Longtime kids’ toymaker Playmobil has branched out into several different licensed brands, and in 2021 they’ll be making their way into the final frontier with a brand-new, massive Star Trek release: a 42-inch-long playset of the classic USS Enterprise, coming in September.
Revealed through preorder listings a number of online retailers — most notably Entertainment Earth — the massive recreation of the original Enterprise not only opens to reveal both the bridge and main engineering, but it’s also built with light and sound functionality which will be managed through a Bluetooth connection to your personal smartphone.
The first photos of the Playmobil Enterprise were released this week through Toy News International, and show the detail that went into the internal compartments of the ship, right down to glowing dilithium crystals in the engineering section.
(Please note these photos may be subject to change.)
Playmobil -- USS Enterprise Playset
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Image via Toy News International
Image via Toy News International
Image via Toy News International
Image via Toy News International
Image via Toy News International
Here’s the full description of the upcoming product:
Where’s Captain Kirk? He’s on the bridge of this astonishing Playmobil 70548 Star Trek U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 Playset! Possibly the biggest and most deluxe Playmobil playset created up to this point, the 42-inch long x 18-inch wide starship features electronic lights and sounds you control with your smart device.
The saucer section of the Enterprise opens to show a full 1966-style bridge play environment. What’s more, the body of the ship opens on the side to reveal the engineering room! Additional details, including electronics, are to be announced later, so don’t miss this sensational playset!
– This U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 measures 42-inches long x 18-inches wide!
– Control the lights and sounds with your smart device!
– Opens to reveal the bridge and engineering play areas.
– Includes Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock, Dr. McCoy, Scotty, Uhura, Sulu, and Chekov figures.
– Display it on the stand or suspend it from the ceiling!
It includes a display cradle and wire for ceiling suspension if that’s your preferred means of display. The ship, figures, and accessories are modeled after The Original Series, so you’ll get Captain James T. Kirk, Mr. Spock, Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy, Ensign Chekov, Lt. Uhura, Lt. Sulu, and of course, Chief Engineer Montgomery “Scotty” Scott.
(136 pieces. Ages 10 and up.)
Interestingly, while its default display mode is atop a Starfleet base, this massive Enterprise will also come with optional ceiling-mount display cables to let it hang above you once in your home — which for a starship that’s more than three feet long, may be the best option for many collectors.
The only thing larger than this Enterprise playset’s size, however, is its pricetag: this massive set is retailing at $499.99, a cost that will need a certain financial fortitude to commit to.
That said, like the Lego brand, Playmobil is not known for inexpensive products, and for a release as physically enormous as this classic Enterprise, the cost isn’t entirely unexpected (and we already know at least one Trekkie parent who’s plunked down a pre-order for their Trekkie-in-training child.)
Image via Toy News International
If you want to see one of these massive Playmobil Enterprise playsets dock at your home starbase when it arrives this September, you can lock in your preorder over at Entertainment Earth now.
It’s been a little over two months since the first teaser trailer for Star Trek: Picard revealed the return of Q to the franchise — and now we’ve got our first look at footage from the show’s upcoming second season, including actor John de Lancie himself back in character!
Released today by Paramount+ to coincide with the calendar equivalent of Captain Picard Day,the first episodic footage from Star Trek: Picard Season 2 sees the La Sirena crew in a world wholly unfamiliar to them — with ol’ JL himself (Patrick Stewart) lamenting “What the hell is happening here?” along the way.
Just as his frustration reaches its peak, the voice of Q (John de Lancie) shocks him alert, revealing the return of the recurring Next Generation trickster being — possible the first time Picard and Q have seen each other since the events of “All Good Things…” so many years ago.
John de Lancie returns as Q. (Paramount+)
“Welcome, my friend,” narrates Q, “to the very end of the road not taken,” as the imagery from the upcoming season shows the La Sirena crew in strange locations and strange costumes, with even Cris Rios (Santiago Cabrera) and La Sirena itself seemingly drafted into some kind of alternate Starfleet’s service.
Rios and La Sirena itself now sport a Starfleet-esque insignia. (Paramount+)
Picard seems to be wearing some version of this uniform and delta badge as well, when he arrives home to find Q waiting for him.
