomats, but because they were raised from a primitive stone-age ape tribe, and the Founders think they shouldn&#039;t be ever allowed to forget that. (On the plus side, they did give the Vorta an immunity to poison that would make [[Mortarion]] himself jealous. [https://youtu.be/rACCZaBcq1g?t=1m29s Observe.]) This may also stem from their own neuroses: the Founders themselves have almost no bodily needs at all and require no nourishment, so they design their slaves to be like them. Notably, Vorta tend to come in [[Paranoia|packs of clones; a new one is activated when an old one dies, and they retain some memories and personality between &amp;quot;lives,&amp;quot;]] further hammering home how expendable they are to their makers.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
And both races are literally engineered to love their makers for what they have done to them and worship and revere them as gods.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Continuing from the Cardassian Union section because the fate of both powers are linked in DS9. After joining the The Dominion. Everything was going seemingly for them and their leader Gul Dukat. They figured out how t bring down the minefield block the worhole created by the Starfleet crew of Deep Space Nine. (The Cardassians use its old name Terok Nor while in charge.)&lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
However doing the start of the sixth season the Founders learn that their not the only &amp;quot;gods&amp;quot; in the Galaxy. As the Sisko convinces the Bajoran Prophets to remove the Jem&#039;Hadar reinforcements in transit. Forcing them to retreat back to Cardassian Space and Dukat&#039;s old friend Damar shoots Dukat&#039;s half Bajorion daughter Ziyal. Forcing Dukat off the deep end as the sod loses his sanity and jumps off after his rehab transport is destroyed by the Jem Hadar, and ends up fighting an injured Benjamin Sisko after being forced to hide inside some caverns on a hell world. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
After escaping he allows one of the evil wormhole aliens to possess him, kills Jadzia Dax, forgives Damar for killing a family member. Creates a cult of Bajorions dedicated to the Pai-Wraths,than abandons the cult when Major Kira scrambles the suicide pills in with his fake. Has sex with an old woman and becomes a demi-god. Bent on buring the universe despite the fact that his own people suffered heavily under the rule of the Dominion. After getting a final bitch slap from the Sisko who gets to have a happy ending living with his alien parents. While Dukat is trapped in the Fire Caves on Bajor.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
His old friend Damar despite murdering a half breed woman is a lot more sane. Lacking Dukat&#039;s Crimisa things get worse for him and the Cardassians under Dominion rule. Most of their victories are off screen such as taking over Betazed. One of the none few major non founding planets of the Federation. This forces the Sisko to bring the Romulans into the war to on the side of the Klingon-Federation alliance. With some underhanded methods from a  former member of the Cassidian Obsidian Order(Elim Garak). I.e. blow up a Romulan Senator&#039;s shuttlecraft and tricking the pointy ears into thinking a damaged but fake datarow was the real deal. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Thus the blame for his death will be switched from the Feds and pals are shifted to the Cardassians. By the final season this leads to the Dominion finding new best buds in the form of The Breen. Damar decides he has enough of the bullshit and in the ultimate irony that his status of his people are now no different from the Cardassian Occupation of Bajor. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
So after the Breen score the Domain a temporary victory over the Federation Alliance. Damar and his Cardi buds destroy a Dominion cloning facility. Just so he can stick it to his &amp;quot;friend&amp;quot; the Vorta, Weyoun. Leaving them and the Klingons being the only thing stopping The Dominion from steamrolling the Alpha Quadrant. As one small Bird of Way was immune to the Breen energy dampening weapon due to modding its warp core. Gowron, due to being a moron who did nothing to change course after his most trusted advisor(Martok) turned out to be a Founder and the first time the Jem Hadar kicked their asses during the Klingon-Cardassian War. Decides to take glory for himself and discredit General Martok(who now how his pre Dominion internment job). This goes as badly as your thinking. Forcing Worf(now a legitimate badass compared to TNG) to kill him and turning the role of Chancellor to Martok.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Meanwhile the Feds decided to help out Damar&#039;s resistance by sending him Colonel Kira(who now has the rank of a Starfleet Commander), Odo and Garak(Ziyal&#039;s former simi-boyfriend). The resistance eventually get their hands on one of the Breen Energy Dampeners. During some infighting Damar realizes that the restoring the old Cardassia is pointless. Killing one of his old friends. The Breen and Jem&#039;hadar do eventually one up the resistance. But not before their brutality turns more Cardassian against them. So during the final space battle this makes the Cardi military switch sides.&lt;br /&gt;
Damar is killed during the final raid on Dominion HQ. Focing Kira and Garak to lead the final push into the compound.&lt;br /&gt;
The War between the Alpha Quadrant Alliance and The Dominion is ended when Odo offers to share the cure to the disease created by Section 31(the Federation&#039;s answer to the Tal Shiar and Obsidian Order) passed on he forced to return to the great Link the first time. While also promising to join the Great Link. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
With all their advanced technology. One would think the Founders would have discovered a cure before being handed one. But the bad guys being just as flawed as everyone else is a common theme in Star Trek. Even in Star Trek Online despiste Odo being the one in charge a few decades later. As their Ambassador to the Federation. The experiments of the Founders sketchy past cause them and everyone else huge headaches including the dishonorable mention of the revived True Way.&lt;br /&gt;
 &lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;&#039;Species 8472&#039;&#039;&#039;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
The one and only race in the galaxy even the Borg don&#039;t want to fuck with. Introduced in Voyager, Species 8472 are three-legged creatures that live in a space called Fluid Space. It&#039;s similar to the [[Eye of Terror]] for the fact that it connects to an alternate dimension and [[Khorne|everyone will be ripped apart upon entering.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
When the Borg first came around to try and assimilate them they were completely obliterated in a war in which 4 million Borg were killed in the first few days at the cost of almost no members of Species 8472. This war was such a roflstomp that the Borg were forced to call on the Federation for help. [[Tau|The Federation being the better people swallowed their pride and decided to help their sworn enemies,]] [[Eldrad|but were dicks and sent only one ship.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Species 8472 fought with fast moving, small ships and devastating beam weapons so the small ship of the Federation could keep up with them and helped the Borg force the species back into Fluid Space. The Federation were the villains on this one. That said, they eventually came to an accord with Species 8472, preventing further wars between the denizens of Fluid Space, except in lots and lots of video games that want to use a fresh antagonist.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
That and that in &#039;&#039;Star Trek Online&#039;&#039;, [[Awesome|they look like the fucking Predator.]]&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===The Q===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Q are a race of beings who have elevated themselves to the point where they are basically gods. Most of them do not interact directly with the younger races, who they tend to consider with disdain- if they consider them at all. However a few of them take a more enlightened view, and one in particular has been known to fuck with individual humans from time time. They are mostly a TNG thing, and even there they work mostly by grace of John de Lancie&#039;s acting chops as a counterpoint to the charisma of Patrick Stewart, as de Lancie played the &#039;&#039;character&#039;&#039; Q, an all-powerful epic [[troll]] (no, not the fantasy kind) who&#039;s occasionally [[Tzeentch]]ian games sometimes appeared to be for his own amusement and sometimes acted as education or event protection to the human race. Various subplots involving the Q &#039;&#039;species&#039;&#039; range from somewhat thought provoking to mildly entertaining to ridiculous and banal, but the classic episodes that highlighted the charisma and chemistry of the two actors were often quite excellent.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== The Mirror Universe ===&lt;br /&gt;
