Life Support
Girls come between Jake and Nog's friendship and Julian tries to save Bareil's life, for some inexplicable reason. Oh, Winn is also trying to negotiate a treaty with the Cardassians. Well, ok, the reason for trying to save someone's life is not so inexplicable. I am actually quite sad that Bareil dies, who will I pick on now for being dull? Oh, wait, Shakaar will appear soon to replace him... Shakaar is possibly more dull than Bareil, at least in my mind at the moment. I guess I will see when I rewatch his episodes. Kira certainly has the ability to pick the most dull people on Bajor with whom to have relationships. I guess I did not want Bareil to die, as much as I carried on about his dullness. I certainly knew him better than I knew Opaka, so his death was much sadder than hers. If you can call Opaka's death a death, I guess one can't really. This episode certainly plays games with me, first Bareil is dead, then he is not, then he is dead again. *sigh* Actually, Bareil is not too dull in this episode, I would not say he is interesting, but not dull. Well, at least not until the doctor put the implant thing into his brain, then he is even duller than he ever was before. Kai Winn seems really stupid in this episode, she is absolutely incapable of negotiating with the Cardassians, and seems to have no idea what is going on, no wonder she needs Bareil to live so badly. Also, if the talks fail, she will have someone to blame, as Julian says. But really, I think this waters down Winn's character quite a lot by having her incapable on negotiating properly - she has been shown to be quite deviously smart, so what is up with that. The Jake and Nog Story was not too interesting to me, it was ok, pleasant and amusing enough, but nothing amazing.
5/10
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Heart of Stone
Kira and Odo chase a Maquis ship into the badlands and get stranded on a moon, while Nog tries to convince Sisko to give him a recommendation for Starfleet Academy. The Nog substory is my favourite in this episode. Firstly, its amusing and second, it starts the character on an awesome journey. The Odo/Kira, or rather Odo/Female Shapeshifter story is ok, nothing too earth-shattering, nothing too exciting. I'm not as big a fan of Odo/Kira as I know some people are, but Odo is a hell of a better choice than all Kira's other boyfriends (he is not dull) so I am quite happy to go along with this, generally when there isn't an entire episode dedicated to it though. It's also lessened by the fact that the person with Odo actually is not Kira. I felt quite cheated at the reveal. A wonderful interaction and it's not really the real person! Grrr. I enjoyed the story about Odo's name and how it came to be. Oh, this episode has a nice bit of foreshadowing... Female Shapeshifter: "No changeling has ever harmed another." Odo: "There's a first time for everything." Yes, there is. There is, indeed.
6/10
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Destiny
Three Cardassian scientists come to the station, the writers magically remember that Sisko is supposed to be the Emissary and Miles participates in an accidental flirtation. I can't say that I am a huge fan of the Sisko-Emissary story line, but I do appreciate it for its originality within the Star Trek universe. I always found it random that the pilot made a big deal out of Sisko being Emissary and then, while it was mentioned in passing, it did not really play a substantial role until this episode, more than half way through the third season. I'm actually quite amusing by these Bajorans running around claiming they know what the Prophets want, I think, for the most part, the Prophets, or wormhole aliens, if you will, don't want anything. And when they do want something, they are not exactly subtle about it. I enjoyed this episode for the most part, but it is not amazing or anything. I like that this episode starts a trend of Sisko becoming more and more accepting of his Emissary status, something that I never expected to happen. Prophecies are too vague to be taken seriously though. However, since the prophets know what happens at all points in time, I think it does not matter what he chooses to do ultimately, because anything he chose to do would fulfil the prophecy, as the prophets have already seen it happen. Wow, this is almost giving me as much of a headache as time travel, but it seems that it's a bit of a faux-choice. The Obsidian Order agent in this episode is really lame, not at all sufficiently sneaky, I hope she gets executed by the Order.
6/10
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Prophet Motive
Grand Nagus Zek is changed by the prophets and rewrites the Rules of Acquisition to be the Rules of Benevolence, also Julian nearly wins some sort of prestigious medical award. I don't really see the point of the Julian story, but it is non-offensive and not too boring. The Zek story is not too bad, but definitely below average. Quark gets to be a hero in a very odd type of way. Zek is even more annoying when he is benevolent though. It's a bit of a silly episode really and not very amusing, it fails as a comedy episode, which, I am guessing, it is supposed to be. I enjoyed Quark's scene with the prophets, which reinforced, in my mind, what I was saying in the previous episode, that the prophets really don't want anything from the corporeal, linear items, unless they are The Sisko.
