Jadzia and Worf. It was beauty and the beast.
The chemistry between the two really showed through in "Change of Heart", imo. I even loved the episode "Let he who is without sin". Jadzia and Worf acted like a loving but bickering couple. I thought it was hilarious.
And the way the two of them physically bonded for the first time in the holosuite was like animal magnetism. Surprisingly, Jadzia and Worf made a good couple.
O'Brien was a married man with children, yet the way he was portrayed at the end, a viewer might have thought that his marriage and fatherhood came second to his friendship with Bashir.
O'Brien seemed almost more devoted to Bashir than to his own wife and children. Granted, Keiko was very permissive of (and at one point, encouraged) Miles' relationship with Bashir. And Miles enthusiastically jumped at the opportunity. It seemed odd. The show overplayed the Bashir/O'Brien bromance, imho.
The chemistry between the two really showed through in "Change of Heart", imo. I even loved the episode "Let he who is without sin". Jadzia and Worf acted like a loving but bickering couple. I thought it was hilarious.
And the way the two of them physically bonded for the first time in the holosuite was like animal magnetism. Surprisingly, Jadzia and Worf made a good couple.
I thought the show overdid the Bashir and O'Brien bromance/friendship toward the end of the series. I remember during the last episodes, O'Brien appeared in scenes for no good purpose other than to show what a great buddy he was to Bashir.For the poll's choice, it's Miles/Keiko. They had the best sci-fi storylines.
I'd also opine for Julian and Miles, or Garak and Julian. Not all relationships have to have a sexual component. And if they were, I'm happy for them as much as any other fictional "shipping". In part because any relationship is a relationship, not all are sexual, our society tends to fixate on the reproductive act above all else*, and if they're not harming anyone then it doesn't matter?
* how can a society that "gets it" come across even more desperate in its stories than incels in real life? Oh, the draaaaaaaaaaaaama. Melodrama...
O'Brien was a married man with children, yet the way he was portrayed at the end, a viewer might have thought that his marriage and fatherhood came second to his friendship with Bashir.
O'Brien seemed almost more devoted to Bashir than to his own wife and children. Granted, Keiko was very permissive of (and at one point, encouraged) Miles' relationship with Bashir. And Miles enthusiastically jumped at the opportunity. It seemed odd. The show overplayed the Bashir/O'Brien bromance, imho.