

In this episode, the Q are Q and use their powers to throw Voyager back and forth through time, but only for a few minutes, and the viewer sees this in real-time. Janeway's cumulative age differential: (still) 20 minutes "Death Wish" Janeway doesn't time travel in this episode: the time traveling is done by a Romulan through a wormhole.

Janeway's cumulative age differential: 20 minutes "Eye of the Needle" Janeway and Torres take a shuttle at leaves Voyager's frame of reference, but is resolved to be only a 20 minute discrepancy. In this episode, the crew is trapped inside a quantum singularity. So, looking at the proper time travel episodes: "Parallax" In Voyager, examples of this include " Time and Again", " Deadlock", and " Year of Hell". In usual Star Trek fashion, that copy is usually either destroyed or never heard from again when the events of the episode resolve and the viewer's frame of reference goes back to the original Universe.

An event spawns a copy of the existing universe at a specific moment of time, creating a copy of the individuals within it. In parallel universe creation, there are multiple "copies". In Voyager, this includes episodes like " Parallax", " Eye of the Needle", " Death Wish", " Future's End", " Before and After", " Fury", and " Shattered". That person somehow exits the normal flow of time and enters back in a different place. In time travel, there's only one "copy" of an individual. Star Trek: Prodigy premieres on October 28 with a one-hour episode exclusively on Paramount+.While the show glosses over it, there's a difference between time travel and parallel universe creation, and it comes down to how many "copies" of a person there are:
#Voyager star trek captain series#
Both Discovery and Picard are among the most-watched original series on Paramount+. There’s also a Starfleet Academy and a Section 31 series in production. Next year, we’ll get the premiere of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. The new generation of Star Trek productions also counts with Star Trek: Picard and Star Trek: Lower Decks. The Federation ship might be their ticket to a better life, but the ragtag team will first have to learn to act as a real crew.īesides holding the complete library of Star Trek series and films, Paramount+ is also the exclusive home of future seasons of the popular show Star Trek: Discovery. RELATED: First ‘Star Trek: Prodigy’ Animated Series Trailer Shows Off a Crew That Certainly Isn’t Starfleet CertifiedĮxplicitly aimed at kids, Star Trek: Prodigy will follow a group of children and teenagers who try to escape the hard life of a mining colony after discovering the U.S.S Protostar. As for the new cast members, Diggs will voice Commander Tysess, Jamil will voice Ensign Asencia, Alexander will voice Doctor Noum, and Beltran will reprise his Star Trek: Voyager role as Captain Chakotay. John Noble and Jimmi Simpson were recently cast as the main villains: the Diviner and Drednok. The new clip also shows the new crew first contact with the hologram, giving us a better look at indestructible blob Murf (voiced by Dee Bradley Baker), bright eight-year-old Brikar Rok-Tahk (voiced by Rylee Alazraqui), sixteen-year-old Tellarite Jankom Pog (voiced by Jason Mantazoukas), a noncorporeal and genderless Medusan named Zero (voiced by Angus Imrie), the unlikely leader of the lawless teens’ Dal (voiced by Brett Gray), and Gwyn (voiced by Ella Purnell), a teenage Vau N'Akart who appears to be tied down to a chair by Murf. The clip introduces us to the hologram version of Captain Janeway created to take control of the lower function of a Starfleet ship and guide young crews while they journey through space. During the Star Trek: Prodigy New York Comic-Con panel, Paramount+ also revealed new members of the voice cast, including Daveed Diggs, Jameela Jamil, Jason Alexander, and Robert Beltran.

Paramount+ has released a new Star Trek: Prodigy clip that gives us an extended look at Star Trek: Voyager's Captain Janeway, who makes a glorious return in the upcoming animated series voiced by Kate Mulgrew.
