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We may know more isolated facts about the {{Whoniverse}}. We may be more emotionally moved by the {{Buffyverse}}, but in terms of a coherent sense of history, world-building, cross-series and cross-media continuity, you really can't beat the Trek Verse.

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We may know more isolated facts about the {{Whoniverse}}.Franchise/{{Whoniverse}}. We may be more emotionally moved by the {{Buffyverse}}, but in terms of a coherent sense of history, world-building, cross-series and cross-media continuity, you really can't beat the Trek Verse.



The '''Trek Verse''' was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to Creator/{{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.

to:

The '''Trek Verse''' was invented by GeneRoddenberry Creator/GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to Creator/{{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.
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None


We may know more isolated facts about the {{Whoniverse}}. We may be more emotionally moved by the {{Buffyverse}}, but in terms of a coherent sense of history, world-building, cross-series and cross-media continuity, you really can't beat the TrekVerse.

to:

We may know more isolated facts about the {{Whoniverse}}. We may be more emotionally moved by the {{Buffyverse}}, but in terms of a coherent sense of history, world-building, cross-series and cross-media continuity, you really can't beat the TrekVerse.
Trek Verse.



The '''''Trek Verse''''' was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to Creator/{{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.

to:

The '''''Trek Verse''''' '''Trek Verse''' was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to Creator/{{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.
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None


The TrekVerse was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to Creator/{{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.

to:

The TrekVerse '''''Trek Verse''''' was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to Creator/{{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.



It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own. Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek. It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.

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It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse The Main 'Verse, The Mirror 'Verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], continuity]] (consisting of the ''Pre-Trek'' and ''Enterprise'' eras as they were with a radically revamped ''Classic'' era), with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own. Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek. It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.
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The wounded Species 8472 in \"Prey\" knocked out the artificial gravity on one deck of Voyager.


* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse. On-screen, it has only failed once [[Film/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry as a result of enemy action]].

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* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse. On-screen, it has only failed once twice [[Film/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry as a result of of]] [[StarTrekVoyager enemy action]].
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* The Delta Quadrant. Home to the Borg, and several dozen other species. Seemingly the [[CrapsackWorld]] most savage Quadrant]], every other lightyear is controlled by an extremely xenophobic and hostile race. This is the quadrant that the ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager U.S.S. Voyager]]'' was lost in for 7 years.

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* The Delta Quadrant. Home to the Borg, and several dozen other species. Seemingly the [[CrapsackWorld]] [[CrapsackWorld most savage Quadrant]], every other lightyear is controlled by an extremely xenophobic and hostile race. This is the quadrant that the ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager U.S.S. Voyager]]'' was lost in for 7 years.
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* The Delta Quadrant. Home to the Borg, and several other species. This is the quadrant that the ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager U.S.S. Voyager]]'' was lost in for 7 years.

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* The Delta Quadrant. Home to the Borg, and several dozen other species.species. Seemingly the [[CrapsackWorld]] most savage Quadrant]], every other lightyear is controlled by an extremely xenophobic and hostile race. This is the quadrant that the ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager U.S.S. Voyager]]'' was lost in for 7 years.
years.
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** A special kind of force field is employed by Starfleet in their cargo and shuttle bays, allowing shuttles to pass through without having to cycle through an airlock system. These bays can be decompressed in an emergency by shutting the force field off while the space doors are open, allowing hazardous material to be quickly removed from a ship, or even acting as an emergency propulsion system when a quick boost is needed.
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* MatterReplicators, called simply Replicators. An outgrowth of Transporter technology, they can synthesize any object for which they carry a program, except living creatures.

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* MatterReplicators, MatterReplicator technology, called simply Replicators. An outgrowth of Transporter technology, they can synthesize any object for which they carry a program, except living creatures.
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* MatterReplicators, called simply Replicators. An outgrowth of Transporter technology, they can synthesize any object for which they carry a program, except living creatures.
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* ''The Dominion:'' TheEmpire from another part of space, set to take over our side of the galaxy. Much of ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' revolves around the war with them, and the consequences of this {{arc}} are sometimes felt in the other series. They also get to be stand-ins for [[AcceptableTargets the evil of drugs]], as their warriors are [[GovernmentDrugEnforcement addicted to one to keep them in line]].

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* ''The Dominion:'' TheEmpire from another part of space, set to take over our side of the galaxy. Sort of a mirror version of the Federation, as it is comprised of many races, but unified through military force, with its most visible members being the Vorta and Jem'Hadar. Much of ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' revolves around the war with them, and the consequences of this {{arc}} are sometimes felt in the other series. They also get to be stand-ins for [[AcceptableTargets the evil of drugs]], as their warriors are [[GovernmentDrugEnforcement addicted to one to keep them in line]].
line]].
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adding links to trope pages


* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse. On-screen, it has only failed once as a result of enemy action.
** It also failed once one screen due to a technical malfunction.
*** And once on screen it was disabled for medical/species reasons.

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* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse. On-screen, it has only failed once [[Film/StarTrekVITheUndiscoveredCountry as a result of enemy action.
action]].
** It also failed once one screen due to a [[Series/StarTrekEnterprise technical malfunction.
malfunction]].
*** And once on screen it was disabled for [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine medical/species reasons.
reasons]].

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additional examples or accuracies



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** It also failed once one screen due to a technical malfunction.
*** And once on screen it was disabled for medical/species reasons.
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* The ''Pre-Trek'' era: Mid 20th century to late 21st century. Humanity on the brink of radical scientific and political developments eventually leading to devastating global conflicts such as The Eugenics Wars (1992-1996) and World War III (2026-2053) putting humanity on the verge of extinction. This is later resolved with Zephram Cochrane's launch of humanity's first ever warp-capable vessel, the ''Phoenix'' leading to the historic ''official'' FirstContact between humans and extraterrestrials followed by the greatest social, cultural and technological renaissance in human history nearly eliminating poverty, disease and war.

