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6* ObviouslyNotFine: The episode "[[Recap/FarscapeS02E14BewareOfDog Beware Of Dog]]" features Crichton becoming increasingly unhinged by the hallucinations of [[BigBad Scorpius]] haunting him; Aeryn continuously seeks explanations for his odder-than-usual behaviour, but Crichton only assures her that he's fine. At the end of the episode, he opens up and admits his worsening SanitySlippage - though he tries to downplay it by telling her he'll be okay... but his despairing tone clearly contradicts him.
7-->Aeryn, don't worry. ''[chuckles]'' I'm not gonna lose my mind! It's all I've got left...
8* OctopoidAliens: The extra-dimensional alien encountered by Crichton in the episode "Through the Looking Glass" resembled a cephalopod dwelling in a strange non-aquatic medium.
9* OffTheShelfFX: You'll occasionally recognize some part of a console or bit of equipment, including a trackball mouse, a Christmas ornament and one of those lightning balls you can find in novelty stores.
10** One particularly hilarious example is the black automatic pipette that they try to pass off as a high-tech syringe.
11** The cooling rods inserted into Scorpius' brain are clearly glowsticks with the loop removed. They use different colored sticks to indicate if they're "fresh" (blue) or "used" (red).
12* OfficialCouple: Aeryn/Crichton. They take a ''long'' time getting there and it's not easy, however, so they rarely come across as StrangledByTheRedString.
13** Supposedly, there was resistance to their relationship at some levels, so the actors conspired to make them Official Couple early on, and the network had no choice but to go along with it.
14* OhCrap:
15** Crichton gets one early on in the series ("They've Got A Secret") when Moya unexpectedly turns her [=DRDs=] against her crew [[spoiler: after becoming paranoid that her unborn child might be harmed by them]]. Crichton anxiously skulks through a corrider, and suddenly the lights go out -- revealing the telltale {{Laser Sight}}s of dozens of [=DRD=]s covering the entire hall. Whoops.
16** Borlik thinks she's won after using her SelectiveMagnetism to cling to the ceiling, with no time to cut her down before her gamma storm engulfs Moya. Yeah, about that wall... [[HoistByHisOwnPetard It's detachable]].
17** After Crichton gets fully taken over by Scorpius's control chip, he heads out in his module. Aeryn chases after him in her Prowler. Under normal circumstances, this would be a curb stomp battle of epic proportions, with the Prowler being far more advanced technologically than Crichton's module (which doesn't even have weapons) and Aeryn being far better trained. Problem is, they're on a planet- not in space. Aeryn's only trained in zero-gravity scenarios, while Crichton has trained in the atmosphere to resist the pull of gravity. As Crichton/Scorpius puts it "Welcome to ''our'' world, baby!"
18** Scorpius gets one in ''The Peacekeeper Wars'' after he finally sees the destructive power of the wormhole weapon--the thing he's been searching for for most of his life--unleashed upon the Peacekeepers and the Scarrans. You know something is bad when even Scorpius is taken aback by its sheer destructive power.
19-->'''Scorpius''': This is insane, Crichton.
20-->'''Crichton''': ''God!'' Four years on and you're ''finally'' getting that.
21** Crichton has a belated one once he realizes he offhandily identified ''Crystherium utilia'', the supply of which is the core issue for Scarrans, as a common Earth plant.
22* OminousObsidianOoze: Luxans have an unusual biological quirk that causes their blood to become dangerously toxic upon exposure to air; when this happens, the blood turns a shade of red so dark it appears black. The only cure for this is for the wound to be repeatedly pummelled to stimulate the blood flow and cleanse the poison - whereupon the black blood turns transparent and runs clear until the wound heals.
23* OmnicidalManiac: The Scarrans. Their goal is not just to defeat the Peacekeepers, but to wipe out the entire Sebacean race. Scorpius believes they won't stop there and pose a threat to every other species. (Harvey -- who knows what Scorpius knows, but is objective due to lacking his biases -- concurs with that belief.
24* {{Omniglot}}: Even without TranslatorMicrobes, Crichton is shown to speak several languages with some degree of fluency, including an understand of invented languages such as Klingon.
25** Sikozu comes from an entire ''race'' of people capable of doing this. By necessity, since their bodies are incompatible with translator microbes.
26* OneProductPlanet: Sykar is a deconstruction of this: because the Peacekeepers have essentially turned the entire planet into a farm for tannot root--which is eventually refined into chakan oil ammunition--the local environment has been almost completely ruined, and the civilian population reduced to slavery. Even the farms themselves are steadily being worn out through overharvesting; the one seen in the episode is said to be the last fertile region of the planet.
27** Meanwhile, nobody bats an eyelid at the idea of an entire planet being used as a cemetery for the system's rulers; Rygel, in particular, finds the idea of burying the dead anywhere near living beings to be absolutely disgusting.
28* OneTrueLove: The concept of ''kreshta'' for the Nebari - when you find someone whom you are destined to be with, your one true love, nothing will keep you away from that person. A psychosomatic reaction that turns you red will make sure everyone else notices it, too. Chiana is initially very confused because of who her ''kreshta'' turns out to be.
29* OnlyInFlorida: Are there any other Floridian [[SpaceCadet space heroes]] besides John Crichton? Most of them seem to be from [[Franchise/StarTrek Iowa]] or the [[Literature/MostlyHarmless UK]]. A rare example of an intelligent portrayal of a U.S. Southerner.
30** And portrayed by an apparently proud Carolinian ('Carolina Style Keedva. Best BBQ this side of a Budong.' - "Home on the Remains").
31* OnlyMostlyDead: Happens to [[spoiler: Noranti]] in the comics, combined with a FountainOfYouth effect, though not literally on ThePhoenix levels of impressiveness.
32* OohMeAccentsSlipping: Happened on occasion.
33** Lani Tupu would sometimes lapse slightly into his native Kiwi accent when playing Crais. In a slightly different way, Pilot sounded noticeably more like Crais during ''Peacekeeper Wars'' than he ever did during the series proper as the crew lost the settings for the vocal processor they applied during the original run.
34** During the first season Chiana kept switching between an American accent and Gigi Edgley's native Australian from episode to episode. This is because directors kept changing their minds about which accent she should use. Eventually the crew settled on the American accent which she kept for the rest of the show.
35* OpeningNarration: His name is John Crichton, an astronaut. A radiation wave hit, and he was shot through a wormhole, lost in some distant part of the universe aboard a ship, a LIVING ship! Full of strange alien life forms. He needs help! Please! Is there anybody out there who can hear him? He's being hunted by an insane military commander, and he's doing everything he can. He's just looking for a way home. (*cue weird chanting*)
36** Season 3 changes it to: My name is John Crichton (I'm lost). An astronaut (Shot through a wormhole). In some distant part of the universe (trying to stay alive). Aboard this ship (this living ship)..of escaped prisoners (My friends). If you can hear me (Beware). If I make it back (will they follow?). If I open the door (Are you ready?). Earth is unprepared (Helpless...)...for the nightmares I've seen. Or should I stay...Protect my home? Not show them... (You exist.) But then you'll never know...the wonders I've seen. (*cue weird chanting*)
37** Season 4 changed it slightly yet again. Understandable, since the "being hunted" parts changed rather significantly, as well as Crichton's relationship with Moya and her crew, and his goal of getting home.
38* OrganicTechnology: Leviathans, of course, as well as Bioloids.