Not so much of a faction as an alternate setting, this is a parallel universe in which [[Alternate History|things have gone differently]] in Earth&#039;s History. The main point of divergence appears to occur when the Vulcan scientists who landed at Bozeman, Montana in 2063 are not welcomed with alcohol and music but instead are killed and have their ship looted. It is equally clear that where the main universe is Noblebright the Mirror Universe is Grimdark. Instead of a peace loving Federation searching for knowledge and friendly cooperation for the betterment of all, Earth gave rise to the &#039;&#039;Terran Empire&#039;&#039; which seeks out new life and civilizations to conquer and enslave, as it had done with the Klingons. Pretty much it&#039;s the PG-13 version of the Imperium of Man with a bit more Grimderp. Junior officers get promoted by killing their superiors, those that fail at that get thrown in the agony booth for their troubles and Emperor gets the job by usurping the previous incumbent. In general everyone in the Mirror Universe is a selfish asshole version of themselves and following comic book logic the uniforms for the female characters are more revealing. Occasionally people can cross over from one universe to the next due to technobabble and cause mischief in either realm.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Originally it was a one off TOS setting for an episode of the week, but it was brought back in a few novels and some romps in Deep Space Nine in which [[Fail|the Terran Empire had fallen]]. In Enterprise&#039;s fourth season it got a two parter that was pretty good and would have been an annual thing if the show had been renewed, this one having little crossover with the main universe (a ship from TOS ended up in the Mirror Universe and is salvaged after all it&#039;s crew have died). We also went there in Discovery, for better or worse.  Voyager never did the mirror universe, but instead got a homage episode with some alien historians in the far future getting the details wrong like historians tend to.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== The Star Trek Crew ==&lt;br /&gt;
Whether the focus of the show is exploration, manning a space station in an important locale or trying to get home, all Star Trek series have a basic set up of casting and focus: namely on a collection of people who are usually the senior most officers on the ship. If you decide to make a Star Trek inspired game take this into consideration.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Captain&#039;&#039;&#039;: Big cheese. Makes the hard decisions. Needs to be able to talk, think or fight out of situations as needed. The third option fetishist finding the balance between empathy and reason. (Two least skubby examples: Kirk and Picard, but the skub will fly hard if you say one is better than the other, sufficed to say that people like both of them alot but for different reasons)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The First Officer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Second in command and trusted advisor.  Added after the original series, where the role was combined with and split between two others. (Two least skubby examples: Riker and Kira)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Science Officer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Got high Int stats. Can analyze the situation and work out solutions. The voice of reason. Almost never human. (Two least skubby examples: Data and Spock)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Engineer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Hard working technically minded guy who gets shit done. (Two least skubby examples: Scotty and Geordi)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Doctor&#039;&#039;&#039;: Ship&#039;s healer with a secondary scientific role. The voice of empathy, whether prickly or serene. (Two least skubby examples: Bones and the EMH Doctor)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Security Officer&#039;&#039;&#039;: Rough and tumble no-nonsense sort whose job it is to keep these guys alive when diplomacy fails, which it often does. Often has to juggle providing ship&#039;s security with working the tactical station on the bridge in a crisis.  (Two least skubby examples: Worf and Odo)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Helmsman&#039;&#039;&#039;: Got mad spacecraft piloting skills, either full-sized starships, shuttles, or fighters. (Two least skubby examples: Sulu and Tom Paris)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Other Guy&#039;&#039;&#039;: A crewmember whose role doesn&#039;t cleanly map onto other positions, a role often restricted to a single show.  Example positions include communications officer, ship&#039;s councilor, transporter chief, and linguist. (Two Least skubby examples: Uhura and Troi)&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;The Outsider&#039;&#039;&#039;: Someone who is a passenger and regular cast member, but exists outside the organization, looking in and commenting.  Usually works a side-job, like tailor, bartender, or cook.  Either a beloved fan-favorite or utterly despised, there is no middle ground.  (Two Least skubby examples: Guinan and Quark)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Some of these hats may be worn by more than one character, some may be worn by no one at all.  This is especially true in the original series, which had a smaller cast overall, and which put less emphasis on an ensemble and more on the main trio of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy.  The usual roles and character dynamics were instead set down by &#039;&#039;The Next Generation&#039;&#039;, which later series generally copied.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== The Shows ==&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;The Original Series&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Created in 1966 by legendary sci-fi [[spiritual liege]] and money-grubbing sexist lounge lizard Gene Roddenberry and pitched as a &amp;quot;Wagon Train to the stars&amp;quot;, it&#039;s a pulpy adventure sci-fi, full of fistfights, sword fights, and hammy speeches.  (The guns never work.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The USS &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; is tasked by the Federation to go on a five year mission to explore space: the final frontier, to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations and boldly go where no man has gone before, though due to budget constraints, her crew often finds that man has in fact gone there before. Or at least something that looks exactly like a man but is actually an [[Xenos|Alien]]; most episodes split the difference. James T. Kirk sleeps with [[Hot Chicks|hot alien babes]] who either die tragically or leave tearfully at the end of the episode, but it&#039;s &#039;k because he&#039;s too in love with the Enterprise to ever love a mere &#039;&#039;woman&#039;&#039; more. Mr. Spock and Dr. McCoy are cold and logical and rash and emotional respectively, and their constant friction must be resulting in the best make-up sex in the world, Mr. Sulu and Lieutenant Uhura wait in vain for focus episodes that never come, Ensign Chekhov suffers horribly to the approval of American Cold War audiences, and Scotty [[gets shit done]]. Uniforms, while iconic, tend to look a bit civilian though. Miniskirts are apparently mandated attire for the ship&#039;s fan-servicey female &amp;quot;yeomen&amp;quot; and others, because 1966. The civilian nature of the attire (including, one must assume, the miniskirts, but they had a visual appeal all their own) were apparently an intentional design decision by Roddenberry who didn&#039;t want uniforms to look military. Further specialness on the part of Roddenberry demanded phasers not look like guns, instead looking like nothing in particular at all (although looking back at them today they look sort of like TV remotes, which would be invented much later), and also (probably the only sensible decision in this category) ships that didn&#039;t look like rockets, giving ships their distinctive and iconic saucer-engineering-nacelles look that still stands out today.