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* The ''Pre-Trek'' era: Mid 20th century to late 21st century. Humanity on the brink of radical Radical scientific and political developments eventually leading lead to devastating global conflicts such as The Eugenics Wars (1992-1996) and World War III (2026-2053) putting humanity on the verge of extinction. This is later resolved with Later, Zephram Cochrane's launch of humanity's first ever warp-capable vessel, the ''Phoenix'' leading to grabs the attention of Vulcans on a survey mission making the historic ''official'' "official" FirstContact between humans and extraterrestrials followed by paving the way for the greatest social, cultural and technological renaissance in human history nearly eliminating poverty, disease and war.
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* The ''Pre-Trek'' era: Mid 20th century to late 21st century. The world and humanity on the brink of radical scientific and political developments eventually leading to devastating global conflicts such as The Eugenics Wars (1992-1996) and World War III (2026-2053) nearly decimating humanity. This is later resolved with Zephram Cochrane's launch of humanity's first ever warp-capable vessel, the ''Phoenix'' leading to the historic ''official'' FirstContact between humans and extraterrestrials followed by the greatest social, cultural and technological renaissance in human history nearly eliminating poverty, disease and war.
* The ''Enterprise'' era: Mid-22nd century. Man's first forays into deep space. This era culminates with the foundation of a United Federation of Planets, of which Earth is a signatory member. ([[Series/StarTrekEnterprise ENT]])
* The ''Classic'' era: Late 23rd century. A period of rapid expansion for the Federation. It is before or during this period that man reaches and surpasses the technological level of the rest of the major local species and becomes the dominant player in local politics. ([[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]], [[WesternAnimation/StarTrekTheAnimatedSeries TAS]])

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* The ''Pre-Trek'' era: Mid 20th century to late 21st century. The world and humanity Humanity on the brink of radical scientific and political developments eventually leading to devastating global conflicts such as The Eugenics Wars (1992-1996) and World War III (2026-2053) nearly decimating humanity.putting humanity on the verge of extinction. This is later resolved with Zephram Cochrane's launch of humanity's first ever warp-capable vessel, the ''Phoenix'' leading to the historic ''official'' FirstContact between humans and extraterrestrials followed by the greatest social, cultural and technological renaissance in human history nearly eliminating poverty, disease and war.
* The ''Enterprise'' era: Mid-22nd Early to mid-22nd century. Man's first forays into deep space. This era culminates with the foundation of a United Federation of Planets, of which Earth is a signatory member. ([[Series/StarTrekEnterprise ENT]])
* The ''Classic'' era: Late Mid to late 23rd century. A period of rapid expansion for the Federation. It is before or during this period that man reaches and surpasses the technological level of the rest of the major local species and becomes the dominant player in local politics. ([[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]], [[WesternAnimation/StarTrekTheAnimatedSeries TAS]])
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* The ''Pre-Trek'' era: Mid 20th century to late 21st century. The world and humanity on the brink of radical scientific developments leading to devastating global conflicts such as The Eugenics Wars (1992-1996) and World War III (2026-2053) nearly decimating humanity. This is later resolved with Zephram Cochrane's launch of humanity's first ever warp-capable vessel, the ''Phoenix'' leading to the historic ''official'' FirstContact between humans and the vulcans followed the greatest social, cultural and technological renaissance in human history nearly eliminating poverty, disease and war.

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* The ''Pre-Trek'' era: Mid 20th century to late 21st century. The world and humanity on the brink of radical scientific and political developments eventually leading to devastating global conflicts such as The Eugenics Wars (1992-1996) and World War III (2026-2053) nearly decimating humanity. This is later resolved with Zephram Cochrane's launch of humanity's first ever warp-capable vessel, the ''Phoenix'' leading to the historic ''official'' FirstContact between humans and the vulcans extraterrestrials followed by the greatest social, cultural and technological renaissance in human history nearly eliminating poverty, disease and war.

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The "active" history of the TrekVerse covers the period of time during which mankind has spread out into nearby space, a period of approximately 300 years, separated into three eras:

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The "active" history of the TrekVerse covers the period of time during which mankind has spread out into nearby space, a period of approximately 300 over 400 years, separated into three eras:
four eras:

* The ''Pre-Trek'' era: Mid 20th century to late 21st century. The world and humanity on the brink of radical scientific developments leading to devastating global conflicts such as The Eugenics Wars (1992-1996) and World War III (2026-2053) nearly decimating humanity. This is later resolved with Zephram Cochrane's launch of humanity's first ever warp-capable vessel, the ''Phoenix'' leading to the historic ''official'' FirstContact between humans and the vulcans followed the greatest social, cultural and technological renaissance in human history nearly eliminating poverty, disease and war.
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* ''Vulcans:'' A logical, long-lived species (who suppress their emotions) with close ties to humanity. They are best recognized for their pointed ears, [[TheThreeStooges Moe Howard]] haircuts, a distinctive salute (see CrossCulturalHandshake), and a clever defensive attack wherein they can render a person unconscious by squeezing the neck (the famed Vulcan Nerve Pinch). Like humans, Vulcans went through a cultural turning point (although theirs was much more drastic), and their intense devotion to logic is a backlash against their wild, vicious past. [[StrawVulcan Much is made]] of the contrast between the rational, collected Vulcans and the more emotional and impulsive human characters.

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* ''Vulcans:'' A logical, long-lived species (who suppress their emotions) with close ties to humanity. They are best recognized for their pointed ears, [[TheThreeStooges [[Film/TheThreeStooges Moe Howard]] haircuts, a distinctive salute (see CrossCulturalHandshake), and a clever defensive attack wherein they can render a person unconscious by squeezing the neck (the famed Vulcan Nerve Pinch). Like humans, Vulcans went through a cultural turning point (although theirs was much more drastic), and their intense devotion to logic is a backlash against their wild, vicious past. [[StrawVulcan Much is made]] of the contrast between the rational, collected Vulcans and the more emotional and impulsive human characters.
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* ''The Borg:'' [[HiveMind Cybernetic collective]] skilled in [[YouWillBeAssimilated adaptation and assimilation.]] Took over the role of [[StrawmanPolitical thinly veiled stand-ins]] [[DirtyCommies for communists]] from the Klingons in the Modern era. Generally treated as the single largest threat to the Federation, in part because they more or less ''cannot'' be negotiated with, have access to the knowledge of thousands of species and trillions of individuals and can adapt very quickly to almost any weapon used against them, rendering it useless, and partly because [[TomatoInTheMirror they are in some ways the Federation's dark reflection]]. A group that goes around incorporating other cultures into their own, in order to make the whole stronger, more complete, and more "perfect"? [[NotSoDifferent Did the writer just describe the Federation... or the Borg?]]

