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Existing species vs. "aliens of the week"

If you have new stuff every week, you'll have people complaining that the show is too episodic.
If you have recurring species and a long arc, you’ll have people complaining that they have to watch the whole season to understand what’s going on.

Fans, smart? No, fans potato.
 
As I said in another thread, I think that Trek has gone past the TOS-era paradigm where it was basically an anthology with a regular cast, which could tell nearly any sci-fi story imaginable. A large portion of Trek has become the corpus of lore - if you ignore that, there's barely even a reason to have a given episode take place in Trek at all. It would be like running a D&D campaign - if you're using Forgotten Realms, it's precisely because of the huge mythos which has developed over the years - otherwise you would chose a different, more generic (and possibly free-form) setup.

As others have said, the main issue with aliens of the week is they aren't - well - alien in the slightest. Forget about having a point of view which would seem odd to a human, for the most part they are completely indistinguishable from late 20th/early 21st century Americans - unless they have "one weird trick" which is the crux of the episode. Voyager was by far the worst example of this, but all of the series did it to a certain degree. Now I know that you couldn't do a truly alien culture justice in only a single episode, which is why unless the episode is legitimately about the difficulties of first contact (like say Darmok) they should be avoided - to allow greater nuance and depth. If you want to just have rando characters as plot devices, use humans or established races.

The other problem with new races is often you just travel the same path that has been ridden before. I'll make an extreme statement here, but one I will back up: the Cardassians were a mistake. Don't get me wrong, I love what DS9 did with them - they were given, by far, the best development out of all of the "antagonist" races in Trek (arguably the best development period). However, there was no reason for the Cardassians to exist. I say this because the Cardassians and Romulans were very similar in basic psychology and their empire structure (right down to having nearly all-powerful intelligence agencies). You could have had Bajor suffering under Romulan occupation for decades and had the series work out roughly identically. Of course, creating the Cardaassians did no harm in the longer run - except that the Romulans were more or less abandoned as a focus race through the remainder of Trek, meaning they were never fleshed out beyond being some secretive "hermit kingdom" kind of state. I'd worry about the same with introducing "new heavies" - essentially they'll just fall into either the Klingon or Romulan/Cardassian archetypes eventually, telling stories that could just as easily been told within existing lore.
 
Cardassians illustrate my point well. Plus they serve both sides of the coin. Like you said, they could have used Romulans and that would have fleshed out one of the original Trek alien villans. On the other hand it's nice DS9 went with established species such as Cardassians, Bajorans, and Ferengi instead of starting over from scratch yet again.
 
However, there was no reason for the Cardassians to exist. I say this because the Cardassians and Romulans were very similar in basic psychology and their empire structure (right down to having nearly all-powerful intelligence agencies). You could have had Bajor suffering under Romulan occupation for decades and had the series work out roughly identically.

Interesting observation. Though there are many similar characteristics, there are differences as well. For example, the Romulans seem distincly 'colder' than the Cardassians. I could see Sisko get into a heated argument with some Cardassian officers, whereas he would probably meet only contempt from his Romulan discussion partners that he got himself worked up like that. The Cardassians (or at least a lot of their military types) really seem to passionately believe in their ideals of a strong state and all that it brings, twisted though it may seem to us, whereas such ideas probably would be a much more pragmatic thing to the Romulans. And so on.

It might have been interesting though to see the Cardassians and the Romulans get into conflict. Two equally conniving states and secret services, both with a no holds barred approach. Then again, the Founders could be argued to be the same so perhaps we got to see just that, in the Founders warring against the Dominion (and we also got to see them cooperating with the Cardassians as an added bonus).
 
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