When TNG did it, those plots were written off as "Harmless Goofiness". Meanwhile VOY gets ripped into for GOOD episodes like "Lifesigns". Tells you something.
The complaint was that they existed at all. The hope was that they'd do some minor damage to the Borg, the Borg would adapt and wipe them out entirely and that would be that. When it turned out the Borg were truly outclassed, the audience was enraged that they existed because their very existence meant that the Borg weren't invincible anymore.
Their potential couldn't be realized, up against that kind of backlash.
Nowhere near as often as VOY's episodes do.
Let me give you examples: Duplicate Crichton. We're supposed to believe that Aeryn can't get over the Talyn Crichton dying and she and John won't get back together. Then in S4 they do get back together and Talyn John isn't mentioned ever again in S4 or Peacekeeper Wars.
Same for D'Argo and Chiana, they break up and get back together later.
Scorpius is deposed and killed, then shows back up alive and get his old power back.
Go to YouTube, folks will watch clips from ENT that they used to be nothing but negative comments and now they're all "Wow, I miss real Trek like this", but you won't see that happen to any Voyager Clips. They're as full of spite as ever,
That was UPN who pulled the plug, wasn't due to fan reaction. It was internal management restructuring.
Uh huh, and fan response was never more the tepid.
Yes, the response was "Please, we're expected to believe they got anyone to agree to help them? What garbage"
The complaint was that VOY succeeded at it at all, even temporarily. Not that we didn't see more of it. Apparently to be "good", Voyager was supposed to attempt at forming Alliances and fail every single time. Because that's "Good writing".
We're going around in circles on the VOYAGER issue, so I'm through with that discussion.
As for FARSCAPE, no... those were not reset buttons.
1. Aeryn was devastated at watching Crichton die on Talyn. And it took time for her to get past it. In universe, there was a gap of several months between "DOG WITH TWO BONES" and "CRICHTON KICKS". She did mention him again, in "PROMISES", when she said there was no longer a distinction in her mind between the two Crichtons. That wasn't a reset... that was growth for her character. Time heals wounds.
2. D'Argo and Chiana... D'Argo was hurt, and he was pretty standoffish with her in season 3. There were a few moments where he went to comfort her because of something extreme, like when they lost Zhaan. But it took all of season 3 and nearly all of season 4 before he let his guard down enough with her and they got back together. Again, time healing the wounds. It was built up again and felt earned, not 1 or 2 episodes and back again. Definitely NOT a reset.
3. Scorpius... he is one of the greatest villains in television. He plans way, WAY ahead. This is how he got his power back. Braca made sure he would survive that planet, and he was Scorpius' spy until he got back to the Peacekeepers. He has the one quality that so few villains have... patience. All the best villains have a great deal of patience, which makes them so dangerous. Scorpius had patience in spades. He played the LOOOOOOOONNNNNG games.
These are NOT reset buttons. Reset buttons would be like these examples from VOYAGER...
"We have a complement of 38 torpedoes." Chakotay
"And no way to replace them when they're gone". Janeway
"THE CLOUD"
(Remind me how many torpedoes were used during the show? I think there's a video out there that counted, and it was about double what they should have had.)
"We have a full complement of shuttles, not to mention the
Delta Flyer." Chakotay, the guy who personally got 3 shuttles destroyed by the time of this episode and another in season 7
"ALICE"
The amount of crew on
Voyager never matched up. In season 1, there are 152 people. In "DISTANT ORIGIN", there are 148... despite losing Seska, Durst, Kurt Bendera and at least two unnamed ones in "ALLIANCES", Frank Darwin, Michael Jonas, Ensign Bennett, Hogan, crewman in "WARLORD", and Ensign Kaplan. They should have been down to about 140 by the end of season 3, but the number always stayed at about 150. Total reset button.
Voyager takes extreme damage in "DEADLOCK"... looks brand spanking new the very next episode, "INNOCENCE". No mention of any time lapse between the two. (Even the stardates are close together.)
The Malon... encountered at the beginning of season 5. Despite TWO huge jumps in distance in "TIMELESS" and "DARK FRONTIER" (about 35-40,000 light years total), they
still encounter the Malon in "JUGGERNAUT".
The 5 survivors of
Equinox... never seen or heard again.
"LATENT IMAGE"... takes place sometime before Seven came aboard, yet instead of Kes assisting The Doctor in the flashbacks, it's Tom.
"ASHES TO ASHES"... Kim says he basically got himself assigned quarters near Ballard while at the Academy, and was apparently in love with her. How easily we forget about Libby, huh? Smells like reset.
I can keep going, but I've typed enough for now. And I think I've made my point.