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* ''The Borg:'' [[HiveMind Cybernetic collective]] skilled in [[YouWillBeAssimilated adaptation and assimilation.]] Took over the role of [[StrawmanPolitical thinly veiled stand-ins]] [[DirtyCommies for communists]] from the Klingons in the Modern era. Generally treated as the single largest threat to the Federation, in part because they more or less ''cannot'' be negotiated with, have access to the knowledge of thousands of species and trillions of individuals and can adapt very quickly to almost any weapon used against them, rendering it useless, and partly because [[TomatoInTheMirror they are in some ways the Federation's dark reflection]].reflection. A group that goes around incorporating other cultures into their own, in order to make the whole stronger, more complete, and more "perfect"? [[NotSoDifferent Did the writer just describe the Federation... or the Borg?]]
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The TrekVerse diverges from our universe some time between 1965 and 2000. The major divergence arguably occurred some time in the 1960s, with the creation of a group of genetically enhanced humans. The differences did not become visible until the 1990s, though, when that group (which included Khan), now adults, launched an international conflict called the Eugenics Wars. The exact impact of this war is hard to deduce, as there have been several [[RetCon retcons]] applied to allow TimeTravel stories to a recognizable contemporary Earth. At one point, it appeared that the Eugenics Wars had been retconned into the late 21st century, but that retcon was itself retconned into a simple inaccuracy (A character saying "two hundred years" when "three hundred years" was called for).

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The TrekVerse diverges from our universe some time between 1965 and 2000. The major divergence arguably occurred some time in the 1960s, with the creation of a group of genetically enhanced humans.humans called Augments. The differences did not become visible until the 1990s, though, when that group (which included Khan), now adults, launched an international conflict called the Eugenics Wars. The exact impact of this war is hard to deduce, as there have been several [[RetCon retcons]] applied to allow TimeTravel stories to a recognizable contemporary Earth. At one point, it appeared that the Eugenics Wars had been retconned into the late 21st century, but that retcon was itself retconned into a simple inaccuracy (A character saying "two hundred years" when "three hundred years" was called for).
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** Speeds while travelling faster than light are given in warp units, where Warp 1 is equal to the speed of light and higher warp numbers represent progressively faster speeds. During the filming of TOS, there was no official warp speed scale, but after the series concluded it was unofficially decided that warp X = X[[superscript:3]] times the speed of light. In TNG, the system was formalized as warp X = X[[superscript:3.33333...]] times the speed of light ''up to warp 9'', and speeds asymptotically approached infinity at a hypothetical Warp 10. In the alternate future of the TNG finale, though, a starship was stated to be going "warp 13".

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* The ''Enterprise'' era: Mid-22nd century. Man's first forays into deep space. This era culminates with the foundation of a United Federation of Planets, of which Earth is a signatory member. ([[Series/StarTrekEnterprise ENT]])



* The ''Enterprise'' era: Mid-22nd century. Man's first forays into deep space. This era culminates with the foundation of a United Federation of Planets, of which Earth is a signatory member. ([[Series/StarTrekEnterprise ENT]])
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


We may know more isolated facts about the {{Whoniverse}}. We may be more emotionally moved by the {{Buffyverse}}, but in terms of a coherent sense of history, cross-series and cross-media continuity, you really can't beat the TrekVerse.

to:

We may know more isolated facts about the {{Whoniverse}}. We may be more emotionally moved by the {{Buffyverse}}, but in terms of a coherent sense of history, world-building, cross-series and cross-media continuity, you really can't beat the TrekVerse.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The TrekVerse was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to {{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.

to:

The TrekVerse was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to {{Paramount}} Creator/{{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. [[This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own.]] [[Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek]]. It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.

to:

It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. [[This This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own.]] [[Note, own. Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek]].Trek. It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. [[hottip:*:This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own.]] [[hottip:**:Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek.]] It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.

to:

It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. [[hottip:*:This [[This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own.]] [[hottip:**:Note, [[Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek.]] Trek]]. It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.

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da Namespace stuff - also, sorted a bit


* The ''Classic'' era: Late 23rd century. A period of rapid expansion for the Federation. It is before or during this period that man reaches and surpasses the technological level of the rest of the major local species and becomes the dominant player in local politics. ([[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]], [[WesternAnimation/StarTrekTheAnimatedSeries TAS]])



* The ''Classic'' era: Late 23rd century. A period of rapid expansion for the Federation. It is before or during this period that man reaches and surpasses the technological level of the rest of the major local species and becomes the dominant player in local politics. ([[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]], [[WesternAnimation/StarTrekTheAnimatedSeries TAS]])



It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. [[hottip:*:This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own.]] [[hottip:**:Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek.]] It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.

to:

It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. [[hottip:*:This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own.]] [[hottip:**:Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''{{Andromeda}}'' ''Series/{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek.]] It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.



* ''Humans:'' A race that is characterized, ironically, [[HumansAreSpecial by their lack of strong defining characteristics]], as well as their disproportionately large numbers within the Federation colonies and Starfleet, especially during the classic era. Other unique aspects of humans include the comparatively high level of diversity within their own species, and their familiarity with their planet's pre-apocalyptic history and culture; which was a time of rampant violence, greed, and ignorance before the Third World War issued in a new cultural era. Earth, the human homeworld, is home to the Federation's governmental bodies and Starfleet, its military force; and is located in Sector 001 on Federation maps.
* ''Vulcans:'' A logical, long-lived species (who suppress their emotions) with close ties to humanity. They are best recognized for their pointed ears, [[TheThreeStooges Moe Howard]] haircuts, a distinctive salute (see CrossCulturalHandshake), and a clever defensive attack wherein they can render a person unconscious by squeezing the neck (the famed Vulcan Nerve Pinch). Like humans, Vulcans went through a cultural turning point (although theirs was much more drastic), and their intense devotion to logic is a backlash against their wild, vicious past. [[StrawVulcan Much is made]] of the contrast between the rational, collected Vulcans and the more emotional and impulsive human characters.



