

Abrams Star Trek movie and its sequels, an alternative sequence of events kickstarted when a rogue Romulan ship from the future destroyed the USS Kelvin – killing James T. We’ve even included the parallel “Kelvin” continuity of the J.J. So we’ve assembled all the key events that shaped Federation history into one massive Star Trek timeline. So much so, in fact, that it’s hard to know how the events of Star Trek: Discovery season 3 and Star Trek: Picard fit in with the Original Series, or, say, where Voyager sits relative to The Next Generation crew movies. Until the finale.With hundreds of episodes spread across multiple TV shows and 13 movies, the Star Trek timeline has become a complex beast. It wasn't until season 3 that the people in charge started muscling out Berman and Braga and letting Coto have the reins more and more, until he finally got to run season 4, which is generally regarded as the best of the entire show.

Instead the two kept regurgitating old Voyager scripts they'd forgotten to shoot (whenever the characters on Enterprise are acting weirdly out of character, you can be pretty sure the script has stuff like T'Pol's name scribbled in over "Seven" and such-like).

Really, the sheer number of cool ideas, plots, character developments and Trek stuff the B's nixed are endless. Shran was a character Manny Coto and several other writers wanted to be a regular instead of a guest star, and the Trip/T'Pol thing suffered from one of the B's hard shipping of Archer/T'Pol even though everyone else thought it was a bad idea. Click to expand.The writers wanted to make more of the prelude to the Romulan War, for one thing, and several of the arcs in season 4 were arcs the writers wanted to make a bit longer and more continuity-laden over all the seasons.