39* OrphanedPunchline: "...And then the Trawlian priest turns to the Calanese cleric and says, "Doesn't bother me, ''you should have seen her mother!''" -- Rygel.
40* OurTimeTravelIsDifferent: "Back and Back and Back to the Future", "...Different Destinations", and "Kansas".
41* OurVampiresAreDifferent: Maldis.
42* OurWormholesAreDifferent: They're a PortalNetwork that links a multiverse, ''and'' [[WeaponOfMassDestruction Weapons Of Mass Destruction]].
43* OutWithABang: Subverted with Zhaan, whose reason for being locked up is that she murdered her lover, a traitor who cooperated with a Peacekeeper coup d'état. Zhaan basically killed the guy via sex. This (understandably) haunts her for a long time.
44* OutfitRipSexCheck: Chiana uses the "rip open jacket to reveal breasts" version to a woman disguised as a man in one episode.
45* PaletteSwappedAlienFood: Shows up frequently, along with non-human-looking utensils. According to the DVD commentaries, sometimes they just used Asian foods that would look alien to a North American audience.
46* PardonMyKlingon: Many, many times, including an episode where John actually ''does'' speak Klingon.
47** Lampshaded in an episode where Aeryn calls John a "drannet," only for him to complain that he doesn't even know what a drannet is.
48* PastExperienceNightmare:
49** In "They've Got A Secret", D'Argo starts hallucinating and sees his crewmates as individuals from his own past. Through this narrative, the audience learns about his late wife and lost son.
50** After fate brings back him back to the ''Zelbinion'', Rygel starts flashing back to his [[ColdBloodedTorture torture]] at the hands of Durka during his past imprisonment there.
51* PeekABooCorpse
52* PercussiveMaintenance:
53** Stanz's ship is noted as specifically requiring this.
54--->'''D'argo''': ''"I thought you said you fixed it!"''
55--->'''Stanz''': ''"I ''did'' fix it! That's why it works when I whack it a few times!"''
56** Bleeding Luxans must have their wounds pounded until the blood runs clear, or they die.
57** Played with in the very first episode. While Moya is under attack, a frustrated D'argo tears up a console, which disables the control collar, allowing the ship to escape. However, following said escape, the ship is then crippled.
58* PercussivePrevention: On one occasion, Zhaan becomes ill and begins exuding spores which are harming Moya and giving the crew allergies. Also, it makes her irrational and violent. So, when she finally comes to enough to ask Aeryn for help, Aeryn knocks her unconscious and stuffs her in a sealed environment until they can cure her.
59** Inverted later, again by Zhaan. She gets the notion of giving up her lifeforce to revive the recently killed Aeryn, to which Stark objects. She responds by knocking out Stark and going through with her [[HeroicSacrifice plan]].
60* PercussiveTherapy: Happens a couple of times. Aeryn tends to take her frustration out on a PK punching bag, while Rygel feels better after headbutting ranting religious nuts.
61* PerfectPacifistPeople: A scary StepfordSmiler variant in the population of Prybella, Crais's homeworld. A colony of [[BlueBlood Jaal-Sebaceans]] devoted to Yemahl, the ancient Peacekeeper religion, now mostly forgotten, which preaches peace and non-violence. They claim they adhere to it rigidly. It does not, apparently, forbid "non-violent" evil, however, such as destroying the property of someone who slighted you, putting spiders in their bed, or, you know, [[BreadEggsMilkSquick selling them genetically modified food so that their children will be born with various mutated abnormalities]]. Aeryn tries to call them out on this even before [[spoiler:she accepts the Yemahl faith]] because she learns that SHE's a Jaal-Sebacean, and [[spoiler:her son's mutation was caused by the very plot Crais's parents orchestrated as vengeance for their sons' draft into the Peacekeepers]]. Her complaints fall on deaf ears. [[spoiler: And then the entire planet is [[LaserGuidedKarma destroyed by the Kkore]].]]
62* PerpetualPoverty: Until "Liars, Guns, and Money," where they knock over a bank and Moya has enough money for basic necessities from then on.
63* PlaceBeyondTime: The "Mist", a stellar phenomenon which exists in a separate bubble of time. Aeryn accidentally gets stranded here for a day; when the crew recovers her ship, she's lived over 165 cycles and is now an old woman with a granddaughter.
64** Also, Einstein's extradimensional lair.
65* ThePlan: Scorpius and John are both undisputed masters, and when they go head to head it often devolves into matches of XanatosSpeedChess.
66** "You used me." "We use each other." "You're better at it." "You're learning."
67** They're different, though, in that Scorpius always seems to have everything planned several steps ahead of everyone else, while John's a master of improvisation after his Plan A fails spectacularly. When Scorpius teams up with John for a while, he's appalled to find out how much John -- who has defeated him repeatedly -- is winging it.
68* PlanetOfHats: Dear God, Litigaria- a planet whose population consists of 90% lawyers and 10% oppressed "utilities" (laborers). Played so straight that the planet's name is even derived from an [[IndoEuropeanAlienLanguage Indo-European root related to law.]]
69* PlantAliens: Delvians, though you wouldn't know it until Zhaan pointed it out in "Bone to Be Wild". It was foreshadowed, though, by her being a little too delighted by sunlight, as well as the fact that her blood looks like sap and she has fibres in her arm rather than bones.
70* PlasmaCannon: Featured prominently on Sheyang ships.
71* PlugNPlayTechnology: John's original ''Farscape-1'' module is extensively modified using organic parts from Moya. This allows it to accept various alternative fuels, in addition to achieving speeds that were not possible before.
72* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: The security guard in the Season 4 episode "Coup By Clam", who is extremely coarse and misogynistic (and it isn't just him - all the females of his native planet are badly oppressed). When Scorpius accompanies him on his tour of Moya to make sure he doesn't try anything underhanded, the guard uses the opportunity to loudly voice his relief that Moya is "controlled" by a male Pilot, among other things. And when he discovers that the mechanic he's guarding is actually [[SweetPollyOliver a woman]], he attempts to kill both her and Chiana--[[VillainousRescue right before Scorpius breaks his neck]].
73* PoorCommunicationKills: After initiating starburst when she is in no shape to do so, Moya accidentally tears a hole into an alien dimension. As a result, an Inter-dimensional Entity is charged with closing the breach and destroying any material from other universes that had crossed into theirs. Unfortunately, the [[YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm abstract physiology]] of the creature makes it difficult to communicate with Moya's crew, who believe it to be malevolent and open fire on what they perceive to be an attack. Eventually, Crichton realizes that the entity is leaving [[{{Wormsign}} scratch marks]] on Moya's bulkheads that corresponded to [[FirstContactMath prime numbers]]. Realizing that it has been trying to communicate, Crichton enters a rift and speaks with the creature directly. From it, he learns how to free Moya herself from her entrapment between dimensions ("Through the Looking Glass").
74** Crichton invokes this when he powers up the weapons of Braca's ship in a "tactical-free zone" above the Royal Planet. The automated defense system tells them to power down their weapons and respond, and begin firing on them when they don't ("Look At The Princess - I Do, I Think").
75* PopCulturedBadass: John Crichton may have defined this trope as he frequently drops references to media from home. He also speaks Klingon.
76** PopCulturalOsmosisFailure: All of Crichton's pop-culture references are met with blank stares because nobody on this side of the galaxy has the slightest idea what he's talking about. When the Moya crew visit Earth in season four most of them familiarise themselves with movies and tv shows, so they finally have at least some context for what Crichton is babbling about.
