![]() ![]() The point is, it seems like the Star Trekfranchise has an opportunity to pull a Clone Wars. Watch the first three minutes of “Overlords,” when Ahsoka, Anakin, and Obi-Wan first land on Mortis, and tell me it doesn’t feel like a Star Trek episode. It took awhile, but by the time we got The Clone Wars, the ongoing nature of it occasionally had a Trek –ish feel. This has less to do with a desire to see a never ending space battle and more to do with the fact that, like Star Wars, Trek canon has several unexplored periods of time where a lot was happening, but very little of it was chronicled.Įver since Luke Skywalker asked “You fought in the Clone Wars?” to Obi-Wan Kenobi, fans have wanted to see what Luke was talking about. ![]() Star Trek needs its own version of The Clone Wars from the Star Warsuniverse. And yet, here I am, arguing for something exactly like that. Long, drawn-out war arcs in the fictional universe of Star Trek are rare precisely because they are (theoretically) antithetical to what Star Trek is about. The final frontier and the galaxy far, far away are different in one specific way: The latter is about war and the former is, ostensibly, about peace. This article contains minor spoilers for The Clone Wars season 7, Star Trek: Picard Season 1, and Star Trek: Discovery Season 2. ![]()
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