I watched DS9 when it was on, then on DVD in the '00s, and have only watched a scant few episodes since. So it's been over a decade since I've seen 95-99% of the series.I'll play the DS9 card here. Watched it twice through before. Doing so again, and it's been years, so I remember very little.
It's really about Bajor and Sisko and the prophets. Bajor is not in danger of being exploded or tentacle-monstered. But I really don't know what's going to develop with it. Ok, the pah wraiths (evil) have to be defeated -- no drama there, but they're not THE MAIN PLOT as the movies and CBS trek (and other franchises) really stress. The Dominion War is relegated to the background. I know they won't win, but a reshuffled Alpha is certainly a possibility. Ad to this the fact that (I do remember this much) -- the end is cryptic and you're left wondering still. (What/who the heck are those prophets, and when will - if?- the Sisko return? Poor Jake.)
When it was airing: even during the tensest moments of the Dominion War, I knew nothing serious would happen to the Federation. If for no other reason than if they seriously messed up the Federation, then it would effect the TNG Movies and VOY too. General audiences who watched the TNG Movies but didn't watch DS9 would be wondering "What the fuck happened?!" And Voyager needed a home to get back to. If they communicated with the Alpha Quadrant and found out the Federation fell, that's a whole can of worms that would've run counter to the VOY creative team's approach which was "Any Average Joe slob with a six-pack of beer can watch any episode any time and not have to worry about what happened in any other episode!" So nothing that was going to change the status quo permanently would've happened on DS9 as long as it had to share with TNG and VOY.
What I cared about when watching DS9 was wondering about what would happen to the characters. It's the same thing I wondered about when watching the first two seasons of DSC. I connected with those characters, so I wondered about what would happen to them.
Now, in the third season, I can wonder about what will happen and I can also wonder about the status quo of the entire galaxy. Because unlike in the '90s with DS9 and the 24th Century, the third season of DSC doesn't have to share the 32nd Century with any other series.
DSC will have more creative freedom now than any other Star Trek series since TNG in 1987. Because now they're building a new era from scratch and they don't have to tie it into anything else. I still would've missed the 23rd Century but that won't be an issue anymore, thanks to SNW.
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