77* PragmaticVillainy: At the end of season three, when Scorpius has had enough of Crichton being uncooperative he makes a serious threat [[spoiler: that he will destroy Earth.]] Once everything goes pear-shaped, he acknowledges that doing so would gain him nothing and so decides not to bother.
78* PregnantBadass: The miniseries features not one but two of these: Aeryn, who guns down enemies ''during labor'', and Grayza, who leads the Peacekeeper armada while looking ready to pop.
79--> '''Grayza:''' Don't let the belly fool you, Lieutenant.
80* PrematureEulogy: Zhaan gives one to [[spoiler: Aeryn, when she dies at the end of Season 2. Surprise, surprise: Aeryn is resurrected in the next episode, by Zhaan no less]].
81* ProphecyTwist: Rygel's self-coronation as the Acquarans' king backfires on him when it's revealed that the "Masata" (a Hynerian) will lead his people "into the light"; In other words, they are expecting Rygel to rise up and part the heavens, or else he'll be [[TorchesAndPitchforks burned at the stake]]. The crew saves the day by unlocking the planet's dampening field, causing a beam of light to erupt from Rygel's statue.
82* PsychoForHire: Bekhesh.
83* PrecisionFStrike: Trapped in the engine room of the ''Zelbinion'', holding two energy-charged plates apart (preventing an explosion in the process), with a Sheeyang burning through the door, Crichton can only mutter, "Shit."
84** Also, what Crichton writes on the chalkboard during the miniseries. One letter is blocked off, but it's fairly obvious what he wrote.
85** Also, due to the use of made-up swears in the show, it's very powerful when a real one is used instead. Such as when Rygel called China a "slut" instead of a "tralk" after she slept with Dargo's son.
86** In The Locket, an aged Crichton is the only one who can initiate the Starburst and save them. After Zhaan communicates this detail to him telepathically, his response is "I'm too old for this shit." This time he didn't drop the T.
87* PreviouslyOn
88* PressurePoint: During a sparring session with Aeryn, Matala gives away her true identity by performing a Scorvian "neuro stroke" -- raising her arm and jabbing downward with her fingers, like a scorpion's tail -- and striking Aeryn in the chest, incapacitating her instantly.
89* PrisonEpisode: "The Ugly Truth" features most of the crew on a disc-like prison.
90* PrivateMilitaryContractor: The Peacekeepers. The audience isn't given too much detail on how they operate in the civilized systems, but from the hints the characters drop, they're apparently 'contracted' by planets to keep order and inevitably end up overstaying their welcome. On Delvia, when the ruling conservative class were supposed to give up power, they instead hired the Peacekeepers, who promptly rounded up any opposition voices and liberal thinkers and sent them to penal colonies.
91* PromiseMeYouWontX: After getting free from Salis, Chiana sneaks into the captive Rygel's quarters and smothers his mouth with a pillow. She offers Rygel a deal: She'll untie his hands and release him, so long as as he promises not to activate his comm and yell for help. ..It's not Chiana's fault, she hasn't [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder known him very long]].
92* ProudWarriorRace: The Luxans are an interesting case. While this and WarriorPoet tendencies are firmly entrenched in their culture, D'argo [[CallToAgriculture aspired to be a farmer]] after a relatively brief military career in his youth. Another Luxan we saw was a diplomat sent to negotiate with the Peacekeepers. However, ''The Peacekeeper Wars'' plays this straight with an elite Luxan commando unit. The Luxans as a whole (what we see of them) are nearly a Deconstruction, with an official (and honored) rank for TheSmartGuy, and some frighteningly advanced and apparently self-developed technology. History, culture, art, and religion are all very important to them. . . but because they're big and strong and capable warriors who love blowing things up and bringing (laser shooting) swords to gunfights, everyone else ''treats'' them just like another generic Proud, Stupid Warrior Race.
93* PrinciplesZealot: The Nebari Establishment.
94* PunchClockVillain: Roiin from the comics. The moment he realizes he's not going to get paid is the moment he stops pursuing Moya.
95* PunctuatedForEmphasis: Chiana: "I! WENT! ''SHOPPING''!"
96** "It is NOT! JUST! SCIENCE!!" - Crichton.
97* PunyEarthlings: Humans are apparently the least-advanced species in all of creation, a fact which John's crewmates never tire of pointing out to him. Even the most humanlike or least-physically capable alien has superhuman ''eyesight''. Of course at least once this leads to DisabilitySuperpower, and some of the aliens' "advantages" are double-sided.
98-->'''Pilot:''' I'm only judging on my experience with you, but I've never seen such a deficient species.
99-->'''Crichton:''' Have you run the scan on the pulsar light yet?
100-->'''Pilot:''' How do humans make it through a cycle, even ''half'' a cycle without killing each other?
101-->'''Crichton:''' ''(getting agitated)'' We find it difficult-- have you run the scan?
102-->'''Pilot:''' You have no special abilities. You're not particularly smart, can hardly smell, can barely see, and you're not even vaguely physically or spiritually imposing. Is there ''anything'' you do well?
103-->'''Crichton:''' [[ThisLoserIsYou Watch football]].
104* [[PutDownYourGunAndStepAway Put Down Your Qualta Blade And Step Away]]: Matala puts a blade to her boss's throat once she sees the jig is up.
105* PuttingOnTheReich: The Peacekeepers' standard is a variation of El Lizzitsky's ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beat_the_Whites_with_the_Red_Wedge Smash the Whites With the Red Wedge]]'', a [[UsefulNotes/SovietRussiaUkraineAndSoOn Soviet]] propaganda poster. Beyond its distinctive red, white, and black aesthetic, the insignia is used in banners and murals throughout the show, drawing a clear comparison to the swastika.
106** The Peacekeepers wear black and red leather, extol the virtues of collectivism, and treat all species other than themselves as inferior. However, they are not monolithic, and some Peacekeepers (especially several hundred years in the past in the episode "Different Destinations," and during the ''Peacekeeper Wars'' miniseries) are shown as heroic, even cooperating with other species against the [[OmnicidalManiac Scarrans]].
107** They're also mentioned several times as emphasizing genetic and cultural purity... so much so that the punishment for "irreversible contamination" (spending too much time with hostile aliens) is death. Somewhat of a subversion though, as it appears this is more PR for the lower ranks; Scorpius was accepted after demonstrating his loyalty, despite being bred and raised by the Peacekeepers' number one enemies, and Grayza has at least some alien biotechnology inside her.
108* RandomTransportation: This was the critical downside to a Leviathan's '[=Starburst=]'. For this reason it's most often used as an emergency escape rather than a regular mode of travel. However subverted later in the series, as Moya becomes capable of performing a [=StarBurst=] with a specified destination, and even perform an ''extended'' [=StarBurst=] (though not without extreme difficulty and discomfort for her passengers).
109* RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil:
110** When John doesn't see much difference between genocidal, authoritarian Peacekeepers and genocidal, authoritarian Scarrans, Scorpius vows to "show you the difference." What he shows as proof is a Scarran raping a Sebacean as part of a genetic experiment.
111** The Peacekeepers, thanks to Commandant Grayza, surrender that moral high ground in the beginning of season four.
