Thoughts on the Doctor in Starfleet Academy

A Star Trek-themed spoiler warning.

Spoiler Warning: There are spoilers ahead for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Season 1. Spoilers are also present for the following Star Trek productions: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Discovery, and Prodigy.

I’d like to focus on one individual storyline from Starfleet Academy’s first season today – specifically from the episode The Life of the Stars. This was only one part of the episode, so if you want to get my thoughts on other aspects of The Life of the Stars, I have a brief review in my Starfleet Academy Season 1 episodes piece – click or tap here to check it out. And if you want to see what I thought of Starfleet Academy’s first season as a whole, check out my full review by clicking or tapping here.

We’re going to get into some serious spoiler territory today, so if you ignored my little spoiler warning above, consider this your last chance to nope out before I talk about storylines impacting not only Starfleet Academy, but also Voyager, Prodigy, and other parts of the Star Trek franchise, too.

Promo photo for Starfleet Academy S1 showing the Doctor
Promo photo of the Doctor released ahead of Season 1’s premiere.

Today, we’re going to focus on the Doctor: Voyager’s Emergency Medical Hologram. The Doctor was a surprising inclusion in Starfleet Academy’s cast when the announcement was made a couple of years ago, but I genuinely thought it was a fun idea. I’d speculated for a long time that the Doctor – or perhaps a backup copy of him – could have survived to the 32nd Century, but we didn’t get to see him in Discovery. A teaching role sounded perfect for a being who’s now more than 800 years old; Robert Picardo, who plays the character, described this version of the Doctor as being akin to Yoda over in the Star Wars franchise! I thought that sounded like an apt comparison.

The Doctor appeared in almost all of Starfleet Academy’s episodes this season, but his role in The Life of the Stars was by far the biggest. This storyline explored the Doctor’s history, his family, his memories, and why he struggled to make a genuine connection with Sam – Starfleet Academy’s holographic cadet.

And… I really didn’t like what this storyline had to say, unfortunately.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing the shuttle set
Behind-the-scenes during production on The Life of the Stars.

Before we go any further, let me give my usual caveat: everything we’re discussing today is the *subjective, not objective* opinion of just one old Trekkie. If you disagree with me about the Doctor (or any other element of Starfleet Academy), if you think I’ve totally got the wrong end of the stick, or if our views don’t align… that’s okay. There’s enough room in the Star Trek fan community for differences of opinion and respectful disagreement, and I share my thoughts with you in that spirit. I’m not trying to say “I’m right and that’s that;” I’m well aware that other Trekkies may completely disagree – and that’s totally fine.

There are always going to be a range of opinions on works of art and media in general, and just because I personally didn’t like what this storyline had to say doesn’t mean other people won’t find it interesting or entertaining. The story was clearly written this way for a reason, so at least *someone* out there must’ve thought it was a good idea!

Photo from the Star Trek SFA finale screening showing the main cast and showrunners
Robert Picardo (second-left), with several co-stars and the executive producers of Starfleet Academy in March 2026.

Finally, this is my second time criticising the way in which Starfleet Academy handled the legacy of a character from The Next Generation era. The show only did two storylines which really focused in on legacy characters, so for me to come away feeling that *both of them* weren’t enjoyable and I didn’t like what they said… that’s pretty disappointing, to be honest. It’ll go down as a real black mark against Starfleet Academy, at least in my book.

Starfleet Academy, in my view, already had several challenges to overcome: its teen/young adult focus, its serialised storytelling, its unimpressive villain, and the simple fact that it’s the sixth new Star Trek series to come along in just nine years. Solid, well-written, enjoyable callbacks to Deep Space Nine and Voyager could’ve done a lot to boost the show’s prospects, at least for an old Trekkie like myself, and could’ve made it more entertaining and just more memorable. I didn’t want to be in this position of having to criticise two of the storylines that *should*, in a sense, have been just the kind of thing I’d have wanted or hoped to see in a series like this. But… here we are.

If you want to check out what I thought of Starfleet Academy’s connection to Captain Sisko and DS9, by the way, you can find that article by clicking or tapping here.

Still frame from Star Trek SFA 1x05 showing Sam and the Doctor
Series Acclimation Mil was also an episode I did not enjoy…

Alright, now that that’s out of the way, let’s set the scene. Cadet Sam – short for Series Acclimation Mil – is only a few days old, but she’s been programmed by her holographic race to have the maturity and appearance of an Academy-aged individual. The Life of the Stars follows on from Sam’s role in the episode Series Acclimation Mil, in which we learned why her people wanted to create her and send her to the Academy in the first place.

Sam had been injured (or “damaged,” I guess) a couple of episodes earlier in Come, Let’s Away, and her injuries progressed to such an extent that the Doctor couldn’t find a treatment. The Doctor and Captain Ake agreed to take Sam back to her homeworld, Kasq, where there was hope that Sam could be repaired. There were stakes not only for Sam herself, but also for Kasq’s potential to come out of isolation and to spend more time with organic life-forms. Sam’s mission, at the end of the day, was to better understand organic life and convey that understanding to her makers.

Still frame from Star Trek SFA 1x08 showing Sam
Sam’s injury.

And then we come to the Doctor.

The Doctor had been quite standoffish with Sam when they first met, back in the series premiere. When Sam tried to bring up the Doctor’s past life – the crews of the USS Voyager and Protostar – he quite quickly shut her down. I speculated that the Doctor could be struggling with having lived such a long life, and having seen potentially many generations of organic friends live and die. I said that, while I was glad the Doctor didn’t overwhelm Starfleet Academy in the show’s premiere, I was curious to see if that angle would be explored further.

The Life of the Stars was that explanation – after a fashion. It turns out that the Doctor was, as I theorised, struggling with life and loss… but not in the way I’d have thought or expected. Rather than mourning his friends from the USS Voyager or the cadets of the Protostar, the Doctor had, instead, spent close to eight centuries grieving for his holographic family from the Voyager Season 3 episode Real Life.

Still frame from Star Trek Voyager Real Life showing the Doctor and Belle
The Doctor with Belle, his holographic daughter, in Real Life.

According to The Life of the Stars, it wasn’t Janeway or Seven of Nine that the Doctor missed and lamented outliving. It wasn’t lil’ Harry Kim, the fresh-faced ensign who was one of the first people the Doctor ever met. Nor was it Dal, Gwyndala, or Rok-Tahk, the young kids he came to know – and perhaps the first cadets he ever really “mentored.” The Doctor, according to this story, loved none of them as much as his holographic family from Real Life, and it was the simulated “death” of his holographic daughter in particular that caused him to become withdrawn and unwilling to risk loving anyone ever again.

What the actual fuck?

Let’s talk about holograms, as defined by Star Trek – and specifically, what their capabilities were in the 24th Century. The Next Generation was the first series to introduce holograms, and according to that show, as well as to Deep Space Nine and Voyager, practically all holograms at that time *were not sentient*. They’re characters in a story, computer programmes, pieces of code. Their lack of sentience is such an important point that holograms which become genuinely self-aware were almost always treated as unique, special, or even dangerous, in some cases.

Still frame from Star Trek Prodigy 1x06 showing the Doctor and the cadets
The Doctor with the cadets in Prodigy Season 2.

The first sentient hologram we met in Star Trek was Professor Moriarty, in Elementary, Dear Data. He was inadvertently created by the Enterprise-D’s computer following a misunderstanding, and seemed – at that time, anyway – to be the only sentient holoprogramme in existence. The next self-aware hologram is arguably the EMH programme – i.e. the Doctor’s original programme. And then we come to the likes of Vic Fontaine. But in between we saw countless examples of holograms that were basically – to use some modern lingo – akin to video game NPCs.

This is how we get away with stories like Hollow Pursuits, which saw Barclay recreating members of the Enterprise-D crew on the holodeck as part of his escapist power fantasy. Or the countless references to holosuites at Quark’s being used for… adult activities. Or holograms created entirely for the purposes of being killed in training simulations. The list goes on.

Are these holograms “alive,” too?

What The Life of the Stars is effectively saying, in my opinion, is that the Doctor spent hundreds of years of his life refusing to get too close to anyone ever again because… he had a particularly emotional reaction to a character from a video game. It would be like if you or I refused to get married or have kids because “this one time, my family in The Sims all died, and it made me really sad… I don’t think I could put myself through that again.” Do you get my point? These holograms are, according to everything we know about Star Trek, holodecks, and the 24th Century, not sentient, not self-aware, and not… alive. At least, not by any conventional definition.

I don’t want to downplay the power of entertainment to evoke strong emotions. Heck, I run a website all about films, games, TV shows, and the Star Trek franchise. I can’t even count the number of incredible titles – interactive and non-interactive – that have given me “the feels.” Just the other day, I talked about the intense bittersweet feelings of nostalgia that I got from a single twenty-minute episode of an anime. So I’m not calling out Starfleet Academy because the writers wanted to show the Doctor having a reaction to a holoprogramme that he participated in. If that was the intention of the story, and if it was handled differently, I might’ve been willing to praise an interesting take on the power of interactive media. But that wasn’t the intention, and it’s not the way it comes across.

Still frame of Robert Picardo (Star Trek) from YouTube
Robert Picardo, who plays the Doctor.

I’m afraid I have to come to the conclusion that one of the episode’s writers (two writers are credited, but Starfleet Academy also had a writers’ room, I believe) just didn’t understand how holograms worked in past iterations of Star Trek. They looked at their character, Sam, and they looked at the Doctor – two sentient, self-aware, alive holograms – and concluded that *all* holograms must be like that. Even though, during TNG, DS9, and Voyager, sentience was the exception, not the norm. And the result is a massively confused storyline that seriously harms the Doctor’s characterisation.

The sad thing is that this exact same storyline, had it adopted one of two possible changes, could have been one of the best of the entire season. In a season which, in my view, was drowned out by a silly, hammy villain and a little too much teen/young adult drama, a story about an older man coming to terms with loss, grief, and what it means to outlive the people you love… that could’ve been incredibly powerful. I’ve lost people close to me – friends as well as close family – and getting a storyline that touched on that, on what it means to be the one left behind… I really think there’s a lot of potential there, and the Doctor’s unique status and age presented a golden opportunity.

But Starfleet Academy’s writers pissed it away on a story they clearly thought was clever… but that completely misunderstands a very basic piece of the franchise’s history.

Still frame from Star Trek SFA 1x08 showing Kasq
The Doctor, along with Sam and Captain Ake, arrives at Kasq.

I am not, despite how parts of this piece may be coming across, a stickler for “the tiniest minutiae of canon.” If holograms were relatively new to Star Trek, or if Real Life had been one of the only episodes in The Next Generation era to feature holograms, I’d have been willing to accept this as a bit of a retcon; a change, but one that could lead somewhere narratively interesting. But I believe that there are a few fundamental building blocks to writing a coherent story in a long-running franchise, and one of those is basic internal consistency. It’s been established on dozens, or perhaps even hundreds, of occasions across TNG, DS9, Voyager and beyond that most holograms – like those in Real Life – are not alive and are not sentient. So new writers have to be bound by that; making an arbitrary change to it this late in the game is not something I can accept.

The consequences of such a change ricochet across the entire 24th Century, if that’s the case. It makes B’Elanna into a murderer, first and foremost, since she reprogrammed the Doctor’s idealistic family life in such a way that his daughter died. It makes a lot of other characters into killers, into sex pests, and more… and while I really like the idea of using the holodeck as a way to critique things like fantasising excessively, relying too much on the computer, or – in the modern day – as an analogy for A.I. chat bots, perhaps… that isn’t how this story was intended, and it doesn’t come across that way, either.

Still frame from Star Trek SFA 1x08 showing the Doctor, Sam, and memories
The Doctor remembers his holographic daughter.

There were, as I mentioned, two ways to salvage this story, so let’s go over them in turn.

Firstly, rather than going back to Real Life and Voyager, The Life of the Stars could’ve simply introduced new holographic characters to fill that role. Let’s say that, sometime in the 25th Century, the Doctor settled down with his holographic husband or wife. But, because of some technobabble, his partner or one of his holographic offspring ended up being damaged beyond repair and couldn’t be reset or saved. This could even be tied to the Burn – the massive, galaxy-altering event that underpins Starfleet Academy’s 32nd Century setting.

That gets us to the exact same narrative place, but in a way that makes it clear that the Doctor is grieving someone who was actually alive to begin with. It wouldn’t have the same connection to Voyager, but I mean… is Real Life an especially memorable episode for a lot of folks? I don’t think that one random deep cut to a single episode would’ve been as effective as the writers hoped, even without this glaring narrative fault.

Still frame from Star Trek SFA 1x08 showing the Doctor getting emotional
The Doctor gets emotional.

Secondly, there’s the more obvious solution: the Doctor finds it difficult to accept friendships of any kind because of the toll outliving so many friends has taken on him.

This kind of story could see the Doctor lamenting the deaths of people like Chakotay, Harry Kim, or Seven of Nine. It might’ve even been possible to bring back one of those characters for a brief scene – perhaps their funeral or even their deathbed. The Doctor gained sentience and self-awareness around these people; they were the first friends he ever knew, and they had his back on multiple occasions when he was in jeopardy, when he was distressed, or just when he needed to talk. Seeing him grieve for Captain Janeway or Tuvok, remarking that it’s a terrible tragedy to outlive all of one’s friends… that could’ve been incredibly powerful.

And then, to hammer it home, the Doctor would explain that this didn’t just happen once… but over and over again. Generations of organic friends came and went, and he remembers – and mourns – all of them. But after the Burn, perhaps the Doctor felt he’d lost too much, and for his own mental health and wellbeing he needed to start keeping things professional. He keeps Sam (and others) at arm’s length not because he misses his video game family from one random episode… but because he’s grieving the loss of countless friends across eight centuries.

Promo photo for Star Trek Voyager showing the main cast
The Doctor’s sense of loss and grief could’ve connected back to Voyager in another way.

Maybe the writers thought that was “too obvious,” and wanted to be a bit subversive. Unless we get them on the record, I guess we’ll never know for sure. But I think that kind of story would’ve got the Doctor to the same place with the same mindset, ready to have that experience on Kasq with Sam, but in a much more powerful, emotional, and enjoyable way – and a way that makes narrative sense based on our understanding of holograms in past iterations of Star Trek.

As I’ve said before on quite a few occasions with modern Star Trek: it isn’t that the core idea was bad, but the way it was executed just… fucked it up. A story about the Doctor coming to terms with grief and having to make the incredibly brave decision to put his heart on the line one more time to save the life of a child? That’s powerful stuff. But because of the way it was handled, and the decision to make the root cause of his grief these one-dimensional characters from the 24th Century equivalent of a video game? It ruined it, and it turned what should’ve been one of the best storylines of the entire season into one of the worst.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Starfleet Academy S01 showing Larry Teng and Robert Picardo
Robert Picardo (right) with director Larry Teng on the set of Series Acclimation Mil earlier in the season.

I was excited when Robert Picardo announced that the Doctor was coming back. And I wondered what might lie in store – this is a character I first fell in love with some thirty years ago, so to see him back in a totally different century for a new adventure… I was on board! I just wish that the end result hadn’t misunderstood something so basic about Star Trek, and that the Doctor’s one real moment in the spotlight could’ve been stronger and more enjoyable. When I can see not one but *two* clear and obvious narrative pathways that could’ve made it happen… it’s an unforgivable mistake, in my view.

Starfleet Academy, as I said in my review, wasn’t really “my thing.” But if there was one storyline that could’ve been more my speed, or that might’ve had something to say that resonated with me, it was this one. And I think that’s why I feel this disappointment all the more – it’s not just what it says about the Doctor, and how he apparently spent centuries sulking over the equivalent of his save file in The Sims. It isn’t even what it says about B’Elanna or other characters who used or reprogrammed holograms for selfish reasons across the TNG era. It’s because it feels like, after Starfleet Academy had already messed up its Sisko story, this was really one of the only storylines I might’ve found relatable or enjoyable. But because the writers – again, in my opinion – didn’t understand or didn’t know enough about holograms… it comes across as completely missing the point, and missing the point so severely that it harms my opinion of the Doctor himself.

Sam with the Doctor during her second life.

So there we go. That’s my take on the Doctor’s role in The Life of the Stars and what this new information says about his character.

I would say, to the story’s credit, that there were some creative ideas. Kasq existing in a different “plane of existence” felt like a bit of a cop-out; a way to ensure the Doctor and Sam wouldn’t need to take too long to re-grow and get back to normal. But the visuals of Kasq were creative, I liked the ultimate explanation for Sam’s breakdown being mental, rather than physical, and the episode’s attempted message about looking after one’s mental health is arguably executed far better than in comparable stories in Discovery or Picard. So it isn’t that the episode as a whole as no merit; this side of the story, though, completely failed for me.

I hope this has been interesting, and I hope I didn’t come across as too harsh or aggressive. Star Trek is something I’m passionate about and have been for a long time, and as someone who watched and enjoyed Voyager during its original run, bringing the Doctor back felt like a great idea in this latest adventure. I just wish it had been handled better, and that a different reason for the Doctor’s grief and reluctance to help could’ve been written. We came close – *this close* – to one of the best parts of the entire season.

Still frame from Star Trek SFA 1x08 showing the Doctor and the cadets
The Doctor and the cadets at the end of the episode.

Thanks for reading. Despite my feelings about Starfleet Academy as a whole, and this storyline, I can tell you that I genuinely gave the series a fair shake. I always expected it wouldn’t be my favourite part of the franchise – the whole teen/young adult focus, of course, but also the serialised story and the villain with an over-the-top magical macguffin all saw to that. But despite that, I really tried to let Starfleet Academy speak for itself, and to go into the show with an open mind.

This essay concludes my coverage of Starfleet Academy for the foreseeable future. Obviously, if we get major news about Season 2, a third season renewal, or any kind of teasers, clips, or trailers, I’ll do my best to cover that here on the website. But for now… that’s all. I’ve finally said all I wanted to say about the show’s first season.

If you missed them, please check out my reviews of the two-part premiere, the first season as a whole, and episodes 3-10. You can find them by clicking or tapping those links. And as the 60th anniversary year rolls along, I’ll have more to say about Star Trek, so be sure to check back from time to time. Thanks again for reading, and Live Long and Prosper, friends!


Star Trek: Starfleet Academy is available to stream now on Paramount+ in countries and territories where the service is available. The Star Trek franchise – including Starfleet Academy and everything else discussed above – remains the copyright of Paramount/Skydance. This review contains the thoughts and opinions of one person only and is not intended to cause any offence.

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy – Season 1 Review: The Episodes

A Star Trek-themed spoiler warning

Spoiler Warning: There are spoilers ahead for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Season 1. Spoilers are also present for the following Star Trek productions: The Original Series, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, and Discovery.

Welcome to an addendum to my review of Star Trek: Starfleet Academy’s first season. Because the review was longer than I originally intended it to be, I didn’t get a chance to delve into every storyline in as much detail as I wanted. So in this “Part Two,” we’ll be taking a look at episodes three through ten of Starfleet Academy Season 1. If you want to get my thoughts on the first two episodes of the season, I already have that review published. You can find it by clicking or tapping here. And please don’t miss my full Season 1 review. I go into detail about characters, season-long story arcs, VFX, and a whole lot more. You can find it all by clicking or tapping here.