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Original Series frequently ran out of budget and entire episodes were filmed using spare costumes belonging to the production company, resulting in a series of extremely goofy excuses to go to planets full of gangsters or [[Nazi]]s. This is often copied by shows who don&#039;t realize it was done out of pure expediency, and nowadays this [[TVTropes|&amp;quot;Planet of Hats&amp;quot;]] gimmick is practically a box to check off when doing sci-fi adventure. The lack of budget also resulted in one of the more memorable inventions; unable to budget for a sequence showing the &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; or a shuttle landing on a new planet every week, the writers instead decided to invent the transporter to &amp;quot;beam&amp;quot; the crew down to planets or between starships. Also worth noting: despite its mediocre critical reception, ratings and eventual cancellation, not to forget the uneven quality of many episodes, especially in the Roddenberry-less third season where poor Fred Freiberger had to come onto a show he didn&#039;t understand and try to get better ratings with less money, &#039;&#039;TOS&#039;&#039; had a hell of a cultural impact thanks to syndication and it has been said that since it entered syndication in 1969, there hasn&#039;t been a 24-hour period without some TV station, in some country, playing Star Trek. Cancellation of The Original Series is now considered one of the worst decisions in TV history, and while much of its silly 60&#039;s campiness is now laughable, it often still manages to teach relevant and important lessons today.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Fun fact: the &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; and each of her 11 sister ships have enough firepower to [[Exterminatus]] a planet by themselves, after getting issued an order called General Order 24. This however is likely a time-consuming task. According to a later DS9 episode, it takes a fleet of 20 warships 1 hour of sustained bombardment to destroy a planets crust and 5 hours of sustained bombardment to destroy a planet down to its mantle. These 20 ships were also in service 100 years after the Enterprise so they were also more powerful. &lt;br /&gt;
Kirk has the distinction of being the only known captain to issue a [[Exterminatus|General Order 24]], because a planet was &#039;&#039;too&#039;&#039; much into wargames (he changed his mind after they dropped wargaming).&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;The Animated Series&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
The often forgotten middle child. More or less &amp;quot;seasons 4-5&amp;quot; of &#039;&#039;TOS&#039;&#039; with the same writing staff and actors, sans poor Walter Koenig. He was replaced by a weird camel person. He learned this at a convention, from a fan, while he was trying to announce he&#039;d be writing an episode, which Gene promptly demanded he rewrite over and over.  Classy. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Being animated allowed the staff to get a lot more creative with the alien designs and plots, and the writing and acting remain... well, top notch is a stretch, but certainly at the same levels as &#039;&#039;The Original Series&#039;&#039;, with the occasional low point. Not &#039;&#039;nearly&#039;&#039; as bad as you&#039;re probably picturing from the name, although still limited by the low budget and primitive, cheap animation techniques of the television era it was aired in. Notably some sci-fi novelists were brought in to write some episodes, such as Larry Niven, and at least one episode, &amp;quot;Yesteryear,&amp;quot; is considered such a pivotal moment in Spock&#039;s development that even people who hate the series enough to consider it all non-canon often make an exception just for that one.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Also, since the series now has no excuse for throwing in lots of Space Puritans and Space Wizards, it of course continued to do so to derptastic results, because by this point it had become traditional. The presence of a straight-up [[furry]] on the bridge, however, is downright unacceptable.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;The Next Generation&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Here&#039;s where it starts getting a little deeper and a little darker, although with a lot of left-wing political subtext turned up to 11. The USS &#039;&#039;Enterprise-D&#039;&#039; (the original and C were destroyed in action while A and B were retired) is, like its predecessor, tasked with going where no-one has gone before, but this time around the problems are less likely to be solved in a single episode. Jean-Luc Picard is the captain and he plots and negotiates his way to victory; Mr. Data is cold and unemotional, though not by choice - as an android, he&#039;d very much like to change that; Riker takes over the captain&#039;s &amp;quot;sleep with alien babes&amp;quot; duties since Picard is married to the job; Worf the Klingon gets beaten up by monsters to show how tough the monsters are, meaning that Worf winds up looking incredibly weak by the end of the show&#039;s run and doesn&#039;t regain his badassery until his run on &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039;; Dr. Beverly Crusher is good old Bones minus his temper; Dr. Pulaski is Bones &#039;&#039;plus&#039;&#039; temper; Counsellor Troy is so badly written she becomes a running joke; and Geordi LaForge [[gets shit done]]. Only two things need to be said about helmsman Wesley Crusher: he was [[Mary Sue|Gene Wesley Roddenberry&#039;s shitty self-insert fanfic character]], and his sueness got to the point that even his actor started to hate him within the first season of the show.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Due to the massive success of The Original Series in syndication (and Paramount being [[Rage|pissed off]] by broadcast networks treating their most valuable IP like any other show), TNG was aired through syndication from the beginning. Although the first two seasons were laughably bad, the quality began to improve dramatically after an increasingly cocaine-addled Gene Roddenberry got too sick to keep ruining it and his partner-in-crime Maurice Hurley was thrown out on his ass, a moment often pinpointed via looking for when [[Meme|Riker grew a beard.]] The later seasons are widely considered to represent the apex of the franchise&#039;s episodic formula on the small screen (although &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; gave it a run for its money with a more serialized approach); sadly, this series only got one good movie.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Unlike all the other series so far, &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039; primarily takes place in a fixed location - the titular space station Deep Space Nine, out near the borders of Federation Space. Said space station is near Bajor, which was recently freed from Cardassian occupation, and a wormhole to the other side of the galaxy which allows [[Warp|all sorts of of crazy shit to go down]]. If the other shows are a wagon train, this one&#039;s a border fort.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Benjamin Sisko is the captain, declared Emissary by the nearby Bajorans for making contact with the wormhole aliens they worship, and he successfully hybridizes the blow-the-shit-out-of-whatever-you-can&#039;t-punch Kirk approach with the talk-in-a-very-dignified-way-about-the-philosophy-of-the-thing-and-win-by-rhetoric Picard maneuver, in his ultimately-successful quest to become the baddest motherfucker in space, then literally becomes a space god. Kira the Bajoran ex-&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;terrorist&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;S&amp;gt;&#039;&#039;noble freedom fighter&#039;&#039;&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; (who are we kidding she calls herself a terrorist) struggles to free and rebuild her people while coming to terms with the moral ambiguities of situations she prefers to see in black-and-white, Dr. Bashir works to find his character for several seasons before becoming a highlight, Dax gets often written poorly and has to switch bodies doing it, Odo IS &#039;&#039;Liquid Space Cop&#039;&#039;, Quark runs his bar and [[troll|heckles]] the Federation, Garak pretends to be a tailor while definitely not being a super-spy and dropping killer lines, and Miles O&#039;Brien [[gets shit done]]. Also, Worf wanders in halfway through, and actually gets to punch things instead of just getting punched by them. It&#039;s also a lot more political than other series (though &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; have their moments) and the last series to have Gene Roddenberry&#039;s involvement (with less enthusiasm, in fact often much to the benefit of this particular series thematically, although Roddenberry&#039;s complete departure did not necessarily bode well for the franchise in general.