112* TheRashomon: "The Ugly Truth" is built on this trope, as each character tells their version of the sequence of events that led to the destruction of a Plokavian ship. In fact, it's actually a plot point in of itself, because Plokavians ''aren't'' affected by individual perspective as other species are, and all see events unfold the same way. Thus they automatically assume that Moya's crew is lying when their stories don't match up. As a particularly nice touch, the version of events told by Crichton have all of the characters mispronouncing the alien species' name as "Plokavoids" the same way he does.
113* RaygunGothic: Some of the props; Cartoon D'argo's weapons in "Revenging Angel." Peacekeeper tech is a mixture of this and DieselPunk.
114* RealityIsUnrealistic: Following the fake beard Ben Browder wore in "Jeremiah Crichton", several fans complained when Crichton again sported a beard in "Crichton Kicks", claiming that it looked even faker than the one in the former episode. Ben Browder genuinely ''did'' grow a beard for the latter episode.
115* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: In "My Three Crichtons", John gives the evolved Future-Crichton this speech, wondering how Humans could ever end up so cold and without compassion, willing to sacrifice innocents in order to save his own ass. Future-Crichton points out that earlier John was perfectly willing to do just that to the Caveman-Crichton version.
116** John also gives himself this speech at the end, pointing out that the Caveman-Crichton performing the HeroicSacrifice without thinking was something that ''he'' should have be able to do, wondering how the least developed one was able to be the one who was the better man in the end.
117*** Crais delivers one to Scorpius during the third season finale, calling Scorpius the worst kind of Peacekeeper because he joined voluntarily rather than being born or conscripted into it.
118* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler:Sikozu]] in the comics. It is that act which makes Aeryn change her opinion about her. [[spoiler: Talyn and Crais]] also have a memorable redemptive-death sequence in the third-season episode "Lambs to the Slaughter, Part II: Wolf in Sheep's Clothing."
119* RedAndBlackTotalitarianism: The Peacekeepers, who are TheEmpire in the show, have red and black uniforms and interior decor. Their insignia is based on a rather famous Russian Civil War-era communist propaganda poster, ''Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge'', which depicts a red wedge penetrating a white circle (white being the color of the Russian anticommunist coalition).
120* RedEyesTakeWarning: Delvian priests ordinarily lose grip on their sanity after committing an act of murder. This is shown by their irises turning blood-red, as part of [[BizarreAlienBiology "tissue bile" migrating to their brains]]. Of course, Delvians can also succumb to madness if they are starved for too long, producing a similar red-eyed effect.
121** M'Lee's 'bubbles' glow red when she loses control of her hunger, along with [[SpikesOfVillainy spikes]] protruding all over her body (indicative of her Venus flytrap-like nature).
122** Jool's normally blonde-ish hair turns bright red when she's either a) scared or nervous, or b) ''really'' pissed off. It stays permanently red following [[spoiler: the crew's infiltration of Scorpius' Command Carrier]] - it can reasonably be assumed this is due to the stress of the event.
123* RedShirtArmy: The [=DRD=]s. And the Peacekeepers are a Blackshirt Army.
124* ReferenceOverdosed
125* ReligionIsMagic: Many priests in the show have magic powers- or, in the case of the Delvian Pa'us, EnlightenmentSuperpowers. Some even have an RPG-style leveling system.
126* ResetButton: In Season 3, Crichton is split into two equal and identical versions of himself, one remaining on Moya and the other going with Talyn. One of these Crichtons [[spoiler:wins Aeryn's heart, gets Harvey permanently removed from his mind, and unlocks the full secrets of wormhole technology]]. Since that's pretty much everything Crichton wants out of life, and the series isn't close to finished yet, he [[spoiler:makes a HeroicSacrifice to save Aeryn and the rest of Talyn's crew from a Scarran dreadnaught]].
127* RestrainingBolt: Crichton's "neural chip", implanted by Scorpius during his time in the Aurora Chair. Crichton now involuntarily shares his brain with a "mental clone" of Scorpius, whom he dubs "Harvey". John mostly manages to suppress and even befriend Harvey, although their relationship is complicated. One of Harvey's goals is to keep John alive for Scorpius, but another is to restrain John from attacking Scorpius.
128** The Peacekeepers keep control of Leviathans (such as Moya) by fitting them with a 'Control Collar' to establish complete control over both the ship and its Pilot. It also prevents the Leviathans from using their starburst ability to escape custody. Pilot manages to shake off his collar in the first episode.
129* RelationshipResetButton: Aeryn and Crichton in the third season, [[spoiler:when Crichton gets twinned and then the twin that Aeryn falls for dies.]]
130%%* ReplacedTheThemeTune: In season 3.
131* RightBehindMe: In the pilot, John and Aeryn see Crais and a group of soldiers approaching as D'Argo is threatening them, relaxing their postures in response. He [[WrongGenreSavvy scoffs and says]] he "[[TheOldestTricksInTheBook won't fall for such an ancient ruse]]".
132* RoadrunnerVsCoyote: In "Revenging Angel," when D'Argo goes into hyper-rage and puts Crichton into a ConvenientComa, Crichton hallucinates that D'Argo is pursuing him through a desert, Wile E. Coyote-style.
133* RobotGirl: [[spoiler:Sikozu]] is a "bioloid", which is a kind of android employed by the Scarrans. She is more of an ArtificialHuman than other bioloids that appear in the series, however.
134* RockBeatsLaser: "I Shrink, Therefore, I Am". Used literally in "Lava's a Many Splendored Thing", where the mooks have shield belts that deflect pulse blasts. Let's just say that they do not deflect rocks. Or lava. Crichton's unshielded prototype module is also perfectly safe to use in wormhole travel when massively more advanced ships are not (which is noted in-universe as completely inexplicable).
135* RockPaperScissors: Frequently used to solve disputes between Crichton and D'Argo. Lampshaded when the "twinned" Crichtons are trying to prove which of them is "real":
136-->'''Aeryn:''' How is he doing?
137-->'''Rygel:''' Still tied.
138** And then used to show that they really are the same, despite their different experiences, when they [[ISayWhatISay both throw "scissors"]] several episodes later after they've been separated.
139* RubberForeheadAliens: Subverted and played straight. Essentially, while most aliens are just humans with make-up, it's done a hell of a lot ''better'' than just about anything you'll see out of ''Franchise/StarTrek'', which means that (a) they look like people, but (b) they look a ''lot'' more exotic.
140** Further subverted since a fair few one-shot characters and two of the show's leads are animatronic puppets. The StarfishAliens brought to life by the Jim Henson Workshop ironically make the Rubber Forehead Aliens standing next to them ''feel'' that much more alien, instead of just actors in funny makeup.
141* {{Robinsonade}}: "Jeremiah Crichton".
142* RunningGag: Rygel's helium farts.
143** Stark's babbling of "My side, your side." It starts when John first meets Stark after having been captured by Scorpius, and Stark begins babbling about splitting their shared cell into "my side, your side, ''my side, YOUR SIDE!"'' As Stark leaves Moya after being rescued, the gag doesn't become a proper running gag until after his resurrection almost a season later; when he does get into the habit, he uses it almost whenever he's under stress- when trying to keep John away from a control panel, when separating a group of arguing bounty hunters, even when having to share a room with Rygel.
144** Crichton's inability to pronounce the names of any of the alien species they meet. Played with ''brilliantly'' in "The Ugly Truth," a RashomonStyle episode in which every character tells the events of the episode from their perspective. When it's Crichton's turn, ''every'' character mispronounces the Aliens of the Week's species name the same way he did, because ''he's'' telling the story.