If you really just want the brief, too-short version, here it comes: Starfleet Academy was more episodic and less serialised than I feared it would be, with individual episodes focusing on different characters. It explored more of the post-Burn 32nd Century in ten episodes than Discovery did in thirty-six. And there were individual moments in every episode that I enjoyed, that won a chuckle, or that “felt like Star Trek.”

Still frame from Kids These Days showing Caleb at the airlock
Caleb Mir.

However, the series very clearly exists in the “teen/young adult drama” space, drawing on university and high-school drama series for inspiration at least as much as on Star Trek. The tone of the show overall, and the way most of the main cadet characters were handled, just wasn’t “my thing.” And I was pretty sure it wouldn’t be before I switched it on! I tried to go into Starfleet Academy with an open mind, and I can say that I gave the series a chance to win me over. But it would be fair to say that, as someone the wrong side of forty, I’m not the target demographic here. For all of its enjoyable moments, Starfleet Academy just… isn’t for me. And I’m okay with that.

The show also recycled several of modern Star Trek’s least-interesting tropes: an over-the-top villain who’s connected to two of the main characters, a magical macguffin of ridiculous destructive power, and a nefarious scheme that threatens billions of lives across the Federation. A protagonist who was a little too perfect was an odd choice for a show set at a school – where characters need room to learn and grow – and while some of these things are not necessarily Starfleet Academy’s fault on their own, the show has come along after Star Trek has been in production for nine-plus years, and after we’ve had more than 200 new episodes across this streaming era. That context, unfortunately, weighs against Starfleet Academy, making some of its story points – which wouldn’t have been *phenomenal* on their own – even less appealing.

I said in my longer review that Starfleet Academy just doesn’t strike me as being an especially unique or memorable addition to the franchise. And I fear its second season – which is already in post-production – will be its last.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Kurtzman directing
Showrunner and director Alex Kurtzman on the set of the season premiere.

I hope that’s enough context for today as we jump into the individual episodes! If it’s not, be sure to check out my longer Season 1 review.

The episodes below are listed in the order they were first broadcast, beginning with the third episode of the season. If an important character moment or plot point seems missing, that may be because I’ve already covered it in the longer Season 1 review. I’ve tried to hit all of the main points from each of these eight episodes in a more condensed format, because I didn’t have enough energy in the tank to write individual episode reviews week-to-week! I hope this format is an adequate substitute for those longer reviews.

So without any further ado… let’s jump into the episodes.

Vitus Reflux:

Still frame from Vitus Reflux showing Calica
Let’s play Calica.

This was an absolutely catastrophic cringe-fest from almost the first moment. When Starfleet Academy was first announced, and fans began to speculate on whether it would be a teen/young adult-oriented show, episodes like Vitus Reflux were what I feared the most! Caleb’s romantic pursuit of Tarima was so bad that I had to physically stop myself from fast-forwarding through their scenes, Jay-Den’s cringeworthy moment with the War College cadets was also toe-curlingly awful to sit through… and this American style of cringe humour just isn’t my thing and never has been.

This was the first episode to attempt to humanise Darem after a pretty rough “rich kid who’s also a bully” start. However, I felt his conflict with Genesis was incredibly poorly-written, coming across feeling scripted and fake. This led to a resolution that felt thoroughly un-earned for both of them, with Daren’s “arrogant dickhead who secretly cared all along” storyline just… falling flat for me. The phaser game was fine, and I appreciated the diversion from massively high-stakes storylines involving pirate warlords and interstellar diplomacy to something a bit better-suited to a class of cadets. However, even this didn’t escape the clutches of American cringe humour, with the two teams each getting a ludicruous mascot.

The main cadet characters.

A story about two groups of kids getting into a prank war is… I mean, it’s something that’s never going to appeal to me. I will say that Vitus Reflux handled that premise about as well as it could have under the circumstances, though. And the War College cadets were set up as suitably antagonistic to “our” Academy heroes such that the conflict worked in context. Captain Ake joining in – in her own, very subtle way – was also a bit of fun, and I think that kind of thing softens and humanises her as both a leader and an educator.

I think I’m right in saying that this was the first episode in which the War College’s Chancellor Kelrec played a significant role. Kelrec is a character I wish we’d spent a bit more time with; he (and the War College in general) seemed to disappear from the series after the halfway point. Overall, this episode was probably the closest that Starfleet Academy came to feeling like a show set at a real school or university. For better or for worse.

Vox in Excelso:

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing a group of Klingons
Jay-Den and his family.

If you’re a regular around here, you may remember me saying on multiple occasions that I wished Discovery had shown us what happened to the rest of the galaxy – and the Klingon Empire in particular – in the aftermath of the Burn. Well… we can finally check that one off the bucket list, eh? I’m not sure I buy the whole “on the verge of total extinction” storyline; the Klingon people seem too resilient, and too vastly spread across space, for that to happen, and I chalk that up to Discovery-inspired “turn all the drama up to eleven all the time” kind of storytelling.

The main thing I have in my notes for this episode, aside from the fact that it was nice to get Jay-Den’s backstory to inform his characterisation, is that this fell into one of the most clichéd traps that many stories intended for kids and young people can stumble into. In short, this was a “the kids figure out something incredibly basic that their teachers and the adults around them can’t” kind of story. It fell to Jay-Den to recognise what even the ancient and wise Captain Ake could not: that the Klingons would not accept a handout, and needed to feel like they’d “won” and annexed their new homeworld on their own.

Still frame from Vox in Excelso showing Ake and the Klingon leader
Sharing bloodwine.

This was the first episode where I felt Darem was somewhat likeable, and his moment with Jay-Den as they prepped for the debate was understated and sweet, setting the stage for more to come between them. Jay-Den was strangely relatable, too, as someone who doesn’t enjoy public speaking or having all eyes on him; I felt that, and I’m sure a lot of the show’s younger viewers will have, too. Jay-Den, as a softer and less violent Klingon with other interests besides a “glorious death in battle,” makes for a fun and different kind of Klingon character – completely distinct from the likes of Worf, B’Elanna, and others.

I felt the outdoor filming location used for the Klingon encampment wasn’t very interesting, and I would’ve liked to have seen an environment that looked a bit more “alien” or otherworldly, not just a generic North American forest. It wasn’t the worst thing in the world, sure, but I think Starfleet Academy can do better than that. And if there are no good locations near Toronto… use the AR wall and make something up! We got a fun look at some Starfleet and Klingon vessels in the climactic fight, and Captain Ake’s scenes with both Lura Thok and the Klingon leader were cute. It wouldn’t be Star Trek unless *someone* drinks bloodwine with the Klingons, eh?

Series Acclimation Mil:

Still frame from Series Acclimation Mil showing Sam at the Bajor Club
Sam and her new Bajoran friend.

I have a longer piece about this episode’s DS9 and Sisko storyline. Click or tap here to check it out.

I loved Cirroc Lofton’s role in Series Acclimation Mil. Despite truly hating the storyline he was part of, seeing Jake again after all this time, and seeing his scenes with Sam, was a genuinely emotional experience, and especially toward the end, I felt myself getting teary-eyed. Lofton put in a great performance, and made a welcome return to the franchise in an attempt to celebrate the life and legacy of Star Trek’s first African American captain.

This episode also solved one of the biggest mysteries behind Sam: why her holographic race wanted to create a child and send her to the Academy. Kasq and the “makers” were interesting, and their distrust of organic races seemed to make sense in context. Sam’s wide-eyed enthusiasm was genuinely one of the best parts of Starfleet Academy, and this episode went into detail about how she came to be and what her intended purpose was for her people.

Still frame from Series Acclimation Mil showing Kelrec's performance
Kelrec’s musical performance.

There were some fun moments, too, with Caleb reprogramming Sam, the cadets getting drunk and getting into a bar fight with their rivals from the War College, and the off-campus bar just being an interesting and well-designed space in general. The Doctor’s look of disappointment when Sam was recovering from her drunken state was pretty funny, too.

The episode’s B-plot seemed to go nowhere. Actually, scratch that: it *literally* went nowhere. We began with Chancellor Kelrec stressing about a diplomatic visit from an alien race, and going to all the trouble to practice a very precise diplomatic dinner he planned to host – with Ake, Reno, and the Doctor as stand-ins for the aliens. But then… we never saw the upshot of that, never met the aliens, and never even learned if Kelrec’s diplomatic overtures were successful or not. It just felt like a weird waste of time.

Come, Let’s Away:

Still frame from Come, Let's Away showing Kelrec, Ake, and Vance
Kelrec, Ake, and Vance.

My favourite episode of the season, on balance.

This *kind* of story – where the villain gets a win and outsmarts the kids – should have come sooner, though, as it would’ve gone some way to helping make up for Braka’s other deficiencies. Speaking of Braka, this was the only time in the season where I felt he was even *slightly* respectable as a villain, with the over-the-top elements of Paul Giamatti’s performance being toned down just enough to make him feel less like a one-dimensional cardboard cut-out and more like a real person. I think that speaks to having someone different in the director’s chair: Larry Teng helmed this outing, whereas Star Trek regulars Alex Kurtzman and Olatunde Osunsanmi were in charge for Braka’s other big appearances.

That being said, the set for the USS Miyazaki was… well, it was just atrocious, to be blunt. Star Trek often redresses sets from one series to another, but not since Discovery’s transporter room pretended to be a Ba’ul prison cell in Season 2 have I seen such an *awful* and pathetic set redress. Apparently hanging a bunch of bin liners (trash bags) over parts of Strange New Worlds’ Enterprise set was meant to make the ship look “futuristic” and “experimental.”

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek Starfleet Academy S1
A behind-the-scenes look at the trash bag-covered set.

Despite that, this was an intense episode – and an episode where the level of intensity felt about right. Braka’s scheme unfolded carefully, the Furies – while pretty flat – were at least a frightening villain to face off against, and the cadets genuinely felt like they were in danger much of the time. Even though I predicted Tarima’s “superpower” from almost her first second on screen, the way she used it, and the way it connected back to her original appearance along with her father, made sense in context, and worked well enough as a “get out of jail free card” to aid the cadets’ escape.

