This Is The Correct Order In Which To Watch The Star Trek Franchise

Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard in Picard

Don't look now, but "Star Trek" is a thing again. It's been a while — after redefining television in the 1960s and enjoying a resurgence in the '80s and '90s, the final episode of ""Star Trek: Enterprise" in 2005 marked the beginning of a dark period in which there was simply no "Trek" to be had. Then, in 2017, the drought ended with the premiere of " "Star Trek: Discovery ," and when it rains, it pours. "Discovery" heralded the arrival of a whole new era of ""Star Trek," and that's just the beginning — Paramount+ will soon play host to two new "Star Trek" shows, with three more currently in development, and there's a new movie scheduled for release in 2023 . Suddenly, we are awash in "Trek," which means that if you're unfamiliar with Gene Roddenberry's universe, it's a pretty good time to jump on board. Only where do you start with a franchise this big — and more importantly, what's the proper watch order?

These are the questions we're here to answer. While it's tempting to try and watch "Star Trek" chronologically, using either the fictional timeline or release dates, we recommend an order that's a bit of a blend of both. Following this list should result in an experience that provides a complete picture of what "Star Trek" is while also remaining easy to binge. With that in mind (and with the understanding that a few spoilers are unavoidable ), it's time to boldly go where every previous "Star Trek" installment has gone before!

The Original Series

William Shatner as Captain Kirk in The Original Series

When you watch "Star Trek," you really need to begin at the beginning. Not with Enterprise, which is set earlier in the "Trek" timeline than any show, but with "Star Trek" — or as it's lovingly called these days, "The Original Series." This is the show that ran on NBC from 1966 to 1969, forever altering the television medium, the science fiction genre, and the experience of being a fan. While some viewers may find the special effects laughable or the political themes unsubtle, the most astonishing thing about "TOS" is how well it holds up, even more than 50 years later. The first two seasons, in particular, are absolutely riddled with classic episodes, and while the third season is significantly worse due to changes in the creative team, it's still fun to watch William Shatner ham it up as Captain Kirk, Leonard Nimoy raise a single Vulcan eyebrow as Mr. Spock, and the original Starship Enterprise soar through space. Most importantly, though, those first 79 episodes introduce rules, concepts, and even characters that "Star Trek" is still playing with today, from Class M planets and the Prime Directive to Khan and the Klingons.

The Animated Series

1970s animated versions of Kirk and Spock

The unofficial fourth and fifth seasons of "Star Trek," "The Animated Series" aired on NBC from 1973 to 1974, after tempers had cooled somewhat between NBC and Roddenberry, who left "Star Trek" after its second season out of frustration with the network. Not only was the entire original cast back (minus Walter Koenig), but so was Roddenberry, and so was D.C. Fontana, Roddenberry's longtime assistant who had grown into one of the most celebrated "Trek" writers and had also departed after Season 2. Between the return of some of the show's original creative minds and cast, and the fact that animation allowed them to do so much more than live action special effects of the era, "TAS" is pure, undiluted "Star Trek."

It's never been made explicitly clear whether "TAS" is canon, but considering the number of "TAS" ideas re-used in later live-action shows, plus the introduction in "TAS" of canon pieces of backstory, like Kirk's middle name, it's silly at this point to believe otherwise. And it's required viewing for completists who want to see every televised adventure undertaken by the original Enterprise crew.

The first six films

Ricardo Montalban as Khan in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

"Star Trek: The Motion Picture" was released by Paramount in 1979, and while it's not an especially good film, it holds historical importance as the launching point for the "Star Trek" movie franchise. The real highlights in this part of the list, though, are the three films that followed. The Wrath of Khan, The Search for Spock, and The Voyage Home essentially form their own trilogy of movies within the larger "Trek" saga, and are some of the most popular and critically acclaimed installments in the franchise. "The Wrath of Khan," in particular, tends to show up near the top of "best science fiction films in history" lists, making the titular Khan such an iconic villain that he was recast for the J.J. Abrams reboot movies, while "The Voyage Home" is probably the most charming "Star Trek" film, as the Enterprise travels to the past to rescue the humpback whale species from extinction.

Even the most dedicated binge-watcher can safely skip the horrendous fifth movie, "The Final Frontier," but "The Undiscovered Country" is an absolute masterpiece, and taken together, these six films provide a worthy capstone to the franchise's inaugural era.

Doug Jones as Saru in Discovery

It might seem counterintuitive to follow up the oldest "Star Trek" series with one of the newest, especially given that "Star Trek: Discovery" actually takes place prior to "The Original Series." But there's a good reason to jump from the tales of Kirk and Spock to the tales of Michael Burnham and...well, and Spock, who shows up in Season 2. "The Original Series" and its accompanying animated and film extensions are foundational to "Discovery," which is set shortly after the events of the rejected "Star Trek" pilot "The Cage." And characters from "The Cage" show up in Season 2 and are also appearing in their own spinoff, "Star Trek: Strange New Worlds."

While an in-universe chronological watch order would put the first two seasons of "Discovery" before "TOS" and the third season at the very end (as the crew travels forward in time to the far future) it makes more sense to us to treat "Discovery" as its own story. The third season does occasionally reference "past" events from other shows, but that does lead nicely into the next "Trek" installment...

The Next Generation (Seasons 1-5)

Picard and Riker in Next Generation

For many Trekkies today, "Star Trek: The Next Generation" was their introduction to the franchise, and for good reason. If any one series beyond the original can lay a claim to being the single most iconic "Star Trek" story, it's Next Generation, which premiered in 1987 and went on to not only have seven seasons of its own, but to jumpstart a chain of interlocking "Star Trek" shows that would thoroughly dominate the 1990s. Before that, though, the first five seasons of Next Generation stood alone, and if you're trying to get somebody instantly hooked on Trek, this might actually be the place to start, despite the fact that the first couple of seasons don't hold up incredibly well.

If you're absorbing all of "Star Trek," though, "Next Generation" has to be the place to start. After all, it's the next generation of what, exactly? The answer is the Starship Enterprise, which comes with an entirely new cast and crew, introducing the world to Worf, Data, Counselor Troi, and Geordi LaForge, and permanently branding the hearts of a thousand Trekkies with the image of Patrick Stewart as Captain Jean-Luc Picard .

The Next Generation (Season 6) / Deep Space Nine (Season 1)

Avery Brooks as Commander Sisko in Deep Space Nine

Okay, this is where it gets weird. "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" debuted in January 1993, just a few months after "Next Generation" kicked off its sixth season — a season full of unmitigated classics, incidentally, from the return of Montgomery Scott in "Relics" to the legendary two-parter "Chain of Command." Picard even makes a cameo in the first episode of "DS9," which takes place aboard a space station and uses the ideas and events of earlier "Next Generation" episodes to inform characters like Commander Benjamin Sisko and Quark. It's essentially impossible to understand Sisko's backstory, for example, without first having seen the "Next Generation" episode "The Best of Both Worlds."

Despite the fact that they take place over roughly the same time period, we recommend watching the entirety of Season 6 of "Next Generation" followed by the entirety of Season 1 of "DS9," if for no other reason than the former has more episodes than the latter, making it a complicated process to intercut between them. But however you choose to do it, these two seasons really should be watched back to back.

The Next Generation (Season 7) / Deep Space Nine (Season 2)

The final shot of Next Generation

Similarly, the second season of "DS9" coincides with the last "Next Generation" season. While it might lack the standout episodes of earlier seasons, Season 7 manages a few achievements. For one thing, it puts a bow on one of the most beloved shows in television history with a flourish, ending the program with an ambitious, timeline-jumping two-parter that ties directly into the events of the very first episode. It also inadvertently lays the groundwork for a much more modern "Trek" show with an episode about junior officers called "Lower Decks." But most importantly, it ties into and reinforces "Deep Space Nine," most notably in the penultimate episode "Preemptive Strike," which deals with concurrent "DS9" problems like the Cardassians and the Maquis.

By the end of Season 2, "DS9" has already proven capable of standing on its own, having picked up and ran with the Maquis threads from earlier "Next Generation" episodes, returned to the Mirror Universe first introduced in the original series, and introduced the Dominion and the Jem'Hadar, who will serve as the series' primary antagonists. But the stories of Picard and company were far from over...

Generations

Captain Kirk meets Captain Picard in Generations

The four feature films built around the cast of "Next Generation" are a direct continuation of the movies that came before, not least because the first one, 1994's "Generations," serves as a bridge between "TOS" and its descendant, and between Kirk and Picard, in about the most literal way you could imagine. This movie marks the final appearance of several characters from the original show, including Kirk himself (the one played by William Shatner, at any rate) which makes it a crucial piece of the "Star Trek" timeline, as does the introduction of Data's emotion chip. Of course, some might consider the movie worth it just to see Malcolm McDowell chew the scenery like he hasn't eaten in three days, and we can't say they're wrong.

"Generations" launched Picard's crew onto the big screen almost immediately after their exit from the small one, meaning they would continue to be the face of "Star Trek" for the remainder of the decade. But back in the realm of "Trek" TV, things were only heating up, as a new series prepared to take the field and challenge "DS9" for television dominance.

Deep Space Nine (Season 3) / Voyager (Season 1)

Kate Mulgrew as Captain Janeway in Voyager

Once again, it's time to switch between two seasons of "Star Trek," as the third season of "DS9" overlaps with the debuting "Star Trek: Voyager." The first "Trek" series to feature a woman (Kathryn Janeway) in the captain's chair, "Voyager" also had a unique and fascinating premise. Much of the "DS9" action is driven by the existence of a nearby wormhole that leads to the Gamma Quadrant, a section of space far away from the Federation's native Alpha Quadrant. This allows the titular space station and its intrepid crew to encounter any number of new and dangerous alien species. "Voyager" goes even farther, literally — a solitary ship finds itself transported to the even more distant Delta Quadrant and spends the rest of the series trying to get home.

Due to this premise, there's no reason whatsoever to jump between individual episodes of these two seasons, as the events of one show don't affect the other in any way. But jumping between shows by the season provides a fun and accurate experience of what it was like to watch the interlocking "Star Trek" programs of the 1990s.

Deep Space Nine (Season 4) / Voyager (Season 2)

Michael Dorn as Worf in Deep Space Nine

Like most "Star Trek" shows, "Voyager" takes a couple of seasons to find its feet, and Season 2 in particular contains some of its most notoriously bad episodes, from the tone-deaf Native American implications of "Tattoo" to Janeway and Voyager pilot Tom Paris turning into salamanders and having salamander babies together in "Threshold" to the utter abomination that is "Tuvix." At least it has the consideration to get them all out of the way early on.

"DS9," meanwhile, was encountering its own problems in Season 4, which took a sharp turn away from the burgeoning conflict with the Dominion and instead spent most of its time dealing with the newly antagonistic Klingon Empire. Fortunately, even as the overarching plot went briefly off the rails, the writing was getting better and better, and the diversion is, if nothing else, entertaining. As a bonus, Season 4 features one of television's first lesbian kisses, and also brings in Worf, the Klingon security officer from "Next Generation" — until Picard, Michael Dorn was the only actor to star in the main casts of two different "Star Trek" shows.

First Contact

Actor and director Jonathan Frakes alongside James Cromwell in First Contact

As a result of his dual roles, Worf would spend the next several years hopping back and forth between television and the movies. One reason it's important to watch Season 4 of "DS9" prior to watching "First Contact," the second film starring the "Next Generation" cast, is because in order to include Worf in the story, the latter is obligated to include a scene in which the Enterprise rescues another ship called the Defiant, introduced in "DS9" and captained by Worf himself. Future "Next Generation" movies, which decline in quality moving forward, come up with increasingly hand-wavy reasons for his presence on the Enterprise bridge.

"First Contact" itself, however, is by far the best of the "Next Generation" films and one of the best "Star Trek" films in general, as the crew travels back in time to prevent the cybernetic hive mind known as the Borg from altering history. Not only is "First Contact" a great movie (and the film directorial debut of Jonathan Frakes, who plays Commander William Riker), it also kicks off a spectacular "Star Trek" run that can stand up against any other period in franchise history.

Deep Space Nine (Season 5) / Voyager (Season 3)

Robert Picardo as Lewis Zimmerman in Deep Space Nine

With Season 5, "DS9" gets back on track after the previous outlier season, quickly focusing around a single unified threat thanks to an alliance between the show's original antagonists the Cardassians and the Dominion. The presence of the sinister Changelings adds an intrigue element to the story, as any character could potentially be a Changeling in disguise — a concept that would be used to great effect years later in the 2004 reboot of "Battlestar Galactica." The season concludes with the official start of the Dominion War, a conflict that would dominate the remainder of the show.

