Indeed. Honestly, this was the place where I really appreciated what people like about interconnected universes with Burnham being able to use her Vulcan history, as well as the united Romulan/Vulcan culture as presented. Her mom's appearance was a little bit much but I love the deep character struggle of Michael so it works.
Sorry it took this long to come back to this.
For me, Unification 3 actually changed how I look at the Star Trek franchise as a whole, if you can believe that. And forgive me if I struggle with words here. Unification 3 is where Star Trek, for me, became a saga.
I've always loved Star Trek as it has been presented. A fictional future history where Humanity strives to reach the stars and be all that it can be. What's not to love?
Each new iteration of the show has brought its own new history and world building to add to the overall tapestry, but there's never really been an overriding through line for the story. Overall, it's been an anthology, not a saga. Especially since the spin-offs started.
For me, for something to be a saga ( at least how I define the word, your mileage may vary) it has to have an over reaching thread throughout the story. The Skywalker line, or the One Ring. An overall story that's being told beyond the individual character arcs.
Star Trek has never really had that. That's not a bad thing. Anthologies are good. And, at its core, Star Trek is still more an anthology more than anything else. But, with Unification 3, I finally see The Saga of it. The Legacy.
The unifying (heh) element is, of course, Spock. Very appropriate. Very logical. If one were to try to encapsulate the entirety of the story of Star Trek, the focus of that story would be Spock. The story starts with him, and with one exception (Enterprise. It took place before he was born, but it still retroactively sets up a lot of things that will become important to the character), the character has appeared on or at least been mentioned in every single iteration of the show (even the JJverse) ever since. And his contributions to the story have been the longest lasting. We have seen Spock from his days as a small child, we saw him put his mark on the entire galaxy. We saw him dedicate his life to a cause that he knew he would never live long enough to see fruition and we saw the Legacy he created through that effort a thousand years later, where he is revered as one of the greatest Vulcans in history, supplanting Surak himself.
We know of the historical impact of his family. Sarek was one of the greatest diplomats the Federation ever saw. His adopted sister continues to carry on his legacy a thousand years later even as she tries to restore the Federation they both loved.
Hell, non-canon materials even identify the Vulcan who made first contact with Zefram Cochrane to be Solkar, father of Skon, grandfather of Sarek, which would put Spock's family there literally as the story began.
https://memory-beta.fandom.com/wiki/Solkar
So, yeah, "The Star Trek Saga". Where the moral of the story is "Don't try and be a great (hu)man. Just be a (hu)man, and let history be the judge". I like it.
This is a level up moment to me. This is Star Trek going in the right direction.
Am I reading too much into things? I don't care.
LLAP, everyone.