145** The ''rest'' of the cast becomes TheMalaproper whenever they try speaking English, or use human slang or phrases. IE D'Argo counting "Mippippippi" or saying he prefers to "go out on a swing" (swinging), and Aeryn mentioning a creepy female character gives her a "woody" (she meant "willies"). Crichton himself lampshades it in an image spot in "Dog with Two Bones" when he remarks to a hallucination of Aeryn (who's frustrated at her difficulties to learning English) that it's is a difficult language and that half the time his friends don't understand what ''he's'' saying.
146* SadisticChoice: The "Cake or Death" option given to [[spoiler: Moya's original female pilot]].
147* SapientShip: Moya is a living biological ship who communicate through their bonded pilots. Talyn, as a hybrid, does not need a pilot to communicate. Instead, he has a direct neural link that can be used by any species (presumably.)
148* SamusIsAGirl:
149** [[spoiler: Stanz]] is a triumphant example, as she's played by a male actor who appears male until the very end. Early on Zhaan remarks that she seems to be missing something expected of a bipedal anthropoid (assuming her to be male) in the crotch region, but it isn't revealed until the very end of the episode when she asks D'Argo to be her "mate" and travel the stars with her. It isn't until she clarifies that she's in love with D'Argo that it's revealed that she's actually a female of her species.
150** In the ''Pilot'', Crichton's reaction to finding out that the Peacekeeper he's locked in a cage with (Aeryn) is human-looking, female, and ''[[DistractedByTheSexy hot]]''.
151** Hubero, a Nebari who escaped from Peacekeeper experimentation in "Fractures", appears female, but reveals to Chiana that she is an androgen.
152* SanitySlippage: John, definitely (the fight for his sanity becomes an integral part of some episodes and story arcs), Aeryn occasionally (mostly during season 4 with the Scarran's [[ColdBloodedTorture Hot Blooded Torture]])
153* SayMyName:
154** In possibly the most poignant moment of "The Choice", Aeryn cries out "CRICHTON!!" from her balcony of her hotel room.
155** D'argo screams "CRICHTON!!" several times when his [[UnstoppableRage Luxan hyper-rage]] grabs hold of him in "Thank God It's Friday, Again".
156* ScaryDogmaticAliens: The Peacekeepers start out at this and ANaziByAnyOtherName. They are extremely racist, wear lots of black leather, and basically sell their security services to other civilizations as a prelude to a military takeover of those planets' governments. Over time they are conceded more diversity. By the time of ''The Peacekeeper Wars'' miniseries, some of them are portrayed as heroic. It's also implied in the series, and shown in a TimeTravel episode, that Peacekeepers in the past were much more noble than the thuggish mercenaries of the series' time.
157* ScienceHero: Crichton, who is a brilliant astrophysicist and engineer.
158* SciFiWritersHaveNoSenseOfScale: In "Premiere", Crais' Command Carrier was closing with our heroes, and Aeryn says the effective range of their weapons is 45 metras. One metra is about a kilometer. The Peacekeeper space ship's weapons are shorter ranged than the 20th century Phoenix air-to-air missile.
159* ScreamingBirth: [[spoiler: Aeryn, in a pool.]] And throughout her labor -- almost right up until she actually delivers the baby -- she's laying down covering fire against their enemies. "Shooting makes me feel better!" {{Dope Slap}}ping Stark seems to be cathartic as well.
160** Also, Vyna from "Taking the Stone".
161* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: John Crichton tends to do this on occasions when he's roped into helping Scorpius. It never works.
162** Crichton surrenders to Scorpius in "Liars Guns And Money" and tolerates the situation up until one of his {{Happy Place}}s is invaded, whereupon he mutters "screw this," and walks away... only to get a knife to the back of his neck.
163** "Into The Lion's Den" has him working for Scorpius to ensure the success of his wormhole project: a few hours later, Crichton attempts to back out, whereupon Scorpius hammers his head against a desk and [[ShameIfSomethingHappened threatens to destroy Earth.]]
164** Finally, Crichton teams up with Scorpius to rescue Aeryn, only to abandon him on Katratzi in the getaway. Unfortunately, Scorpius was [[CrazyPrepared expecting something like this to happen sooner or later, and installed a failsafe to ensure that Crichton would return to rescue him.]]
165** A minor and non-Scorpius-related version occurs in "Jeremiah Crichton" when John decides he's had enough of life on Moya and runs off in his module. He is promptly abandoned (though accidentally) and is [[HypocriticalHumor demonstrably upset]] when they finally return for him, since he never intended to leave for real (and didn't realize the abandonment was accidental).
166* ScyllaAndCharybdis: Crichton invokes this in the first season finale. [[spoiler:He is riding with D'Argo on a transport pod filled with explosives aimed at the Gammak Base on an oiled covered moon. If Scorpius lets them hit the base, all the research and material he has collected on wormholes will be lost. If he blows up the pod, he saves the base but loses John with the hidden information inside him. Scorpius is furious but allows the base to be destroyed guessing John would have some means of escaping and then capture him later.]]
167* SdrawkcabName: [=NamTar=] is "[[MeaningfulName Rat-man]]" spelled in reverse.
168** PropheticName: In Mesopotamian mythology, Namtar was a God of death, much like our modern concept of the grim reaper.
169* SeizeThem: Unluckily for John, Scorpius sees right through his disguise in their first encounter.
170* SelfMadeOrphan: Tahleen psychically murders her father, Tuzak, to remove a potential opposing voice to her leadership.
171* SelfSoothingSong: * In "[[Recap/FarscapeS02E19LiarsGunsAndMoneyANotSoSimplePlan Liars Guns And Money Part 1]]," John Crichton finds himself on the brink of a total breakdown as [[EnemyWithin Harvey]] begins exerting more control over him. However, he is eventually able to reinforce his self-control by loudly singing "The Star-Spangled Banner" until he's able to get away from the clone's objective. For good measure, he's also using this to drown out the demands of the ''real'' Scorpius.
172* SeriesGoal: Crichton wants to get back to Earth. [[spoiler:Subverted when he finally does, but then realizes he no longer fits in there. He decides to leave again because his presence brings danger to the Earth. He tries to give humanity hope by putting his detailed notes on alien technology on the moon, though.]]
173* SexualKarma: Aeryn's escapades with Velorek and Crichton are considerably more vanilla than Scorpius's romps with Netira and Sikozu.
174* SignificantMonogram: John Crichton. His "father" gave him powers, he tries to use these powers for peace, people hate him (except for those loyal followers).
175* ShipTease: In "Out Of Their Minds", Chiana in D'Argo's body tries to tempt Rygel in John's body... resulting in a rather long scene of what looks like D'Argo cooing to, purring at, and ''groping'' John. [[IllBeInMyBunk If you]] [[{{Fanservice}} need to]] [[HoYay leave for a while]], [[{{Bara}} that's fine.]]
176* ShipperOnDeck: In perhaps the weirdest example ''ever'', early on in season 3 Talyn continuously tries to antagonise John and contrive more and more situations where Crais and Aeryn are alone together, going even as far as making a fake video of Aeryn and Crais hooking up just to piss John off. And he does [[GettingHotInHere weird things to the heat]] in whatever room those two happen to be in. YMMV whether this is just Talyn being an angsty teen who doesn't want John getting anywhere near his adopted aunt, or really is him trying to get them together.