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s the [[Awesome|closest the canon series ever get]] to [[Grimdark]], especially when the Dominion show up. The show has aged remarkably well and the terrorist/freedom fighter debate was repeatedly explored in a very mature and honest way. &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; is the most serialized of all Trek shows and could be considered a forerunner to the golden age of television with its long story arcs and deep character development. Overall, &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; has to be considered the most consistently good Trek show thanks to the excellent writing and fantastic performances from a truly wonderful ensemble cast. At least until the final season, when the writers who made it good were pulled to try and fail to make good movies, heralding the failure that was &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039;.  The finale episodes were mostly okay and tied up the story semi-satisfyingly, though a few die-hard subplots fell flat.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It wasn&#039;t without its controversies however. The show was airing around the same time as another thematically similar sci-fi show, &#039;&#039;Babylon 5&#039;&#039;. Not only that but characters also shared similarities, as did the episodes. Interestingly, beginning of both series, introduction of characters and airing of similar episodes were often too close to each other for one show to copy the other but this did not stop massive [[Rage]] and [[/v/|fanboy wars]] from starting between fans of the two series accusing one another of plagiarism and having an inferior product.  Happily, as time went on and both shows evolved, these hurt feelings have mostly faded.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
How good is &#039;&#039;Deep Space Nine&#039;&#039;? Every Star Trek series and even the reboot movies have pretty much ripped off ideas and concepts established during the series. Famously, within the &amp;quot;Trekker/Trekie&amp;quot; fan community, there&#039;s a little cell of fans who like it better than most other &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;; these fans are typically called &amp;quot;Niners.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Star Trek: Voyager centers around the eponymous USS &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039;, a smallish ship which gets teleported over to the other side of the galaxy. The plot of the series centers on the crew&#039;s efforts to get back home, which COULD have made for an excellent premise. Unfortunately, there were few lasting story arcs, with most episodes being fully self-contained (as well as being littered with far too many episodes featuring holodeck or transporter incidents). As a consequence, despite being completely isolated from the Federation, no matter how bad things got Voyager always appeared in the next episode without a scratch, fully supplied, and with all its shuttlecraft intact. Think &#039;&#039;Gilligan&#039;s Island&#039;&#039; on a starship.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Like &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;DS9&#039;&#039; it&#039;s a character-driven drama just as often as it is a sci-fi adventure romp, although compared to TNG only a few of the characters are particularly memorable. The captain and arguable &amp;quot;main character&amp;quot; is Kathryn Janeway, a Katharine Hepburn lookalike (I see what you did there) who is stern without being cold, and principled without being inflexible. The fan favorite is a character called &amp;quot;The Doctor&amp;quot; ([[Doctor Who|No relation]]); he&#039;s the solid-light hologram representative of the ship&#039;s emergency medical computer, who has to take on actual medical duties when their chief medical officer was conveniently killed in the pilot episode. Other than this, Chakotay is a peace-loving and spiritually rich indian &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;freedom fighter&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;terrorist&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; [[FAIL|who was written with the help of a special cherokee consultant so native his name was Jamake Highwater and it turned out later on that he was actually jewish and didn&#039;t know dick about native cultures so he made everything up resulting in Chakotay basically being a borderline racist caricature of what you think indians are like. Akoochimoya.]] Tom Paris is an annoying jerk and is counterbalanced by Harry Kim who is the ideal boy-scout, making him only half as annoying and twice as boring. B&#039;elanna Torres tries to perpetuate a lineage of dudes getting shit done but ends up blankly reciting her technobabble, having second degree plasma burns and – worst of all – systematically fails to get shit done whenever the warp core goes nuts. Tuvok tries hard to be as cool as Spock but ends up being a lame version of the n°1 Vulcan who uses logic to justify everything and makes it short for &amp;quot;you are wrong, I am right because I said so.&amp;quot; Kes is passed as a fragile and nice character but it takes a couple of episodes to realize that having a short lifespan does not change the facts: [[powergamer|when you can boil someone to death from the inside of their body, drain life from everything around you to become stronger and do anything you want without knowing how, just by thinking of it]], you are a goddamn Mary Sue. From the fourth season onwards the only character the writers seemed to care about are Seven of Nine, [[Mary Sue|a human woman who recently escaped from Borg control and kept all of her cyborg enhancements but regained her free will]]; another Mary Sue, to be sure, but she&#039;s [[Hot Chicks|hot]], and the other characters are much worse, so that&#039;s not really a bad thing. Fortunately, The Doctor still received a lot of attention from the writers and almost single-handedly made the show watchable. There was also Neelix, who was the apparent inspiration for Jar-Jar Binks, and any sane crew would have pushed him out of an airlock on the first episode. Fans who stuck with the show despite its glaring failings were given one final slap in the face with the &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;controversial&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; shit final season, in which the producers decided &amp;quot;screw steadily crafting a satisfying conclusion to a story which we have wasted for most of the last seven years anyway; lets just ignore it until the final episode and then throw in some shit about trans-warp conduits and time travel, bitches love time travel!&amp;quot; If you did not care about any of the characters or the subplots or time travel making sense (the writers sure didn&#039;t), then the final episode was explosions (and the Borg got a major setback, just don&#039;t think about the setup too hard).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The Doctor never once stopped being totally fucking awesome though (enough so to even earn a cameo in First Contact), and the great acting from the cast carries the series from being horrific to &#039;&#039;occasionally&#039;&#039; watchable. Just goes to show that no matter how good your actors are, they can&#039;t make diamonds out of shit.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Overall, most Star Trek fans view Voyager&#039;s legacy with a shrug and a &amp;quot;meh.&amp;quot; Unfortunately, hopes that Voyager&#039;s successor would revitalize the franchise would soon prove to be overly optimistic.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