The Furies, despite their somewhat boring and OTT presentation, feel like the kind of post-Burn faction we didn’t see enough of. People who resorted to cannibalism – but later realised they liked it and wanted to keep doing it… I mean, that’s kind of intimidating. And their costumes and weapons certainly added to that feeling. I wish we’d got a story like this to kick off Braka’s story and set him up as a genuinely imposing villain.

Ko’Zeine:

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Darem's makeup
George Hawkins (Darem) getting his makeup adjusted on the set of Ko’Zeine.

Parts of this episode felt like an homage to the classic TOS story Amok Time, with Jay-Den following Darem to his arranged marriage on a desert moon. There was no climactic fight to end things, though! The wedding story was… not my favourite, unfortunately. There were interesting ideas in the mix, but I felt Darem’s new wife went from “yay, I can’t wait to marry you” to “divorce me and abdicate” in a heartbeat, and solely because of one short speech she heard from Jay-Den.

It was a bit of forced drama in a series that, let’s be honest, doesn’t need that kind of thing. Darem’s position at the Academy looked to be in jeopardy because he’s secretly the prince of his homeworld, and now has to be its co-ruler. The setup for that entire thing felt like one big cliché, and while I think Darem ended the episode in a way better place than he had been at the start, really capping off his “redemption arc” from the premiere… it wasn’t a solid outing in its own right.

Caleb and Genesis got the episode’s B-plot.

Back on campus, Caleb and Genesis got to spend a bit of time together one-on-one, which had merit. It was certainly the stronger of the two stories, as well as Genesis’ only real spotlight storyline across the season. I think Genesis felt quite relatable, in some ways, in this storyline, as she sought to overcome her anxieties and step out of her illustrious father’s shadow. Seeing the Academy sets deserted was a bit of fun, too.

Genesis and Caleb got their comeuppance from Reno, and later from Captain Ake. Ake’s scenes with Genesis in particular, as she figured out what was going on and why the promising young cadet was on the verge of sabotaging her own career showed her off in her best light as a teacher and a leader, and I think that might be the single best part of Ko’Zeine, on the whole.

The Life of the Stars:

Hey, look who’s back!

I put in my notes that parts of this episode “felt like an English lesson,” and I think someone more familiar with the (out-of-copyright) play that Tilly and the cadets worked on would’ve gotten a lot more out of it than I did! But, again, this is a show set at a school with an intended audience that skews younger, so perhaps teens and young adults would find the theatre class plot more relatable than I did. In any case, I genuinely felt that my unfamiliarity with Our Town, the play at the centre of the story, hampered my enjoyment of the episode.

Tilly was originally announced as being a main cast member in Starfleet Academy, and back in Discovery’s fourth season, she even got a spotlight episode which felt like a backdoor pilot. For whatever reason, her role was reduced (and none of the cadets from All Is Possible carried over to the main show), but it was still fun to welcome Tilly back to the show here. Her arc, as I think I noted in All Is Possible, basically took her full-circle from the cadet we met at the beginning of Discovery to becoming a teacher. I would love to spend more time with Tilly in Season 2.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing the Doctor's makeup
Robert Picardo getting a touch-up.

This episode, though, will be remembered for what it says about the Doctor – who escorted Sam back to her homeworld in the hopes of curing her. I felt Sam getting a second main storyline so soon after Series Acclimation Mil was a bit much, and the fact that *both* of her big stories involved connections with a legacy character was a tad repetitive. But for the Doctor… I really didn’t like what The Life of the Stars had to say, I’m afraid.

The Doctor didn’t miss Janeway. He didn’t regret outliving B’Elanna or Harry Kim. He didn’t care about the cadets from Prodigy. No. The Doctor spent almost a millennium pining for the *non-sentient* holograms from his family holoprogramme that we saw in the Voyager Season 3 episode Real Life. That would be akin to you or I reaching old age and not grieving for our friends and families… but for characters from a particularly emotional video game we once played.

I think this’ll have to be the topic of a longer standalone article in the future, so stay tuned.

300th Night:

Still frame from 300th Night showing Genesis and Caleb in a shuttle
Stealing a shuttle…

I liked the party atmosphere we got at the beginning of the episode, and how it clashed in such a huge way with what was to come. The Ukeck marketplace was a great post-Burn setting, and one of the best individual off-campus sets that I think we saw across all ten episodes. It felt, in a way, like something out of Star Wars; aliens milling around, scavengers trying to trade for petty cash, and just like a generally run-down, dangerous place that was perfect for this kind of story. A well-designed space.

Some of the ideas here were great, and seeing Caleb achieve his goal of reuniting with his mother was sweet, and it hit some of the right emotional notes. But there was some pretty imperfect execution, too, which dragged things down a notch or two. Caleb was *always* going to choose his mother over his friends and leave the Academy; that was set in stone from episode one. But the way he went about it, being so harsh and so much of a dick to his friends, the people who’d risked a lot to help him… that didn’t feel great. And it didn’t serve a greater narrative purpose, either, making it feel unnecessary and therefore even worse.

Reno, Captain Ake, and the Doctor on the Athena’s bridge.

Braka’s “omega mines” were another of modern Star Trek’s typical over-the-top macguffins with stupidly powerful capabilities – and a convenient weakness. But I kind of liked the callback to Voyager, as well as how the Federation might’ve been researching the dangerous omega molecule as a potential source of power generation in the post-Burn era. Weaponising something like that felt right for Nus Braka, and a shady Starfleet programme that might’ve been doing something dangerous also felt right for this incarnation of the Federation.

Caleb choosing not to tell his mother who his friends were or how they’d come to be there made sense, but I think it also said a lot about the extent to which Caleb trusted her and her judgement; he was unwilling to admit he’d used Starfleet to find her, fearing the reaction she might have. The episode did a lot for Caleb, mostly good but a few negatives found their way into the mix, too. As the first half of the season finale, we got a solid if derivative setup, and the story manoeuvred the cadets and the Athena into position as the only ones capable of stopping Braka.

Rubincon:

Still frame from Rubincon showing Braka
Wait a minute, you’re not the captain!

There seemed to be a bit of confusion about the name of this episode; some sources listed it as “Rubicon,” including the venerable IMDB!

My overwhelming feeling about the season finale, unfortunately, is just that it didn’t seem very realistic. I could buy Nus Braka wanting to put the Federation – and Captain Ake – “on trial,” as an attempt at poetic retribution for his own imprisonment. But it felt like an episode where the writers had come up with several very pretty and well-delivered monologues… but no way to connect them together in a framework that made any kind of narrative sense.

The idea that Braka would willingly broadcast unfiltered and uncensored speeches by Ake, Caleb, and his mother to the entire galaxy, right at the moment where he *should* have been on the verge of a huge victory just didn’t track for me, not one bit. And it added to the feeling that Braka was a one-dimensional caricature of a villain; a “32nd Century Heinz Doofenshmirtz,” obsessed with monologuing and being seen rather than actually being in any way effective as a leader.

Still frame from Rubincon showing Caleb
Caleb.

Rubincon was also hampered by Starfleet Academy’s very real failure to convey the size and scale of the Venari Ral. Were they a collection of pirate ships? A warlord’s private militia? Mercenaries hired by Braka? A proto-state on the verge of forming a government? Or a fully-functional interstellar power? Without that context and that background, it was hard to follow Braka and what his plan even *was*; assuming he detonated his mines and locked the Federation inside a bubble of non-traversable space… what would he do next?

I will credit Rubincon for the way it brought the cadets together, culminating the season-long arc of helping (most of them) grow and learn new skills, then putting those skills to the ultimate test. Reno made a fun lead aboard the Athena, too, and some of Captain Ake’s speeches – even when I felt like they were unrealistic on Braka’s part – hit the right emotional notes. Caleb’s mother also got some pointed barbs at Captain Ake, calling her out for the way she’d been treated years earlier. I don’t think it’s a great finale, to be honest, but it wrapped up key storylines and brought the cadets together for a dangerous assignment.

So that’s it.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing camera crew
A glimpse behind-the-scenes.

That’s all from Starfleet Academy Season 1 for now. I may write that follow-up on the Doctor in The Life of the Stars soon, so stay tuned for that. And with Season 2 already in post-production, potentially targeting a 2027 broadcast, I daresay there’ll be more to say about Starfleet Academy in the months ahead. Rest assured that, if we get a trailer, a teaser, or more details about the show’s future, I’ll be covering it here on the website.

Thanks for joining me this time. There wasn’t enough space to cram all of this into my longer review, so I hope splitting things up like this wasn’t a terrible idea! I wanted to touch on each of these episodes and go into a bit more detail about storylines and character moments than I had time for in that piece.

Still frame from Rubincon showing the Athena saucer in a gas cloud
The USS Athena’s saucer section.

Overall, Starfleet Academy just wasn’t “my thing,” and I doubt it’ll be a show I return to very often… if at all. But that’s somewhat beside the point, and really, a bigger source of disappointment for me is that the show seems to have struggled to attract its target audience. Starfleet Academy failed to break into the top ten most-streamed shows over the nine weeks of its first season, a feat that Discovery, Picard, and Strange New Worlds all managed. And I fear that Season 2 – assuming even that goes ahead – will be the show’s swansong.

But this is Star Trek’s 60th anniversary year, so let’s not end on such a negative note! There’s still Season 4 of Strange New Worlds to come, probably in the late summer or autumn, and I’ve got a few more ideas for re-watches and other pieces to write as the year-long celebration rolls along. If you’re a Trekkie, I hope you’ll swing by to check out at least some of that right here on the website.

Live Long and Prosper, friends!