"Voyager," meanwhile, was also getting back on track in its third season, which generally sees an uptick in quality — particularly toward the end, with episodes like "Before and After," "Real Life," and "Worst Case Scenario." Robert Picardo, who plays Voyager's holographic doctor, also gets to make a cameo in "DS9" as the Doctor's creator, Lewis Zimmerman, in the episode "Doctor Bashir, I presume." And Season 3 ends with the first installment of "Scorpion," which catalyzed "Voyager's" official rise to greatness in part thanks to a memorable new character.

Deep Space Nine (Season 6) / Voyager (Season 4)

Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine in Voyager

These two overlapping seasons, airing in late 1997 and early 1998, represent the pinnacle of "Star Trek's" '90s golden age. In "DS9," the Dominion War is in full swing, the series' much-discussed religions themes are building in prominence, the mysterious Section 31 is introduced, foreshadowing its prominent role in both "Enterprise" and "Discovery," and most memorably, the showrunners do what almost no iteration of "Star Trek" has ever dared to do: permanently kill off a member of the main cast.

Casting changes are also a major part of Season 4 of "Voyager," which jettisons the little-loved character of Kes and officially introduces Seven of Nine , a liberated Borg drone played by Jeri Ryan who quickly joins the ranks of the franchise's most widely known characters. It's an oversimplification to suggest that the overall brilliance of Season 4 is the direct result of Ryan joining the cast, but no matter how much of it you attribute to her, it's a phenomenal season of television, filled from start to finish with some of the best "Voyager" episodes (and also "Retrospect," but we don't talk about that one).

Insurrection

Patrick Stewart alongside Donna Murphy in Insurrection

It's not "First Contact," but 1998's "Insurrection" is still a pretty good "Next Generation" movie, another solid offering from Jonathan Frakes. While "Insurrection" doesn't interact much with the events of "DS9" or "Voyager," watching it at this point in the "Trek" timeline provides an overall context for the state of the Federation, which has been intermittently challenged, as the movie's primary villain points out, by the Borg, the Cardassians, and the Dominion. A sense of the Federation being assailed from all sides isn't strictly necessary for the film's story of familial betrayal on a planet that confers immortality, but it does make viewing it a more interesting experience (though again, the perfunctory inclusion of Worf simply because he's expected to be in "Next Generation" movies is potentially jarring for "DS9" fans who have become invested in his character development, which "Insurrection" largely ignores).

"Insurrection" is Frakes' last "Star Trek" movie as director (though he would later direct episodes of "Discovery" and "Picard") and marks the beginning of the end of the '90s "Trek" boom. There's still plenty of great "Trek" ahead, but the curve is now pointing down.

Deep Space Nine (Season 7) / Voyager (Season 5)

Avery Brooks alongside Penny Johnson Jerald in the Deep Space Nine finale

The final season of "DS9" represents one of the single greatest creative accomplishments in "Star Trek" history, as no "Trek" show to date has managed to stick such an ambitious and satisfying landing. In a unique move, the last 10 episodes of the season form a single, series-ending story, and the feature-length finale, "What You Leave Behind," is considered one of the greatest "Trek" episodes of all time. "DS9" had been great for at least two seasons prior to this one, but the success of Season 7 cemented it as a foremost jewel in the crown of the "Star Trek" franchise.

"Voyager," meanwhile, continued its stellar run of episodes, capping off a three-year rehabilitation effort that saw one of the franchise's shakiest shows become one of its best. It was good timing, too, because with "DS9" wrapping up ("What You Leave Behind" aired the week after the Season 5 "Voyager" finale, "Equinox"), Captain Janeway and her crew were suddenly the only starship in the galaxy. And you, intrepid binge-watcher, can finally stop switching between two different shows.

Voyager (Seasons 6-7)

An older version of Janeway in Endgame, the Voyager finale

Unlike "DS9," the final seasons of "Voyager" are not its best, though admittedly, after Seasons 4 and 5, that's a high bar to clear. Season 6 comes close with a steady stream of classics, introducing both the popular Holodeck scenario Fair Haven and the "Pathfinder" storyline that sees "Next Generation" vets Reginald Barclay and Deanna Troi join up as recurring characters. By Season 7, however, the quality of "Voyager" has begun to dip noticeably — the final season contains few memorable episodes and at least one extremely ill-conceived romantic subplot. It earns some redemption, however, with the two-part series finale "Endgame," which, whether you like it or not, at least fulfills the promise of the show's premise and comes to a definitive conclusion about whether the ship and its crew are ever getting back to the Alpha Quadrant. It's a moment that would have been easy to shy away from, and "Voyager" meets it head on.

"Endgame" aired in May 2001, and in retrospect, the title didn't only apply to "Voyager." The continuous story that "Star Trek" had been telling for the past 14 years over the course of three different shows and three different movies was over. There was, however, one last (incredibly depressing) chapter to get through.

Tom Hardy as a villainous Picard clone in Nemesis

The final "Next Generation" film, released in 2002, is by far the worst of them, and the worst "Star Trek" movie in general since 1989's "The Final Frontier." It was so bad, in fact, that it notoriously killed "Star Trek" — plans for a fifth "Next Generation" movie were scrapped after "Nemesis" bombed at the box office, and creatively, it's an absolute nightmare, introducing a Romulan sister planet with the unfortunate name of Remus, blatantly attempting to restart Data's entire character arc via a literal copy with the also unfortunate name of B-4, and tying these and other unfortunate decisions together with a nonsensical plot featuring Tom Hardy as a secret clone of Picard. After "Nemesis," the scuttling of future franchise installments can honestly be seen as a mercy killing.

"Star Trek" wasn't quite dead in 2002, however. While we've now officially made it through the combined stories of "Next Generation," "DS9," and "Voyager," there's one more show, independent from the others, that now enters the viewing order. And watching it involves going back to the very beginning... and even before that.

Scott Bakula as Captain Jonathan Archer in Enterprise

In a chronological viewing, "Star Trek: Enterprise" would actually be the first show you watch, since it takes place a hundred years prior to "The Cage." Indirectly spinning off from the events of "First Contact," it tells the story of Earth's first warp starship, appropriately named the Enterprise and captained by Scott Bakula's Jonathan Archer, and of humanity's early relationships with alien species like the Vulcans, Klingons, Romulans, and Andorians. Despite its status as a prequel, the sheer degree to which "Enterprise" relies on its audience having knowledge of other "Star Trek" properties makes it almost impossible to recommend as an entry point. It fits much better here, as the official end of the franchise's second major era, especially given that the final episode, "These Are The Voyages...," frames itself as a holodeck simulation being watched by the Enterprise crew from "Next Generation."

"There Are The Voyages..." aired on May 13th, 2005. There wouldn't be another "Star Trek" show for more than 12 years. At this point, our watch order breaks away from order of release, but we feel strongly that it's how "Star Trek" from 1987 to 2005 should be watched.

Lower Decks

The animated characters of Beckett Mariner and Brad Boimler in Lower Decks

If you think 12 years is a long gap between "Star Trek" installments, that's nothing compared to the 45 years that went by between "Trek" stories told via animation. "Short Treks" was technically the first "Trek" show since "The Animated Series" to include animated episodes, and that aired in 2019, but 2020 gave us the first season of "Lower Decks," an entirely animated show about the people who don't get to hang out on the bridge.

The first franchise installment to ever concern itself primarily with characters who are not in command of a starship or space station, "Lower Decks" is the "Star Trek" equivalent of shows like HBO's "Harley Quinn" — an irreverent, adult-oriented comedy that revels in its TV-MA rating, delivering violence, sex, and swearing at warp speed frequencies. Chronologically, it's set shortly after the events of "Nemesis," but more importantly to the binge-watcher, it's the dessert following a feast — a vital dose of pure fun after absorbing almost four full decades of space drama.

The Kelvin timeline

Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto as Kirk and Spock in the rebooted Star Trek

After the box office failure of "Nemesis" brought an abrupt end to the "Next Generation" movies, there wasn't a new "Trek" film until 2009. And far from being a continuation of the existing movie franchise, this new version, simply called "Star Trek," was a reboot of "The Original Series," casting new, younger versions of Kirk, Spock, and the rest of the first Enterprise crew. Sequels to the reboot followed in 2013 and 2016.

Watching these three movies as part of a "Star Trek" binge is pretty much entirely optional, since they take place in an alternate timeline created when the USS Kelvin was destroyed in battle with time-traveling Romulan ship from the 24th century, leaving an infant James T. Kirk without a father in the process. Moreover, the trilogy is widely considered to be of uneven quality (though the third movie, "Star Trek Beyond," is considerably better than its predecessor, possibly due to the departure of director J.J. Abrams). Still, if you're going to watch them, this is the place in the viewing order to do it, as a key plot point of the first film — the Romulan sun going supernova — plays a major role in "Picard."

Short Treks

Aldis Hodge as Craft in the Short Treks episode

The Kelvin movies might not exert much direct influence over the larger plot of "Star Trek," but they played a major role in the future of the franchise by bringing in Alex Kurtzman. Kurtzman is the showrunner on "Discovery," and with the exception of "Lower Decks," he has been directly involved in every modern "Trek" series. In 2018, after the successful first season of "Discovery" led to a new expansion of the "Star Trek" franchise, Kurtzman and co-creator Bryan Fuller (formerly a writer on "DS9" and "Voyager") premiered "Short Treks," an anthology series of short, unrelated stories. As of this writing, there have been two seasons and 10 total episodes, some live-action, some animated.

"Short Treks" spans almost the entire "Star Trek" timeline — two episodes are set in the period of time between "Enterprise" and "The Original Series," while a third takes place in the far future. As a result, watching it requires a sense of the entire scope of the "Trek" universe. It's the penultimate entry in this watch order, however, because the Season 2 finale, "Children of Mars," leads directly into the final entry: "Picard."

Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard in Picard

"Star Trek: Picard" is the first of the modern "Trek" offerings to look forward rather than back, giving us a story set after the events of "Next Generation," "DS9," and "Voyager." Indeed, not only does the series follow up with Jean-Luc Picard 20 years after we last saw him (and 12 years after the Romulan sun went supernova) but it also brings in an older version of Seven of Nine, once again portrayed by Jeri Ryan. As mentioned, Picard also ties into the most recent installment of "Short Treks," which involves a terrorist attack by synthetic life forms that eventually leads to a ban on their creation — one of the many plot elements of "Picard" that has drawn criticism for being inconsistent with the original utopian vision of "Star Trek."

With so many new "Trek" shows on their way, this list will quickly become outdated. But all the upcoming series will reward previous "Trek" viewing, from Janeway's return on "Star Trek: Prodigy" to a show focused entirely on Section 31. So if you're going to binge all of "Star Trek," you might want to get started now!

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  • General Trek Discussion

DS9 and Voyager in Chronological Order

  • Thread starter DigificWriter
  • Start date Sep 10, 2016

DigificWriter

DigificWriter

Vice admiral.