JL is back – in black. (Paramount+)
“Time has been broken,” says a female narrator who sounds very similar to Romulan infiltrator Commodore Oh (Tamilyn Tomita), which appears to be the cause of all these unexpected changes to our cast and their lives — and in the case of Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), she wakes up in an unfamiliar bedroom to find herself without that signature Borg implant above her left eye… and what may be a wedding ring on her finger.
Seven finds her self in a new place, with a new look… and a new ring? (Paramount+)
We also get glimpses of Elnor (Evan Evagora) and Raffi (Michelle Hurd) with new hairstyles, on the run through a dark and dingy back alley…. with a dead body behind them.
Elnor and Raffi should probably get out of there pretty quickly. (Paramount+)
Picard and Raffi also appear to take place in some kind of conference presentation at Starfleet Command, where flags from many Alpha Quadrant races are on display — and where both former officers appear back in uniform.
Flags representing the Klingon Empire, the Tellarites, the Federation, Starfleet, Starfleet Academy, Vulcan, Bajor, and Ferenginar. (Paramount+)
Both Picard and Raffi appear to be in “dress uniform” variants off the 2399 uniform design we saw as season — with formal “flaps” on the jackets, along with colored piping down the seams — so perhaps the two have been re-instated back to service after their Season 1 adventure…. or perhaps this is yet another impact of “broken time” on our heroes.
What appear to be 2385-era Starfleet dress uniforms. (Paramount+)
Besides those highlights, there are also glimpses of the rest of the Star Trek: Picard cast, including Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill), Soji Asha (Isa Briones), and Picard’s Romulan housekeeper Laris (Orla Brady).
Soji appears in white on what seems to be Earth, wearing the two-ringed symbol of her synthetic creation, along with a blue pin with an unusual symbol on it. Soji dressed to the nines — but is she ‘our’ Soji or is this another alternate setting? (Paramount+)
A mysterious logo seen in Seven of Nine’s bedroom. (Paramount+)Jurati is in a dark place — perhaps a consequence of her actions last season? (Paramount+)Long-haired Laris at the Picard family estate. (Paramount+)
Finally, the crew seems to find a way to come together — despite their crazy situation — in a final moment from the trailer, as Picard promises that he’ll find a way to get them all home.
Raffi, Picard, Elnor, and Jurati manage to find each other. (Paramount+)
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While the trailer may be the biggest news of the day, it may not contain the biggest Star Trek: Picard mystery of the day, as Paramount+ has also just unveiled this new teaser poster for the show’s second season…. featuring an unexpectedly-modern vista of the Los Angeles skyline and surrounding freeways.
What could this 2021-esque depiction of southern California mean for Picard and the La Sirena crew? We’ll have to wait until 2022 to find out.
In addition, stick around to listen to Jamie’s wish for Star Trek: Picard Season 2 to feature more exploration of the Picard/Guinan and Picard/Q relationships, and Alex’s theory about what we might learn at a possible Star Trek panel at San Diego Comic Con @ Home in July!
WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify— and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.
Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!
That is… until today! Expanding upon the tantalizing character image released back in February, Paramount+ has just unveiled the names and backgrounds of Prodigy’s alien characters, along with the voice actors who will be bringing them to life when the show arrives “later this year.”
British actor Ella Purnell stars as Gwyn, a 17-year-old member of the Vau N’ Akat species, a new race to Star Trek, who was raised on her father’s bleak mining planet — and grew up dreaming of exploring the stars.
Purnell was most recently seen in Zack Snyder’s Army of the Dead which landed on Netflix earlier this year, and starred in the two-season run of Sweetbitter on Starz.
Brett Gray stars as 17-year-old Dal — a purple alien whose race is not yet known — who fancies himself a maverick and holds strong onto his unwavering hope even in the toughest of times.
Gray currently stars as one of the leads on the Netflix coming-of-age series On My Block, and recently made guest appearances on When They See Us and Chicago P.D.
Always-energetic comedic actor Jason Mantzoukas stars as Tellariteteenager Jankom Pog, a species which has been part of Star Trek lore since the Original Series, with members of the argumentative race later taking on a prominent role during the final season of Star Trek: Enterprise.
