I enjoyed it. I enjoyed a story arc driven trek as opposed to the episodic ones. I enjoy that the franchise has modernised and moved with the times. I’ve read a lot of reviews and feedback about missing 26 episode series and it “not being real trek”
I don’t get it, this is a modern trek for a modern times. I mean sure we all would have wanted something different and it’s far from perfect. But I for one don’t miss the standard holodeck/stuck in the transporter/let’s build the captain a new chair episodes.
The new series need to compete with a totally new TV landscape. Disco, and Picard are doing that.
But then I am a fanboy.
I think
Star Trek means different things to different people. Some enjoy the tech, others enjoy the philosophy, some like action or the adventure, and so on.
In my case -- and I speak only for myself -- I feel like
Star Trek generally (and
Discovery particularly) has moved in a direction that appeals to others more than me. That's disappointing, and I don't like feeling disappointed.
I miss the days when Starfleet officers were smart and hard-working -- the best of the best -- and
Star Trek fans were too (even though walking around with my head in a Trek novel resulted in merciless ridicule in school from the "cool" kids). I miss the ethos of genuine effort being both respected and rewarded, and can't get myself worked up over a story about James Kirk being a juvenile delinquent who saves Earth and becomes Captain before he even graduates from Starfleet Academy just because he's awesome -- or Michael Burnham betraying her commanding officer on multiple occasions and then getting the center seat because she reminds an admiral of his daughter. (And are we fans really expected to buy the idea that in a whole galaxy of highly capable people, only Michael Burnham could solve the greatest mystery of all time?)
I like the idea of Lt. Kirk being a "walking pile of books," who worked hard, made mistakes, grew up, gained experience, and earned his captaincy
and along with it the right to exercise his own judgment at times. He was "a starship commander... a valuable commodity." These new Treks lack that je ne sais quoi that made the old ones so much more appealing and inspiring to me. In this new ethos, greatness is a natural gift, and as long as everybody else gets out of the way and falls into line, everything will be okay with the universe.
None of this is to say the shows are bad. They're just intended for a different audience than the
Star Trek I grew up with. And that sucks because I really want more of what I love.