4/10
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Girls come between Jake and Nog's friendship and Julian tries to save Bareil's life, for some inexplicable reason. Oh, Winn is also trying to negotiate a treaty with the Cardassians. Well, ok, the reason for trying to save someone's life is not so inexplicable. I am actually quite sad that Bareil dies, who will I pick on now for being dull? Oh, wait, Shakaar will appear soon to replace him... Shakaar is possibly more dull than Bareil, at least in my mind at the moment. I guess I will see when I rewatch his episodes. Kira certainly has the ability to pick the most dull people on Bajor with whom to have relationships. I guess I did not want Bareil to die, as much as I carried on about his dullness. I certainly knew him better than I knew Opaka, so his death was much sadder than hers. If you can call Opaka's death a death, I guess one can't really. This episode certainly plays games with me, first Bareil is dead, then he is not, then he is dead again. *sigh* Actually, Bareil is not too dull in this episode, I would not say he is interesting, but not dull. Well, at least not until the doctor put the implant thing into his brain, then he is even duller than he ever was before. Kai Winn seems really stupid in this episode, she is absolutely incapable of negotiating with the Cardassians, and seems to have no idea what is going on, no wonder she needs Bareil to live so badly. Also, if the talks fail, she will have someone to blame, as Julian says. But really, I think this waters down Winn's character quite a lot by having her incapable on negotiating properly - she has been shown to be quite deviously smart, so what is up with that. The Jake and Nog Story was not too interesting to me, it was ok, pleasant and amusing enough, but nothing amazing.
5/10
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Heart of Stone
Kira and Odo chase a Maquis ship into the badlands and get stranded on a moon, while Nog tries to convince Sisko to give him a recommendation for Starfleet Academy. The Nog substory is my favourite in this episode. Firstly, its amusing and second, it starts the character on an awesome journey. The Odo/Kira, or rather Odo/Female Shapeshifter story is ok, nothing too earth-shattering, nothing too exciting. I'm not as big a fan of Odo/Kira as I know some people are, but Odo is a hell of a better choice than all Kira's other boyfriends (he is not dull) so I am quite happy to go along with this, generally when there isn't an entire episode dedicated to it though. It's also lessened by the fact that the person with Odo actually is not Kira. I felt quite cheated at the reveal. A wonderful interaction and it's not really the real person! Grrr. I enjoyed the story about Odo's name and how it came to be. Oh, this episode has a nice bit of foreshadowing... Female Shapeshifter: "No changeling has ever harmed another." Odo: "There's a first time for everything." Yes, there is. There is, indeed.
6/10
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Destiny
Three Cardassian scientists come to the station, the writers magically remember that Sisko is supposed to be the Emissary and Miles participates in an accidental flirtation. I can't say that I am a huge fan of the Sisko-Emissary story line, but I do appreciate it for its originality within the Star Trek universe. I always found it random that the pilot made a big deal out of Sisko being Emissary and then, while it was mentioned in passing, it did not really play a substantial role until this episode, more than half way through the third season. I'm actually quite amusing by these Bajorans running around claiming they know what the Prophets want, I think, for the most part, the Prophets, or wormhole aliens, if you will, don't want anything. And when they do want something, they are not exactly subtle about it. I enjoyed this episode for the most part, but it is not amazing or anything. I like that this episode starts a trend of Sisko becoming more and more accepting of his Emissary status, something that I never expected to happen. Prophecies are too vague to be taken seriously though. However, since the prophets know what happens at all points in time, I think it does not matter what he chooses to do ultimately, because anything he chose to do would fulfil the prophecy, as the prophets have already seen it happen. Wow, this is almost giving me as much of a headache as time travel, but it seems that it's a bit of a faux-choice. The Obsidian Order agent in this episode is really lame, not at all sufficiently sneaky, I hope she gets executed by the Order.
6/10
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Prophet Motive
Grand Nagus Zek is changed by the prophets and rewrites the Rules of Acquisition to be the Rules of Benevolence, also Julian nearly wins some sort of prestigious medical award. I don't really see the point of the Julian story, but it is non-offensive and not too boring. The Zek story is not too bad, but definitely below average. Quark gets to be a hero in a very odd type of way. Zek is even more annoying when he is benevolent though. It's a bit of a silly episode really and not very amusing, it fails as a comedy episode, which, I am guessing, it is supposed to be. I enjoyed Quark's scene with the prophets, which reinforced, in my mind, what I was saying in the previous episode, that the prophets really don't want anything from the corporeal, linear items, unless they are The Sisko.
4/10
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