* ''Klingons:'' a [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Proud Warrior Race]] of RubberForeheadAliens (originally white guys wearing fu manchus and shoe polish in [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]]; retconned in Series/StarTrekEnterprise), started out as enemies of the Federation, but later became tacit allies. Later stories focus on the internal struggles of the Klingon Empire as a power on the wane.
* ''Romulans:'' Secretive diaspora Vulcan sub-species who rejected the Vulcan drive for logic, but have cloaking devices, which makes up for it. [[ScaryDogmaticAliens Highly xenophobic and reliant on their secret police to keep order]], they are [[FantasyCounterpartCulture loosely inspired by the Roman Empire]] and their territory is the Romulan Star Empire. They are also somewhat a ProudWarriorRace but have fewer qualms about [[TryingToCatchMeFightingDirty sneaky tactics]] and value honor for the Empire higher than personal honor. They once got along with the Klingons but these fundamental differences and some nasty wars mean Romulans and Klingons hate each other's guts. [[spoiler:The new [[Film/StarTrek Trek reboot movie]] makes it canon that the Romulan homeworld was destroyed by a supernova, sending Nero back in time for revenge and starting the AlternateTimeline.]]
* ''Ferengi:'' [[PlanetOfHats An entire race]] of [[CorruptCorporateExecutive slimy capitalists.]] The big-eared, big-nosed Ferengi value profit above all else, cheat and swindle as a way of life, have [[SpaceJews big ears and noses]], and are played by [[UnfortunateImplications primarily Jewish actors.]] The Ferengi were originally meant to be the new BigBad for The Next Generation in the way that the Klingons were for the original series, but that fell through after one or two episodes when it became apparent how silly they were. Ferengi were later relegated to comedy relief, most famously in the character Quark on Deep Space Nine.
* ''Cardassians:'' Even more ScaryDogmaticAliens than the Romulans, introduced in the Next Generation era and a main antagonist of [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Deep Space Nine]]; Expansionist, collectivist and many [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour 1984]] [[ThereAreFourLights overtones]]; they are brutal as colonial overlords and merciless with dissenters. They occupied the Bajoran homeworld until LaResistance got too much for them and actively try to subvert the treaty that forms the Cardassian [[TheNeutralZone Neutral Zone]] in order to control it. [[spoiler: They later side with The Dominion against the Federation. This ends ''[[LaserGuidedKarma horrifically]]'' for them, and by the latest point in the official timeline they've practically been reduced to a rump state due to the complete devastation of their entire nation, both homeworld and colonies.]]



* ''Cardassians:'' Even more ScaryDogmaticAliens than the Romulans, introduced in the Next Generation era and a main antagonist of [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Deep Space Nine]]; Expansionist, collectivist and many [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour 1984]] [[ThereAreFourLights overtones]]; they are brutal as colonial overlords and merciless with dissenters. They occupied the Bajoran homeworld until LaResistance got too much for them and actively try to subvert the treaty that forms the Cardassian [[TheNeutralZone Neutral Zone]] in order to control it. [[spoiler: They later side with The Dominion against the Federation. This ends ''[[LaserGuidedKarma horrifically]]'' for them, and by the latest point in the official timeline they've practically been reduced to a rump state due to the complete devastation of their entire nation, both homeworld and colonies.]]



* ''Ferengi:'' [[PlanetOfHats An entire race]] of [[CorruptCorporateExecutive slimy capitalists.]] The big-eared, big-nosed Ferengi value profit above all else, cheat and swindle as a way of life, have [[SpaceJews big ears and noses]], and are played by [[UnfortunateImplications primarily Jewish actors.]] The Ferengi were originally meant to be the new BigBad for The Next Generation in the way that the Klingons were for the original series, but that fell through after one or two episodes when it became apparent how silly they were. Ferengi were later relegated to comedy relief, most famously in the character Quark on Deep Space Nine.
* ''Humans:'' A race that is characterized, ironically, [[HumansAreSpecial by their lack of strong defining characteristics]], as well as their disproportionately large numbers within the Federation colonies and Starfleet, especially during the classic era. Other unique aspects of humans include the comparatively high level of diversity within their own species, and their familiarity with their planet's pre-apocalyptic history and culture; which was a time of rampant violence, greed, and ignorance before the Third World War issued in a new cultural era. Earth, the human homeworld, is home to the Federation's governmental bodies and Starfleet, its military force; and is located in Sector 001 on Federation maps.
* ''Klingons:'' a [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Proud Warrior Race]] of RubberForeheadAliens (originally white guys wearing fu manchus and shoe polish in [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]]; retconned in Series/StarTrekEnterprise), started out as enemies of the Federation, but later became tacit allies. Later stories focus on the internal struggles of the Klingon Empire as a power on the wane.
* ''Romulans:'' Secretive diaspora Vulcan sub-species who rejected the Vulcan drive for logic, but have cloaking devices, which makes up for it. [[ScaryDogmaticAliens Highly xenophobic and reliant on their secret police to keep order]], they are [[FantasyCounterpartCulture loosely inspired by the Roman Empire]] and their territory is the Romulan Star Empire. They are also somewhat a ProudWarriorRace but have fewer qualms about [[TryingToCatchMeFightingDirty sneaky tactics]] and value honor for the Empire higher than personal honor. They once got along with the Klingons but these fundamental differences and some nasty wars mean Romulans and Klingons hate each other's guts. [[spoiler:The new [[Film/StarTrek Trek reboot movie]] makes it canon that the Romulan homeworld was destroyed by a supernova, sending Nero back in time for revenge and starting the AlternateTimeline.]]
* ''Vulcans:'' A logical, long-lived species (who suppress their emotions) with close ties to humanity. They are best recognized for their pointed ears, [[TheThreeStooges Moe Howard]] haircuts, a distinctive salute (see CrossCulturalHandshake), and a clever defensive attack wherein they can render a person unconscious by squeezing the neck (the famed Vulcan Nerve Pinch). Like humans, Vulcans went through a cultural turning point (although theirs was much more drastic), and their intense devotion to logic is a backlash against their wild, vicious past. [[StrawVulcan Much is made]] of the contrast between the rational, collected Vulcans and the more emotional and impulsive human characters.