177* ShockCollar: The Nebari utilise these on their prisoners.
178* ShootEverythingThatMoves: When an [[TheVirus intellant virus]] gets loose about Moya and starts [[BodySurf Body Surfing]] between members of the crew, Larraq gives this order to his men ("A Bug's Life").
179* ShootTheShaggyDog: [[spoiler:"...Different Destinations". They travel back in time and make everything worse, at first changing the future of the planet to a war-torn hellhole, then to a lifeless rock, and finally ''getting rid of the planet entirely.'' They sort of fix things by killing a bunch of people, but then it's revealed that due to all their meddling, there were no survivors. Not to mention a bit of FridgeHorror, which is that they'll eventually forget it ever happened due to time travel.]]
180* ShoutOut: All OVER the place. Listing every single instance would be difficult to accomplish here, but Creator/TheBBC [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/farscape/story/index.shtml episode guide]] lists pop culture references for every episode.
181** Now defunct chrichtonisms.com listed every pop culture reference and explained them. Some of it is still in the wayback machine, which you can review [[https://web.archive.org/web/20090615231509/http://www.crichtonisms.com/ here]]
182** ''The Peacekeeper Wars'', not listed on the BBC site, has as one of its most notable references, [[spoiler: Harvey]] dying in the room from the end of ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey''.
183* ShutUpHannibal: In "Crackers Don't Matter", after being defeated, T'raltixx starts ranting about how the rest of his people will rise up and make Crichton pay. Crichton has had enough of T'raltixx by this point and finishes him off with an exasperated "I told them it was a bad idea to bring you on board."
184* SickAndWrong: In the episode "Won't Get Fooled Again," Crichton is trapped in a fantasy by a Scarran MindProbe which subjects him to increasingly humiliating stimuli. by the end, nearly ever character (male and female) is dressing up in fetish-wear or fawning over him as he (unsuccessfully) denies that he's had sexual thoughts about any of them. Just when you think it can't get any more uncomfortable, Rygel appears wearing a leather mask and wielding a whip, hissing like Hannibal Lecter.
185** Which is tame compared to the hallucination of his nightie-clad (and [[{{Squick}} dead]]) mother [[ParentalIncest hitting on him]].
186* SingleTear: Used often with Zhaan, as Virginia Hey is quite adept at squirting out tears on command. Also used with Aeryn quite often, save for the occasions where she's truly, deeply grief-stricken.
187* SinisterSchnoz: Doctor Tumii from "Coup By Clam" has an impressively-sized nose. [[spoiler:It gets [[ManBitesMan bitten off my Rygel]] at the end of the episode.]]
188* SlowMotionDrop: In "DNA Mad Scientist", Crichton smacks a [[BoobyTrap booby-trapped]] navigation crystal out of Rygel's mitts, sending it flying to the ground with a smash.
189* SmarterThanYouLook: Anyone who meets Crichton has trouble deciding whether or not this is true of him. Even Maldis isn't sure.
190* SmugSnake: Commandant Grayza, and also Prince Clavor from the "Look At The Princess" trilogy.
191* SnarkingThanks: One episode (when Scorpius was a prisoner on Moya) saw the ship get taken over by pirates. Crichton discovers that Scorpius has also escaped his cell and hatches a plan to retake the ship. This involves handing him a large blaster and staging an ambush. When they actually pull off the ambush, Scorpius tries to fire on the enemy and discovers Crichton gave him an uncharged blaster. His response: "Thank you, John."
192* SnicketWarningLabel: The series finale, which was originally meant to be an end-of-season cliffhanger. It was oh so beautiful, and then hero gibs, D'Argo's screams, and end credits. Of course ''The Peacekeeper Wars" did mitigate the effect, but, when the episode aired, for all we knew it was the final word on the series.
193* SniffSniffNom: In "Constellation of Doubt", Chiana is filmed chomping on a tube of lipstick.
194* SomeonesTouchingMyButt: Rygel and Chiana are locked in an airtight tube while the air is purged from the ship; naturally the lecherous Rygel uses this as a chance for some groping.
195* SoulEating: The apparently-magical recurring villain Maldis claims to eat souls, although this might just be mystification of something like LifeEnergy.
196* SourceMusic: John spends a few scenes in "I Shrink Therefore I Am" humming along to the soundtrack. [[DiegeticSwitch Or is is the other way around?]]
197* SouthernFriedGenius: John Crichton. [[ExaggeratedTrope Exaggerated]] almost to the point of parody with his genius clone from "My Three Crichtons". Really, Brainy!Crichton's accent got extremely thick.
198%% ZCE, please fix before uncommenting * SpaceIsNoisy
199%% ZCE, please fix before uncommenting * SpaceOpera
200* SpacePirates: The Zenetans (androgynous humanoids with a disabling superweapon), the Sheyangs (fire-breathing frog-people with lots of plasma cannons)
201* SplitPersonalityTakeover: Scorpius's neural clone.
202%% ZCE, please fix before uncommenting * TheSpock: Aeryn Sun, Sikozu.
203* StableTimeLoop: Crichton mentions that he lost his virginity to girl named Karen Shaw. In reality, "Karen" was a time-traveling [[spoiler:Chiana]] whom he met in the fall of 1985. John mishears her name after she [[ICantHearYou turns the volume on his truck's stereo way up]]. She then exclaims "She-yaaw!" while playing with the cigarette lighter, which John interprets as her surname, "Shaw".
204* StarfishAliens: Several. Pilot is, in at least [[HealingFactor one way]], a literal example. The use of Muppets allows some really strange aliens.
205* StarfishLanguage: Several. Pilot's language was so incredibly complex that he had to simplify his speech in order for TranslatorMicrobes to work. When their native language was shown, most of the main cast of aliens produced sounds that weren't anything like the sound of familiar languages on Earth, like D'Argo hissing or Rygel's froggish speech.
206** SpeakingSimlish: The Sebecean language, as heard by someone without translator microbes. Notably, when the script called for her to speak in native Sebacean, Aeryn's dialogue sounds like it's looped backwards through a tape recorder (although that's actually just a trick that Claudia Black can do with her tongue). It very effectively reminded the audience that while Aeryn may look human, she is not.
207* StandardSciFiFleet: The major Empires each seem to have one [[TheBattlestar giant battlecarrier]] (command carriers, dreadnoughts), a [[SpaceFighter fighter-type ship like a prowler or the Scarran equivalent]], and a Marauder/Stryker-type, which is like a Heavy Fighter or Gunboat combined with a Dropship. In the Scarrans' case, theirs is also a LightningBruiser. The [=PK=]s also have a smaller capitol type ship, the ''Pantak''-Class Vigilante, which looks to function like a frigate in fleet formations or like a light cruiser on its own.
208%%* StarshipLuxurious
209* StealthInsult: Crais delivers one to Braca.
210-->'''Crais:''' I predicted your rise in this organization. And I stand by that prediction. You are a consummate Peacekeeper.
211* StealthPun:
212** Rygel is a deposed king. He also has a tendency to release farts similar in effect to helium. Helium is a ''noble gas''.
213%% ZCE, please fix before uncommenting * SternChase
214%% ZCE, please fix before uncommenting * StickyFingers: Chiana and Rygel.
215* StickySituation: In "They've Got a Secret", a renegade DRD sprays Aeryn with a fast-hardening purple goo, fusing her to the floor.
