That's like saying we needed to see every last second of repair and resupplying done when they would come across a commerce hub.
No, that would be you exaggerating.
I just wanted to be shown some sort of continuity regarding
-Replacing torpedoes
-The ship being repaired after MAJOR damage - especially "Deadlock" and "The Killing Game".
Other aliens species use the equivalent of photon torpedoes, it's not hard to conceive that they could just go barter for restocking or siphon off anti-matter from the warp core to make more while replicating the casings.
The torpedo they used in "Dark Frontier" was a standard Starfleet torpedo. I wanted a show that showed how Voyager survived in the Delta Quadrant alone, an occassional mention of how they kept their weapons restocked would have added to the fulfillment of the premise.
No more than the DS9 characters forgetting they were turned into James Bond characters in "Our Man Bashir".
"Our Man Bashir" was about the crew getting stuck in a holomatrix for a few hours, "The Killing Game" was about Voyager actually being captured by the enemy, several crewmembers dying and giant chunks of the ship being completely taken apart.
Wasn't Voyager one ship alone in the DQ? Is it realistic that the giant ship alterations really would have had no impact on even the NEXT episode? Not to mention the trauma experienced by all the crewmen.
Its true that all Trek writers drop the ball on occassions but the sheer lack of connection between one episode and the next in Voyager was laughable on occassion. I'm glad you can be content with laziness.
If the VOY crews problems just went away at the end of each episode then they wouldn't be trapped in the DQ or fighting hostile aliens. Their problems didn't just "go away", they just didn't waste time ruminating on minor self-contained events. They just got over them and moved on instead of constantly dwelling on them.
This isn't about getting over problems, this is about the characters being real people and being concerned or occupied with the same issues for a realistically long amount of time.
People battle with problems for very long periods of time, and build relationships over long periods of time, or mourn and miss people for long periods of time.
Besides Tom and B'Ellana, none of the Voyager crew appeared to have any romantic interests never mind friends.
A Star Trek show should be just as much about the crew and their lives as it is about the weeks's sci-fi story. Voyager just didn't give us that, characters like Harry, Tuvok, Neelix and often Tom Paris just appeared to live in some sort of stasis when away from the screen. They didn't seem textured or real.
And of course, some ship problems shouldn't have simply gone away between episodes or within episodes. A reference to the damage done in "Deadlock" or "The Killing Game" in the subsequent episode would have made the show feel more real and organic.
I'm glad you can be content with lazy writing and lack of attention to continuity, but I can't
It's not like Kes was some well-known member of the crew.
She was a regular cast member and in show, she was one of only two medics on board Voyager as well as sitting in on most meetings of the senior crew.
She was closest to Neelix and Paris, and being trapped away from home for as long as they have would tend to harden a person to the point they don't get all blubbery over someone leaving.
Geez, that's your excuse? Data was as hardened as any being ever and he still remembered Tasha Yar and kept a holoprojection of her.
Neelix was a big emotional softie who was with Kes for two years and the writers never bothered to show his reaction to her leaving, never mind Tom or Janeway who was like a surrogate mother to her.
"Life changing events" are more or less a fictional creation, people really aren't of such weak character they let some random experience radically alter who they are.
You can't characterise the entire human race, plenty of people are changed by one event.
-Near death experiences
-Family dying
-Being tortured
Are some major events which can change a person - change their outlooks, change their disposition, change their opinions. I mean are you taking the piss?
If you think "life changing events" don't exist, then I'd like to know if you're ever even stepped out your front door and talked to another person. Hell, turn on the TV and you'll find a documentary or two about them.
Picard didn't let the Borg irrevocably change who he was on the fundamental level.
Picard did change.
Spock didn't let his death/rebirth fundamentally change who he was, Kirk didn't let his son's death irrevocably change who he was.
This happened after the tv show was over, all we got were films that could hardly delve into the after effects of those two events. But at least Kirk's son was remembered.
Whenever anyone talks about how VOY's chars never changed, they mean that they wanted them to all becoming people who had absolutely nothing in common with who they were a month ago.
Ah yes, because you're psychic and know what everyone really thinks even if they think otherwise, you just know better!
Oh and everyone wanted the Voyager crew to turn into space pirates with no morals right? HYPERBOLE AND EXAGGERATION FTW!
The audience would never accept mere mention of the Borg, they'd demand they be seen on screen.
Because you know what every audience member is thinking?
What a ludicrous thing to say, they WOULD see it on screen -in "Dark Frontier"! Keep up!
You're painting Voyager viewers as morons as well as claiming you know everything they think, which I find insulting as a Voyager fan.
And they wouldn't tolerate VOY just avoiding them, they'd want some massive epic battle
Have you got your own collective going on with Voyager fandom or are you so conceited you really believe you can speak for all Voyager viewers ever?
If you're going to continue using the tactics of 1. Exaggeration and 2. Speaking for all Voyager fans based on nothing - then save your rebutall, because I can't argue with someone so illogical.
Besides, it appears you're already known around these parts for trolling regarding Voyager criticism, and I don't have the energy for that.