  • Sep 10, 2016

Hi, all. Just for fun, I ended up putting together a Chronological Guide for Deep Space Nine and Voyager that covers the first 5 seasons of DS9 and the first 3 seasons of Voyager, and figured I'd share it with my fellow Trek fans. [Deep Space Nine Season 1] Emissary (Deep Space Nine 1x01/1x02) Past Prologue (Deep Space Nine 1x03) A Man Alone (Deep Space Nine 1x04) Babel (Deep Space Nine 1x05) Captive Pursuit (Deep Space Nine 1x06) Q-Less (Deep Space Nine 1x07) Dax (Deep Space Nine 1x08) The Passenger (Deep Space Nine 1x09) Move Along Home (Deep Space Nine 1x10) The Nagus (Deep Space Nine 1x11) Vortex (Deep Space Nine 1x12) Battle Lines (Deep Space Nine 1x13) The Storyteller (Deep Space Nine 1x14) Progress (Deep Space Nine 1x15) If Wishes Were Horses (Deep Space Nine 1x16) Dramatis Personae (Deep Space Nine 1x17) The Forsaken (Deep Space Nine 1x18) Duet (Deep Space Nine 1x19) In the Hands of the Prophets (Deep Space Nine 1x20) [Deep Space Nine Season 2] The Homecoming (Deep Space Nine 2x01) The Circle (Deep Space Nine 2x02) The Siege (Deep Space Nine 2x03) Cardassians (Deep Space Nine 2x04) Invasive Procedures (Deep Space Nine 2x05) Melora (Deep Space Nine 2x06) Rules of Acquisition (Deep Space Nine 2x07) Necessary Evil (Deep Space Nine 2x08) Second Sight (Deep Space Nine 2x09) Rivals (Deep Space Nine 2x10) Sanctuary (Deep Space Nine 2x11) The Alternate (Deep Space Nine 2x12) Armageddon Game (Deep Space Nine 2x13) Paradise (Deep Space Nine 2x14) Whispers (Deep Space Nine 2x15) Shadowplay (Deep Space Nine 2x16) Playing God (Deep Space Nine 2x17) Profit and Loss (Deep Space Nine 2x18) Blood Oath (Deep Space Nine 2x19) The Maquis, Part 1 (Deep Space Nine 2x20) The Maquis, Part 2 (Deep Space Nine 2x21) The Wire (Deep Space Nine 2x22 Crossover (Deep Space Nine 2x23) The Collaborator (Deep Space Nine 2x24) Tribunal (Deep Space Nine 2x25) The Jem'Hadar (Deep Space Nine 2x26) [Deep Space Nine Season 3/Voyager Season 1] The Search, Part 1 (Deep Space Nine 3x01) The Search, Part 2 (Deep Space Nine 3x02) The House of Quark (Deep Space Nine 3x03) Equilibrium (Deep Space Nine 3x04) Second Skin (Deep Space Nine 3x05) The Abandoned (Deep Space Nine 3x06) Civil Defense (Deep Space Nine 3x07) Meridian (Deep Space Nine 3x08) Fascination (Deep Space Nine 3x09) Defiant (Deep Space Nine 3x10) Past Tense, Part 1 (Deep Space Nine 3x11) Past Tense, Part 2 (Deep Space Nine 3x12) Caretaker (Voyager 1x01/1x02) Parallax (Voyager 1x03) Life Support (Deep Space Nine 3x13) Time and Again (Voyager 1x04) Heart of Stone (Deep Space Nine 3x14) Phage (Voyager 1x05) Destiny (Deep Space Nine 3x15) The Cloud (Voyager 1x06) Prophet Motive (Deep Space Nine 3x16) Visionary (Deep Space Nine 3x17) Distant Voices (Deep Space Nine 3x18) Eye of the Needle (Voyager 1x07) Ex-Post Facto (Voyager 1x08) Through the Looking Glass (Deep Space Nine 3x19) Improbable Cause (Deep Space Nine 3x20) The Die is Cast (Deep Space Nine 3x21) Emanations (Voyager 1x09) Prime Factors (Voyager 1x10) State of Flux (Voyager 1x11) Heroes and Demons (Voyager 1x12) Explorers (Deep Space Nine 3x22) Family Business (Deep Space Nine 3x23) Cathexis (Voyager 1x13) Shakaar (Deep Space Nine 3x24) Faces (Voyager 1x14) Jetrel (Voyager 1x15) Learning Curve (Voyager 1x16) Projections (Voyager 1x17) Elogium (Voyager 1x18) Twisted (Voyager 1x19) Facets (Deep Space Nine 3x25) The Adversary (Deep Space Nine 3x26) The 37s (Voyager 1x20) [Deep Space Nine Season 4/Voyager Season 2] Initiations (Voyager 2x01) Non Sequitur (Voyager 2x02) The Way of the Warrior (Deep Space Nine 4x01/4x02) Persistence of Vision (Voyager 2x03) The Visitor (Deep Space Nine 4x03) Hippocratic Oath (Deep Space Nine 4x04) Partuition (Voyager 2x04) Tattoo (Voyager 2x05) Indiscretion (Deep Space Nine 4x05) Rejoined (Deep Space Nine 4x06) Cold Fire (Voyager 2x06) Little Green Men (Deep Space Nine 4x07) Maneuvers (Voyager 2x07) Resistance (Voyager 2x08) Starship Down (Deep Space Nine 4x08) Prototype (Voyager 2x09) The Sword of Kahless (Deep Space Nine 4x09) Our Man Bashir (Deep Space Nine 4x10) Alliances (Voyager 2x10) Homefront (Deep Space Nine 4x11) Threshold (Voyager 2x11) Meld (Voyager 2x12) Dreadnought (Voyager 2x13) Death Wish (Voyager 2x14) Paradise Lost (Deep Space Nine 4x12) Lifesigns (Voyager 2x15) Investigations (Voyager 2x16) Crossfire (Deep Space Nine 4x13) Return to Grace (Deep Space Nine 4x14) Deadlock (Voyager 2x17) Sons of Mogh (Deep Space Nine 4x15) Bar Association (Deep Space Nine 4x16) Innocence (Voyager 2x18) Accession (Deep Space Nine 4x17) The Thaw (Voyager 2x19) Tuvix (Voyager 2x20) Rules of Engagement (Deep Space Nine 4x18) Hard Time (Deep Space Nine 4x19) Resolutions (Voyager 2x21) Shattered Mirror (Deep Space Nine 4x20) Basics, Part 1 (Voyager 2x22) The Muse (Deep Space Nine 4x21) For the Cause (Deep Space Nine 4x22) To the Death (Deep Space Nine 4x23) The Quickening (Deep Space Nine 4x24) Body Parts (Deep Space Nine 4x25) Broken Link (Deep Space Nine 4x26) [Deep Space Nine Season 5/Voyager Season 3] Apocalypse Rising (Deep Space Nine 5x01) Basics, Part 2 (Voyager 3x01) False Profits (Voyager 3x02) The Ship (Deep Space Nine 5x02) Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places (Deep Space Nine 5x03) ...Nor the Battle to the Strong (Deep Space Nine 5x04) The Assignment (Deep Space Nine 5x05) Sacred Ground (Voyager 3x03) Trials and Tribble-ations (Deep Space Nine 5x06) Let He Who is Without Sin (Deep Space Nine 5x07) Things Past (Deep Space Nine 5x08) Flashback (Voyager 3x04) The Chute (Voyager 3x05) Remember (Voyager 3x06) The Ascent (Deep Space Nine 5x09) The Swarm (Voyager 3x07) Future's End, Part 1 (Voyager 3x08) Future's End, Part 2 (Voyager 3x09) Warlord (Voyager 3x10) The Q and the Grey (Voyager 3x11) Rapture (Deep Space Nine 5x10) The Darkness and the Light (Deep Space Nine 5x11) Macrocosm (Voyager 3x12) The Begotten (Deep Space Nine 5x12) Fair Trade (Voyager 3x13) Alter Ego (Voyager 3x14) For the Uniform (Deep Space Nine 5x13) Coda (Voyager 3x15) Blood Fever (Voyager 3x16) In Purgatory's Shadow (Deep Space Nine 5x14) Unity (Voyager 3x17) By Inferno's Light (Deep Space Nine 5x15) Rise (Voyager 3x18) Doctor Bashir, I Presume (Deep Space Nine 5x16) A Simple Investigation (Deep Space Nine 5x17) Business as Usual (Deep Space Nine 5x18) Darkling (Voyager 3x19) Ferengi Love Songs (Deep Space Nine 5x19) Ties of Blood and Water (Deep Space Nine 5x20) Favorite Son (Voyager 3x20) Before and After (Voyager 3x21) Real Life (Voyager 3x22) Children of Time (Deep Space Nine 5x21) Soldiers of the Empire (Deep Space Nine 5x22) Blaze of Glory (Deep Space Nine 5x23) Distant Origin (Voyager 3x23) Empok Nor (Deep Space Nine 5x24) Displaced (Voyager 3x24) In the Cards (Deep Space Nine 5x25) Worst Case Scenario (Voyager 3x25) Call to Arms (Deep Space Nine 5x26) Scorpion, Part 1 (Voyager 3x26) Note 1: This chronology attempts, whenever/wherever possible, to order things by Stardate, and relies on a number of "missing" Stardates that may or may not be Canonical depending on your own point of view. Note 2: Any assistance/suggestions people could give me in terms of arranging/ordering the episodes for DS9 Season 6/Voyager Season 4 and DS9 Season 7/Voyager Season 5 would be greatly appreciated. Note 3: First post updated to place Dax back in production/story order in spite of its Stardate. Note 4: First post updated to correct an unconscious error I'd made in accidentally flipping Sanctuary and The Alternate  

Tosk

Regardless of stardates, I wouldn't split multi-parters that way. No way there's time for four eps of VOY between Homefront and Paradise Lost , or seven eps of DS9 between Basics part 1 and 2 .  

^ Actually, there is. Homefront's Stardate is 49170.65 (placing its events in March), while Paradise Lost's Stardate is 49364 (placing its events in May). That's a gap of a little more than 2 months. As for Basics 1 and 2, the Stardate I have for Part 1 is 49700.0 (placing its events in September), with the listed Stardate for Part 2 being 50032.7 (placing its events in January, which is a gap of about 4 months. Both DS9 and Voyager had a habit of jumping ahead significantly in time between the events of Parts 1 and 2 of some of their multiparters.  

DigificWriter said: As for Basics 1 and 2, the Stardate I have for Part 1 is 49700.0 (placing its events in September), with the listed Stardate for Part 2 being 50032.7 (placing its events in January, which is a gap of about 4 months. Click to expand...

Aside from Lifesigns and Investigations, Voyager was diligent and meticulous in its use of Stardates (as was DS9), so it makes no sense to ignore Stardates because you're basically ignoring narrative intent by doing so. If Stardates weren't important, they wouldn't have been used. Anyway, this is getting somewhat off-subject. Does anybody have suggestions as to how to chronologically arrange DS9 Season 6/Voyager Season 4 and DS9 Season 7/Voyager Season 5?  

http://thestartrekchronologyproject.blogspot.com.au/ Also, where does your stardate for Basics part 1 even come from? The ep doesn't actually have one.  

^ The problem with that particular listing is that it isn't "technically" chronological given that it more or less just relies on airdate rather than actual storyline narrative relative to individual arcs, episodes, and events. Regarding the Basics 1 Stardate, I cribbed it from another user's post in a thread that was posted on here a few years back: http://www.trekbbs.com/threads/chronological-viewing-order-missing-ds9-voy-stardates-found.212584/  

TonyLeung82

TonyLeung82

Lieutenant commander.

DigificWriter said: ^ As for Basics 1 and 2, the Stardate I have for Part 1 is 49700.0 (placing its events in September), with the listed Stardate for Part 2 being 50032.7 (placing its events in January, which is a gap of about 4 months. Click to expand...

ok, you already answered my question. Nevertheless it is not really convinving...I also would not put Basic Part 1 in September and Part 2 in January.  

DigificWriter said: Regarding the Basics 1 Stardate, I cribbed it from another user's post in a thread that was posted on here a few years back: Click to expand...

I'm choosing to assume that the person who posted the Stardate for Basics 1 and others didn't just arbitrarily make up the number he/she gave, meaning that it came from somewhere at least semi-official, even if it wasn't ultimately used in the episode itself.  

retroenzo

Fleet Captain

Didn't the video releases of the time have stardates printed on them? Unfortunately if nothing was ever specified in the episode then the video company made them up. Ah here we go. Found it. This was the cover of Voyager 3.1 released in the UK by CIC video. http://assets.catawiki.nl/assets/2015/2/23/2/a/2/2a2e7a3e-bb61-11e4-8480-b77c24f60d99.jpg  

retroenzo said: Didn't the video releases of the time have stardates printed on them? Unfortunately if nothing was ever specified in the episode then the video company made them up. Ah here we go. Found it. This was the cover of Voyager 3.1 released in the UK by CIC video. http://assets.catawiki.nl/assets/2015/2/23/2/a/2/2a2e7a3e-bb61-11e4-8480-b77c24f60d99.jpg Click to expand...

Just trying to find a picture of 2.11 (with Basics, part 1) and failing.  

Hmm it's not great but here's the cover on Amazon. I can't make out the stardate listing as the image is so poor but there's definitely a stardate there. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Star-Trek-...96&sr=8-1&keywords=star+trek+voyager+vhs+2.11  

retroenzo said: Hmm it's not great but here's the cover on Amazon. I can't make out the stardate listing as the image is so poor but there's definitely a stardate there. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Star-Trek-...96&sr=8-1&keywords=star+trek+voyager+vhs+2.11 Click to expand...
TonyLeung82 said: Yeah true, difficult to read. I can not read it either Click to expand...
Two episodes from the end of the second season of the Star Trek seires set on board a Federation ship stranded seventy years from Earth. In 'Resolutions', stardate 49690.1, Chakotay and the Captain are left on an idyllic planet when they are infected with a mystery virus. Janeway orders Tuvok to continue the voyage home without them. In 'Basics - Part One', stardate 49700.0, Seska sends a message to Chakotay that she has given birth to his son, and that the infant's life is in danger. The crew have to decide if Seska is telling the truth or whether she is setting a trap. Click to expand...