At age 16, Pog loves a good argument like many of the Tellarites we’ve seen before, and regardless of his own opinion, he’ll always play ‘devil’s advocate’ for the sake of hearing all sides. (Many fans speculated this character would be a Talaxian — like Voyager’s Neelix.)
Mantzoukas has been seen in many high-profile television comedies including Brooklyn 99,The Good Place, and The League, and has performed many voice acting roles for shows like Big Mouth, Invincible, and American Dad!.
Angus Imrie stars as a member of another classic Star Trek race: Zero the Medusan, an energy-based life form whose species was introduced in 1968’s “Is There in Truth No Beauty?”
Medusans are non-corporeal and genderless, and are known to cause madness to any humanoid who would lay eyes on their natural form — so Zero wears a containment suit to protect those around them.
The British actor has perhaps most prominently appeared as Prince Edward in Netflix’s The Crown, with other recent guest appearances in Fleabag and the Batman prequel series Pennyworth.
Dee Bradley Baker stars as the sparkly Murf, an endearing, indestructible blob with curiously good timing and an insatiable appetite for ship parts.
Perhaps best known as the voice of Captain Rex (and all of the Empire’s other clone troopers) in the multitude of Star Wars animated television shows, the prolific actor also voices German man-turned-fish Klaus on American Dad!, Animal on the current run of Muppet Babies, as well as hundreds of other characters over his long career.
Lastly, young actor Rylee Alazraqui stars as the hulking Brikar Rok-Tahk, an unusually bright eight-year-old girl. While a bit shy, Rok doesn’t hold back when it comes to her love of animals.
At just 10 years old, Alazraqui has only been in the business for a short time, and to date has most notably contributed voices to Cartoon Network’s Summer Camp Island. As for her character, Rok-Tahk may be the most interesting member of this alien crew, as her race actually began life among the pages of 1990s-era Star Trek print storytelling.
The Brikar (or Brikarian) species was originally created by author Peter David in his 1993 young-adult Star Trek: Starfleet Academy tale Worf’s First Adventure, and later incorporated the race into his the original novel series Star Trek: New Frontier.
Brikar officer Zak Kebron was represented in different art styles over the years.
Zak Kebron, the Brikar who originated in Worf’s First Adventure and later served as New Frontier security chief aboard the USS Excalibur, was an extremely strong rock-like creature who was raised in a high-gravity environment (like the other members of his species). Eventually, Kebron lost his rocky appearance as he matured, a natural change part of Brikar development.
While it’s hard to tell from this early description how much of that novel-based Brikar alien depiction will carry over to television, as the character was depicted in different designs as Kebron appeared on different book covers and in New Frontier comics, but the young Rok-Tahk certainly appears “rocky” enough to bring the species into the television world.
Of course, rounding out the cast is returning Star Trek: Voyager series lead Kate Mulgrew as Kathryn Janeway, who in this show will be voicing a hologram of the USS Voyager captain — an “emergency training hologram” who will be the sole Starfleet representation on the unfamiliar ship that the young aliens find while escaping prison in the Delta Quadrant.
* * * *
This breakdown of the cast and animated crew isn’t the only thing that Paramount+ is showing off today, as they’ve also released a few stills from Star Trek: Prodigy today — giving us a feel for the animation style and cinematography of the upcoming show.
Dal (Brett Gray) gazes out into space from aboard a starship. (Paramount+)Rok-Tahk (Rylee Alazraqui) at work — an eight-year-old wielding welding gear. (Paramount+)Gwyn (Ella Purnell) looks ahead. (Paramount+)Dal listens intently through an air vent — possibly while ‘in prison.’ (Paramount+)
JUNE 17 UPDATE: Four more images, showing some of the beautiful digital landscapes from Prodigy, were released today.
This animated art design — with lush coloring and a dazzling depth of field — clearly puts Star Trek: Prodigy light-years away from the animated styles of not only the classic 1970’s Animated Series, but this decade’s Star Trek: Lower Decks as well.
While there’s still no air date past “later this year” for Prodigy, this infusion of new information must mean we’re going to see some footage from the upcoming series sometime soon — and with San Diego Comic Con just over a month way, that’s when we’re thinking the next big news day will come for this animated show.
Star Trek: Prodigy will debut on Paramount+ in the United States sometime in late 2021 before later airing on Nickelodeon; the show will also be available on the CTV Sci-Fi Channel in Canada.