From the minute the Nickelback-tier theme tune started, Enterprise attempted to take Star Trek in a new direction and was only partially successful in doing so. The series never quite caught its footing, although it still managed to have some enjoyable moments. It was most notable for providing a first-hand view of the key events that directly led to the formation of the Federation. The Federation&#039;s founding races were also featured heavily, with Andorians, Tellarites, and Vulcans all enjoying significant screen time alongside the human characters.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s a prequel to the rest of the canon, taking place on the first &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039;, before the Federation was founded and during the period when Earth was still an independent power- so there&#039;s a lot of primitive versions of things from other series. At least the uniforms were pretty cool in an Air Force sort of way. Captained by &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;that guy from &#039;&#039;Quantum Leap&#039;&#039;&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Jonathan Archer, in hindsight the fact that they had to rename him from their original choice of Jeffrey Archer to avoid confusion with the disgraced British MP and author of the same name probably cursed the series with bad karma before it had even begun shooting. In an unusual twist for a &#039;&#039;Trek&#039;&#039; series, his first officer isn&#039;t a &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;terrorist&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; &#039;&#039;noble freedom fighter,&#039;&#039; however she does share a trait with her &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; predecessor in that the actress who portrayed her frequently criticized the show&#039;s writers in interviews. Other than that, well, Hoshi Sato screams a lot, Travis Mayweather was so dull even the writers forgot he existed, the resident Vulcan T&#039;Pol serves as both the Science Officer and source of sexy fanservice, Malcolm Reed has an accent, Dr Phlox is a weird creepy alien with weird creepy alien moral (and gets surprisingly interesting when given enough screentime, which hardly happened), and Trip also has an accent and [[gets shit done]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Was retooled twice, the third season tries to be &#039;&#039;24&#039;&#039; IN SPACE (stop some guys the Xindi from blowing up Earth) while the 4th season is a massive apology about the last three seasons that tries to fix all the problems they had, and as a result, the only season that&#039;s close to being good.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Unfortunately, the poorly-received final episode is set on the holodeck of the Enterprise-D, which leaves us with the firm impression that the producers would have much rather have just continued making &#039;&#039;The Next Generation&#039;&#039;. Considering the mediocre quality of the &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; movies we got instead, this probably would have worked out better for all involved (Or not since &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; was that; its first episode was even numbered 901, as in Season 9 Episode 1).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Yet despite all this bad directing, subpar plots, and frankly boring episodes, &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; still manages to be moderately enjoyable with occasional moments of awesomeness if you can suffer through a fair few awful spots and aggressive mediocrity almost everywhere else. The focus on founding Federation races like the Andorans was refreshing and the technology level, being somewhere between the original series and the real world present-day, was quite interesting. We also got to see the Vulcans portrayed as arrogant, superior dicks. Which makes a lot more sense than the way they&#039;re usually portrayed as fairly submissive towards humans because they are, obviously and objectively, the superior race. The Klingons certainly still considered themselves to be honorable but the show made it clear that the Klingon notion of honor is rarely analogous to the human concept which was interesting as all hell to watch. There have been a few small nods to it in discovery and the abrams movies.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
And let&#039;s be fucking honest, [[/tg/]] loves 40k and the Xindi arc was about as grimdark as shit gets. And that was awesome.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Also makes a neat pairing with &#039;&#039;Voyager&#039;&#039; in that they really mess with the Prime Directive and question the Federation.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Discovery&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
----&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;s&amp;gt;A LOAD OF SOCIAL JUSTICE SHIT!&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; Ahem, let&#039;s start again, shall we?&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A new &amp;quot;prequel&amp;quot; series set 10 years before &#039;&#039;The Original Series.&#039;&#039; Run exclusively on CBS&#039; paid streaming service (unless you live outside the US and Canada, in which case you can get it on Netflix) to try and drum up sign-ups and revenue, it features a mix of &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; and Abramstrek aesthetics despite supposedly taking place in parallel to the TOS &amp;quot;The Cage&amp;quot; pilot while [[what|having technology superior to late DS9]] and introducing [[dune|mushroom-based space travel]] that would imply [[retcon|all later events and warp travel would be outdated]]. The trailer has attracted a lot of concern over the fact that Klingons have been completely redesigned to look like slit-nosed ogres wearing ancient Egyptian cosplay, and rumors that the Klingons shown were [[Racial Holy War|primitives who had been trapped in stasis]] proved to be unfounded, so there is no excuse. Not having a cold war to posture about, the new villains are based off of Trump-inspired xenophobia by the admission of the authors. Also the lead character is Spock&#039;s human sister that he never mentioned before, aka the &#039;&#039;exact&#039;&#039; origin of the [[Mary Sue]] which is just fucking depressing. To further reinforce this, there are &#039;&#039;numerous&#039;&#039; examples of dialogue and exposition that serve only to show how the Mary Sue main character was right all along, usually in conjunction with the death of the character that had foolishly disagreed with her. Want a new Star Trek episode about racism and immigration? Try the now-banned [https://youtu.be/3VEZH8bqytA Star Trek Continues]. Want Star Trek with humor, keep an eye out for the upcoming [https://ew-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/ew.com/tv/2018/10/25/star-trek-animated-comedy/amp/?fbclid=IwAR2WN6auDNm5YiunYhaqiu7vt9f-P08AuUjMpLA5LlpUgvTm9_xloJNRYb0 Star Trek: Lower Decks]; want a pseudo-Star Trek show about other modern issues? Try &#039;&#039;The Orville&#039;&#039; below; that&#039;s right, American Dad In Space may right now be a better Star Trek than an actual Star Trek series.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Initial reviews have been... well, it&#039;s shit. The writing is overly convoluted, the massive injection of grimdark into pre-TOS continuity is anathema to the hardcore fans (the &#039;&#039;human&#039;&#039; characters are often the ones doing the nastiest shit, including [[Marines Malevolent|trying to kill a Klingon party by planting an explosive on the corpse of one of their comrades for when they came to collect the dead]]) and the Klingons are so flat and devoid of characterization that they might as well be Larry the Cable Guy lookalikes wearing Trump hats, which is a massive disappointment for a series that promised to put a spotlight on Klingon culture but ended up retconning all the characterization that happened in TNG and DS9. It &#039;&#039;may&#039;&#039; get better with time (remember that it took two seasons for TNG to get really good) but given the release schedule (split between 2017 and 2018 with a long break) it may come too late for the fanbase to care. Currently it&#039;s cause for more fans to lose their shit over whether it&#039;s better or worse than the Abrams movies, which is a new record of [[Skub|Trek Skub]]. Releasing the show on CBS All Access instead of cable or broadcast TV makes it seem that executives don&#039;t really give a shit if the show succeeds or fails, bringing up the question of [[Bioware|whether they&#039;re deliberately putting Star Trek: Discovery in a no-win scenario where, no matter what happens, the executives have an excuse to cancel Star Trek altogether]]. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Other stupid decisions are: not bringing back Bruce Greenwood and Zachary Quinto as Captain Pike and (at this time a likely a Lieutenant Commander) Spock. Who wouldn&#039;t mind taking a pay cut to bring the characters to the small screen. Their ages wouldn&#039;t have mattered either if CBS and Paramount weren&#039;t such cheapskates. As they don&#039;t even care enough to shell out cash for the CGI technology that Marvel Studios uses to make their actors appear younger during flashback scenes. There&#039;s also allegations that large chunks of plot were stolen from previews of an in development indie game.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Naturally, nobody is ever going to let this series live down its unfortunate initials.&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed&amp;quot; style=&amp;quot;width:800px&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===&#039;&#039;Picard&#039;&#039;===&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;div class=&amp;quot;mw-collapsible-content&amp;quot;&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Set to be a continuation of the original timeline, featuring old man Picard with Patrick Stewart reprising the role. Hopes are not high, but at the very least Patrick Stewart&#039;s presence should make it watchable if nothing else.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