216* StockFootage:
217** Taken to something of an artform by the production staff. By the end of its run something like 10% of the series was recycled footage from previous episodes. [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools It was usually done intelligently]] and fit in with the episode it was used in. Overall it turned out incredibly well, especially since the savings allowed them to produce some of the most elaborate season finales ever made for any show on television.
218** Probably the most recognizable examples would be the shots of Moya entering and exiting Starburst. Those same two clips are used in just about every other episode. Although it also led to some continuity problems after "Losing Time."[[note]]A plot point of the episode was feeding the energy of Starburst through Pilot's den to drive an energy creature out of his body, which Starburst normally ''doesn't do'' and caused Pilot considerable pain. However for the rest of the series the shot of the energy climbing up the den was reused for most subsequent jumps to Starburst, even though those modifications ''should'' have been undone.[[/note]]
219* StopOrIShootMyself: John Crichton, when faced with enemies that [[IWantThemAlive want him alive]]. "Get back or the white boy gets it!" (He's holding himself hostage with his finger, and he moments later remarks that they're so stupid.) This is a direct reference, of course, to ''Film/BlazingSaddles''.
220* TheStoryThatNeverWas: At the climax of "The Locket", the central characters are forced to use the strange properties of the NegativeSpaceWedgie that they are trapped in to reverse time and change history so that they never entered it. One of the two characters with a RippleEffectProofMemory who remember this feels guilt that they might have erased a number of people who were conceived and born thanks to one of the crew having children on a planet on the other side of the anomaly, but the other speculates that they might have split the timeline instead of erasing it.
221* StrawMisogynist: An [[PlanetOfHats entire planet]] of them in "Coup By Clam."
222* StrawVulcan: The "advanced" Crichton of "My Three Crichtons" supposedly runs on pure logic. In practice, this means he's about as big a bastard as Rygel, and twice as smug about it.
223* StuffBlowingUp: Almost every season finale. Also contains an all-too-rare inversion which is equally spectacular.
224* SubmersibleSpaceship:
225** {{Deconstructed|Trope}} in "I, E.T.", in which [[LivingShip Moya]] evades detection by the Peacekeepers by landing on a planet and sinking beneath the surface of a swamp. Leviathans aren't normally meant to land at the best of times -- much less swim -- and the fact that Rygel has to perform surgery on Moya while she's submerged only ends up exacerbating the situation. As a result, Moya very nearly dies.
226** In "The Peacekeeper Wars Part 2," Moya is forced to hide under the surface of an ocean world in order to escape an attack by the Scarrans, and stay there while the crew rescue the locals. Unfortunately, as Sikozu observes, there's a substantial difference between the vacuum of space and the bottom of the ocean, and Moya begins taking on water on several tiers. Plus, the transport pods that will take them to the surface aren't meant to serve as submersibles either, so the crew have to modify it to that end. Moya survives the escapade once again, but only barely.
227* SubordinateExcuse: The episode "Kansas" shows that Braca's [[HoYay devotion]] to Scorpius was never purely mercenary. [[{{Squee}} He certainly enjoyed that kiss.]]
228* SuccessThroughInsanity: Pretty much everyone has moments of this, but John Crichton takes the cake, who has ejected himself into space and propelled himself to a nearby ship by shooting a gun into space and manages to force the Scarrans to negotiate with him by creating a ''handheld nuclear bomb'' which he promptly dances around with.
229* SuddenSequelHeelSyndrome: Sikozu in ''The Peacekeeper Wars''.
230* SufficientlyAdvancedAlien: "God-like aliens, I hate God-like aliens. I'll take a critter any day."
231* SuggestiveCollision: Called "Proximity Alerts" by Ben Browder and Claudia Black, they inserted them into ''many'' early episodes. Mostly because the actors and showrunners knew they wanted to put Chrichton and Aeryn together, while the studio executives were against it, so this trope was invoked behind-the-scenes to crank up the ShipTease and {{UST}}.
232** In "PK Tech Girl," John and the titular PK Tech Girl have one while conducting repairs. They both lampshade it.
233* SurrogateSoliloquy: Aeryn in "Prayer".
234* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: Sikozu for Jool; in the comics, [[spoiler: Jothee for D'Argo.]]
235* SwallowedWhole: "Green-Eyed Monster" has Talyn eaten by a [[SpaceWhale Budong]].
236* SwirlyEnergyThingy: As per Farscape, lampshaded, deconstructed...
237* SympathyForTheDevil: John for Scorpius (particularly through the end of Season 3, when he eventually realizes that [[spoiler:Scorpius does not care about anything except getting revenge on the Scarrans and stopping them from taking over the galaxy. Finding out just why Scorpius [[FreudianExcuse despises the Scarrans so much]] helps, too.]]
238* TheTag
239* TakeThat: In "We're So Screwed, Part II: Hot to Katratzi":
240--> '''Staleek:''' Your safety guaranteed, in just a few arns.
241--> '''Crichton:''' Bill Gates can’t guarantee Windows, how are you gonna guarantee my safety?
242* TalkativeLoon: Good God, ''Stark''. And any time Crichton gets his sanity tested (which becomes increasingly ''a lot'' as the seasons go on) he becomes more and more this.
243* TalkingToThemself
244* TapOnTheHead: A few times, but usually justified. Aeryn knocks John out in one punch in "Throne For A Loss," and the crew came up with calling it a "panthak jab," some kind of special Peacekeeper strike that plays the trope straight, since a regular punch has even odds of not knocking the target out or doing way more damage than you intended to. A few other strikes designed to incapacitate but not kill were featured over the course of the series (such as D'Argo's "adaptive venom" tongue and the Scorvian Neuro Strike), usually revolving around BizarreAlienBiology, Bizarre Alien Martial Arts, or both.
245* TeamDad: Crichton and D'Argo both share this role (once CharacterDevelopment kicks in), particularly towards Chiana and Jool. Eventually, D'Argo's role as this was cemented in Season 4, when he was [[spoiler: elected Captain of Moya.]]
246* TeamMom: Zhaan. Always the first to comfort, always the first to encourage reconciliation, and always the first (and scariest) to go all MamaBear on anyone that threatens the rest of the crew. She especially became a mother figure to Chiana, and it's easy enough when she says "that child" in reference to Chiana to substitute "my child". Probably highlighted the most in one episode where John, facing death and in a situation where many men would instinctively shout for their mothers, screams "[[SayMyName Zhaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan]]!"
247* TearsOfRemorse: Shed by Crichton when faced with having to [[ShootTheDog kill the Alternate Universe's]] [[spoiler:Chiana/Aeryn hybrid]].
248* TechnoBabble: Averted most of the time. The few times it's thrown in, it's either A) to describe a device or material that has no real-world equivalent, or B) to describe an actual scientific process. When they do use B) it's pretty comprehensible and makes sense either in-universe or with reference to real-world ideas and concepts. If it's A) you're probably not ''supposed'' to understand it. The few times it ''is'' incomprehensible though, Crichton lampshades it or it's deconstructed. Sometimes an explanation or an idea will seem a bit like technobabble in how it is exposited but it will make complete sense, and will be well integrated into the universe context. An example early on in season 3, after Pathfinder Neeyala has spouted some standard technobabble.
249-->'''Aeryn''': Did you understand any of those words?
250-->'''John''': Well, yeah, I watched all kinds of Star trek, It's just the order I didn't get.