You can't go by made up stardates for a VHS cover. Not unless you're willing to accept that DS9's fourth season episodes Little Green Men, Crossfire, and Return to Grace actually happened during the first half of DS9's third season. Not to mention the VHS cover placing Homefront and Paradise Lost in the same period despite having proper on-screen stardates given.  

retroenzo said: Ah I just found it. Scroll down to the product description and it says this. Click to expand...
The duration of the events in this episode transpire over a period of approximately three months, making it one of the longest times the viewers spend with the characters in a single episode of Star Trek [...]. Nevertheless, Ken Biller ultimately thought this episode insufficiently indicates the passage of time herein. " I was disappointed, because I felt it was repetitive, " he commented. " That is another problem with the style of our show – I don't fault Jeri for that at all – which is how to convey the passage of time. If you go back and listen to the ship's logs, the idea was they were months stuck on that planet and I don't think it felt like that when you watched it. Maybe we should have done more to show the passage of time. That was a show that needed a montage sequence or Chakotay to grow a beard or something. " The duration of this episode's events are: The first four weeks spent in orbit of "New Earth" searching for a cure. The next six weeks with Voyager resuming its journey home. The final six weeks involving Voyager 's return to "New Earth," after obtaining a cure. Click to expand...
Tosk said: You can't go by made up stardates for a VHS cover. Not unless you're willing to accept that DS9's fourth season episodes Little Green Men, Crossfire, and Return to Grace actually happened during the first half of DS9's third season. Not to mention the VHS cover placing Homefront and Paradise Lost in the same period despite having proper on-screen stardates given. Click to expand...

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How to Watch Every Star Trek Series (and Movie) in the Right Order

Ready for a rewatch but not sure where to start? We’ve got you covered.

Have you ever wondered what the best way is to stream Star Trek from start to finish? Look no further.

Approaching the chronological watch of a franchise that’s been on over fifty years can be daunting. Especially with a science-fiction universe that has time travel, multiple universes, concurrent shows and entirely new timelines.

Fear not, as we have created a handy binge-watch guide using the Stardate of each series and film. Here is our guide on how to watch every Star Trek series and movie in the right order.

Star Trek - Series and films

The Definitive Chronological Viewing Order For The Star Trek Cinematic Universe

Marvel might get credit for pioneering their transmedia “Cinematic Universe,” but truly, Star Trek in the 90’s was way ahead of the game.

In the span of that decade, the Star Trek universe saw the release of four feature films and three TV shows that all shared some degree of interconnected continuity, over a decade before the world realized that this was the future of entertainment.

Yes, Star Trek was twenty years ahead of its time, but most of it has aged so well there’s no reason not to go back and enjoy it. If you’re like us, and want to know how the puzzle fits together while you’re watching it built, we’ve got you covered.

Aside from the occasional stardate hiccup, Star Trek has done a pretty admirable job of keeping its continuity in order, making it fairly straightforward to place things into a timeline. With no end to Star Trek storytelling in sight, we’ll keep this page updated as frequently as possible as new movies and TV shows are announced and released.

[Update] We’ve added  Star Trek: Discovery (Season 3)  to the post.

Original Timeline

Star trek: enterprise.

star trek tng ds9 watch order

This series follows Captain Jonathan Archer and the crew of Starfleet’s first warp 5 vessel: The Enterprise (NX-01).

This early placement in the timeline gave the show a lot of runway to explore some seminal events in the Star Trek universe, including first contact with the Klingons. The series was cancelled after four seasons, and began a nearly 12 year hiatus for Star Trek episodic series that ended with Discovery in 2017.

star trek tng ds9 watch order

“The Cage” is the initial pilot episode for the original Star Trek series. While at the time the network rejected it and ordered a new pilot (“Where No Man Has Gone Before”), the episode was retroactively canonized in Star Trek: Discovery .

Its new, official placement in the timeline is now notable for its introduction of Christopher Pike, the original captain of The Enterprise.

Star Trek: Discovery (Seasons 1-2)

star trek tng ds9 watch order

This series was the first to debut on CBS All Access, with the first two seasons set about a decade before The Original Series . It follows the crew of the USS Discovery (NCC-1031) during the first Klingon-Federation war, with the second season revolving around a mysterious figure known as the “Red Angel.”

A third season is upcoming, but is set much further along in the timeline.

Star Trek: The Original Series

TOS crew

This is where it all began. Over a century after the events of Star Trek: Enterprise , this series follows the Captain James T. Kirk and the voyages of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) on its five-year mission to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, and to boldly go where no man has gone before.

While the series only ran for three seasons, it continues to be some of the most defining storytelling in the Star Trek canon.

Star Trek: The Animated Series

star trek tng ds9 watch order

This animated show essentially serves as a continuation of The Original Series , featuring the same cast of characters in 22 episodes across 2 seasons.

For a long time, this series was officially non-canon, but over the years it has become increasingly referenced in other material; and in 2007, the official website included information from The Animated Series in its “library” section, making a strong argument that the series is, at least in part, canonical.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

star trek tng ds9 watch order

Approximately four years after the conclusion of The Original Series , Kirk is now an Admiral. He resumes command of the USS Enterprise after a powerful alien being called V’Ger destroys several Klingon warships and sets a path towards Earth.

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Wrath of Khan

The Wrath of Khan , widely considered to be the greatest Star Trek film, acts as a sequel to both Star Trek: The Motion Picture , and the episode “Space Seed” from The Original Series .

In that episode, Kirk and crew tangled with the genetically engineered superhuman Khan Noonien Singh, who ruled more than a quarter of the Earth during a period called the Eugenics Wars. At the end of the episode, Khan is exiled to the uninhabited planet Ceti Alpha V.

In The Wrath of Khan , he escapes, and plans a revenge using a device known as the Genesis Machine, designed for terraforming planets.

Star Trek III: The Search For Spock

TFFS

Picking up a few weeks after the end of Khan , The Search For Spock finds the crew of the Enterprise learning that there might be a way to bring back their deceased friend.

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

The Voyage Home

The Voyage Home concludes the unofficial film trilogy that began with The Wrath of Khan . Returning to Earth to face trial for stealing the Enterprise in the previous film, the crew become embroiled in time travel hijinks when they’re tasked with traveling to the past. Their mission? Bring back a humpback whale, now extinct in their timeline, which holds the key to stopping a destructive alien probe that has emerged from deep space.

The film concludes with Kirk returning to the rank of Captain, and taking command of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-A).

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

TFF

This film was William Shatner’s first feature directing credit, a result of his contract terms after Leonard Nimoy directed Star Trek III and IV . The film takes place shortly after the conclusion of The Voyage Home , as the USS Enterprise-A is taken over by the rogue Vulcan Sybok who believes God lives at the center of the galaxy.

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

TUC

The final Original Series film, The Undiscovered Country acts as a swan song for the cast as they embark on one final adventure together. One half murder mystery, one half Cold War political thriller, this is an often overlooked but really strong entry that closes out The Original Series era in style.

Star Trek: The Next Generation (Seasons 1-5 )

star trek tng ds9 watch order

This series kicked off arguably the most explored era of Star Trek storytelling, with over 178 episodes, four feature films, and a ton of ancillary material. The numerous story arcs follow Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the USS Enterprise-D as it embarks on a long-term exploration mission.

Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 6, Episodes “Time’s Arrow: Part 2” – “Chain of Command: Part 2”)

This batch of episodes in TNG ‘s sixth season, culminating in the fantastic two-parter, “Chain of Command,” lead in to a period in the timeline where two Star Trek series ran concurrently.

Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 6, Episodes “Ship In A Bottle” – “Descent: Part 1” / Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 1 )

Deep Space Nine

Deep Space Nine , the fourth Star Trek TV series, is set concurrently with the events of TNG ‘s sixth season, just in a very different part of the galaxy. It follows Commander Benjamin Sisko aboard the titular space station, located near a wormhole that allows passage to the distant Gamma Quadrant of the Milky Way galaxy.

Star: Trek The Next Generation (Season 7) / Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 2 )

These two seasons also take place at roughly the same time, though it’s worth noting that The Next Generation Season 7 ends just before the last few episodes of Deep Space Nine Season 2.

The second season of Deep Space Nine is notable for introducing the USS Defiant.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 3, Episodes “The Search: Part 1” – “Distant Voices”) / Star Trek: Voyager Season 1 (Episodes “Caretaker” – “Prime Factors”)

Following the end of The Next Generation , a new series called Voyager was aired that likewise overlapped with the timeline of Deep Space Nine . Voyager was the first Star Trek series to have a female captain, Kathryn Janeway of the USS Voyager. The series features the first appearance of a number of Star Trek species including the Kazon, Vidilians, and Hirogen.

Star Trek: Generations

star trek tng ds9 watch order

Generations was the first of four Star Trek films set during The Next Generation era. This story worked as a bridge of sorts between The Original Series and TNG time periods, revealing the fate of Kirk, and giving him a brief meeting with his eventual successor, Picard.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 3, Episodes “Through The Looking Glass” – “The Adversary”) / Star Trek: Voyager (Season 1, Episodes “State of Flux” – “Learning Curve”)

The second halves of Deep Space Nine ‘s third season and Voyager ‘s first overlap.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 4) / Star Trek: Voyager (Season 2 )

star trek tng ds9 watch order

The Klingon-Cardassian war heats up for a strong season of Deep Space Nine that also introduces Worf to the cast.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 5, Episodes “Apocalypse Rising” – “For The Uniform”) / Star Trek: Voyager (Season 3, “Basics: Part 2” – “Blood Fever”)

Deep Space Nine Season 5 is when the show started firing on all cylinders creatively. Tensions are rising, characters are growing richer, and the show’s plot threads are coming together. Voyager also went through a creative revamp, with season 3 containing some of its best episodes.

Star Trek: First Contact

FC

This film gives the crew of TNG their own shot at some cinematic time travel hijinks, as they head to the past in order to protect the inventor of the warp drive from the Borg.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 5, Episodes “In Purgatory’s Shadow” – “A Call To Arms”) / Star Trek: Voyager (Season 3, “Unity” – “Scorpion: Part 1”)

This block of episodes are some of the best across both shows.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 6) / Star Trek: Voyager (Season 4 )

Voyager

The Dominion War arc is in full swing on Deep Space Nine , while Voyager brings in Seven of Nine and has arguably its best season yet.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 7, “Image In The Sand” – “Covenant”) / Star Trek: Voyager (Season 5, “Night”  – “Infinite Regress”)

Deep Space Nine ‘s seventh season is a little uneven in the first half but still has some great stuff. The rest of Voyager will never be as good as its fourth season, but Season 5 still has some great episodes.

Star Trek: Insurrection

STI

This film finds the crew of the USS Enterprise-E going up against a species known as the Son’a, who are attacking the population of a peaceful planet to steal their regenerative properties.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 7, “It’s Only A Paper Moon” – “What You Leave Behind”) / Star Trek: Voyager (Season 5, “Nothing Human”  – “Equinox: Part 1”)

The Dominion War (and Deep Space Nine overall) comes to a close with an ambitious arc.

Star Trek: Voyager (Season 6-7)

Voyager continues on after the conclusion of Deep Space Nine , acting as the only running Star Trek series until the premiere of Enterprise in 2001.

Star Trek: Nemesis

Nemshin

The Next Generation era comes to a close with this final film, as the crew of the USS Enterprise-D encounter a clone of Captain Picard (played by a young Tom Hardy), who has taken over the Romulan Star Empire.

Star Trek: Lower Decks

star trek tng ds9 watch order

This animated series might not feel like “core” canon due to its comedic tone, but the official word is that the events are set in continuity.

Bonus: Star Trek Online

star trek tng ds9 watch order

While technically not a film or TV series, it’s worth noting that Star Trek Online takes place in the original timeline and continues the story past the events of Star Trek: Nemesis .

Star Trek (2009)

star trek tng ds9 watch order

The J.J. Abrams helmed Star Trek kicks off the “reboot” era known as the “Kelvin Timeline,” after the USS Kelvin. While most of the story takes place in an alternate timeline (which we’ll explore in a separate section below), events narrated by Spock take place in the original continuity, following the destruction of Romulus.

The aftermath of this event in the original timeline is explored in the series, Picard .

Star Trek: Picard

star trek tng ds9 watch order

The eight Star Trek series, Picard , takes place about 20 years after Nemesis . Jean-Luc Picard is retired, having resigned in protest when the Federation chose not to aid the Romulans as their home planet was destroyed.