There are a lot of rumors coming out and if the comics can be considered canon, then the Enterprise F from Star Trek Online is the successor to the Enterprise E. This would strongly link the video game to the main Star Trek universe. That being said, it &#039;&#039;appears&#039;&#039; that the show will not be taking place on a Starfleet ship, and that Picard himself will be acting as a private individual, not as an officer of the Federation. Stay tuned. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Homages ==&lt;br /&gt;
Being a longrunner with a wide audience, Star Trek has gained enough acclaim to have numerous references. In a few cases entire works get made to homage Star Trek. Here are some of the examples.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Galaxy Quest ===&lt;br /&gt;
A sci-fi/comedy film released in 1999, directed by Dean Parisot. It parodies science fiction films and series in general, but particularly &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; and its fandom. The film stars big name actors including Tim Allen, Sigourney Weaver and the late great Alan Rickman. The plot revolves around the cast of a defunct cult television series called Galaxy Quest (for example, Tim Allen played the Kirk/Shatner expy and the late Alan Rickman played the Spock/Nimoy expy). They&#039;re also suffering fatigue that mirrors the experiences of the actual Star Trek actors (Rickman&#039;s character is typecast with his Galaxy Quest character and laments it, similar to how these things happened to the late Leonard Nimoy).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The cast are suddenly visited by actual aliens, who believe the series to be an accurate documentary (it helps that the aliens have no concept of fiction and only the most bare bones idea of lying) and seek their help. They take the actors with them, who find themselves involved in a very real, and dangerous, intergalactic conflict, and unlike the show where it all wrapped up quickly they struggle to learn about and relate to the aliens.  Can these actors find greatness within themselves, and possibly personal redemption?  (Spoiler: yes, and it is incredible.)&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Built around the basic premise of &amp;quot;What if the cast of &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; ended up on a real spaceship and had to actually do the shit they did in the show?&amp;quot; Featuring a veritable all-star cast of talented comedians and character actors, this is one of the best parodies ever made, and an affectionate love-letter to the franchise as a whole.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Star Wreck: In the Pirkinning===&lt;br /&gt;
Another parody, parodying not only &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; but &#039;&#039;Babylon 5&#039;&#039; as well. The seventh in a series fan movies released in 2005, it&#039;s about Captain Pirk builds a starship called CPP &#039;&#039;Kickstart&#039;&#039;, allies with Russia and takes over the world. He wants to take over more planets but the ships of his P-Fleet aren&#039;t fast enough to travel outside the Solar system. A maggot hole opens and it leads to an alternate reality. Pirk wants to take over the Earth of this reality, which leads to an [[awesome]] space battle between the P-Fleet and the fleet of the space station Babel 13 led by Johnny Sherrypie. The movie features some of the best special effects ever put in a sci-fi movie, which is pretty impressive, considering that this is an amateur film with a very low budget and was rendered in five years in someone&#039;s bedroom. The film is spoken in Finnish but subtitles are available for a wide variety of languages, including Klingon. They also made [https://web.archive.org/web/20070828010927/http://rpg.starwreck.com/ a role-playing game based on it], where your character [[Truenamer|becomes more incompetent]] [[Page 42|as he levels up]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
===Star Trek: Renegades===&lt;br /&gt;
Kickstarter Trek. The makers submitted their made-for-TV movie pilot to CBS in an attempt to get it made into a legit on-the-air series (and by god it shows), but they were not successful. As a result, while the project limped along for a few years afterward, it has good and bad in equal measure. As a non-official product it also cannot be considered canon. Some characters are actually interesting (about time we saw more of the Breen!) while others are pure Mary Sues (including a male Seven of Nine with a built-in Borg-gun/personal shield/fully-functional hand). Some of the ideas are interesting while others are boring or already-been-done. The CGI is all Hollywood-quality, but the practical effects are okay at best. &lt;br /&gt;
It&#039;s obvious that they made this without knowing that they were going to be able to make a TV show or not, and tried to cram the sort of build-up and intrigue we saw in DS9 into a span of 90 minutes. For now though, it&#039;s decidedly meh, and probably a dead project as well since it hasn&#039;t been mentioned on the maker&#039;s website in over a year as of late 2019.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== The Orville ===&lt;br /&gt;
A comedy drama sci-fi television series that began as a homage to Star Trek, created by and starring Seth MacFarlane of &#039;&#039;Family Guy&#039;&#039; infamy-- [[Skub|No wait, come back!]]  The guy&#039;s a huge Trekkie and felt too many shows were up in their ass with grimdark, so he pitched his idea to the execs to make a loving comedic sendup of The Next Generation.  Many of the executive producers and developers are notable industry Trekkies such as David Goodman (who wrote the &#039;&#039;Futurama&#039;&#039; Trek parody episode), or Trek alumni such as Brannon Braga.  First airing in 2017, the series is about the strung-out not-Picard protagonist Captain Edward Mercer, played by MacFarlane himself, of the eponymous not-Enterprise spaceship &amp;quot;The Orville&amp;quot; ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wright_brothers#Orville named after one of the Wright Brothers in a splash of genius]).  His ex-wife Kelly is the first officer while the crew includes the not-T&#039;Pol alien security officer Alara, gay beefy not-Worf alien Bortus, asshole not-Lore android Isaac, and John LaMarr and Gordon Malloy - an even more ridiculous parody of Harry Kim and Tom Paris. They explore the galaxy while dealing with personal problems and fighting various bad guys.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Season one started with a decent pilot about Ed and Kelly reconciling enough to work together, then had peaks and valleys to its final episode.    Like Star Trek, there’s some commentary on real world issues, and while less preachy than &#039;&#039;Discovery&#039;&#039; on some subjects, it&#039;s just as bad or even worse on other subjects.  The totally-not-Black-Mirror&#039;s-&amp;quot;Nosedive&amp;quot; episode &amp;quot;Majority Rule&amp;quot; had good commentary on social currency systems.  The Season trod [[SJW|certain waters]] at times, such as the episode &amp;quot;About a Girl&amp;quot; being a surprisingly well done, Bortus-centered story about gender-fluid/sex-changing aliens... only for episode &amp;quot;Cupid&#039;s Dagger&amp;quot; to poke the hornet&#039;s nest when it revealed Kelly and Ed split because Kelly banged an alien whose seduction included pheromones (raising questions of consent, blame and date rape).  Then, since it’s a Seth MacFarlane show, it has preachiness on atheism exceeding even Star Trek’s, with a quarter of Season 1 episodes all about beating the “Religion is Bad” drum.  On that note there’s the alien race the Krill, the only religious race in the setting, so &#039;&#039;of course&#039;&#039; they’re fanatical devotees of a dangerous religion (a monotheistic one teaching that [[The Culture#Other civilizations|all non-Krill are soulless abominations to be subjugated or destroyed]]); between this and cues from villains like Nosferatu (all deliberate according to the devs, including a pallid reptilian look and being killed by UV sunlight), the Krill seemed set up to be the show’s go-to bad guys.  While there were teething problems with plots, the jokes were more misses than hits and the preachiness could grate even for those who agreed with the messages, The Orville did well enough for a second season. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