* The Gamma Quadrant. Home to the Dominion. A permanent wormhole connects the Gamma Quadrant to the star system where the Bajorans live.



* The Gamma Quadrant. Home to the Dominion. A permanent wormhole connects the Gamma Quadrant to the star system where the Bajorans live.



* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse. On-screen, it has only failed once as a result of enemy action.

* DeflectorShields. These are standard equipment on most starships. They consume a significant (but not excessive) amount of power, can withstand a sizeable amount of punishment, and are weakened in precisely predictable ways when damaged ("Shields down to 40%, Captain!"). Scaled-down versions of this technology are used to create smaller force fields, for such uses as prison doors that are vulnerable to power failures.
* EverythingSensor, usually referred to as simply the ship's sensors. They can detect life forms, time travel, the entire subatomic particle zoo, and even alterations to the fabric of the universe, and can pinpoint not only the direction to any of these oddities but also the distance. However, their ability to locate a crew member planetside seems to be inversely proportional to the amount of peril said crew member finds himself in.



* DeflectorShields. These are standard equipment on most starships. They consume a significant (but not excessive) amount of power, can withstand a sizeable amount of punishment, and are weakened in precisely predictable ways when damaged ("Shields down to 40%, Captain!"). Scaled-down versions of this technology are used to create smaller force fields, for such uses as prison doors that are vulnerable to power failures.
* TransportersAndTeleporters, called simply Transporters. They can operate over distances of several thousand kilometers, but are ''not'' long ranged enough to beam a person from the Earth to the Moon (unless someone comes up with a {{Technobabble}} way of doing so that only works for that one episode). They cannot operate through a starship's DeflectorShields. Several other local conditions can interfere with the operation of Transporters, usually in direct proportion to how much immediate danger an away-team is in.



* StealthInSpace, in the form of the Cloaking Device. Thanks to the Treaty of Algeron, only the Romulans and Klingons posess this technology ... at least, ''officially''.



* EverythingSensor, usually referred to as simply the ship's sensors. They can detect life forms, time travel, the entire subatomic particle zoo, and even alterations to the fabric of the universe, and can pinpoint not only the direction to any of these oddities but also the distance. However, their ability to locate a crew member planetside seems to be inversely proportional to the amount of peril said crew member finds himself in.
* StealthInSpace, in the form of the Cloaking Device. Thanks to the Treaty of Algeron, only the Romulans and Klingons posess this technology ... at least, ''officially''.
* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse. On-screen, it has only failed once as a result of enemy action.

to:

* EverythingSensor, usually referred to as TransportersAndTeleporters, called simply the ship's sensors. Transporters. They can detect life forms, time travel, operate over distances of several thousand kilometers, but are ''not'' long ranged enough to beam a person from the entire subatomic particle zoo, and even alterations Earth to the fabric Moon (unless someone comes up with a {{Technobabble}} way of the universe, and can pinpoint not doing so that only works for that one episode). They cannot operate through a starship's DeflectorShields. Several other local conditions can interfere with the direction operation of Transporters, usually in direct proportion to any of these oddities but also the distance. However, their ability to locate a crew member planetside seems to be inversely proportional to the amount of peril said crew member finds himself in.
* StealthInSpace, in the form of the Cloaking Device. Thanks to the Treaty of Algeron, only the Romulans and Klingons posess this technology ... at least, ''officially''.
* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it
how much immediate danger an away-team is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse. On-screen, it has only failed once as a result of enemy action.
in.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Bajorans:'' A mostly peaceful and spiritual race hardened by the rape of their homeworld by the Cardassians, they play a large role in DeepSpaceNine where the titular space station hovers over their planet. The Federation wants them to become a member state but the two are opposed in some ways, including the Bajoran religion, especially the slightly xenophobic hardliner faction that wants both the Cardassians and the Federation to stay out.

to:

* ''Bajorans:'' A mostly peaceful and spiritual race hardened by the rape of their homeworld by the Cardassians, they play a large role in DeepSpaceNine [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Deep Space Nine]] where the titular space station hovers over their planet. The Federation wants them to become a member state but the two are opposed in some ways, including the Bajoran religion, especially the slightly xenophobic hardliner faction that wants both the Cardassians and the Federation to stay out.



* ''Cardassians:'' Even more ScaryDogmaticAliens than the Romulans, introduced in the Next Generation era and a main antagonist of DeepSpaceNine; Expansionist, collectivist and many [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour 1984]] [[ThereAreFourLights overtones]]; they are brutal as colonial overlords and merciless with dissenters. They occupied the Bajoran homeworld until LaResistance got too much for them and actively try to subvert the treaty that forms the Cardassian [[TheNeutralZone Neutral Zone]] in order to control it. [[spoiler: They later side with The Dominion against the Federation. This ends ''[[LaserGuidedKarma horrifically]]'' for them, and by the latest point in the official timeline they've practically been reduced to a rump state due to the complete devastation of their entire nation, both homeworld and colonies.]]

to:

* ''Cardassians:'' Even more ScaryDogmaticAliens than the Romulans, introduced in the Next Generation era and a main antagonist of DeepSpaceNine; [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Deep Space Nine]]; Expansionist, collectivist and many [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour 1984]] [[ThereAreFourLights overtones]]; they are brutal as colonial overlords and merciless with dissenters. They occupied the Bajoran homeworld until LaResistance got too much for them and actively try to subvert the treaty that forms the Cardassian [[TheNeutralZone Neutral Zone]] in order to control it. [[spoiler: They later side with The Dominion against the Federation. This ends ''[[LaserGuidedKarma horrifically]]'' for them, and by the latest point in the official timeline they've practically been reduced to a rump state due to the complete devastation of their entire nation, both homeworld and colonies.]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
In \"The Undiscovered Country\", for reference.


* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse -- it has never failed in battle and has only been deliberately deactivated a handful of times.

to:

* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is possibly the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse -- 'verse. On-screen, it has never failed in battle and has only been deliberately deactivated failed once as a handful result of times.
enemy action.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Fixed the namespace.


The TrekVerse was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to {{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.

to:

The TrekVerse was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to {{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.
comprehend.



* ''Klingons:'' a [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Proud Warrior Race]] of RubberForeheadAliens (originally white guys wearing fu manchus and shoe polish in [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]]; retconned in [[Series/StarTrekEnterprise Star Trek Enterprise]]), started out as enemies of the Federation, but later became tacit allies. Later stories focus on the internal struggles of the Klingon Empire as a power on the wane.

to:

* ''Klingons:'' a [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Proud Warrior Race]] of RubberForeheadAliens (originally white guys wearing fu manchus and shoe polish in [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]]; retconned in [[Series/StarTrekEnterprise Star Trek Enterprise]]), Series/StarTrekEnterprise), started out as enemies of the Federation, but later became tacit allies. Later stories focus on the internal struggles of the Klingon Empire as a power on the wane.



* ''Ferengi:'' [[PlanetOfHats An entire race]] of [[CorruptCorporateExecutive slimy capitalists.]] The big-eared, big-nosed Ferengi value profit above all else, cheat and swindle as a way of life, have [[SpaceJews big ears and noses]], and are played by [[UnfortunateImplications primarily Jewish actors.]] The Ferengi were originally meant to be the new BigBad for The Next Generation in the way that the Klingons were for the original series, but that fell through after one or two episodes when it became apparent how silly they were. Ferengi were later relegated to comedy relief, most famously in the character Quark on Deep Space Nine.
* ''Cardassians:'' Even more ScaryDogmaticAliens than the Romulans, introduced in the Next Generation era and a main antagonist of DeepSpaceNine; Expansionist, collectivist and many [[NineteenEightyFour 1984]] [[ThereAreFourLights overtones]]; they are brutal as colonial overlords and merciless with dissenters. They occupied the Bajoran homeworld until LaResistance got too much for them and actively try to subvert the treaty that forms the Cardassian [[TheNeutralZone Neutral Zone]] in order to control it. [[spoiler: They later side with The Dominion against the Federation. This ends ''[[LaserGuidedKarma horrifically]]'' for them, and by the latest point in the official timeline they've practically been reduced to a rump state due to the complete devastation of their entire nation, both homeworld and colonies.]]

to:

* ''Ferengi:'' [[PlanetOfHats An entire race]] of [[CorruptCorporateExecutive slimy capitalists.]] The big-eared, big-nosed Ferengi value profit above all else, cheat and swindle as a way of life, have [[SpaceJews big ears and noses]], and are played by [[UnfortunateImplications primarily Jewish actors.]] The Ferengi were originally meant to be the new BigBad for The Next Generation in the way that the Klingons were for the original series, but that fell through after one or two episodes when it became apparent how silly they were. Ferengi were later relegated to comedy relief, most famously in the character Quark on Deep Space Nine.
Nine.
* ''Cardassians:'' Even more ScaryDogmaticAliens than the Romulans, introduced in the Next Generation era and a main antagonist of DeepSpaceNine; Expansionist, collectivist and many [[NineteenEightyFour [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour 1984]] [[ThereAreFourLights overtones]]; they are brutal as colonial overlords and merciless with dissenters. They occupied the Bajoran homeworld until LaResistance got too much for them and actively try to subvert the treaty that forms the Cardassian [[TheNeutralZone Neutral Zone]] in order to control it. [[spoiler: They later side with The Dominion against the Federation. This ends ''[[LaserGuidedKarma horrifically]]'' for them, and by the latest point in the official timeline they've practically been reduced to a rump state due to the complete devastation of their entire nation, both homeworld and colonies.]]



* The Beta Quadrant. Major parts of the Klingon and Romulan empires are here. The Federation, likewise, claims some territories inside the Beta Quadrant. This is the least-discussed quadrant in the various TV series and movies, and as such little is known about it.

to:

* The Beta Quadrant. Major parts of the Klingon and Romulan empires are here. The Federation, likewise, claims some territories inside the Beta Quadrant. This is the least-discussed quadrant in the various TV series and movies, and as such little is known about it.



----

to:

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None

Added DiffLines:

We may know more isolated facts about the {{Whoniverse}}. We may be more emotionally moved by the {{Buffyverse}}, but in terms of a coherent sense of history, cross-series and cross-media continuity, you really can't beat the TrekVerse.

[[InternetBackdraft No matter what the fans say.]]

The TrekVerse was invented by GeneRoddenberry for ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''. Initially no more detailed or self-consistent than any other SpeculativeFiction 'verse, it has become a place with a continuity which outstrips that of any other project on television. It is built up by the {{canon}} details from five television series and ten feature films; there is also a [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse myriad of original novels]] and an AnimatedAdaptation that are not officially canon according to {{Paramount}} Pictures, which owns the franchise, but many fans consider them so anyway. (As for the several {{Comic Book Adaptation}}s, their quality varies wildly, so at least some of the older ones have fallen prey to FanonDiscontinuity.) It also spawns vast amounts of {{fanon}}, in the form of more FanFic than the human mind can safely comprehend.

At least one planned series (''Assignment: Earth'') was to be set in the TrekVerse during the 1960s, but did not come to pass.