Short Treks: Calypso

star trek tng ds9 watch order

One of the shorts in the Short Treks collection on CBS All Access is set way in the future, hundreds of years after the events of Discovery .

Star Trek: Discovery (Season 3)

star trek tng ds9 watch order

The end of Season 2 of Discovery saw the crew embark on a one-way trip to the furthest we’ve ever explored in the Star Trek timeline. The season will pick up about 900 years after The Original Series era.

Kelvin Timeline

star trek tng ds9 watch order

Spock’s attempt to intervene in the disaster that destroyed Romulus inadvertently sent him and the Romulan mining ship Narada back in time, causing the creation of a second, alternate timeline. In this timeline (now the home of the OG Spock, effectively removing him from the original timeline), James T. Kirk loses his father shortly after his birth, resulting in a very different start to his Starfleet career.

Star Trek Into Darkness

Into Darkness

Into Darkness reveals that in the Kelvin Timeline, the cryogenically frozen body of Khan Noonien Singh was recovered by Admiral Alexander Marcus of Starfleet, who covertly used him to develop advanced weaponry.

Star Trek Beyond

Screenshot 2015-12-14 09.47.29

Beyond takes  place roughly two and a half years after Into Darkness , halfway into the crew’s five year mission. The crew of the Enterprise must contend with the dangers of the final frontier when they’re ambushed by a mysterious fleet. The end of the film sees the introduction of the USS Enterprise-A to the Kelvin Timeline.

To date, this is the furthest along we’ve seen of the reboot timeline, although rumors of a fourth film continue to persist (perhaps featuring the return of George Kirk, played by Chris Hemsworth); as well as another Kelvin-set feature written by Quentin Tarantino.

Upcoming Stories

Star trek: prodigy.

This animated series will follow a group of teenagers who take over an abandoned starship. It will feature the return of Kate Mulgrew as Kathryn Janeway.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

This upcoming CBS All Access series will follow the USS Enterprise under the command of Captain Christopher Pike, before the events of The Original Series .

Star Trek: Section 31

This upcoming series will follow Philippa Georgiou as a member of the organization Section 31.

Star Trek: Lower Decks (Season 2)

A second season of this animated show has been greenlit, and is scheduled to premiere sometime in 2021.

Star Trek: Discovery (Season 4)

The fourth season of Discovery has officially been announced, but no release date has been set yet.

Ceti Alpha V

This miniseries event was announced back in June 2018, and we haven’t heard much about it since. If it is still happening, it will follow the iconic character Khan Noonien Singh.

13 Comments

I do not fully understanding (apologies to Spock) the logic of your timeline methodology. Why, for example, do you place the Original Series Pilot – The Cage – second on the list? The Cage and the Menagerie stories describe the discovery of Talos IV, and in Menagerie, Spock’s desire to return to the forbidden planet following his former captain’s unfortunate accident, putting the disabled Pike in the wheelchair. At least it describes one of Pike’s early missions. So in my mind shouldn’t it immediately precede or follow Star Trek: Strange New Worlds in your timeline?

Last update was Jan 2021. My OCD is killing me!!

It’s safe to say that anything connected to Alex Kurtzman is no longer “Star Trek” (discovery, picard, lower decks, etc.). His teams simply stopped concerning themselves with a well constructed universe that takes into consideration every intricate timeline and started relying heavily on spectacle and poorly designed plot devices. The plot was forced in directions using mcguffins and nonsensical exposition while destroying any logical connections it had to the rest of the series. That’s why he put his timeline first, to rest on the infallible excuse that the timeline has changed as we’ve seen a few branched timelines throughout the franchise. Kurtzman’s branches, however, are directed in a way that might as well be 20th century humans given space and time travelling technology out of thin air and react as such. Nothing like the growth in a better human society we see in Roddenberry’s true vision of the future of mankind. So don’t waste your time dissecting this timeline while much of is not really Star Trek to begin with; just purchased copyrights of another man’s creative genius. Instead, go watch the series in the order it was produced and truly enjoy connecting the timelines as you jump around through them. Only then will you also be able to witness the catastrophic, shallow design put into today’s star trek as well.

I couldn’t agree more with you on this. Perfectly said. The Orville is actually more Star Trek than anything post Voyager.

I have been referencing this site for the last couple of years and today finished everything that has been produced and released to date. Thank you I really appreciate your guidance. The series I enjoyed most was Star Trek: Enterprise. Although I have viewed all the episodes of Discovery I’m not a fan, I think I do it out of obligation to the timeline. The other series were kinda hit or miss per episode.

where does Star Trek : Horizon fit in?

Horizons is not an official star trek series, so it does not fit in anywhere.

Greetings,the Kelvin/Abrams timeline is not derived from Prime/Roddenberry timeline,if U will look & listen preciously,U will notice in ‘Star Trek’ 2009,that in these events often described being in Roddenberry timeline-these with old Spock before departure from future R NOT in Roddenberry timeline,but in another Abrams timeline,as there r another stardates(in Abrams format) & there r also differences unexplainable by Nero’s actions as construction of Constitution-class ships on the ground(nonsence as Constitution-class is incapable of entering atmosphere,nor any atmospheric flight & is too heavy to be able to lift off). The Abrams Universe has its own 2 timelines & has nothing to do with Roddenberry Universe. Discovery is very hardly insertable into Roddenberry Universe,IF Strange New Worlds will fix the inconsistencies,which is possible,for example a destruction of forward half of the Primary hull of Enterprise followed by rebuilding its proper appearance without forward window & with original viewscreen,which could already be done after Control’s torpedo hit,some such event would explain the return to viewscreens. & Calypso is set AFTER Discovery season 3. The right order after Nemesis is: Lower Decks. (Renegades,Hidden Frontier & its spin offs,yes,fan production but better fitting into Roddenberry Universe than Discovery). Picard. Discovery season 3. Calypso. The Abrams univehas 2 ti

“In a Mirror, Darkly,” the two-parter in the last season of Enterprise was intended as a sequel to the TOS episode “The Tholian Web” and a prequel to TOS “Mirror, Mirror.” Those two TOS episodes are not back-to-back, but Darkly could be mentioned as being in the middle of the TOS timeline.

It’s a sequel to a season 3 episode but a prequel to a season 2 episode? How does that work? Is Mirror Mirror set in the future within TOS? I’m still on season 1 so haven’t reached it yet. Not saying you’re wrong, not at all, just observing how confusing show timelines can be sometimes.

isnt the first chronological appearence of the Borg in episode 23 of enterprise?

Discovery should not be listed in the same timeline as TOS. It is clearly an alternate reality.

Abrams’ movies should either be last or put Trek ’09 in between Discovery & TOS

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How to watch Star Trek in order

Whether you're wanting to check out the Original Series or Discovery, figuring out how to watch Star Trek in order is a breeze with this easy guide!

star trek discovery season 3 cast

Is it just us or is figuring out how to watch Star Trek in order getting more and more complex with each passing year? The prospect of watching Star Trek in order would be daunting for even the most decorated of starship captains with multiple series being brought to life on both the big and small screens. But fear not Trekkies - we've got you covered!

If you've ever tried to watch the Marvel movies in order , you'd be forgiven for thinking that was the most complicated franchise on the planet, but we kid you not - it has nothing on Star Trek. The 55-year-old sci-fi franchise includes nine (soon to be 11) TV shows and 13 movies and it spans 1000 years, making for one super complicated and vast timeline.

So, what is the best way to watch Star Trek in order? Well, that depends. For you purists out there, you might like to opt for viewing this franchise by release date, just like all the original Trekkie fans did back in the day. This will allow you to follow along as they did and get a similar experience. While the timeline does jump around, ( Star Trek: Discovery , for example, is set at the end of the 32nd century but was released before Star Trek: Picard , which is set in the 24th century), it gives you a more complete picture. 

Because the Star Trek franchise involves movies and TV series that take place at different times, another option is to watch everything in chronological order. This means you get to start with something a little bit more modern, but the one problem with this is that references will often be made to films you've not yet seen, which could make certain elements difficult to follow. 

To be honest, just like we recommend in our guide to how to watch the Star Wars movies in order , it really is a matter of personal preference. As long as you have one of the best TVs , you'll find you enjoy this franchise no matter what order you decide to watch it in.

So, without further ado, here's how to watch Star Trek in order - based on release date and in-universe continuity...

Star Trek TV shows and movies in chronological order

This is probably the list you're looking for if you're trying to figure out how to watch Star Trek in order. It's where things get really interesting, as Star Trek movies and TV shows have a habit of jumping around the franchise's chronology with sequels, prequels and bits in between. There are even two distinct timelines – but don't worry, we'll explain all that.

The original ‘Prime’ timeline was started by the Original Series, the Next Generation-era TV shows, and the first ten movies, The alternative ‘Kelvin’ timeline, meanwhile, was created in JJ Abrams’ first Star Trek (2009) to allow the familiar Enterprise crew of Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Sulu, Uhura and Chekov to have new adventures without contradicting canon . To avoid confusion, we've defined the two timelines as separate entities below.

This list doesn't, however, include all of the brief Short Treks – short stories which are mostly set around the Star Trek: Discovery era – and adventures where Starfleet crews time-travelled to the eras before any of the shows/movies are set (eg visits to 1986 in The Voyage Home and 2063 in First Contact). We've also left out upcoming Discovery spin-off Star Trek: Section 31 , since it's not yet in production. (Also, we're not entirely sure exactly when it'll be set.)

Let's start with everything in one big list. 

  • Star Trek: Enterprise (seasons 1-4)
  • ‘The Cage’
  • Star Trek: Discovery (seasons 1-2)
  • Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
  • Star Trek: The Original Series  (seasons 1-3)
  • Star Trek: The Animated Series 
  • Star Trek: The Motion Picture 
  • Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan 
  • Star Trek 3: The Search for Spock 
  • Star Trek 4: The Voyage Home 
  • Star Trek 5: The Final Frontier 
  • Star Trek 6: The Undiscovered Country 
  • Star Trek: Generations (opening sequence)
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation (seasons 1-5)
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation (seasons 6-7), Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (seasons 1-2)
  • Star Trek: Generations
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (seasons 3-4), Star Trek: Voyager (seasons 1-2)
  • Star Trek: First Contact 
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (seasons 5-6), Star Trek: Voyager (seasons 3-4)
  • Star Trek: Insurrection 
  • S tar Trek: Deep Space Nine (season 7), Star Trek: Voyager (season 5)
  • Star Trek: Voyager (seasons 6-7)
  • Star Trek: Nemesis 
  • Star Trek: Lower Decks
  • Star Trek: Prodigy
  • Star Trek (2009) – Prime timeline sequences
  • Star Trek: Picard
  • Star Trek: Discovery (season 3-)
  • Short Treks: 'Calypso'

If you watch in the order given above, you'll get a continuous ‘history’ of the 22nd, 23rd, 24th and 32nd centuries according to the Star Trek timeline. That said, you will notice some odd discrepancies – thanks to the time in which respective shows were made, the technology in prequel show Star Trek: Discovery is significantly more advanced than what Kirk and Spock used in the Original Series.

Below, we'll explain how the different eras of the shows and movies break down for context. 

Note that Gene Roddenberry's original pre-Kirk Star Trek pilot, 'The Cage', is counted as an instalment of the Original Series. You'll usually find it listed as a bonus episode as part of season one when you're watching it on streaming services.

Star Trek: Enterprise era (22nd century) Begins and ends with: Star Trek Enterprise seasons 1-4

About a century before James T Kirk and his crew embark on their famous five-year mission in Star Trek: The Original Series, Captain Jonathan Archer leads Earth's first steps into the wider universe.

Star Trek: The Original Series

Star Trek: The Original Series era (23rd century) Begins with: 'The Cage' Ends with: Star Trek: Generations (opening sequence)

For many this is the most familiar era of Star Trek, since it involves Kirk, Spock and the classic Enterprise crew.  

This section of the Trek timeline kicks off with the original unaired Star Trek pilot, 'The Cage' . Next up in franchise chronology are the first two seasons of Star Trek: Discovery , which work as a prequel to the Original Series (they even feature a younger version of Spock), but it's all change in season 3 – the events of the season 2 finale send the crew into the distant future of the 32nd century. More on that later...

Upcoming spin-off Strange New Worlds will follow the adventures of Captain Pike, Number One and Spock on the Enterprise after the USS Discovery travelled to the future. And at some point after that, Captain James T Kirk will take command of Starfleet's most famous ship – a role he filled throughout The Original Series , The Animated Series and the first six Star Trek movies ( Star Trek: The Motion Picture , The Wrath of Khan , The Search for Spock , The Voyage Home , The Final Frontier and The Undiscovered Country ).