In the second season, Alara was written out of the show halfway through.  The character&#039;s actress, Halston Sage, was rumoured to be dating Seth MacFarlane and given the apparent distance between them later, this may have indicated a breakup which led to her departure from the show.  If the rumor was true, this likely factored into writing Alara out because [[Derp|dating a co-worker and subordinate 20 years younger than you almost never ends well]].  In any event, this change may come back to haunt them as she was one of the more well-received characters.  In other events, Issac turns good at the last minute (becoming not-Data instead of not-Lore) and one episode has a plot hole where the Krill teacher Teleya - captured by Mercer and co. and imprisoned in Season 1 - comes back as part of a strike force targeting Ed with no explanation for her escape.  Speaking of the Krill, they become the &amp;quot;lesser villains that need to team up with the good guys to fight worse villains&amp;quot; cliché, in a possible asspull given all the villainous setup they got in Season 1.  The team up happens because the rest of Issac&#039;s robotic race, introduced this season and called the Kaylons, have gone [[Necrons|Full Skynet]] against organic life.  The cast seems to be gelling better (rumoured friction between Seth and Halston aside), the writers have a better idea of what the show should be and the humour is now used in service of the stories.  The criticized elements were watered down but still remain, and while the show is getting a third season, it was moved from TV to streaming service Hulu.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ultimately, some commend The Orville as a breath of [[Noblebright|fresh air]] in an overly [[Grimdark|stagnant]] genre with good special effects and bouts of genius. Others denounce The Orville as derivative with sophomoric preachiness, clumsy pop-culture references and haphazard writing.  Further criticisms include MacFarlane&#039;s stunt-casting of himself as the main character being the height of vanity and that his interactions with ex-wife character Kelly are uncomfortable to watch from the word &amp;quot;go.&amp;quot;  Some think both its supporters and detractors have a point. Trekkies are equally divided on the show; many Trekkies [[butthurt]] over Discovery endorse The Orville, a significant number of Discovery fans hate The Orville while a small and overlooked group quietly enjoys both.  &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
As always, stay tuned for how this turns out.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Films ==&lt;br /&gt;
As a general rule, the even-numbered ones aren&#039;t complete shit.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek: The Motion Picture&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: AKA: The Slow Motion Picture, or the Motionless Picture. A giant space whatsit is flying towards Earth, the mostly-retired crew has to go figure out what&#039;s going on and stop it.  Old school sci-fi geeks like the ideas, but terrible pace and interminable special effects that were clearly meant to capitalize on &#039;&#039;2001: A Space Odyssey&#039;&#039; while failing to understand what people like about that movie kill them dead for everyone else. Besides the uniform worn by Kirk, the uniforms also look like pajamas. So no wonder they were changed only a movie later. Features an entirely bald female alien who is [[What|so good at sex that she has to swear an oath not to get it on with the crew]]. Really. This is canon.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: As Kirk starts to feel his age, a one-off villain from the show makes a dramatic reapperance: [[Meme|KKKHHHAAAAAAAAAAAANNNN!!!!]] Widely considered the best of all the films, and the only one considered a straight up great film, no qualifiers. If you haven&#039;t seen it, see it. So good many later movies in the franchise just try to rip it off instead of finding their own identities. Interesting fact: due to time constraints, actors of Kirk and Khan weren&#039;t available at the same time. So the entire script was written so that Kirk and Khan never need to meet face-to-face. But you&#039;d never notice if it weren&#039;t pointed out to you. Roddenberry screeched autistically and objected to some of the actions of his characters, including Kirk shooting a [[Enslavers|brain eating space parasite]] rather than &amp;quot;[[Noblebright|keeping it for study]].&amp;quot; The fact that his strongest objections came to the most [[win]] of the films says a great deal about his deprecating value to the franchise around the TNG era. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek III: The Search for Spock&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Where is Spock? &#039;&#039;He&#039;s on Genesis.&#039;&#039; ALL AHEAD FULL! Not really bad, just mediocre and run of the mill compared to the superior films that surround it. It was also saddled with the misfortune of undoing some of the previous film&#039;s more-daring decisions, and having its only daring decision reversed a film later. If you had to say that any film broke the &amp;quot;odd numbers suck&amp;quot; rule, it would be this one. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The crew of the &#039;&#039;Enterprise&#039;&#039; travels back in time to save the whales. No, literally and unironically. Scott tries to talk to a computer through the mouse, Spock nerve-pinches a punk on a bus in San Francisco, and somehow it works, creating something perhaps not quite in the genre intended but a classic in sci-fi dramedy. &#039;&#039;The Voyage Home&#039;&#039; is a zany comedy romp beloved by the general public and fandom alike, leaving only the most intractable fanbois to bitch and moan.  Nimoy directed this one but there was a contract stipulation that Shatner would get whatever Nimoy got, thus leading to...&lt;br /&gt;
* &amp;lt;del&amp;gt;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek V: The Final Frontier&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;:&amp;lt;/del&amp;gt; &amp;lt;s&amp;gt;The epitome of the &amp;quot;odd-numbered Star Trek films suck&amp;quot; rule.&amp;lt;/s&amp;gt; {{BLAM|Lies! There is no}} &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek V&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;{{BLAM|! It was not called}} &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;The Final Frontier&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;{{BLAM|! It was not directed by Kirk&#039;s egotistical actor and did not have a plot that could literally be summarized as &amp;quot;Kirk is betrayed by his incompetent crew, yet goes on to fight God and win!&amp;quot; The films mysteriously moved from four to six and &#039;&#039;we are all improved because of this!&#039;&#039;}}&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The Space Cold War ends amidst searing mystery and drama. The sendoff for the original cast, except Kirk who got a worse send-off a movie later. Gene Roddenberry watched it, hated it, and was going to seek legal advice but died a week later. And good riddance to that, because it&#039;s a pretty sweet political thriller if your hippie-panties don&#039;t get into a twist at the thought that the Federation isn&#039;t a perfect place full of perfect people. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Generations&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Malcolm McDowell blows up planets to get into a magic space ribbon to live forever, no it does not make any more sense in context. An already-weak story hamstrung by its obsession with being daring and unconventional rather than good. Also, Kirk dies on the bridge in the most face-palming manner possible.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek First Contact&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; crew face off with the Borg to ensure the future happens. Lots of action, a script that sparks with energy and snark, and some quite effective performances make this the only good &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; movie. It sadly is also the only appearance of the Defiant on screen, doing a pretty decent job of fighting the Borg before the Enterprise E saves the day of course. The Borg Queen was also introduced here before Voyager, ruining what could have been a good idea. &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Insurrection&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: If you thought the [[Avatar|Na&#039;vi]] were a bunch of badly-written [[Mary Sue]]s, you ain&#039;t seen nothing yet! B-b-b-baby you ain&#039;t seen n-n-n-nothing yet! Also, Riker shaves his beard, and that&#039;s basically a war crime.  