!! Timeline

The TrekVerse diverges from our universe some time between 1965 and 2000. The major divergence arguably occurred some time in the 1960s, with the creation of a group of genetically enhanced humans. The differences did not become visible until the 1990s, though, when that group (which included Khan), now adults, launched an international conflict called the Eugenics Wars. The exact impact of this war is hard to deduce, as there have been several [[RetCon retcons]] applied to allow TimeTravel stories to a recognizable contemporary Earth. At one point, it appeared that the Eugenics Wars had been retconned into the late 21st century, but that retcon was itself retconned into a simple inaccuracy (A character saying "two hundred years" when "three hundred years" was called for).

The "active" history of the TrekVerse covers the period of time during which mankind has spread out into nearby space, a period of approximately 300 years, separated into three eras:

* The ''Enterprise'' era: Mid-22nd century. Man's first forays into deep space. This era culminates with the foundation of a United Federation of Planets, of which Earth is a signatory member. ([[Series/StarTrekEnterprise ENT]])
* The ''Classic'' era: Late 23rd century. A period of rapid expansion for the Federation. It is before or during this period that man reaches and surpasses the technological level of the rest of the major local species and becomes the dominant player in local politics. ([[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]], [[WesternAnimation/StarTrekTheAnimatedSeries TAS]])
* The ''Modern'' era: Mid to late 24th century. A period of internal conflict and consolidation. Despite tacit peace with the other local major powers, wars with distant powers such as the Borg and the Dominion weaken the Federation. ([[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration TNG]], [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine DS9]], [[Series/StarTrekVoyager VOY]])

It also includes at least three separate continuities -- the main 'verse, the mirror 'verse (of the Terran Empire and later, uglier events in which the former subjects of the Empire are subject to backlash by everyone else), and the [[Film/StarTrek JJ Abrams movie continuity]], with hints of others, the most likely candidate being the alternate future of ''Enterprise'''s Temporal Cold War. [[hottip:*:This does not include the Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse, which adds an undetermined number of extra continuities of its own.]] [[hottip:**:Note, however, that so far as anyone knows, the other Gene Roddenberry-developed properties like ''EarthFinalConflict'' and ''{{Andromeda}}'' have nothing to do with Star Trek.]] It's almost complex as the many continuities of {{Transformers}}, but at least the Trek mercifully interconnects them in ways that mostly make sense.

!! Species

The TrekVerse is rife with life, every third planet populated by HumanAliens, RubberForeheadAliens, or [[SufficientlyAdvancedAlien Godlike]] EnergyBeings all living on a PlanetOfHats. Some of the major players include:

* ''Humans:'' A race that is characterized, ironically, [[HumansAreSpecial by their lack of strong defining characteristics]], as well as their disproportionately large numbers within the Federation colonies and Starfleet, especially during the classic era. Other unique aspects of humans include the comparatively high level of diversity within their own species, and their familiarity with their planet's pre-apocalyptic history and culture; which was a time of rampant violence, greed, and ignorance before the Third World War issued in a new cultural era. Earth, the human homeworld, is home to the Federation's governmental bodies and Starfleet, its military force; and is located in Sector 001 on Federation maps.
* ''Vulcans:'' A logical, long-lived species (who suppress their emotions) with close ties to humanity. They are best recognized for their pointed ears, [[TheThreeStooges Moe Howard]] haircuts, a distinctive salute (see CrossCulturalHandshake), and a clever defensive attack wherein they can render a person unconscious by squeezing the neck (the famed Vulcan Nerve Pinch). Like humans, Vulcans went through a cultural turning point (although theirs was much more drastic), and their intense devotion to logic is a backlash against their wild, vicious past. [[StrawVulcan Much is made]] of the contrast between the rational, collected Vulcans and the more emotional and impulsive human characters.
* ''Bajorans:'' A mostly peaceful and spiritual race hardened by the rape of their homeworld by the Cardassians, they play a large role in DeepSpaceNine where the titular space station hovers over their planet. The Federation wants them to become a member state but the two are opposed in some ways, including the Bajoran religion, especially the slightly xenophobic hardliner faction that wants both the Cardassians and the Federation to stay out.
* ''Klingons:'' a [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Proud Warrior Race]] of RubberForeheadAliens (originally white guys wearing fu manchus and shoe polish in [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries TOS]]; retconned in [[Series/StarTrekEnterprise Star Trek Enterprise]]), started out as enemies of the Federation, but later became tacit allies. Later stories focus on the internal struggles of the Klingon Empire as a power on the wane.
* ''Romulans:'' Secretive diaspora Vulcan sub-species who rejected the Vulcan drive for logic, but have cloaking devices, which makes up for it. [[ScaryDogmaticAliens Highly xenophobic and reliant on their secret police to keep order]], they are [[FantasyCounterpartCulture loosely inspired by the Roman Empire]] and their territory is the Romulan Star Empire. They are also somewhat a ProudWarriorRace but have fewer qualms about [[TryingToCatchMeFightingDirty sneaky tactics]] and value honor for the Empire higher than personal honor. They once got along with the Klingons but these fundamental differences and some nasty wars mean Romulans and Klingons hate each other's guts. [[spoiler:The new [[Film/StarTrek Trek reboot movie]] makes it canon that the Romulan homeworld was destroyed by a supernova, sending Nero back in time for revenge and starting the AlternateTimeline.]]
* ''Ferengi:'' [[PlanetOfHats An entire race]] of [[CorruptCorporateExecutive slimy capitalists.]] The big-eared, big-nosed Ferengi value profit above all else, cheat and swindle as a way of life, have [[SpaceJews big ears and noses]], and are played by [[UnfortunateImplications primarily Jewish actors.]] The Ferengi were originally meant to be the new BigBad for The Next Generation in the way that the Klingons were for the original series, but that fell through after one or two episodes when it became apparent how silly they were. Ferengi were later relegated to comedy relief, most famously in the character Quark on Deep Space Nine.
* ''Cardassians:'' Even more ScaryDogmaticAliens than the Romulans, introduced in the Next Generation era and a main antagonist of DeepSpaceNine; Expansionist, collectivist and many [[NineteenEightyFour 1984]] [[ThereAreFourLights overtones]]; they are brutal as colonial overlords and merciless with dissenters. They occupied the Bajoran homeworld until LaResistance got too much for them and actively try to subvert the treaty that forms the Cardassian [[TheNeutralZone Neutral Zone]] in order to control it. [[spoiler: They later side with The Dominion against the Federation. This ends ''[[LaserGuidedKarma horrifically]]'' for them, and by the latest point in the official timeline they've practically been reduced to a rump state due to the complete devastation of their entire nation, both homeworld and colonies.]]
* ''The Borg:'' [[HiveMind Cybernetic collective]] skilled in [[YouWillBeAssimilated adaptation and assimilation.]] Took over the role of [[StrawmanPolitical thinly veiled stand-ins]] [[DirtyCommies for communists]] from the Klingons in the Modern era. Generally treated as the single largest threat to the Federation, in part because they more or less ''cannot'' be negotiated with, have access to the knowledge of thousands of species and trillions of individuals and can adapt very quickly to almost any weapon used against them, rendering it useless, and partly because [[TomatoInTheMirror they are in some ways the Federation's dark reflection]]. A group that goes around incorporating other cultures into their own, in order to make the whole stronger, more complete, and more "perfect"? [[NotSoDifferent Did the writer just describe the Federation... or the Borg?]]
* ''The Dominion:'' TheEmpire from another part of space, set to take over our side of the galaxy. Much of ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' revolves around the war with them, and the consequences of this {{arc}} are sometimes felt in the other series. They also get to be stand-ins for [[AcceptableTargets the evil of drugs]], as their warriors are [[GovernmentDrugEnforcement addicted to one to keep them in line]].

