More like TNG season2, euh? Let's see what that would get us ...
1 "The Child"
Kes spontaneously becomes pregnant and gives birth to a mysterious child. Neelix doesn't buy her innocence and gets into a fit of rage,
2 "Where Silence Has Lease"
Voyager becomes trapped in a spatial phenomenon. Here they are subjected to unusual experiments by the whim of a being 'unlike any they have encountered before' but somehow, the script still feels recycled.
3 "Elementary, Dear Kim"
After Ensign Kim easily solves an medical whodunit, Tom Paris asks the computer to make an opponent capable of covering his tracks in such a setting. The result is the EMH, whose medical knowledge actually turns out to be quite useful.
4 "The Outrageous Okona"
Voyager is caught up in the schemes of a flamboyant space rogue on the run, while the newly minted EMH explores humor with the help of a holodeck comedian (Joe Piscopo).
5 "Loud as a Whisper"
The crew play host to a deaf, telepathic ambassador (Howie Seago) who mediates difficult peace negotiations with the assistance of his trio of telepathic interpreters. No reason for the Voyager detour or involvement in local matters that don't really concern the Voyager crew is given.
6 "The Schizoid Man"
An alien scientists cheats death by uploading his memories and personality into the EMH.
7 "Unnatural Selection"
The Voyager receives a distress call from an alien ship , discovering its crew has apparently died of old age. The race is on to solve the mystery before scientists on a research colony suffer the same fate. We get to see crew age even faster than Kes.
8 "A Matter of Horror"
Chakotay is assigned to a Kazon vessel in an attempt to start diplomatic relations with said species, as a gesture of trust. Let's just say the experiment doesn't end well.
9 "The Measure of a Man"
After the EMH refuses an order from a paranoid Janeway to be decompiled for research reasons, a hearing is convened to determine if an accidentally generated but sentient program can be considered property of the crew.
10 "The Dauphin"
The Enterprise hosts the young leader of a single-episode race. Soon, Ensign Kim finds himself falling in love with her. However, Salia and her guardian harbor a secret. Again, no reason whatsoever is given for Voyager hosting the leader of an alien world in the first place.
11 "Contagion"
A dangerous alien computer virus runs rampant through the Enterprise after Tom ill-advisedly runs alien software without check what it actually would do. Turns out a reboot is the simple solution, the ship apparently having no permanent memory accessible to the virus. Inexplicably, the reboot doesn't seem to affect the EMH.
12 "The Royale"
Tuvok and Neelix investigate a structure on the surface of an icy gas giant, which appears to be a hotel from 20th-century Earth. When they try to leave, they are prevented from doing so, and are forced to stay. Hilarity ensues when both non-humans have to improvise their parts.
No reason for the link with 20th century earth is provided, which is puzzling since they're still in the Delta Quadrant.
13 "Time Squared"
Captain Janewaw encounters her unconscious future self when Voyager becomes caught in a time loop where she is destroyed by a space anomaly. At the end of the adventure, captain Janeway remarks: My advice on making sense of temporal paradoxes is simple: don't even try. Not even with extremely dull ones such as these.
14 "The Icarus Factor"
Chakotay's estranged father visits Voyager, and B'elanna's friends discover she is about to miss an important Klingon rite of passage. Two problematic points aren't brought up in the episode: Chakotay's father (1) should be in the Alpha Quadrant and (2) is supposed to be long dead anyway.
15 "Pen Pals"
The Prime Directive is threatened when Tom befriends the child of a pre-warp planet that is suffering from devastating volcanic activity. No problem really, since they're only passing through and will be out of communication range in 24hrs anyway.
16 "Q Who"
Q (John de Lancie) flings Voyager 7,000 light years towards Federation space and into a confrontation with the deadly Borg. At the end, Janeway is really pissed off. Not because of their Borg confrontation, but because Q flung them back to their original position at the end of the episode undoing their 7000 LY gain. She would've beaten those Borg anyway as she's the GOAT, duh!
17 "Samaritan Snare"
A group of seemingly dimwitted aliens, the Pakleds, kidnap Torres to "make their ship go".
18 "Up the Long Ladder"
Captain Janeway must find a way to rescue two radically incompatible cultures, one a primitive Irish farming colony threatened by solar flares, and the other a colony of clones facing inevitable genetic degeneration. Why Janeway would interfere with such alien Delta Quadrant creatures is, once again, never explained, and also we'll never see what becomes of them after this episode. However, she creates a 19-century Irish town holoprogram after this experience that later gets its own arc.
19 "Manhunt"
Kes enters her Elogium, meaning she has to find a mate quickly and her instincts drive her to explore all options. No male on board is safe.
20 "The Emissary"
The Voyager crew must deal with a ship full of Klingons in stasis and unaware they are no longer at war with the Federation. How they ended up in the Delta Quadrant is never explained (hm, I'm starting to notice a pattern here).
21 "Peak Performance"
The EMH fails to beat a humanoid at a game of Strategema and exhibits self-doubt.
and finally ...
22 "Shades of Gray"
A festive compilation of all Ensign Kim Must Suffer moments since Voyager was stranded in the Delta Quadrant!