The latest point we've seen (so far) in the 23rd century era is James T Kirk being taken away by the Nexus ribbon in the prologue of Star Trek: Generations . This is the event that allows Kirk to meet Picard when the Next Generation crew take on the mantle of headlining the big screen franchise.

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Star Trek: The Next Generation era (24th century) Begins with: Star Trek: The Next Generation Ends with: Star Trek (2009) – Prime timeline sequences

The richest, most complicated period in Star Trek chronology. During The Next Generation era, Star Trek was experimenting with the idea of a shared universe years before Marvel got in on the act, with three TV shows (TNG, Deep Space Nine and Voyager ) and four movies ( Generations , First Contact , Insurrection and Nemesis ) interweaving through the same timeline – Voyager's Captain Kathryn Janeway even shows up in Star Trek: Nemesis as a newly promoted admiral.

New animated comedy spin-off Lower Decks is set a year after Picard and the Next Generation crew's final mission in Star Trek: Nemesis, while Nickelodeon kids' cartoon Star Trek: Prodigy will see Kate Mulgrew reprising her role as Voyager's captain, Kathryn Janeway. That suggests it will presumably be set at a similar point in the Star Trek timeline.

In JJ Abrams' first Star Trek movie (2009), the destruction of Romulus and Spock Prime's accidental trip back to the pre-Original Series era (in the Kelvin timeline) also take place after the events of Nemesis.

In the list above, we've shown how the movies (roughly) fit into the chronology of The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and Voyager. 

Star trek: Picard

Picard era (turn of the 25th century) Begins with: Picard Ends with: ???

Aside from glimpses of the destruction of Romulus in JJ Abrams’ Star Trek (2009), Star Trek: Picard gives us our first post-Star Trek: Nemesis look at what the United Federation of Planets has become. 

Since we last saw Jean-Luc Picard, he's retired to his vineyard in France, an android uprising on Mars has led to a ban on all synthetic life, and a disabled Borg Cube (known simply as the 'Artifact') is being mined for technology.

star trek discovery season 3 story

Distant future (32nd century) Begins with : Star Trek: Discovery season 2 (finale) Ends with: ???

In order to save the galaxy, the brave crew of the USS Discovery set off on a one-way mission 900 years into the future in Star Trek: Discovery 's season 2 finale. Their 32nd century destination is new territory for Star Trek – thanks to the mysterious 'Burn', most of the dilithium in the galaxy has been destroyed, making warp travel impossible. As a result, the Federation is a shadow of its former self – even Earth has decided to go it alone.

This isn't, however, the furthest Star Trek has ventured into the future – Short Trek ' Calypso ' is set on the Discovery in a distant future where the ship's computer has become sentient.

Star Trek's alternate 'Kelvin' timeline explained

A still from Star trek Beyond

In 2009's Star Trek movie directed by JJ Abrams, Spock Prime tries to save Romulus from a supernova, inadvertently creates a black hole while doing so, and gets pulled into the past, along with Romulan mining vessel the Narada. Once there, the Narada attacks the USS Kelvin on the day James T Kirk is born. The ship is destroyed as Kirk's father, George, sacrifices himself to save the rest of the crew. 

When all that happens, the alternative ‘Kelvin’ timeline is created, with events unfolding in parallel (but with remarkable similarity) to the original Prime timeline.

Got all that? There are just three movies set in the Kelvin timeline:

  • Star Trek (2009)
  • Star Trek into Darkness
  • Star Trek Beyond

Star Trek TV shows and movies in release date order

watch star trek lower decks online

  • Star Trek: The Original Series (1966-1969)
  • Star Trek: The Animated Series (1973-1974)
  • Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
  • Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
  • Star Trek 3: The Search for Spock (1984)
  • Star Trek 4: The Voyage Home (1986)
  • ‘The Cage’ (previously unavailable Star Trek pilot from 1965, given VHS release in 1986)
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994)
  • Star Trek 5: The Final Frontier (1989)
  • Star Trek 6: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-1999)
  • Star Trek: Generations (1994)
  • Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001) 
  • Star Trek: First Contact (1996)
  • Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)
  • Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005)
  • Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)
  • Star Trek Into Darkness (2013)
  • Star Trek Beyond (2016)
  • Star Trek: Discovery (2017-)
  • Short Treks (2018-2020)
  • Star Trek: Picard (2020-)
  • Star Trek: Lower Decks (2020-)
  • Star Trek: Prodigy (2021, TBC)
  • Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (TBC)

Considering The Original Series was cancelled after just three seasons in 1969, it's remarkable that Star Trek is still around half a century later. But as the show's popularity grew in syndication on US TV, Trek fandom became a big enough force for the five-year mission to resume via Star Trek: The Animated Series in 1973. Most of the original cast – with the notable exception of Walter Koenig (Chekov) – were enticed back to voice their characters. 

Then, helped by Star Wars turning sci-fi into the hottest genre in Hollywood, Star Trek beamed onto the big screen with 1979's The Motion Picture . The original crew headed up five more movies ( The Wrath of Khan , The Search for Spock , The Voyage Home , The Final Frontier and The Undiscovered Country ) before bowing out in 1991. The ’80s also gave the world a hint of the Star Trek that never was when 'The Cage' , the original unaired pilot, was released on VHS in 1986 (it appeared on TV two years later). Of the pilot crew, only Leonard Nimoy's Spock went on to reprise his role in the TV show, though footage from 'The Cage' was used extensively in the Original Series’ only two-parter, 'The Menagerie'. 

While the Enterprise was making it big in cinemas, the franchise returned to its TV roots in 1987 with The Next Generation . Set over 70 years after Kirk and Spock's final mission, it featured a new crew – led by Captain Jean-Luc Picard – on board a new starship Enterprise. The Next Generation was arguably even more successful than the Original Series, spawning two spin-off series: Deep Space Nine (which began in 1993) played with the Trek format by focusing on a space station, while Voyager (1995) dumped its crew on the other side of the galaxy, hundreds of light years from home. 

The Next Generation crew also fronted four movies of their own ( Generations , First Contact , Insurrection and Nemesis ) between 1995 and 2002.

After Voyager came to an end in 2001, Star Trek left the Next Generation era behind, and went in a completely different direction – Star Trek: Enterprise was a prequel set a century before Kirk and Spock's adventures. Enterprise lasted only four seasons, however (The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and Voyager all made it to seven), and was canceled in 2005.

These were also dark times for the movie branch of the Trek franchise, as the disappointing box office performance of Nemesis had put the film saga on hiatus – it wasn't until 2009 that Star Trek warped back onto the big screen. 

Future Star Wars: The Force Awakens director JJ Abrams (already hot property as director of Mission: Impossible 3 and co-creator of Lost) gave the franchise an action blockbuster makeover, recasting Kirk, Spock and the rest of the original crew as rookies on their first mission. The reboot, simply titled Star Trek , made more than twice as much at the box office as any of its predecessors, and two sequels ( Star Trek into Darkness , Star Trek Beyond ) followed. 

Star Trek belatedly returned to TV in 2017 with Star Trek: Discovery . Set a decade before the Original Series, it was a darker, more serialized Trek than we’d seen before – more in tune with the prestige shows of the so-called Golden Age of TV. As it’s turned out, it was just the beginning of Star Trek's renewed assault on TV...

A series of brief Short Treks appeared online ahead of Discovery's second season, while The Next Generation follow-up Star Trek: Picard left spacedock in January 2020. Animated series Lower Decks followed in August 2020, and Discovery spin-off Strange New Worlds – featuring Anson Mount's Captain Pike, Rebecca Romijn's Number One and Ethan Peck's Spock on the pre-Kirk Enterprise – is now in production. 

There's also another cartoon offering heading for the Alpha Quadrant, in the form of animated kids show Star Trek: Prodigy.

And there's potentially even more to come, as the much-talked about Michelle Yeoh vehicle Section 31 is still in development. But with Paramount Plus programming boss Julie McNamara telling Variety that the streaming service's current aim is to debut "a new Trek every quarter", we may have to wait for Discovery, Picard, Lower Decks and/or Strange New Worlds to stand aside before we get a new TV iteration of Trek.

To keep things simple, all the shows above are listed by the date their first episode aired. While the chronology does jump around if you watch Star Trek in order of release date, there are some benefits. For example, the prequel shows assume a fair bit of knowledge of earlier series, like the Borg's appearance in Star Trek: Enterprise episode 'Regeneration', or Star Trek: Discovery's revelations about the ultimate fate of Christopher Pike (the Enterprise captain in 'The Cage', who later shows up in 'The Menagerie'). Moments like that undoubtedly make more sense in the context of later events in the Star Trek timeline. 

How to stream Star Trek TV shows and movies

If you just want to know how to stream the 13 Star Trek movies and eight TV shows in the US and the UK, we've laid it out below. 

In the US, the newly rebranded Paramount Plus (formerly CBS All Access) is definitely the place to go, with every TV show available to watch. In the UK, Netflix hosts all the Star Trek series except for Picard and Lower Decks.

Watching the 13 Trek movies is a rather more complex affair, with the films spread across numerous streaming services in the US and UK – and some of them you'll have to pay to rent/buy.

The TV shows

  • Star Trek: The Original Series ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Netflix)
  • Star Trek: The Animated Series ( US: Paramount Plus UK: Netflix)
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Netflix)
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Netflix)
  • Star Trek: Voyager ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Netflix)
  • Star Trek: Enterprise ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Netflix)
  • Star Trek: Discovery ( US: Paramount Plus UK: Netflix)
  • Star Trek: Picard ( US: Paramount Plus UK: Amazon Prime Video)
  • Star Trek: Lower Decks (US: Paramount Plus US: Amazon Prime Video)
  • Star Trek: The Motion Picture ( US: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu UK: Only available to rent/buy)
  • Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan ( US: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu UK: Sky Cinema/Now TV)
  • Star Trek 3: The Search for Spock ( US: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu UK: Sky Cinema/Now TV)
  • Star Trek 4: The Voyage Home ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Sky Cinema/Now TV)
  • Star Trek 5: The Final Frontier ( US: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu UK: Only available to rent/buy)
  • Star Trek 6: The Undiscovered Country ( US: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu UK: Only available to rent/buy)
  • Star Trek: Generations ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Sky Cinema/Now TV)
  • Star Trek: First Contact ( US: Paramount Plus UK: Only available to rent/buy)
  • Star Trek: Insurrection ( US: Amazon Prime Video, Hulu UK: Only available to rent/buy)
  • Star Trek: Nemesis ( US: Paramount Plus, Amazon Prime Video UK: Only available to rent/buy)
  • Star Trek 2009 ( US: DirectTV UK: Sky Cinema/Now TV)
  • Star Trek Into Darkness ( US : FX Now UK: Amazon Prime Video)
  • Star Trek Beyond ( US: Amazon Prime, Hulu UK: Amazon Prime Video)

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Richard is a freelance journalist specialising in movies and TV, primarily of the sci-fi and fantasy variety. An early encounter with a certain galaxy far, far away started a lifelong love affair with outer space, and these days Richard's happiest geeking out about Star Wars, Star Trek, Marvel and other long-running pop culture franchises. In a previous life he was editor of legendary sci-fi and fantasy magazine SFX, where he got to interview many of the biggest names in the business – though he'll always have a soft spot for Jeff Goldblum who (somewhat bizarrely) thought Richard's name was Winter.

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star trek tng ds9 watch order

star trek tng ds9 watch order

How to watch Star Trek in order – both release and chronological orders

From The Original Series to Strange New Worlds, here's how to watch the entire Star Trek canon in order.

Star Trek

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It's a hugely exciting time to be a Star Trek fan, especially after the news that we'll be getting a new prequel movie from the director of Andor!

The Star Trek franchise has enjoyed a dramatic revitalisation in recent years, returning to its original home on the small screen to launch a sprawling shared universe of exciting shows.

Coming up next in the world of Star Trek, we've got Star Trek: Discovery season 5 to look forward to, as well as Star Trek: Prodigy season 2 after the series was saved by Netflix – and more! Meanwhile, Star Trek: Picard wrapped up with a third and final season, while we got renewals for shows like Lower Decks .

With all these interconnecting stories, it's not surprising that newcomers to the franchise want to ensure they are watching in the correct order. Fortunately, we can help with that.

Below, we've compiled how to watch Star Trek in release and chronological order, while we also weigh in on the pros and cons of each method. Once you have all the information you need, venture forth into the final frontier.

More like this

How to watch star trek in release order.