Additional international availability has not yet been announced.
In late May, the team at Star Trek Online launched their newest expansion to the long-running MMORPG — “House United” — and with the end of the in-game Klingon Civil War comes a new opportunity for TrekCore readers to win prizes in our new giveaway!
The new “House United” expansion launch for PC players on May 25 — concluding the year-long Klingon Civil War storyline which began last July.
After travelling to the sacred planet of Boreth and descending into the pits of Gre’thor, J’Ula, matriarch of House Mo’Kai, has resurrected the famed Klingon Warrior, L’Rell (voiced by Mary Chieffo, who originated the role on Star Trek: Discovery). L’Rell will be a guiding light for J’Ula on what it truly means to be Klingon, as players will have to prove themselves and build an army, before heading to Qo’noS for the final epic battle.
Captains will also encounter emblematic characters such as Aakar (portrayed by Robert O’Reilly from Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine), General Martok (played by J.G Hertzler from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine), and Adet’Pa (voiced by Rekha Sharma from Star Trek: Discovery).
These events take place across two brand new featured episodes. House United also introduces new playable content for Captains to enjoy, including:
— Two Brand New Episodes – In “Warriors of the Empire,” Captains will fight alongside J’Ula with L’Rell on their side as they gather support for their cause, before taking forces to Qo’noS to put an end to the raging Klingon Civil War in “A Day Long Remembered.”
— ‘Only Qo’noS Endures’ Event – Captains will be able earn an exclusive new reward, a ground set inspired by the villainous Aakar, by exploring new episodes, patrols and TFOs associated with the Klingon Civil War.
— New Task Force Operation – Players will get to experience “Remain Klingon” a 5-Captain space TFO, which concludes the Civil War storyline as the final battle takes place over Qo’noS.
— Three New Patrols – In House United, Captains will enjoy three new patrols based on the episode “Warriors of the Empire.”
As part of the celebration for this new chapter in the Star Trek Online Klingon story, we’ve got the opportunity for PC players to win one of a large number of in-game prize packages — and three of our readers will even get their own mini-bat’leth!
We have a very large number of Klingon Personnel Packages to give away to TrekCore readers, which includes the Klingon Miracle Worker Bridge Officer and T’Kuvma Uniform (from Star Trek: Discovery) for Klingon Captains, Klingon Species Unlock (allows Starfleet officers to to create Klingon Captains), along with 12 Inventory Slots and 12 Bank Slots.
For three of our entrants, we’ll hook you up with a special grand prize package: along with the Klingon Personnel Package, you’ll also receive a (T6) Klothos-class Miracle Worker Cruiser (which is outfitted with a cloaking device) and a Star Trek Online-exclusive no-touch bat’leth tool!
Created just for Star Trek Online, the small bat’leth no-touch tool lets you avoid germs, including a stylus tip to use with touch screens, credit card keypads, and other public-use surfaces.
Our Star Trek Online “House United” giveaway begins today — just email us here with your name for your chance to win!
This contest will run through June 15, and once concluded, we’ll contact our winners via email — and if you’re selected as a grand-prize winner, we’ll request mailing information for your bat’leth tool delivery at that time.
All winners will be emailed the in-game code and instructions how to add the bundle to your Star Trek Online account. Good luck to all!
Star Trek Online — House United is now live on PC, and launches on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One on August 3.
More than two years after licensee QMx revealed — and curiously forgot about — their Captain Pike Star Trek: Discovery Starfleet delta badges, Star Trek pin production company FanSets has picked up the dropped ball with their just-announced Pike-era USS Enterprise delta release!
Up for preorder now, with an anticipated first-shipment date in July, is the command-division Starfleet delta badge worn by Captain Pike, Number One, and the crew of the USS Enterprise during the Discovery-era 23rd century — a play on the classic Star Trek delta patch — featuring a gold Starfleet symbol backed by silver.
This design is one that’s been hotly demanded by fans who had their hopes up for the Captain Pike Enterprise badge since it debuted on-screen in 2019 — and the magnet-backed Enterprise delta debuts at a $19.99 price point, and is available for preorder now at the FanSets website. A pin-backed version is on its way as well, available for preorder at $17.99.
FanSets’ take on the “All Good Things” delta (pin-back version shown).