Star Trek: Starfleet Academy is available to stream now on Paramount+ in countries and territories where the service is available. The Star Trek franchise – including Starfleet Academy and everything else discussed above – remains the copyright of Paramount/Skydance. This review contains the thoughts and opinions of one person only and is not intended to cause any offence.

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy – Season 1 Review

A Star Trek-themed spoiler warning.

Spoiler Warning: There are spoilers ahead for Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Season 1, as well as for the following Star Trek productions: Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Discovery, Picard, Lower Decks, and Section 31.

Alright, let’s talk about Starfleet Academy!

First of all, some general information. I chose not to write individual episode reviews week-to-week for Starfleet Academy this season. So this review is going to be a little different in terms of format. This article will detail my overall thoughts on the season, the characters, the storylines, the VFX, and so on. And in the days ahead, I will write a follow-up piece in which I share my thoughts on episodes 3-10 of Season 1. I already have a review of the two-part series premiere, and you can find that by clicking or tapping here.

Secondly, I went into detail about one of Starfleet Academy’s mid-season storylines – the one involving DS9 and Captain Sisko. I’ll touch on that this time, but if you want my full thoughts on the Sisko storyline and whether it was a good idea, click or tap here to check it out. Finally, I thought it would be interesting to return to the Academy’s first major on-screen appearance, which came during The Next Generation’s fifth season. I re-watched The First Duty, and you can read my impressions of that episode, in which I reference Starfleet Academy Season 1, by clicking or tapping here.

Still frame from Star Trek SFA S1 showing a spotlight
Let’s put Starfleet Academy in the spotlight!

I share those articles with you in case you want to get some additional context for some of the things we’re going to discuss today – and even if you don’t care about that, I still encourage you to have a read if you’re a Trekkie, like me! I enjoy writing about Star Trek, and I think some of those pieces will definitely add to the conversation around Starfleet Academy’s first season, if that’s something you’re interested in.

So… what did I think of Starfleet Academy, then, as someone who’s been a Star Trek fan for some thirty-five years?

Cards on the table: I went into this series expecting to find that it wouldn’t be “my thing.” I tried hard to set aside my biases about teen/young adult drama shows, but the inescapable conclusion is that I wouldn’t have even switched on Starfleet Academy were it not for the “Star Trek” label. I asked myself the question of whether I’d have chosen to sit down and watch a similar programme in a different franchise; if this were “Star Wars: Jedi University” or “The Lord of the Rings: Bilbo Goes To College.” And the answer is “almost certainly not.” I showed up for the Star Trek name and the Star Trek name alone, hoping to find that the series… well, wasn’t as advertised, really, and didn’t have as strong a focus on teen/young adult drama as its promo material suggested.

Photo from the Star Trek SFA finale screening showing the main cast and showrunners
Showrunners Alex Kurtzman and Noga Landau with several main cast members at a special screening for the series finale in March 2026.

Sometimes, having low expectations can be a good thing! And there are definitely aspects of Starfleet Academy that both exceeded my expectations and just plain *worked*, either as a Star Trek story or just a fun sci-fi adventure in a more general sense. I will absolutely give credit where it’s due for the series being significantly more episodic in nature than I’d feared; there are still serialised storylines and character arcs, but not quite to the same extent as either Discovery or Picard.

However, what I would also say is that Starfleet Academy doesn’t feel like an especially memorable addition to the franchise – at least, not for me. There are episodes from right across modern Star Trek that stick in my mind for one reason or another – positive as well as negative. There are characters with strong personalities or who got heavily-featured in big, impactful storylines. There are starship and uniform designs that I found visually pleasing – or, occasionally, so-bad-it’s-good! But Starfleet Academy… it had basically none of that, and I really can’t call to mind a single protagonist, antagonist, visual element, or individual storyline that I’d say will stick with me now that the credits have rolled on the season finale.

And I think at least *part* of the reason for that is because Starfleet Academy has been unlucky. Let me explain what I mean.

Still frame from Vox in Excelso showing the cadets
The main cadet characters.

Discovery brought the franchise back to its small-screen home almost nine years ago, and since then, we’ve had more than 200 episodes of Star Trek across six mainline shows, as well as short episodes, animated mini-episodes, and a TV movie. The timeline has been chopped up, with different stories taking place hundreds of years apart, featuring new and returning characters, and there’s been so much Star Trek coming at us so quickly that I found myself dealing with franchise fatigue and burnout back in 2023, even as someone who’s a huge Trekkie.

Furthermore, modern Star Trek’s content, with very few exceptions, has been action-packed to the extreme and with ridiculously high stakes. Starfleet Academy’s over-the-top villain and Federation-ending threat don’t exist in a vacuum – they’ve come along after the franchise has repeatedly returned to those same narrative spaces, whether it was with Vadic and the Borg in Picard, Control and Osyraa in Discovery, the Gorn in Strange New Worlds, the Mirror Universe from Section 31, or the Diviner in Prodigy. Lower Decks wasn’t immune, either, with its Pakled story arc, and we can extend this trend back further, with a trio of nefarious villains in the Kelvin trilogy, and even Enterprise’s Xindi arc shortly after the turn of the millennium.

Concept art for Star Trek SFA showing three characters/costumes
Concept art of Tarima, Jay-Den, and Nus Braka.

In a word… there have been *a lot* of Star Trek stories in recent (and not-so-recent) years that all used the same basic underlying premise: there’s an over-the-top villain whose evil scheme threatens not just these characters, but everyone else in the Federation, or even the entire galaxy. The fact that I’m bored to tears of that kind of storyline is not, in isolation, Starfleet Academy’s fault. But it is a factor that the show has to contend with, and unfortunately, it’s one of the reasons why I came away from this new series feeling that very little about it was unique or memorable.

Let’s play a game called “who am I describing?” I’m going to describe a Star Trek villain from the past decade, and you have to guess who it is. Ready?

This villain clearly has a connection to at least one of the show’s protagonists. The performance is hammy and over-the-top, trying to channel iconic villains like Khan or the Borg Queen, but doing so less effectively. Their plan involves using a magical macguffin of impossible destructive power to attack Starfleet and the Federation. And the only ones who can stop them are a rag-tag group of misfits who become a “found family” over the course of the season.

Still frame from Come, Let's Away showing Braka
Nus Braka.

See, that *could* be Starfleet Academy’s Nus Braka. Or it could be Vadic, Lorca, the Diviner, Mol and La’ak, the super-synths, Nick Locarno, San, the Red Angel… and more.

This, in a nutshell, is Starfleet Academy’s problem. We’ve seen this story before, and not just once. Repeatedly, since Star Trek returned in 2017, we’ve gotten season after season after season where we’ve seen another over-the-top villain who’s mysteriously connected to a main character, and whose evil scheme is galactic in scope. One or two stories like that can work. And Star Trek can do big, Federation-threatening storylines pretty well. But this core concept is utterly, thoroughly burned out, so trying to return to it *again* didn’t work for me.

What’s more, Starfleet Academy didn’t even handle this story outline particularly well. I noted in my coverage of the premiere that giving the main villain a big defeat in his first-ever appearance seldom works well, and it set up the main cadets – Caleb in particular – as being too skilled and too perfect. It felt like we’d seen the end before it began; having seen how easily Nus Braka can be defeated, and how impossibly perfect Caleb is at everything from hacking and computers to hand-to-hand combat… it basically left neither character with anywhere to go as this storyline rumbled on across subsequent episodes.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Braka
Behind-the-scenes photo of Paul Giamatti on set.

More so than any other Star Trek show, Starfleet Academy needed to start with characters who had room to improve. What’s the point in someone like Caleb going to school when he already knows everything, and can do things better, faster, and more effectively than most of his teachers? It gave me “Wesley Crusher” vibes from almost the first moment, and it was tough to root for Caleb, sometimes, because of how impossibly perfect he seemed to be – at least in terms of his skills.

Where Caleb did find room to grow – at least for a while – was in terms of his relationships with his peers. I don’t think Caleb came *close* to nailing the “learning to play well with others” kind of arc that I believe was intended for him. But his relationships with Tarima, Darem, and Genesis in particular did evolve over the course of ten episodes, and largely in ways that felt natural and in keeping with this kind of teen/young adult series’ tone. There were some emotional moments in the mix, too, as Caleb clashed with – and later figured out how to befriend – his peers.

Still frame from 300th Night showing Caleb
Caleb.

I try to review Star Trek (and everything else I review here on the website) without having exposed myself to other viewpoints; that’s just part of my process, and I don’t want to feel like I’m being influenced by the conversation around a film or TV series – I want to judge it on its own merit as much as possible. But, as a Trekkie who follows some fansites and social media pages, I haven’t been able to shut out *everything* Starfleet Academy-related for the last nine weeks.

One thing that definitely caught me off-guard was the negative reception in some corners of the internet to Captain Nahla Ake. I’ve seen fans criticising things like her preference for going barefoot and the way she sits in a chair… things that, frankly, give her a bit of depth and personality, and which I found in no way offensive or off-putting. Imagine criticising the (in)famous “Riker manoeuvre,” where Riker would swing his leg over the back of a chair before sitting down. Or Picard’s tendency to tug at the bottom of his tunic to straighten up his uniform. Maybe some fans did, back in The Next Generation era, genuinely hate those things… but I certainly don’t remember any of that being an issue. And to me, some of the criticisms of Captain Ake feel rather petty.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Jonathan Frakes and Holly Hunter
Director Jonathan Frakes with Holly Hunter on the set of Starfleet Academy.

Captain Ake, for me, seemed to be channelling a bit of Strange New Worlds’ Pelia in the way she came across – and if you know me, you’ll know that Pelia is one of my favourite additions to that series! I like how Captain Ake takes a less-rigid approach, and it makes perfect sense for the role she has to play. She’s not a typical captain, who can afford to be concerned with strict discipline in front of trained officers. She’s a teacher, and most of her crew are cadets who are still learning what it means to serve in Starfleet. Of course she’s going to take a different approach; the best teachers find ways to get through to their students, and that can include taking a more casual or less-disciplinarian approach.

