But the Riker we knew back then appeared to want wildly improbable, insane and dangerous adventures.
Even the novels have noted that to some degree TNG and everything that followed can be divided into pre and post-Borg, in the sense that "BoBW" and to a lesser extent "Q Who" brought home indisputable evidence that the "great unknown" in fact had at least one race that was actively hostile and vastly technologically superior to Our Heroes.
We already knew of species that were, or had been vastly superior to the Federation (take the Q, or the Iconians or the T' Kon for example), and they'd already run into hostile species, too (those parasites from Season 1). Taken together with the vastness of the unexplored areas of the galaxy, it would just seem a matter of time before they'd encounter a species that combined those two attributes. And that's just based on the encounters of the enterprise-D till that point in time, and not even including all those of the original Enterprise, so one could ask himself why Starfleet was so optimistic and perhaps almost naive about this up until that point in time.
I don't agree with Picard being dangerous and irresponsible adrenaline junkie who takes the ship into a dangerous roller coaster ride. But, it's a TV show, if weird and interesting adventures didn't happen, would the viewers like it?
Well, perhaps I was just making a joke there. That being said, you still can argue about how smart it was (in-universe) to send a large luxury liner filled with civilians sailing into the unknown (see also the first point) but there have been threads in the past discussing this question in depth.
Last edited: