This occured to me the other day.
Apart from Starfleet Academy (both home console and computer versions) and its spin-off Klingon Academy, the game based directly on Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, and PS2 game Shattered Universe (which is set in the MIRROR universe anyway, so maybe it doesn't even technically count apart from Sulu and the Excelsior being in it), I can't immediately recall any other Star Trek videogames set during this time period.
There have been a couple set during TOS, a few set during TNG and it's movies, one or two DS9 and VOY outings, one game that pays lip service to ENT and even a couple that are explicitly set 'after' Star Trek: Nemesis (heck, there's even been one set in the JJ-verse!).
It seems strange to me that the original Trek movie-verse has been so largely ignored. TWOK being the most popular movie and all, you'd have thought it would have been tapped more often.
It seems to me that most of the Trek games we have got seem to be set in the TNG era or beyond. Almost disproportionately so.
Do we think there's potential here?
Apart from Starfleet Academy (both home console and computer versions) and its spin-off Klingon Academy, the game based directly on Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, and PS2 game Shattered Universe (which is set in the MIRROR universe anyway, so maybe it doesn't even technically count apart from Sulu and the Excelsior being in it), I can't immediately recall any other Star Trek videogames set during this time period.
There have been a couple set during TOS, a few set during TNG and it's movies, one or two DS9 and VOY outings, one game that pays lip service to ENT and even a couple that are explicitly set 'after' Star Trek: Nemesis (heck, there's even been one set in the JJ-verse!).
It seems strange to me that the original Trek movie-verse has been so largely ignored. TWOK being the most popular movie and all, you'd have thought it would have been tapped more often.
It seems to me that most of the Trek games we have got seem to be set in the TNG era or beyond. Almost disproportionately so.
Do we think there's potential here?