Star Trek: The Next Generation - All Good Things

Arguably, the most faithful way of watching Star Trek is in the order each series was made, allowing you to follow the franchise from its inception and explore its universe as the original fans did decades ago.

It makes sense to do it this way as while the shows do jump around in terms of time period, they still find ways to build on what came before in order of release.

In that sense, you're likely to get a slightly more complete picture of Star Trek by watching in this order, instead of piecing the shows together in a chronological timeline.

Star Trek release order (films listed in italics )

  • Star Trek: The Original Series (TOS)
  • Star Trek: The Animated Series (TAS)
  • The first six Star Trek films (The Motion Picture up to Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country)
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG)
  • Star Trek: Generations
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (DS9)
  • Star Trek: Voyager (VOY)
  • Star Trek films 8-10 (First Contact, Insurrection, Nemesis)
  • Star Trek: Enterprise (ENT)
  • Star Trek (2009), Star Trek Into Darkness, Star Trek Beyond
  • Star Trek: Discovery (DSC)
  • Star Trek: Short Treks*
  • Star Trek: Picard (PIC)
  • Star Trek: Lower Decks (LOW)
  • Star Trek: Prodigy (PRO)
  • Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (SNW)
  • Untitled Toby Haynes Star Trek prequel film

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* Star Trek: Short Treks premiered after Discovery, hence the listing here. However, Short Treks season 2 sets up some plot threads picked up in Discovery season 2 and beyond, so it's best to alternate between them if you can.

Some people who watch in this order choose to skip over the first three steps and begin with Star Trek: The Next Generation. There is a belief among certain Trekkies that TNG has aged better than The Original Series, making it an easier entry point for newcomers to the franchise.

It would be worth watching the first few episodes of TOS to see what you think of it, but if William Shatner's Captain Kirk doesn't quite cut it for you, feel free to move on to the dulcet tones of Patrick Stewart's Jean-Luc Picard. The two shows have relatively few connections, so you don't need to worry about feeling lost (although they do eventually cross over in a major way in the Star Trek: Generations movie).

How to watch Star Trek in chronological order

Star Trek: Discovery

As previously stated, the various shows in the Star Trek universe take place at different points in a sprawling timeline, so an alternative method is to watch in chronological order.

This comes with pros and cons: on the one hand, it allows you to begin with a modern show, which may be preferable to some people. But on the other hand, some of the references contained in more recent episodes may not land with you in the way they were intended.

Star Trek chronological order (films listed in italics )

  • Star Trek: Enterprise (Year: 2151-2161)
  • Short Trek: The Girl Who Made the Stars (Year: 2230s)
  • Short Trek: The Brightest Star (Year: 2239)
  • Star Trek: The Cage – The Original Series one-off pilot episode (Year: 2254)
  • Short Trek: The Escape Artist (Year: 2250s)
  • Short Trek: Q&A (Year: 2253)
  • Star Trek: Discovery season 1 (Year: 2256)
  • Short Trek: Runaway (Year: 2257)
  • Star Trek: Discovery season 2 (Year: 2258)
  • Short Trek: The Trouble with Edward (Year: 2250s)
  • Short Trek: Ask Not (Year: 2250s)
  • Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (Year: 2259)
  • Star Trek: The Original Series (Year: 2265-2269)
  • Short Trek: Ephraim and Dot (Year: 2267-2285)
  • Star Trek: The Animated Series (Year: 2269-2270)
  • The first six Star Trek films (Year: 2273-2293)
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation (Year: 2364-2370)
  • Star Trek films 7-10: Generations up to Nemesis (Year: 2293-2379)
  • Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Year: 2369-2375)
  • Star Trek: Voyager (Year: 2371-2378)
  • Star Trek: Lower Decks (2380)
  • Star Trek: Prodigy (Year: 2383)
  • Short Trek: Children of Mars (Year: 2385)
  • Star Trek: Picard seasons 1-3 (Year: 2399-2402)
  • Star Trek: Discovery seasons 3-4 (32nd Century)
  • Short Trek: Calypso (far future, year unknown)

Note – Star Trek: Short Treks was a two-season anthology series, which visits various periods on the franchise timeline. Anything listed as a Short Trek is a single episode of this show (with a runtime between 8 and 18 minutes).

It's not currently confirmed where precisely Toby Haynes' film will sit in the chronology but we do know it'll be a prequel film, taking place "decades" before Star Trek (2009).

For those wondering, the recent trilogy of Star Trek movies directed by JJ Abrams and Justin Lin – Star Trek, Into Darkness and Beyond – are set in an alternate universe, meaning they do not connect to a chronological order of the series.

They do, however, contain references to The Original Series – most notably the return of Leonard Nimoy as Spock – but can be watched at any point as standalone stories.

Star Trek: The Original Series, The Animated Series, The Next Generation, Voyager and Deep Space Nine are available to stream on Netflix .

Star Trek: Picard is exclusive to Prime Video. Sign up for a 30-day free trial of Prime Video and pay £8.99 a month after that.

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Star Trek Isn’t Supposed To Have Money: What Is Latinum?

I’m glad voyager’s tom and b’elanna are no longer star trek's only successful romance, wesley crusher's god-level gadget is star trek's coolest new tech.

In a choice between whether to watch the Star Trek TV series and movies in the order of release or watching the saga unfold throughout its in-universe continuity, here's how a Trekker can do either. When  Star Trek: The Original Series premiered in 1966, no one dreamed it would launch a franchise that would last 55 years, and Star Trek  is still going strong . Star Trek now encompasses 9 TV series, with two more, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds and the animated Star Trek: Prodigy in development for 2022, as well as 13 feature films, with the 14th Star Trek movie earmarked for June 2023.

Star Trek has also grown into a massive canon that spans a thousand years of the future. Much of the franchise is focused on the Captain and crews of the various starships named Enterprise and most of the saga is divided between the optimistic future of the 23rd century's The Original Series ( TOS ) era and Star Trek: The Next Generation 's ( TNG ) 24th-century era, which also spans the spinoffs Star Trek: Deep Space Nine , Star Trek: Voyager, Star Trek: Lower Decks, and Star Trek: Picard . But in the last 20 years, Star Trek has also relied heavily on prequels, with Star Trek: Enterprise, Star Trek: Discovery seasons 1 and 2, and J.J. Abrams' Star Trek movie trilogy all set before TOS . Complicating matters, Abrams' films are also set in their own alternate canon, the Kelvin timeline. Star Trek: Discovery season 3 (and all future seasons) take place in the 32nd century, which is the farthest in the future the franchise has explored.

Related: Star Trek: Every Captain of The Enterprise

Star Trek  utilizes Stardates in-universe but it's easier to track the timeline based on the Greco-Roman calendar years each TV series and movie is set in. Of course, as a sci-fi franchise renowned for its innovative storytelling, Star Trek has told plenty of time travel tales . Nearly every TV series and several of the films have time travel adventures set that have sent the Starfleet heroes into the present day or even let them cross over and meet crews from different eras. There is really no wrong way to watch Star Trek but if a new fan is making the choice between release date order or the order of continuity, here is a handy guide to both options.

Star Trek TV Shows & Movies In Order Of Release

Star Trek: The Original Series (1966-1969)

Star Trek: The Animated Series (1973-1974)

Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982)

Star Trek III: The Search For Spock ( 1984)

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)

Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994)

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-1999)

Star Trek Generations (1994)

Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001)

Star Trek Insurrection (1998)

Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005)

Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)

Star Trek (2009)

Star Trek Into Darkness (2013)

Star Trek Beyond (2016)

Star Trek: Discovery (2017-present)

Star Trek: Picard (2020-present)

Star Trek: Lower Decks (2020-present)

Related: Star Trek: When The Kelvin Timeline Takes Place

Star Trek TV Shows & Movies In Chronological Order

Star Trek: Enterprise (2151-2155)

Star Trek (2009) (2255 in the Kelvin timeline) Star Trek also contains flashbacks to 2233, the 2240s, and 2252 and a flashforward to 2387 in the Prime timeline.

Star Trek: Discovery Seasons 1 & 2 (2256-2258) The USS Discovery permanently time travels to the 32nd century at the end of season 2.

Star Trek Into Darkness (2259 in the Kelvin timeline)

Star Trek Beyond (2263 in the Kelvin timeline)

Star Trek: The Original Series (2266-2269)

Star Trek: The Animated Series (2269-2270)

Star Trek: The Motion Picture (2270s)

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan and Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (2285)

Star Trek IV:  The Voyage Home (2286 and 1986)

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (2287)

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (2293)

Star Trek: The Next Generation (2364-2370)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (2369-2375)

Star Trek Generations (2371) Generations takes place before DS9 season 4 when Worf (Michael Dorn) joins the space station crew.

Star Trek: Voyager (2371-2378) Voyager 's first four seasons take place concurrently with DS9 seasons 4-7.

Star Trek: First Contact (2373 and 2063) First Contact takes place during DS9 season 5 and Voyager season 3. Most of the film takes place in 2063, 90 years before the events of Star Trek: Enterprise .

Star Trek Insurrection (2375) Insurrection takes place during DS9 season 7 and Voyager season 5.

Star Trek: Nemesis (2379)

Star Trek: Lower Decks (2380 onward)

Star Trek: Picard (2389 onward) Picard also has flashbacks set in 2385.

Star Trek: Discovery Season 3 (3188-3189)

Next: Why Every Star Trek Series Ended

  • SR Originals
  • Star Trek: Discovery

JustWatch

Where To Watch Every Star Trek TV Show and Movie in Order

star trek tng ds9 watch order

Rachel Ulatowski

Official JustWatch writer

Paramount has ushered in a new era of Star Trek. Following the conclusion of Star Trek: Discovery , the studio ordered multiple new series and began developing the TV movie Star Trek: Chapter 31 , which will star Academy Award-winning actress Michelle Yeoh. Given its revitalization, now is the perfect time to delve into the franchise. This guide will demonstrate where and how to watch every Star Trek movie and TV show in order.

The Star Trek franchise began in 1966 with the premiere of Star Trek , also known as Star Trek: The Original Series. Created by Gene Roddenberry, the sci-fi series follows Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and First Officer Spock (Leonard Nimoy) as they guide the Enterprise on a mission of intergalactic space exploration. While the show received poor ratings during its three-season run, broadcast syndication and reruns breathed new life into the franchise, garnering it a cult following after its 1969 cancelation.

Following the show’s re-evaluation, Roddenberry convinced Paramount to continue the original series on the big screen with Star Trek: The Motion Picture . Although it wasn’t a huge box-office hit, it did well enough to earn five more sequels, for which Roddenberry was a consultant.

As Star Trek: The Original Series remained one of the most popular syndicated TV shows years after its release, Paramount and Gene Roddenberry began working on another live-action series: Star Trek: The Next Generation . The series takes place aboard a new Enterprise one century after the events of the original series, with Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) at the helm. Along with his crew, Captain Picard carries on his predecessors' mission of exploring new worlds.

Star Trek: The Next Generation also continued on the big screen after its conclusion, receiving four feature films. While films like Star Trek: First Contact were well-received, Star Trek: Nemesis was a critical and financial failure. The failure of Star Trek: Nemesis was followed by another blow as the prequel series Star Trek: Enterprise was canceled amid low ratings.

Paramount switched directions on the big screen and released what many consider a “reboot” trilogy. However, the films aren’t an official reboot as they merely explore an alternate timeline known as the Kelvin Timeline and see Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto take over as Captain Kirk and Spock, respectively.

While the Kelvin Timeline film series played out, Star Trek went on a hiatus on the small screen. After a 12-year break, Paramount revived the franchise, aiming to create Star Trek shows specifically for its streaming service, CBS All Access (now Paramount+). In 2017, it released Star Trek: Discovery, followed by a new round of shows, including Star Trek: Picard , which continued Captain Picard’s story after Star Trek: The Next Generation.

There are no signs of the franchise slowing down, with the first TV movie, Star Trek: Chapter 31, on the way and Paramount showing interest in further Star Trek TV films, theatrical films, and shows.

How to watch the Star Trek franchise in order

Viewers can watch the Star Trek franchise either by release date order or chronologically. Those hoping to watch chronologically should know that the Kelvin Timeline trilogy takes place outside of the timeline of the other shows and movies, so they can technically be watched at any point. Star Trek: Short Treks also does not fit in the chronological order as it is an anthology series. Additionally, viewers may have to jump between shows occasionally due to time jumps in series like Star Trek: Discovery.

