I have to admit I did not, since exploration was not primary. A station, religion, past oppression, etc. didn't appeal to me. In truth, it was bringing the Dominion into the plot, as well as The Way of the Warrior, which made me a fan.
Nope, and I still don't. At least, not in its original form as of Emissary.When you first heard of DS9, did you like its premise?
Nope, and I still don't. At least, not in its original form as of Emissary.When you first heard of DS9, did you like its premise?
IMO:
Bajor was occupied: who cares? I certainly don't, and it being occupied is not in and of itself a reason why I should care that it was. Hearing Bajorans whine about the occupation just makes me care even less, not more, and hate them, not like them.
DS9 is an outpost near Bajor: again, who cares? To care about that there would have to be a reason to care about Bajor.
Wormhole aliens who don't know about humanity: yet again, who cares? If I am going to care about an alien, it has to be interesting and present at least some sort of new innovation, and above all, entertainment. DS9's wormhole aliens fail in all regards.
DS9 as an outpost for new races coming through the wormhole: this is actually the only good and promising element of DS9's original premise, but aside from Tosk, the show did absolutely nothing good with it. Certainly though DS9 could have been a great show by telling TOS-style stories using this element, yet it dropped the ball here by abandoning it.
When they changed DS9's premise at the end of Season 2 to guardian of the wormhole and AQ from the Dominion threat, that is when DS9's premise started to get good.
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