Along with the new Captain Pike design is a second release of the “All Good Things…” alternate-future Starfleet badge, released as a pin-back edition earlier this year — a magnetic-backed version is coming next month, available for preorder here for $19.95.
The company still has a number of Starfleet badges on the way for collectors in the months ahead, including their edition of the Discovery Section 31 delta, the new oval “tri-combadges” worn by the Star Trek: Discovery crew in the 32nd century, the “Future Imperfect” bar-backed designs from The Next Generation, one from the Kelvin Timeline, and the classic movie era design introduced in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
MAGNETICS! Picard,S3 Discovery, Lower Decks, All Good Things, Section 31, Discovery Classic, Kelvin Delta, Strange New Worlds and proud to announce with our good friend John Cooley @starshipgeek with Anovos..The Wrath of Khan Monster Maroon Insignia Badge!!#DeltasDoneRight #2021 pic.twitter.com/znCSrjZXBB
Following the path charted by Discovery, Picard, and Lower Decks, franchise fans in Canada won’t have to wonder where they can see the next two Star Trek series when they make their way up north — as both Star Trek: Strange New Worlds and Star Trek: Prodigy will be headed to a familiar home.
While all the currently-airing (and soon-to-arrive) Star Trek shows remain as Paramount+ original series in the United States, Canadian viewers can rest assured that the local mainstay CTV Sci-Fi Channel will continue to bring that country the next two shows coming down the pike — pardon the pun.
Announced today during Bell Media’s upfront presentation, both the Captain Pike-centric Strange New Worlds and the animated kids series Prodigy will each join the specialty network’s lineup “in the 2021-2022 season,” though like in the United States, no specific arrival date for either show was mentioned.
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS
Based on the years Captain Christopher Pike manned the helm of the U.S.S. Enterprise, series follows Captain Pike, Science Officer Spock and Number One in the years before Captain Kirk boarded the U.S.S. Enterprise, as they explore new worlds around the galaxy.
The series premiere is written by Akiva Goldsman with the story by Akiva Goldsman, Alex Kurtzman and Jenny Lumet. Goldsman, Kurtzman and Lumet serves as executive producers in addition to Henry Alonso Myers, Heather Kadin, Rod Roddenberry and Trevor Roth. Aaron Baiers, Akela Cooper and Davy Perez serve as co-executive producers.
Akiva Goldsman reamins an executive producer and a key part of the creative team on STAR TREK: PICARD as well. The series is produced by CBS Studios, Secret Hideout and Roddenberry Entertainment.The series is distributed by ViacomCBS Global Distribution Group.
STAR TREK: PRODIGY
The series follows a motley crew of young aliens who must figure out how to work together while navigating a greater galaxy, in search for a better future. These six young outcasts know nothing about the ship they have commandeered – a first in the history of the STAR TREK franchise – but over the course of their adventures together, they will each be introduced to Starfleet and the ideals it represents.
The series takes place in the year 2383, after the events of STAR TREK: VOYAGER, and in the Delta Quadrant.
Alex Kurtzman, Heather Kadin, Katie Krentz, Rod Roddenberry and Trevor Roth will serve as executive producers alongside co-showrunners Kevin and Dan Hageman. Ben Hibon will direct, co-executive produce and serve as the creative lead of the all-new animated series. Aaron Baiers will also serve as co-executive producer. Developed and produced by Nickelodeon and CBS Studios.
From CBS’ Eye Animation Productions, CBS Studios’ new animation arm; Nickelodeon Animation Studio, led by President of Animation, Ramsey Naito; Secret Hideout; and Roddenberry. The series is distributed by ViacomCBS Global Distribution Group.
While not specified by the Canadian broadcaster, it’s reasonable to assume that both new shows will debut their episodes within about a day of the US release on Paramount+ — as new episodes of Discovery, Picard, and Lower Decks have been scheduled — as well as being available to watch later on-demand through the Crave streaming service.
* * * *
Further distribution of Strange New Worlds or Prodigy, outside of North America, has not yet been announced by any international partner, but we imagine such news will be announced closer to the air dates of each series.
Outside the US and Canada, Discovery Season 4 will continue on Netflix, and the second seasons of both Picard and Lower Decks will remain Amazon Prime Video exclusives.