See below for the chronological order of every Star Trek show and movie:

Star Trek: Enterprise

Star Trek: Discovery Seasons 1 - 2

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

Star Trek: The Original Series

Star Trek: The Animated Series

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Star trek ii: the wrath of khan, star trek iii: the search for spock, star trek iv: the voyage home, star trek v: the final frontier, star trek vi: the undiscovered country, star trek: the next generation, star trek: generations, star trek: first contact, star trek: insurrection, star trek: nemesis, star trek: deep space nine, star trek: voyager.

Star Trek: Lower Decks

Star Trek: Prodigy

Star Trek: Picard

Star Trek: Discovery Seasons 3 - 5

Viewers can also watch the Star Trek franchise by the release date order detailed below. Read on to find out where to stream every Star Trek movie and TV show in the United States!

Netflix

Star Trek is an American science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry that follows the adventures of the starship USS Enterprise and its crew. The show is set in the Milky Way galaxy, roughly during the 2260s. The crew is headed by Captain James T. Kirk, first officer Spock, and chief medical officer Leonard McCoy. Shatner's voice-over introduction during each episode's opening credits stated the starship's purpose: The series was produced from 1966-67 by Desilu Productions, and by Paramount Television from 1968-69. Star Trek aired on NBC from September 8, 1966 to June 3, 1969. Although this television series had the title of Star Trek, it later acquired the retronym of Star Trek: The Original Series to distinguish the show within the media franchise that it began. Star Trek's Nielsen ratings while on NBC were low, and the network canceled it after three seasons and 79 episodes. Nevertheless, the show had a major influence on popular culture and it became a cult classic in broadcast syndication during the 1970s. The show eventually spawned a franchise, consisting of five additional television series, 12 theatrical films, and numerous books, games, toys, and other products.

Paramount Plus

The animated adventures of Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock and the crew of the Starship Enterprise.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture

When an unidentified alien destroys three powerful Klingon cruisers, Captain James T. Kirk returns to the newly transformed U.S.S. Enterprise to take command.

Spectrum On Demand

The starship Enterprise and its crew is pulled back into action when old nemesis, Khan, steals a top secret device called Project Genesis.

Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

A surprise visit from Spock's father provides a startling revelation: McCoy is harboring Spock's living essence.

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

When a huge alien probe enters the galaxy and begins to vaporize earths oceans, Kirk and his crew must travel back in time in order to bring back whales and save the planet.

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Follow the intergalactic adventures of Capt. Jean-Luc Picard and his loyal crew aboard the all-new USS Enterprise NCC-1701D, as they explore new worlds.

Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

A renegade Vulcan with a startling secret hijacks the U.S.S. Enterprise in order to find a mythical planet.

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

After years of war, the Federation and the Klingon empire find themselves on the brink of a peace summit when a Klingon ship is nearly destroyed by an apparent attack from the Enterprise. Both worlds brace for what may be their deadliest encounter.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

At Deep Space Nine, a space station located next to a wormhole in the vicinity of the liberated planet of Bajor, Commander Sisko and crew welcome alien visitors, root out evildoers and solve all types of unexpected problems that come their way.

Star Trek: Generations

Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the Enterprise-D find themselves at odds with the renegade scientist Soran who is destroying entire star systems. Only one man can help Picard stop Soran's scheme...and he's been dead for seventy-eight years.

Star Trek: Voyager

Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is 75 years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.

Star Trek: First Contact

The Borg, a relentless race of cyborgs, are on a direct course for Earth. Violating orders to stay away from the battle, Captain Picard and the crew of the newly-commissioned USS Enterprise E pursue the Borg back in time to prevent the invaders from changing Federation history and assimilating the galaxy.

Star Trek: Insurrection

When an alien race and factions within Starfleet attempt to take over a planet that has "regenerative" properties, it falls upon Captain Picard and the crew of the Enterprise to defend the planet's people as well as the very ideals upon which the Federation itself was founded.

Star Trek: Enterprise

During the mid-22nd century, a century before Captain Kirk's five-year mission, Jonathan Archer captains the United Earth ship Enterprise during the early years of Starfleet, leading up to the Earth-Romulan War and the formation of the Federation.

Star Trek: Nemesis

En route to the honeymoon of William Riker to Deanna Troi on her home planet of Betazed, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise receives word from Starfleet that a coup has resulted in the installation of a new Romulan political leader, Shinzon, who claims to seek peace with the human-backed United Federation of Planets. Once in enemy territory, the captain and his crew make a startling discovery: Shinzon is human, a slave from the Romulan sister planet of Remus, and has a secret, shocking relationship to Picard himself.

Star Trek

The fate of the galaxy rests in the hands of bitter rivals. One, James Kirk, is a delinquent, thrill-seeking Iowa farm boy. The other, Spock, a Vulcan, was raised in a logic-based society that rejects all emotion. As fiery instinct clashes with calm reason, their unlikely but powerful partnership is the only thing capable of leading their crew through unimaginable danger, boldly going where no one has gone before. The human adventure has begun again.

Star Trek Into Darkness

Star Trek Into Darkness

When the crew of the Enterprise is called back home, they find an unstoppable force of terror from within their own organization has detonated the fleet and everything it stands for, leaving our world in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Captain Kirk leads a manhunt to a war-zone world to capture a one man weapon of mass destruction. As our heroes are propelled into an epic chess game of life and death, love will be challenged, friendships will be torn apart, and sacrifices must be made for the only family Kirk has left: his crew.

Showtime Apple TV Channel

Star Trek Beyond

The USS Enterprise crew explores the furthest reaches of uncharted space, where they encounter a mysterious new enemy who puts them and everything the Federation stands for to the test.

Netflix

Star Trek: Discovery

Follow the voyages of Starfleet on their missions to discover new worlds and new life forms, and one Starfleet officer who must learn that to truly understand all things alien, you must first understand yourself.

fuboTV

IMAGES

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  4. Star Trek : Deep Space Nine Commercial for Episodes "Crossover" and Star Trek : TNG finale

  5. Star Trek: Prodigy

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COMMENTS

  1. Yet Another TNG/DS9/VOY Watching Order : r/startrek

    A casual, constructive, and most importantly, welcoming place on the internet to talk about Star Trek. Yet Another TNG/DS9/VOY Watching Order. As we know, the runs of Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG), Deep Space Nine (DS9), and Voyager overlapped within the same timeframe. If one's intent is to watch them all, the viewer has several options ...

  2. This Is The Correct Order In Which To Watch The Star Trek ...

    In 2018, after the successful first season of "Discovery" led to a new expansion of the "Star Trek" franchise, Kurtzman and co-creator Bryan Fuller (formerly a writer on "DS9" and "Voyager ...

  3. DS9 and Voyager in Chronological Order

    Just for fun, I ended up putting together a Chronological Guide for Deep Space Nine and Voyager that covers the first 5 seasons of DS9 and the first 3 seasons of Voyager, and figured I'd share it with my fellow Trek fans.

  4. Star Trek in Order: How to Watch Every Episode of Your Favorite

    How to Watch Every Star Trek Series (and Movie) in the Right Order Ready for a rewatch but not sure where to start? We've got you covered.

  5. TNG/DS9 watching order? : r/startrek

    After TNG Chain of Command, Part II you can watch all of season 1-2 of DS9. Then switch back to finish the seasons 6 and 7 of TNG, and after that go back to DS9. Watch Generations any time before the start of DS9 season 4 and First Contact after the start of season 4 but before the episode "Penumbra". You can watch Insurrection and Nemesis ...

  6. The Definitive Chronological Viewing Order For The Star Trek Cinematic

    The Definitive Chronological Viewing Order For The Star Trek Cinematic Universe. Marvel might get credit for pioneering their transmedia "Cinematic Universe," but truly, Star Trek in the 90's was way ahead of the game. In the span of that decade, the Star Trek universe saw the release of four feature films and three TV shows that all ...

  7. TNG DS9 VOY viewing order? : r/startrek

    TNG DS9 VOY viewing order? Throughout the years I've regularly caught some Star Trek on the side on the telly, but I've never made an intentional effort to get invested in it until now. I intend to change this, and it seems like the TNG DS9 VOY era is the best place to do so, but I'm a bit confused about viewing orders.

  8. How to watch Star Trek in order

    Whether you're wanting to check out the Original Series or Discovery, figuring out how to watch Star Trek in order is a breeze with this easy guide!

  9. How to Watch Every Star Trek Movie and TV Show in Order

    Thankfully, all Star Trek content is now back on Paramount+ for the time being, so you can watch The Original Series, DS9, The Wrath of Khan, and Star Trek Beyond all in one place.

  10. star trek

    24. I've noticed character crossovers in each series but considering the timeline is mostly linear, when does TNG take place in relation to DS9? As an example I've noticed a correlation in the Maquis and a mention of Cardassian occupation but I'm not aware as to when these took place in a linear timeline. Interactions of the two based on star ...

  11. How to Watch Star Trek in Order: The Complete Series Timeline

    How to Watch Star Trek in Chronological Order. 1. Star Trek: Enterprise (2151-2155) Star Trek: Enterprise is the earliest entry on our list as it takes place a hundred years before the adventures ...

  12. How to watch Star Trek in order

    From The Original Series to Strange New Worlds, here's how to watch the entire Star Trek canon in order.

  13. Next generation / deep space 9 watch order : r/startrek

    Next generation / deep space 9 watch order I have watched the OS, and I'm now on S7 E21 of the next generation. in this episode Riker contacted a ferengi on DS9, so I looked up the release date and saw the series deep space 9 came out before next generation was over. Should I have watched them at the same time?

  14. How To Watch Every Star Trek Series & Movie In The Right Order

    In a choice between whether to watch the Star Trek TV series and movies in the order of release or watching the saga unfold throughout its in-universe continuity, here's how a Trekker can do either. When Star Trek: The Original Series premiered in 1966, no one dreamed it would launch a franchise that would last 55 years, and Star Trek is still going strong. Star Trek now encompasses 9 TV ...

  15. What is the chronological order for the Star Trek series?

    2364 to 2370: Star Trek: The Next Generation (ST:TNG) 2371 to 2371: Star Trek: Generations (bulk of the movie except prologue) 2373 to 2373: First Contact. 2375 to 2375: Insurrection. 2369 to 2375: Star Trek: Deep Space 9 (ST: DS9) Partially overlaps with TNG, Generations and 2 TNG movies. Season 1 is same time as TNG season 6.

  16. In which order should I start watching Star Trek?

    In this question the person only wanted to watch the TV series. I want to watch every movie and TV series there is about Star Trek but I don't know where to start. I found this page on Wikipedia which is about a time line. Do I need to watch it in this order? Are the movies and TV series related? star-trek suggested-order Share Improve this question edited Apr 13, 2017 at 12:43 Community Bot 1 ...

  17. How to Watch Star Trek in Order? Easy Complete Guide

    The entire Star Trek series can be watched either in the release or chronological order, depending on your preference.

  18. What order to watch Star Trek television episodes in? (TNG/DS9 ...

    Watch the DS9 episode "Blaze of Glory" before you get to the Voyager episode "Hunters" and similarly, start season 6 of DS9 before you get to the Voyager episode "Message in a Bottle". If you go on to Star Trek Enterprise, make sure you've seen up to the TNG film First Contact. But even if you screw that up it's not the end of the world.

  19. Where To Watch Every Star Trek TV Show and Movie in Order

    Here is how (and where) to watch every Star Trek TV show and movie in order online as Paramount ushers in a new era of the sci-fi franchise.

  20. What is the recommended viewing order for young first-timers to watch

    The Motion Picture Star Trek: II - VI Generations First Contact Insurrection Nemesis Star Trek (2009) Star Trek Into Darkness (2013) I've found a list on Wikipedia * that seems to thoroughly cover the chronological order down to individual episodes. Should I use this, or should I go in order of release? Or, is there another recommended ...

  21. What order to watch TNG, DS9 and movies? : r/startrek

    DS9 began roughly in the middle of TNG's sixth season. There were minor crossovers and references but there is no crucial need to watch TNG and DS9 episodes in broadcast order - at least not for the TNG season six. It gets a little more involved in TNG season 7 because one episode plants the seed for the Maquis who then make themselves known in ...

  22. How to Watch Every Star Trek Movie and TV Show in Order

    How to Watch Every Star Trek Movie and TV Show in Order If you're looking to boldly go where no streamer has gone before, here's where to watch Star Trek TV shows and movies.

  23. Viewing order for TNG + DS9? : r/startrek

    Viewing order for TNG + DS9? I watched some of TNG as a kid but just started my first full viewing of the series, I'm a couple episodes into season 2 now. I haven't seen any of DS9 other than the first episode so I plan on watching it too. Would you recommend watching the entirety of TNG before starting DS9, or should I watch both series in the order of original air date and alternate ...