Captain Ake also brings centuries’ worth of experience to the table as a Lanthanite, and that earns her a great deal of respect from the kids. As someone who remembers what Starfleet was like in the years before the Burn – something we’ll talk about more in a moment – Captain Ake is uniquely-poisitioned, within the world of Starfleet Academy, to instil old-school Starfleet values into a new generation of cadets. Her approach may not be rigid and adhering to the letter of the rules, and she may not always keep to a strict uniform code… but she’s clearly a good captain, a respected teacher, and a great leader.

Still frame from Vitus Reflux showing Ake
Captain Ake has come in for criticism in some quarters.

I think some of the criticism of Captain Ake – and of Starfleet Academy in a more general sense – is coming from folks who would never have been interested in the series to begin with. There are some “anti-woke” folks crawling out of the woodwork to pick on Starfleet Academy, as well as people (like myself) who are way outside of the target demographic. And some of these criticisms of the way Captain Ake sits on a chair stem from that; they’re indicative of a portion of the fanbase who couldn’t go into the show with an open mind and who want to pick on anything they can find to criticise.

Starfleet Academy isn’t going to be right for every viewer, or even every Trekkie. And if the show’s low streaming numbers hold… well, it doesn’t look like it’s having as much success as I’d have hoped when it comes to connecting with new viewers. But that isn’t because it’s “woke,” or because Captain Ake puts her feet on the seat. There can be many factors behind a series failing to connect with audiences, and I’d posit that franchise fatigue and repetitiveness are bigger deals in this case than any individual performance or storyline.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Kurtzman and Picardo
Robert Picardo with director/showrunner Alex Kurtzman during production on the season premiere.

That being said, I saw nothing across Season 1 that, to be blunt about it, changed my mind on Starfleet Academy’s future prospects. With the series seeming not to make a huge splash for Skydance/Paramount on streaming, and given that the corporation has already cancelled every other Star Trek series that had been in production at the time of the merger, I very seriously doubt whether a third season renewal will happen.

The show doesn’t have any huge strong suits in its corner, really, and it feels like it’s in the same kind of position as Enterprise was some twenty-plus years ago – it just may not have been Starfleet Academy’s moment, coming after so much Star Trek has been on our screens over the past few years. If the show doesn’t get renewed, and hasn’t done enough to demonstrate to Paramount’s new owners that it’s a solid investment… I don’t think we can lay the blame for that exclusively on Starfleet Academy itself and its production team. As I said above, the series feels like it drew the short straw, in a sense.

Still frame from The Life of the Stars showing cadets
Several of the main characters.

I criticised Discovery, from Season 3 onwards, for not making more of the Burn – the giant apocalyptic event that *should* underpin everything about this 32nd Century setting. Discovery’s writers wanted to make a drama series; it felt like the Burn very quickly disappeared into the background, serving as little more than the backdrop for other, generally less-interesting stories to play out in front of.

Starfleet Academy did more with the Burn that Discovery had done, and for that I’m grateful. But I still feel like this brand-new setting, this brand-new narrative idea for Star Trek, something huge and transformative for literally *the entire franchise* just… isn’t being used very well. Or very often.

There were *references* to the Burn and the state of the galaxy in dialogue. And some storylines and settings reflected this event and its lingering aftermath more than others. But the main characters, with the partial exception of Caleb, could’ve really been from any pre-Burn era, and even when references were made to the Burn and its post-apocalyptic after-effects… it just didn’t stick the landing much of the time.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing a camera and the AR wall
Filming Darem’s homeworld.

Let’s take episode seven, Ko’Zeine, as an example. The cadets get a break from their classes and head to different places. Jay-Den and Darem get the A-story, visiting Darem’s homeworld for what felt like a bit of an Amok Time homage. And Genesis and Caleb got the B-plot, getting into hijinks back at the deserted campus. Literally *nothing* about either storyline would have changed if this episode had been set before the Burn. Despite getting an opportunity to do so, with the introduction of a brand-new alien race in the Khionians, there was absolutely no mention of the Burn at all. Did Khionia just… not notice?

Star Trek has always used its sci-fi lens to take a look at real-world issues. And as a series focusing on younger folks that’s being broadcast in the mid-2020s, there was scope to take the Burn as a starting point and view it as an analogy for the disrupted post-pandemic world that kids today are growing up in. To use the Burn as a metaphor to examine what it might mean for young people whose education and formative years were massively disrupted in unprecedented ways. I didn’t want or expect that to be a constant presence, hammered home in *every* story. But I did expect it to be present more often than it was.

Still frame from Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Season 1 showing the Chancellor giving a speech to the cadets.
The re-opening of the Academy.

I’ve said this before, and I daresay I’ll repeat myself again before too long, but I don’t like what the Burn says about the future of the Star Trek galaxy, and how it challenges and alters how we interpret stories set in the 23rd and 24th Centuries. But, if Discovery and now Starfleet Academy had been able to find stories to tell in that setting, really leaning into what it means to live and grow up in a “post-apocalyptic” galaxy… maybe it would have at least felt justified. But after three seasons of Discovery and one of Starfleet Academy… we’re still stuck with stories and characters which, at best, pay lip service to the Burn and its decades-long aftermath without really exploring what any of it means.

And the result? Unfortunately, I’m still of the opinion that, somehow, we should find a way to push this “post-apocalyptic” far future out of the prime timeline.

That being said, there was *more* of an effort to explore the state of the galaxy after the Burn in Starfleet Academy than there was in Discovery. I appreciated getting a look at the Klingons in this era – though I’m still curious to learn what the Klingon survivors would make of the knowledge that the Burn was caused by the Federation! And seeing Betazed’s accession back to the Federation, and the changes the organisation was willing to make to accomodate the Betazoids, made for a fun and engaging story, too.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Zoe Steiner as Tarima
Zoë Steiner (Tarima) getting her makeup touched up on set.

Sam was an interesting character, and I particularly enjoyed Kerrice Brooks’ enthusiastic, wide-eyed performance. She really captured Sam’s nature as a “newborn;” someone experiencing the world for the very first time. But unfortunately, Sam also got two of my least-favourite storylines in the entire season – and two stories that felt pretty repetitive, too, if you think about it.

Let’s play another game: this one’s called “which episode am I describing?” This episode, from Season 1 of Starfleet Academy, sees the character of Sam making a connection with a major character from The Next Generation era. She comes to see this character as a major influence, or even a father figure of sorts, and the writers go out of their way to draw parallels between Sam and this legacy character. The legacy character gets an epilogue to their story from The Next Generation era, which – many fans will argue – detracts from their original story or even actively harms their characterisation.

So… was I talking about Series Acclimation Mil or The Life of the Stars?

Still frame from The Life of the Stars showing Sam and the Doctor
Sam with the Doctor.

I said a lot of what I wanted to say about Starfleet Academy’s treatment of Sisko in my standalone piece – click or tap here to read that. But to very briefly recap: despite being a well-intentioned effort to celebrate the legacy of Star Trek’s first African American captain, the episode ultimately was an awful ending for Sisko and his legacy, turning him into the very “absent black father” trope that Avery Brooks had argued against more than a quarter of a century earlier. Starfleet Academy asked a question that didn’t need to be asked about Sisko’s survival (because it was already perfectly well-explained in Deep Space Nine), and then set about answering that question in just about the worst conceivable way.

And then, a couple of episodes later, we get a remarkably similar story involving Sam and the Doctor.

I don’t want to linger for too long on legacy characters in this review, and if you join me for my episode breakdown in the days ahead, I might delve into the Doctor a bit more when we discuss The Life of the Stars. But again, this was a story that felt… well, tacked-on, in one sense, but also became one that painted the Doctor in a really negative light.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing the shuttle set
Filming The Life of the Stars.

The Doctor, it turns out, was not terribly moved by outliving his friends aboard the USS Voyager, nor the cadets of the USS Protostar. He didn’t miss Janeway, Tuvok, or Neelix. But he *had* spent almost a millennium pining for the holographic family he created in the Voyager third season episode Real Life. Not only were these holograms *non-sentient* as defined by the show, but it also paints B’Elanna as a major villain, since she was the one who edited the Doctor’s family holoprogramme, “killing” his holographic daughter.

As above with the Sisko storyline, I think there were good intentions and at least parts of an interesting idea at the story’s core. But the way it came across, with the Doctor not even acknowledging his friends – the people he spent years of his life with and who first helped him explore what it means to be a sentient life-form… it left a bad taste in the mouth. If the plan was always for Sam to view the Doctor as a father figure, why not simply start from that point? Or else find a different route to get there.

I’ll shelve this for now, but stay tuned, because there’s more to say about this element of The Life of the Stars.

Still frame from The Life of the Stars showing the Doctor
The Doctor at the end of The Life of the Stars.

Visually, Starfleet Academy was pretty okay much of the time. There were things the show did well, like using a proper 16:9 aspect ratio instead of the weird letterbox that other shows of the streaming era have employed. I also greatly appreciated getting episodes that all felt sufficiently long: not a single episode was under the fifty-minute mark, which made them feel all feel quite meaty! Compare Starfleet Academy’s ten-plus-hour first season with something like A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, where the entirety of Season 1 barely cracked the three-and-a-half-hour mark.

Set design was more hit than miss, but some of the misses were… well, they were pretty dire. In my review of the series premiere, I talked about one sequence involving a low-poly, horribly pixellated “whale” when Caleb and Tarima went to the aquarium. And while I’m pleased to say that nothing else in Season 1 sank quite so far as that awful CGI misfire, there were a few other unimpressive visual moments, unfortunately.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Frakes on Ukeck
Director Jonathan Frakes on set with members of the main cast.