(While Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 2 is scheduled to premiere August 12 in the US and Canada, no Prime Video release date for international viewers has been announced, as of this writing.)
Keep checking back to TrekCore for the latest news on the every-expanding Star Trek franchise!
The first Star Trek: Discovery novel to tie into the events of Season 3, Una McCormack’s Wonderlandsfills in the gap between the year’s first and second episodes, chronicling Michael Burnham’s year apart from the Discovery crewin the 32nd century.
Alone in an unfamiliar future — and with no promise that her shipmates aboard Discovery will ever join her — Burnham must adjust to a galaxy where the United Federation of Planets is a shell of its former self, a galaxy where interstellar travel is extremely difficult, and where life for many is difficult.
While we got a hint about her solo adventures in the opening montage of “People of Earth,” the story of Wonderlands significantly expands on her life as a courier-for-hire in the post-Burn Alpha Quadrant.
Una McCormack excels at strong character work, and so she made a great fit for a book whose mission is to explore Michael Burnham’s experiences further.
Burnham is a richly realized complicated woman, and Wonderlands successfully lays the groundwork for the character’s journey in the middle of Season 3 — where she finds herself questioning a future in Starfleet — while reconciling the season-ending Captain Burnham with the Red-Angel-suit-wearing Burnham who flew out of the 23rd century in Season 2.
Courier Burnham, seeking out information about The Burn. (Paramount+)
The book does an excellent job of exploring Michael’s conflicted feelings about the success of her mission, and the sorry nature of the future she finds herself in — along with serving as a great vehicle for expanding on the character of Cleveland “Book” Booker, further developing the connection and attraction between two characters which latter blossoms to romance.
Book’s good intentions, balanced with the harsh realities of life in the 32nd century, get more room to breathe in Wonderlands than they do in Discovery’s third season, and the novels does well by the character.
McCormack also gives a significant role in the novel for Aditya Sahil, the lonely, loyal Federation liaison officer Burnham meets in the final scene of “That Hope is You, Part 1.” Sahil and Book serve as opposing forces on Burnham throughout the novel to great effect — as Book pushes Burnham to accept the reality of a galaxy without a Federation, Sahil pulls Burnham back towards making it her mission to restore all that has been lost.
In what has become a recurring theme for the Burnham character, who has frequently found herself trapped between two opposing ideologies throughout Discovery, she charts her own course; adapting to the new reality and using it to try and find ways to re-ignite what made the Federation great.
The Queen and her human, Book. (Paramount+)
Wonderlands and McCormack’s inaugural Picard novel The Last Best Hope share a similar difficult mission: provide backstory that aligns closely with what we saw on screen without venturing too far afield so as to be potentially contradicted by a future episode. As a result, you should go into this book expecting a deeply studied character piece, and not a big “Where Are They Now?” story, detailing the fates of our familiar Star Trek names and races.
McCormack, for example, cannot tell us what happened to the Klingons by this time period, because the show hasn’t covered the fate of the Empire yet, a big question which only the show will be able to address due to its impact on the Star Trek landscape.
But the sight of several Cardassian characters in Discovery Season 3 does allow McCormack to include a member of the alien race she’s explored the most in previous works; Ileana Pa’Dan is a courier, like Burnham and Book, who crosses paths with the pair at various points during the story.
It’s refreshing to have a Cardassian play a big role in a story again, and here’s hoping that Discovery promotes a Cardassian character into the foreground next season, because that race works quite well in the difficult 32nd century environment!
Federation dreamer Aditya Sahil gets a role to play in ‘Wonderlands.’ (Paramount+)
With the caveat I mentioned above about the limitations McCormack had in crafting the world of 3188, the adversaries she develops are well realized and an interesting concept for this new Star Trek time period. I won’t go into much more detail here to avoid spoilers, but the book asks a number of interesting questions about the balance between technological superiority and moral superiority — and the ways in which one can often obscure the other.
Overall, Star Trek: Discovery — Wonderlands is another great character piece from Una McCormack, and like her previous Discovery tale (the Tilly-centric A Way to the Stars), it will definitely enhance your appreciation of the show’s ongoing story.
With several months to go until the series returns for Season 4, Wonderlands serves as a great waypoint on the road back to Discovery.
