Hmmm, interesting thread, I spend what little time I do here usually commenting about what Voyager did wrong, now I get to prove I'm not a Voyager hater.
What Voyager got right for me -
The sense of family. I've always loved the sense of family and closeness that grew over the course of the series, and Janeway's evolution from tight, bun-wearing 'school teacher' into a short haired mother hen.
The characters - even if most of them were woefully undeveloped in the later season - I even liked Harry and Neelix.
The Doctor - deserves a mention all of his own. His character growth, his terrible bedside manner, and personality... all made believable and real thanks to Picardo's wonderful acting skills. The Doc has always been one of my favourite Trek characters.
Seven - while I'd rather she lose the catsuit (come on, if they wanted to make her sexy, they should have put her in a slinky dress!), it didn't matter to me that she was added for sex appeal, I just loved the character for her growth and development. And Jeri Ryan also has amazing acting abilities!
The ship itself - I've always loved the design of Voyager and the Intrepid class. And the Delta Flyer was just COOL.
The fun and silliness - like visiting Fair Haven, or the Doc pretending to be the Captain in Tinker, Tenor, Doctor, Spy (that was my favourite Voyager episode growing up!) - while these days, I tend to gripe about the ridiculousness of the holodeck's 'separate power source', when I actually watch Voyager, I can suspend my inner Trek critic and just enjoy it for what it is.
All in all, its no DS9, but its still Star Trek, and it was my first Trek series, so I can love it for what it is.