The sets used for parts of the Academy could feel cluttered, at times, with an overabundance of holographic signs and interfaces. The end result was an environment that looked too busy, with too many things on screen at once. I also felt that some choices, both for outdoor filming locations and using the AR wall, weren’t particularly impressive, and just didn’t leave me with much of an impression at all. I’d call out Jay-Den’s Klingon encampment from Vox in Excelso and Darem’s homeworld from Ko’Zeine as examples of the latter.

In fact, Darem’s homeworld looked an awful lot like a copy-and-paste of the Vulcan set that we’ve seen extensively in both Discovery and Strange New Worlds, which just felt profoundly odd for the Khionians – a semi-aquatic race. I get that we were technically visiting their desert moon, not their watery planet, but that just raises the question of… why? I guess it was an effort to spend less money on prosthetics, or to keep Darem in his humanoid form so he could better emote? Either way, it’s a bit of a shame; I’d have been genuinely quite pleased to visit Khionia and spend more time with this brand-new alien faction.

Still frame from Ko'Zeine showing the moon
Jay-Den arrives on the Khionian moon.

I think, on balance, my favourite episode of the season was Come, Let’s Away – the episode where Braka returns and scores a big win at the cadets’ expense. It was well-paced, action-packed, and its emotional moments generally hit the mark. But the major caveat I have to give is that this *kind* of story – where the villain gets a big win, and sets up the next phase of their nefarious scheme – shouldn’t come when we’re past the halfway point. And it shouldn’t have come along *after* we’ve already seen the villain being defeated by a bunch of untrained cadets on their first day at school.

I mentioned this in my review of the premiere, but Nus Braka was not an entertaining villain. The performance was ridiculously hammy and off-putting, and I’m so disappointed that a genuinely wonderful actor like Paul Giamatti – whose performances I’ve enjoyed elswhere, and whose name felt like a big coup for Starfleet Academy when his role was announced – could be reduced by the show’s producers and directors to being so genuinely awful. Braka was, for the most part, a one-dimensional pantomime villian; the antagonist from a direct-to-video kids’ movie who’s “evil for the sake of it” and turns everything up to eleven for no reason.

Still frame from a Star Trek SFA event showing Paul Giamatti (Braka)
Paul Giamatti, who played Nus Braka.
Image: Star Trek on Facebook

When a series commits to a serialised arc, it’s important for that arc to stick the landing. In Starfleet Academy’s case, Nus Braka was the show’s overarching antagonist, and even in some episodes where he didn’t appear in person, his influence loomed large and he was discussed by other characters. But when a villain is so weak, so one-dimensional, and so uninteresting… it really takes a lot away from that serialised story arc. For me, unfortunately, Nus Braka is firmly in that category, and feels like one of the Star Trek franchise’s least-interesting villainous characters. I don’t doubt that Giamatti had fun playing the role, and I’m also certain that a way could’ve been found for a character like this to have been handled better. But the way Braka came across in the finished product? I’m afraid it’s one of the worst individual elements of the season.

One character I criticised in the two-part premiere (and in the buildup to Starfleet Academy’s debut) was Lura Thok. I felt Gina Yashere’s performance was really… well, amateurish, especially in the opening two-parter. I’m not going to retract that statement, but I will amend it to say that, over the course of her subsequent appearances in Season 1, Lura Thok managed to grow on me, and either I got used to Yashere’s take on the character, the cadence of her speech, and so on, or… maybe she grew into the role somewhat. Either way, I ended the season with more of an appreciation for this Klingon-Jem’Hadar hybrid than I had at the beginning.

Still frame from Vox in Excelso showing Lura and Ake
Lura Thok with Captain Ake.

One of the really odd, left-field announcements going into Starfleet Academy’s premiere was that Stephen Colbert – a late-night talk show host in the United States – was going to have a voice role as the “Digital Dean of Students.” I said at the time that this felt like little more than stunt casting; an attempt to garner some interest for the series based on nothing but the name of the performer. And so it turned out to be. The Digital Dean had a couple of funny lines here and there – the recurring Talaxian fur-fly bit being one – but overall, I didn’t get the impression that the former Paramount corporation needed to recruit someone so well-known (presumably for no small amount of money) for this complete non-role. Colbert’s voice work was *fine*, but would anything about the Digital Dean have changed if it had been a newcomer? Heck, *I* could have done no less of a job in that kind of voice-only role, for all the impact it had.

When the cadets were first introduced, ahead of the show’s premiere, I thought it was at least noteworthy that we were going to meet a Klingon named Jay-Den – a name that sounds, well, human. And I wondered if there might be a reason for that in-universe; maybe it was indicative of the Klingons having joined the Federation centuries earlier, or Jay-Den’s family having an appreciation for human culture. But, as it turns out, the name “Jay-Den” has a meaning in Klingon.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Jay-Den
Filming one of Jay-Den’s scenes in Vox in Excelso.

Someone who speaks Klingon will have to answer this (I can barely manage English), but… does “Jay-Den” really mean “he who crosses oceans of fire,” as he claimed in Vitus Reflux? I’m gonna go out on a limb and suggest that it doesn’t.

That doesn’t mean, by the way, that I didn’t enjoy Jay-Den. Karim Diané put in an exceptional performance, and I really enjoyed getting a Klingon main character who was a bit more complex, a bit softer, and who didn’t care only about honour and suffering a violent death. Jay-Den came from the same Klingon warrior culture that we’re familiar with from past iterations of Star Trek – regressed, arguably, by the impact of the Burn – but he was his own man with his own interests, and his desire to become a healer, not a warrior, added somewhat to his complexity as a character.

I also liked the way Jay-Den’s romantic life was handled. There was definitely a spark between him and Darem in the latter part of the season – a spark that, I would argue, either wasn’t fully justified or didn’t sit quite right because of their initial bully-and-victim interaction in the first episode. But I appreciated how they overcame that and built up a friendship.

Still frame from Ko'Zeine showing Jay-Den and Darem
Jay-Den and Darem seem to have… a spark.

I’ve always read the Klingons as being somewhat analogous to historical civilisations like the Spartans, at least in the way they were presented after The Original Series. Their warrior culture certainly feels like something Spartan, anyway. And if you know your history… you’ll know that the Spartans (and Ancient Greeks in general) were, to use some technical language from historiography, hella gay. *Hella* gay. So… gay Klingons just make sense, and the only thing weird about it, really, is how we’ve never really explored this aspect of Klingon culture and sexuality before.

At this point in the far future, being LGBT+ (whatever race you are) shouldn’t be a big deal, and Jay-Den’s arc and his relationship with the War College cadet Kyle was handled subtly, without much fanfare. It reminded me a little of Adira’s “coming out” as non-binary in Discovery; it’s something that everyone involved understood, accepted, and just rolled with without making it a big deal in any way. That’s generally how I like to see LGBT+ representation handled in Star Trek; I like the idea that, in the future, these things won’t be controversial in any way, and stories which set up that ideal as a plot point tend to go down well with me.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Jay-Den and Kyle
Behind-the-scenes photo of Kyle (Dale Whibley) and Jay-Den (Karim Diané).

The Venari Ral, Nus Braka’s organisation, didn’t feel consistent across the season. When we met Braka, he seemed to be the captain of a pirate ship – or perhaps someone who might be the “commodore” of a small flotilla of ships. And that presentation carried through; Braka was a jumped-up petty criminal, or so it seemed. So it was a real surprise, then, when the Venari Ral, a few episodes later, began annexing entire planets to their “empire,” with Braka painted as the leader of an entire interplanetary faction.

This just wasn’t sufficiently explained within Starfleet Academy itself, and because the Venari Ral are a new faction, we had no frame of reference. If it had been, say, the Cardassian Union or the Gorn Hegemony, there’d be a foundation to build on. Even Discovery’s Emerald Chain could’ve fit the bill. In fact the Emerald Chain is a great point of comparison, because that faction also seemed to fluctuate between “criminal syndicate” and “interstellar empire” – though at least in that case, it never felt quite so small-scale as the Venari Ral did in their first couple of appearances. I think we’d have benefited from seeing a tiny bit more of the Venari Ral, somehow, in the first couple of episodes – something that could’ve nailed down how big, how powerful, and how intimidating the faction was *supposed* to be.

Still frame from Rubincon showing Venari Ral ships firing on the Athena
Venari Ral ships. The scale of the faction and its fleet wasn’t adequately explained.

And then Starfleet Academy would’ve needed to stick to that. If the first episode seemed to show Nus Braka as the captain of a pirate ship, later episodes like Come, Let’s Away and 300th Night tried to present the faction as an empire capable of conquering entire planets, with a fleet of ships, a legion of soldiers and paramilitary, and the resources necessary to hold onto all of that territory. But then the season finale seemed to show only about half a dozen Venari Ral ships and a handful of troops.

This inconsistency was also present in the Venari Ral ships themselves. Kids These Days ended with Braka’s ship being destroyed… with a single volley of torpedoes. Come, Let’s Away showed a Venari Ral ship taking the fight to the Athena, and winning. Then Rubincon saw Starfleet massively outnumbering the Venari Ral, beaming through shields with ease, and arresting their troops and leadership. I came away from the season feeling like I *still* don’t know what the Venari Ral was meant to be: a pirate fleet, a crime lord’s militia, a proto-state, or a fully-fledged interstellar empire. And for the main villainous faction of the season… that’s a bit of a disappointment. How am I meant to be invested in a story when I don’t really comprehend who our heroes are facing off against?

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing the bridge set
Fire on the bridge! Paramount has got a lot of mileage out of those pyrotechnics in recent years, eh?