In addition, stick around to listen to Captain Pikeachu’s wish for Captain Pike to take his shirt off in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, and Alex’s wish that attendees to Star Trek conventions this year will be safe and have fun — himself included!
WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify— and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.
Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!
After four previous releases have well-honed Looney Labs’ take on Star Trek card games, the final entry in their Star Trek Fluxx series made it home from the Delta Quadrant late last year — the fourth and concluding release, Star Trek: Voyager Fluxx.
The Fluxx game, which is touted as one “with ever-changing rules,” relies heavily on each player’s actions to guide where the gameplay will go — with the goal to find and collect “Keeper” cards as you go, aiming to complete goals established by previous rounds of play.
Along the way, these “Keeper” cards might be traded with or stolen by other players, while “Creeper” cards can either get in your way — or help you win the game, if you’re lucky. As you play, the game will be impacted by “New Rule” cards (which, as the name implies, changes how things proceed forward), and “Action” cards, which dictate a required task the player at hand must complete.
The joy of Star Trek: Voyager Fluxx is in the depth of Voyager knowledge that the Looney Labs team clearly utilized in the design of this version of the game, with cards referencing fan-favorite character traits, episodes from all across the show’s seven seasons, and even a bit of tongue-in-cheek humor about some of Voyager’s lesser-loved elements.
Here are some of our favorite cards from each section of the game, clearly illustrating this team’s love of Voyager.
B’Elanna Torres: The skilled engineer saves the day if you’re stuck with a Malfunction card.
Phaser: Stun away any Creeper in your way.
Timeship Aeon:The time-traveling starship from “Future’s End” will give you an extra turn.
Holographic Doctor: Players must announce the card with the EMH’s catchphrase.
Holodeck: Duplicate another player’s Keeper using holographic trickery to win the game.
Transporter: Beam up any other player’s Keeper to your own collection during a turn.
There’s Coffee In That Nebula: Get Captain Janeway a refill of her trusty beverage.
Nurses in Training: Pair up The Doctor with his sickbay sidekicks, either Kes or Tom Paris.
Even the Borg Fear Them: Recreate the Collective’s war with Species 8472.
Human Error: A joking dig at the late-series romance between Chakotay and Seven.
Tuvix: Recreate that infamous incident by pairing up Tuvok and Neelix with the Transporter.
Breaking the Threshold: Match up the parents of those long-lost lizard babies.
Ancestor’s Eve: Mention the name of one of your own ancestors (or older family members) and pick up an extra card.
Vent the Warp Core: Get a free pass to dump as many cards from your hand as you like, and replace them with new ones.
The Kazon: You can’t win with this Creeper card in your possession, so you can curse it to whoever has USS Voyager in their hand.
Krenim Timeship: Discard a Keeper card and change another player’s history by adding this to their impediments.
The Caretaker: Fire out a coherent tetryon beam and collect the USS Voyager, along with cards bearing the faces of all original Alpha Quadrant senior staff.
Belay That Order!: Cancel out another player’s commands and shut down an Action card.
All in all, it’s not a revolutionary update to the Star Trek Fluxx series, but certainly it’s a well-crafted homage to the adventures of Captain Janeway’s crew, and one which will make a great expansion to the existing three Star Trek Fluxx games — if you’re brave enough to combine them all into one massive deck.
Unfortunately, this is the last Trek Fluxx game expected from the Looney Labs team, who told us last spring that Enterprise wasn’t getting its own variant — though that series was well-represented in 2019’s Chrono-Trek game — and because the ongoing new shows aren’t finished airing yet, no entries for Discovery, Picard, etc., will be pursued at this time.
That said, the company’s five Star Trek card games have been welcome releases to the analog gameplay scene, after years of less-than-stellar video and mobile games, and we hope other board and card game designers will follosw suit in the future.
JUNE 3 UPDATE: We may have spoken too soon, as the Looney Labs team shared on TrekCore’s Facebook pagethat “pending CBS approval,” they’re pursuing “two final expansion packs that will have a heavy dose of Enterprise cards in them and will allow you to shuffle all the decks together.”
You can pick up your copy of Star Trek: Voyager Fluxx — and all of Looney Labs’ other Star Trek games — at your local game store now, or at the links below.