!! Galactic Quadrants

The Milky Way galaxy is divided into four 90-degree wedges called ''quadrants''. These are:

* The Alpha Quadrant. This is home to the Humans, Vulcans, and a number of other minor races, all of whom have banded together to form ''The United Federation of Planets''. It's also home to the Bajorans, Ferengi, and Cardassians. Portions of the Klingon and Romulan Empires also extend into the Alpha Quadrant.
** The Federation occupies a region of space roughly 8000 light-years across. Since it's 50,000 light-years from the center of the galaxy to the edge, the Federation covers less than 3% of the alpha quadrant.
** Earth is located on the border of the Alpha and Beta Quadrants.
* The Beta Quadrant. Major parts of the Klingon and Romulan empires are here. The Federation, likewise, claims some territories inside the Beta Quadrant. This is the least-discussed quadrant in the various TV series and movies, and as such little is known about it.
* The Gamma Quadrant. Home to the Dominion. A permanent wormhole connects the Gamma Quadrant to the star system where the Bajorans live.
* The Delta Quadrant. Home to the Borg, and several other species. This is the quadrant that the ''[[Series/StarTrekVoyager U.S.S. Voyager]]'' was lost in for 7 years.

!! Treknology

Technology in the Star Trek universe is as varied as the scriptwriters who invented it. However, despite some outright discontinuities in the availability or even [[ForgottenPhlebotinum existence]] of various pieces of Treknology, there are certain staples that show up again and again as the standard means by which the Federation (and most of the other major players) get things done:

* FasterThanLightTravel, in the form of Warp Drive. Starships can travel several times, or even several hundred times, the speed of light -- but only under rare, [[GameBreaker non-repeatable]] conditions can they cross the entire galaxy in less than several decades. Starships under warp are fully aware of the sub-light universe they're travelling through, and may even (DependingOnTheWriter) engage each other in combat while travelling at warp speed.
* FTLRadio, over [[SubspaceOrHyperspace subspace]]. DependingOnTheWriter, subspace radio either propagates infinitely fast (allowing for instantaneous two-way communication between distant starships and starfleet HQ), or takes days to cross the larger interstellar distances. A quadrant-spanning subspace relay network is usually involved, whether deliberately mentioned or not.
* DeflectorShields. These are standard equipment on most starships. They consume a significant (but not excessive) amount of power, can withstand a sizeable amount of punishment, and are weakened in precisely predictable ways when damaged ("Shields down to 40%, Captain!"). Scaled-down versions of this technology are used to create smaller force fields, for such uses as prison doors that are vulnerable to power failures.
* TransportersAndTeleporters, called simply Transporters. They can operate over distances of several thousand kilometers, but are ''not'' long ranged enough to beam a person from the Earth to the Moon (unless someone comes up with a {{Technobabble}} way of doing so that only works for that one episode). They cannot operate through a starship's DeflectorShields. Several other local conditions can interfere with the operation of Transporters, usually in direct proportion to how much immediate danger an away-team is in.
* RayGun, in the form of Federation phasers and Klingon disruptors. There are small handheld, and large starship-mounted, varieties. Hand-held phasers have a [[StunGuns "stun" setting]], useful for knocking out an adversary without killing it. Ship-mounted varieties are usually powerful enough to weaken an enemy ship's shields, but not so powerful as to destroy their target in a single hit. Depending on the scriptwriter (and the era), phaser beams travel either ''at'' the speed of light, or many times faster than light.
* TractorBeam. Sometimes visible, sometimes not. Fighting a tractor beam with your ship's engines can put a heavy strain on your hull, and may threaten to tear you apart.
* EverythingSensor, usually referred to as simply the ship's sensors. They can detect life forms, time travel, the entire subatomic particle zoo, and even alterations to the fabric of the universe, and can pinpoint not only the direction to any of these oddities but also the distance. However, their ability to locate a crew member planetside seems to be inversely proportional to the amount of peril said crew member finds himself in.
* StealthInSpace, in the form of the Cloaking Device. Thanks to the Treaty of Algeron, only the Romulans and Klingons posess this technology ... at least, ''officially''.
* ArtificialGravity. Ubiquitous on all starships and space stations, it is the most robust piece of technology in the 'verse -- it has never failed in battle and has only been deliberately deactivated a handful of times.

Starting in the Next Generation era, we also got:

* HardLight, used for entertainment on the Holodeck. Some Holodeck programs can take on a [[ArtificialIntelligence mind of their own]], though the computer that controls them never does. The system can also be used to create artificial crewmembers wherever holographic emitters have been installed, including emergency medical doctors.

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