I was a little surprised when it was announced that Tig Notaro’s Jett Reno would be one of the show’s recurring characters, making the jump from Discovery. Out of all of the Discovery characters, as much as I like Reno, she probably wouldn’t have been my first choice to take a significant role in a spin-off. But I greatly enjoyed Reno’s role this season, particularly in the finale when she was left alone with the cadets, and she really seemed to rise to the occasion – while retaining her usual deadpan style.

Reno’s relationship with Lura Thok wasn’t a big part of Starfleet Academy, but it was another of those subtle, understated LGBT+ moments that I discussed above. It worked very well, and I liked how both characters gained a bit of depth and personality from one another. Notaro and Yashere played off each other perfectly in their moments together, and I felt their relationship went a long way to humanising (if you’ll excuse the term) Lura Thok in particular. I also liked what it said about Reno, and how she was finally willing to embrace new relationships after the loss of her wife – something we learned about in Discovery.

Still frame from Rubincon showing Jett and Lura
Lura and Jett together.

A ten-episode season won’t have time to do everything, nor focus on every single character – and for me, it was Genesis who seemed to draw the shortest straw this time around. Genesis got an arc of sorts, relating to her father and how she modified her references when applying to the Academy, but that was very much a B-plot in the episode in which it featured. It’s not necessarily a problem; other characters simply got bigger or more central storylines this time around. But, as I said several times in Discovery and Strange New Worlds, it would be nice if, next time, we could get an episode or two to make up for the characters who took a back seat in Season 1.

I liked what we saw of Genesis, though, and how she seemed able to push through her anxieties and fears to step up and become a leader. We saw this with her taking the captaincy of the Academy’s phaser-game team, and this carried through to later in the season, where she was finally able to take the conn of the Athena in the finale. It was never an arc that was centre-stage, but actress Bella Shepard did very well with the material she had to work with, making Genesis into a cadet who felt like she truly fit the Starfleet mould almost better than everyone else. Perhaps that’s a nod to her background, as the daughter of an admiral and who’d been raised around Starfleet from a young age. In any case, the series needed at least one character like this – and we got that with Genesis, even if she wasn’t as present as some of the others in key storylines.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Genesis
Bella Shepard on set with a member of the production team.

Uniforms can be a contentious point among Trekkies! I appreciated Discovery returning to bold primary colours after Season 3, and Starfleet Academy stuck with a similar design – at least for commissioned officers. The cadets’ uniforms – their main uniforms, anyway – were a bit less interesting in a fairly drab grey. I did like, however, that Starfleet Academy introduced a lot of uniform variants: Jay-Den’s skant, the letterman jackets, away team armour, separate uniforms for the War College… all of these added a lot of depth to the series. None of the uniforms on their own really leapt out at me, but the variety definitely kept things visually interesting.

The USS Athena… well, it didn’t really grow on me, as I hoped it might after its introduction in the premiere. I don’t *hate* the design of the ship, but I don’t really find it as visually appealing as, well, almost any other hero ship from past iterations of the franchise. It feels a bit over-designed, if that makes sense, which is a criticism I’d level at a lot of 32nd Century Starfleet vessels. I did like, though, that the design of the ship was reflected in the design of the cadets’ combadges. That was a neat inclusion.

Cropped still frame from 300th Night showing the USS Athena
The USS Athena.

Darem got a potentially interesting arc across the season, but I think it was a bit of a mistake to set him up as being quite so unlikeable in the premiere. Darem had this whole “entitled, wealthy bully” thing going on, and it clashed with his *actual* personality. Part of this was in service to his abortive wedding in Ko’Zeine, but also it was done because – as I’ve said before when discussing Discovery in particular – Star Trek’s modern writers don’t always know how to do subtlety. Darem couldn’t just be overconfident or a bit of a brat – he had to be an aggressive, mean-spirited bully. And that beginning made him hard to root for, at times, even as we got to know the “real” Darem.

In my notes, I called parts of episodes three and seven Darem’s “dickhead to normal guy” arc, which was my way of saying this was the writers demonstrating his growth or his redemption from a poor beginning. And that kind of story can work; in Darem’s case, I think the results are a bit muddled. His spotlight – Ko’Zeine – was one of the season’s least-impressive outings, and his aristocratic background and cancelled wedding weren’t really mentioned again. I love a good redemption story, even for someone who seems unlikable, and there’s merit in doing something like this in a school setting, especially considering the show’s intended audience. But for me… I don’t think it came across as well as it should’ve. And, as mentioned above, I’d have liked to have seen more of the Khionians.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing Darem's makeup
Darem actor George Hawkins getting his prosthetic makeup applied for the series premiere.

In my review of the two-part premiere, I said that I felt sure that Tarima’s condition – which required her to use a device to dampen her telepathic abilities – would turn out to be a “superpower” that would be really useful and end up saving the day. And who’d-a thunk it: I was right about that! In both Come, Let’s Away and Rubincon, Tarima’s magic – which she denied was actually “magic,” but let’s not mince words – turned out to be the only thing the cadets could use to save the day. Sometimes, setting up something in one episode to pay it off later works well and feels right. And sometimes, subtly foreshadowing something that will be important later can be a great way to keep the audience engaged. Tarima’s ability, for me, was neither of those things. It was patently obvious what was going to happen, I called it from the first moment she was on screen, and it played out beat-for-beat not once, but twice.

That aside, Tarima was… well, “okay,” is what I put in my notes. I don’t like to pick on young performers too much, because there’s always room to gain experience, but I felt that Zoë Steiner was the lesser of the main cadets in terms of her performance. Tarima felt stilted and wooden a lot of the time, and while some of that may be the fault of writers and directors as much as (or more than) the performer, it left the character in a weird space for a co-star and the main protagonist’s romantic interest. There were moments where Tarima managed to leave that behind… but overall, she wasn’t my favourite character by a long stretch.

Still frame from Series Acclimation Mil showing Tarima
Tarima.

Starfleet Academy was intended to reach new audiences and expand the Star Trek franchise beyond its current niche. From what I’ve seen of its streaming numbers (and even its performance through “less-than-official” means), I don’t think it’s doing that. Starfleet Academy, across all ten episodes of its first season, was routinely beaten by shows like The Pitt, Fallout, and even Bluey, and never once cracked the top ten most-streamed programmes of the day or the week. That should ring alarm bells for Skydance/Paramount… as well as for anyone who hopes to see the show continue beyond its already-produced second season. For context, shows like Picard and Strange New Worlds were regulars in the top ten most-streamed episodes of the week during their runs.

But audience numbers are not a measure of quality. I wish I could tell you that Starfleet Academy is a real hidden gem, something that the masses are unfairly overlooking and missing out on. But the reality is that… well, this isn’t my kind of show, really. And I knew that – which is why I’m pulling my punches, at least a little, when it comes to criticising some of the character arcs and storylines. There’s a ton of “teen drama” that I knew from the get-go I wasn’t going to enjoy… and I didn’t enjoy it. The Star Trek label could mitigate some of that some of the time, sure… but not enough.

Behind-the-scenes photo from Star Trek SFA S1 showing episode 6 in production
Behind-the-scenes on Come, Let’s Away.

This was the first Star Trek project of the current streaming era (well, after Scouts, I guess) not to hold any appeal for me. I watched it because… I don’t know. I guess I felt an obligation to keep up with live-action Star Trek. And I can say that I did genuinely enjoy some parts of it. But overall? It’s a teen/young adult drama set in the Star Trek universe, using the lore of Star Trek for inspiration and to set up some of its stories, but it isn’t really the kind of Star Trek show that personally appeals to me. I’m okay with that – I made my peace with it before the show even aired! But it does make it hard to recommend the series to someone in a similar position to myself.

I tried to keep an open mind, though. And I was pleased to see Starfleet Academy being a more episodic project than I feared it would be, as well as to see attempts to both harken back to older shows and expand the franchise with new factions and alien races. There are good moments, interesting ideas, and some characters and performances that are a lot better than some folks online would have you believe. But for a Trekkie, the measure of success for any show is how often I think I’ll be tempted to return to Starfleet Academy and re-watch it. I can tell you with certainty that I’ll show up for Season 2. But… I can really only think of one episode from Season 1 (Come, Let’s Away) that I might even consider re-visiting in the future. The rest of it just wasn’t my thing, or else didn’t leave much of an impression at all.

Still frame from Kids These Days showing the USS Athena at San Francisco
The USS Athena arriving at San Francisco.

So that’s all for today.

In the days ahead, I’ll write up my thoughts on individual storylines from episodes 3-10 in a bit more depth, so I hope you’ll join me for some of that. I plan to touch on a few topics that I didn’t get around to on this occasion. Splitting up this review made sense to me – this piece is already running very long, even by my standards, so writing even just three or four paragraphs about each episode would be too much! But stay tuned, because that compilation of mini-reviews is still to come.

I hope this has been interesting, and I hope I didn’t treat Starfleet Academy too unkindly. I keep saying this because I think it’s important, but I know someone who’s the wrong side of forty isn’t the target audience for a series like this. I tried to keep that in mind while writing this review! I can say that I’m glad Starfleet Academy was produced, and I maintain that the Star Trek fan community needs a project like this to reach out to new, younger viewers if the franchise is to have a shot at surviving long-term. Unfortunately, however, I fear circumstances have conspired against Starfleet Academy, with the show coming along at a difficult time for Star Trek, after franchise fatigue has set in, and with a new corporate merger shaking things up. Even if the show was never going to be for me, I still hoped that it would find success with its target audience… but that seems not to have been the case. Maybe Season 2 will “grow the beard” and improve things… but whether you’re a fan or not, I wouldn’t bet on that third season renewal going ahead.


Star Trek: Starfleet Academy is available to stream now on Paramount+ in countries and territories where the service is available. The Star Trek franchise – including Starfleet Academy and everything else discussed above – remains the copyright of Paramount/Skydance. This review contains the thoughts and opinions of one person only and is not intended to cause any offence.