I was a kid during TNG's run and I found the kids to be annoying as hell tooI always found the kids on TNG annoying as hell too. Nothing against kids, it just doesn't belong there. Just like Lwaxana Troi doesn't belong there either. Hmpf.![]()

Lwaxana seemed to grate on the nerves more than most kids did. She had an obnoxious, imposing personality. The actress did drama well though ("Half Life", "Dark Page"). I think because she was like a character out of a sitcom (the mother-in-law) and that didn't really have a place in a drama or sci-fi for that matter.
Yes, it was "Rules of Acquisition" (or "Rules of Aquisition" if you want to talk the *first* usage of the Dominion), "Sanctuary", "Shadowplay". "Vortex", "The Alternate" alluded to Odo's people. The slow growth makes sense. DS9 crew was slowly exploring further and further from the wormhole and based on on-screen maps and comments, the wormhole and adjacent space is 2-4 dozen or so light years past the Dominion's border. It's frontier space beyond that which they can safely hold with current quantities of Jem 'Hadar, only being space they step up patrols into after Season 2. How else could some advanced governments exist independent of the Dominion? (Paradans of "Whispers", the "Hard Time" people). Just as Star Trek Star Charts screws up some of the details with Voyager's 7 season maps, the Gamma Quadrant map has atrocious scale (Founder Homeworld/Omarion Homeworld 5000ly from the wormhole. Really?)Yeah, my understanding was that the writers decided sometime in the early second season to build up to a big end-of-season reveal about the Dominion, and that they started planted the seeds with "Rules of Acquisition," (purposefully doing it in a Ferengi episode so that people wouldn't take it seriously). But I hadn't heard of them thinking about it at all in the first season.
The Hunters of Tosk were to be a part of the Dominion (Jem 'Hadar ship navigators) but they were cut. Why I have no idea since "Captive Pursuit" was one of the best episodes of DS9, the best of Season 1, and both Tosk and the Hunters were cool. That neither was revisited in the series was one of the greatest travesties of DS9 (up there with the travesty of transexual Quark in "Profit and Lace").