Aged from terrible to forgettably bad thanks to that one scene of Picard and Data singing &#039;&#039;HMS Pinafore&#039;&#039; going memetic.    &lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Nemesis&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: The last stand of the &#039;&#039;TNG&#039;&#039; cast, ending not with a bang but a whimper. It also required amending the even=good/odd=bad rule to &amp;quot;&#039;&#039;Galaxy Quest&#039;&#039; counts as a &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; film so this one is also odd.&amp;quot;&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039; (2009): Alternate timeline &amp;quot;reboot&amp;quot; (sideboot?) with the original crew, albeit with new younger actors. Timey-wimey shit happens and old prime timeline Spock (reprised by old Leonard Nemoy) is hurled back in time along with a bunch of Romulan assholes. The dickbag Romulans begin fucking shit up, slightly altering history in a way that ensures gratuitous lens flare. [[skub| Skubtastic]], but at least watchable, which is more than &#039;&#039;most&#039;&#039; odd-numbered films can muster. If you still even count it as odd, without the &#039;&#039;Galaxy Quest&#039;&#039;-amendment.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Into Darkness&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Some [[edgy]] shit. The second of the alternate timeline &#039;&#039;Trek&#039;&#039; films. Terrorism, conspiracy and flapdoodle. Even more skubtastic, but generally considered worse than its predecessor, partially because (like &#039;&#039;Nemesis&#039;&#039;) it tries to be a remake of &#039;&#039;The Wrath of Khan&#039;&#039; and having Kirk at his most punchable.&lt;br /&gt;
* &#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;Star Trek Beyond&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;&#039;: Controversial, but more in a question of whether it&#039;s decent or quite good.  Lots of good character stuff and a decent story revolving around a race of mysterious space pirates trying to conquer a colony, but the action photography is poorly-lit shaky-cam horseshit and the sound work is awful.  If it&#039;s the last &amp;quot;Kelvin Timeline&amp;quot; movie, as it seems it will be, at least it ended on a good note.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Novels ==&lt;br /&gt;
Like most long time franchises &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; has a massive line of books. Unlike most they&#039;re basically just fanfics as nothing but the show and the movies is canon so the writers can do whatever they want. This changed after &#039;&#039;Nemesis&#039;&#039; since they might never have another show or movie in the &amp;quot;Prime&amp;quot; universe, so the writers got their shit together and wrote a group of books as a tight community very close to the shows. The relaunch novels are a continuation of the show they&#039;re about. Also there&#039;s the &#039;&#039;Titan&#039;&#039; book series which is about Riker and Troi getting their own ship, which happens to be staffed by every race in the Federation including living rocks, [[awesome|space dinosaurs]] that smell like [[meatbread|toast]] and a [[what|space cyborg ostrich]].&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
During yet another novel continuity (Star Trek: Destiny), the Borg go nuts and eat Pluto... yeah... and then they finally get sick of the Federation somehow managing to not get assimilated all the time, so they finally just send every last cube they have with orders to Exterminatus the absolute SHIT out of the entire Alpha Quadrant. Pretty much every important character from TNG, DS9, and Voyager has to team up to stop them, and even then the Federation still gets its shit kicked in and winds up having to rely on a vaguely ridiculous deus ex machina to win, and [[Grimdark|billions of people still die and dozens of planets are blown to shit]]. It was pretty insane.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Then all the Federation&#039;s main enemies get together to form an anti-Federation and start poking the bear, all the while telling their allies that they&#039;re somehow warmongering dicks, Section 31 gets its cover blown in a big way, and Riker gets promoted to Admiral. Also, a lot of the newer TNG novels have been devoted to following up on one-shot aliens from the show, like the guys that sent out the probe that made Barclay super-smart and those fish monks that were abducting crewmembers for experiments. Now that the Picard show is coming out, though, this will all presumably be chucked in the dustbin.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Video Games ==&lt;br /&gt;
=== Star Trek Online ===&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;Star Trek Online&#039;&#039; is the free-to-play online game built by Cryptic Studios and run by Perfect World. With an official license CBS, recurring characters voiced by various Trek alumni, and recently a license to include references to the reboot chronology (officially known as the &amp;quot;Kelvin Timeline&amp;quot;), it&#039;s the closest existing thing to an &amp;quot;official&amp;quot; continuation of the &amp;quot;Prime&amp;quot; timeline, and contains history and fluff extending nearly 40 years from the end of Star Trek: Nemesis.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Taking place in the 25th century (around the year 2409-2410), the Hobus supernova (the event that kicked Nero and Spock into the past during Star Trek 2009) has devastated the Romulans, and its near-collapse and fragmentation causes tensions between a resurgent Klingon Empire and the Federation. The tensions blow up into a war, with members of a new, nicer, breakaway Romulan Republic playing both sides in exchange for development aid.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
The game contains deep cuts from all over Trek lore, and answers questions about what happened to various key characters, including Data (took over the Enterprise-E, then retired), the Enterprise (now an even bigger ship run by Andorian captain Shon), and the Voyager crew (it took Harry Kim 30 years to make Captain lol). Raises barely-shown, unnamed, and otherwise obscure races to new prominence as big bad foes, including the Iconians (ancient aliens with god complexes who mutated into energy beings, currently live in dyson spheres and were only defeated by predestination paradox), Tzenkethi (4-armed halo guys whose weak points are the FRONT of their shields), and Na&#039;kuhl (the alien nazis from Enterprise as time-traveling terrorists who blame the Federation for a throwaway event that happened in TNG&#039;s beach episode).&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
Ostensibly free to play, but don&#039;t let that fool you... the &#039;&#039;not-so-micro&#039;&#039;transactions are the only reason the lights stay on.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Starfleet Command ===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&#039;&#039;Starfleet Command&#039;&#039; was a series real time space battle games by Interplay based on the much older tabletop game Star Fleet Battles.  It came out in 1999 and was followed by several sequels and expansions.  Gameplay was much like &#039;&#039;Battlefleet Gothic&#039;&#039;, but with the player only controlling one ship.  SFC remains Interplay&#039;s best selling game, topping even &#039;&#039;Baldur&#039;s Gate&#039;&#039;.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
=== Armada ===&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
A series of low effort RTS&#039;s churned out by Activision in 2000.  Tried to take on both &#039;&#039;Homeworld&#039;&#039; and &#039;&#039;Age of Empires&#039;&#039;, both of which have recently gotten HD remakes and &#039;&#039;Armada&#039;&#039; hasn&#039;t so that should tell you all you need to know.  However, for one of the first 3D model space RTS&#039;s it was surprisingly easy to mod, resulting in many ship mod packs being made for it.&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
== Would you like to know more? ==&lt;br /&gt;
And oh Lordy, is there more...&lt;br /&gt;
*[http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/ Main Memory Alpha: A &#039;&#039;Star Trek&#039;&#039; wiki]&lt;br /&gt;
*[http://memory-beta.wikia.com/wiki/ Main Memory Beta: The flip-side of Memory Alpha for the less than official stuff]&lt;br /&gt;
*[http://sfdebris.com/ SF Debris: opinionated episode reviews, has some non &#039;&#039;Trek&#039;&#039; stuff as well]&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
[[Category: Television]]&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>2406:3400:20F:FFC0:7C71:43FB:2FAE:70A9</name></author>
	</entry>
</feed>