251* TeethClenchedTeamwork: The show is a case study in the progression from this trope early on to TrueCompanions later. There's always a degree of this present, as established and trusted characters leave and new, less trustworthy ones come aboard.
252* TemptingFate: In Natural Election, John realizes he does this just before things would have gone bad anyways.
253--> '''Aeryn''': "You know we don't have a contingency."
254--> '''Crichton''': "Eh, this'll work. Unless that plant can mutate in five minutes, what could go wrong? ...Damn, I did not just say that."
255--> '''(Fan explodes)'''
256* TensionCuttingLaughter: D'argo and John Crichton frequently did this.
257* TenThousandYears: the Peacekeepers have been around for even longer, they were established 27,000 cycles ago and have been acting on their own without their Eidelon masters for 12,000 cycles.
258* TermsOfEndangerment: A minor example, but the only two characters who regularly put themselves on a FirstNameBasis with Crichton are Scorpius and Maldis.
259* ThatDidntHappen: After Aeryn and John's first kiss on Farscape they both claim it was because of oxygen deprivation and a stressful moment. They also use the stress excuse for having sex later.
260* ThatsNoMoon: Crichton [[DiscussedTrope says these exact words]] when Talyn encounters a Budong.
261* ThereAreNoCoincidences: Harvey references UsefulNotes/AlbertEinstein just to hammer in, "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srHJBueSx40 Yeah, Scorpius has your number, Crichton]], ''and he will never stop screwing with you!''"
262-->'''Harvey''': ''Scorpius... Iz... [[AGodAmI Like Gohd]]! He doez not play dize vit ze univerze!''
263** And Harvey, the invisible friend in Crichton's head is '''dressed like Einstein. Complete with EinsteinHair.''' Farscape's that kind of show.
264* ThereIsOnlyOneBed: In "Thank God It's Friday, Again", D'Argo only has one guest bed on the floor of his dwelling in Sykar to offer Crichton and Zhaan, who have followed him to find out why he has become delusional. Crichton immediately offers to sleep on the floor, but Zhaan refuses his offer, opting to sleep next to him to his dismay.
265* ThermalDissonance: Crichton's human biology compared to a Sebacean's.
266* TheyWouldCutYouUp: Played straight in "A Human Reaction" with [[spoiler:Rygel's vivisection]]; subverted when it turns out to be a HiddenPurposeTest to see how Crichton's species might react to having aliens among them.
267** Thoroughly subverted when Crichton & Co. make it back to Earth in season 4. Moya arrives over a month before Crichton does, but none of the aliens get hurt. When they all go down to Earth later, the aliens are treated as celebrities (although they aren't allowed to roam freely, with the exception of Aeryn.)
268* ThirdPersonFlashback: As Bialar Crais is forced to recall events on the memory-probing chair operated by Scorpius, the screen shows Crais snapping his lieutenant's neck.
269* ThreatBackfire: Crais tries to use the IHaveYourWife tactic to muscle Crichton into cooperating with Scorpius's mind probe. Unluckily for him, Crais doesn't know that Aeryn is incapacitated and dying. When Crais claims to have recaptured Moya and her crew, John asks if his friends are all "in perfect health"; Crais affirms it, exposing his lie.
270* ThroughTheEyesOfMadness: "Won't Get Fooled Again."
271* ThrowingYourSwordAlwaysWorks: D'argo at one point throws his sword and impales a Peacekeeper mook through the heart at impressive range for such a heavy blade that was by no means designed for throwing.
272** Lampshaded in a way by D'Argo, who claimed he actually ''missed'' what he was aiming at. The sword buried itself in the center of the target's chest. He was aiming for between the eyes.
273* TimeMaster: Einstein.
274* TitleDrop: Happens in several episodes, especially as the seasons go by, but not all of them.
275* ToiletHumour: In Season 3, D'Argo gains a ship that can only be operated if it is in contact with Luxan DNA. But D'Argo isn't always around when they need to use it. Aaaand this trope description is stopping right here.
276** A somewhat consistent feature on the show, with Rygel-in-Crichton proclaiming "I just peed in the maintenance bay" in "Out Of Their Minds," John commenting in "The Ugly Truth" about finding the bathroom in an alien prison and D'Argo laughing before saying "I really wish you hadn't said that." The crowner probably goes Jool being given a miraculous painkilling conconction, only be distressed when she's told it's one part water, nine parts fellip urine. Note that Aeryn had appreciatively compared Earth beer to "fellip nectar" all the way back in season one; John stopped her from describing where it came from.
277* TokenHeroicOrc: The Scarran Naj Gil, briefly, in Season 3.
278* TooKinkyToTorture: [=NamTar=] can easily switch his nerve receptors from transmitting pain to pleasure, so that [[JackBauerInterrogationTechnique interrogating]] him won't get you very far. Moreover, blowing a hole through him with a pulse pistol has little effect, as his HealingFactor allows him to repair himself (and [[MySuitIsAlsoSuper his outfit]]) instantly - and he seems to enjoy this a little too much, as well.
279** Scorpius is a pretty obvious example of this as well- to the point that on the rare occasions he ends up being tortured, his captors have to work hard to find a form of torture he ''doesn't'' enjoy.
280* TomatoSurprise: The revelation that the Ancients secretly gave Crichton wormhole knowledge completely changes the status quo of the series. And wouldn't you know it? At about when viewers first learn that, an off-screen event takes place that leads to another surprise revelation: Scorpius implanting a neuro-chip with a neuro-clone into Crichton's brain to extract the information. Unlike the first revelation, the writers had more time to hint at the second one - possibly attempting to mislead viewers into thinking Crichton may just be losing his mind.
281** A lesser surprise concerns Karen Shaw. Crichton alluded to her a few times as the girl he lost his virginity to. [[spoiler: In the Season 4 episode, "Kansas," Karen Shaw is revealed to be Chiana, who a young Crichton thought was just going to a Halloween costume party.]]
282* TookALevelInBadass: John Crichton takes multiple levels of badass over four seasons: he starts out as a clueless nerd, and by series end is so badass he manages to intimidate two entire galactic empires into leaving him the frell alone by threatening to wipe out the universe. '''''THE ENTIRE FREAKING UNIVERSE!''''' And what makes it badass is he can ''absolutely'' pull it off.
283** The following Crichton quotes illustrate his progression over the course of the series perfectly:
284--> (in season 1): "I wish you people would stop pointing guns at me!"
285--> (in season 3): "I have got to stop pointing guns at people."
286--> (in season 4): (to himself) "Either stop pointing guns at people or get a bigger gun."
287** Jool, who starts off opposed to violence (given that her culture frowns upon it), also does this towards the end of Season 3, and most notably during the "What Was Lost" two-parter in Season 4.
288* ToplessnessFromTheBack: Zhaan in the pilot, Chiana in "Look at the Princess, Part II: I Do, I Think" and "Sons and Lovers," and Sikozu in "The Prefect Murder."
289* TortureTechnician: Well, let's see, there Scorpius, Grayza, Crais (for a time), almost every single Scarran... nearly every single character who isn't part of Moya's crew ''will'' bring out a pair of shackles and a whip at some point. [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything You will wonder if there's a reason for that...]] Rygel also gets in on the action, torturing several villainous characters during the series and even threatening to torture Aeryn at one point. Hell, at one point, Talyn actually goes so far as to torture Crais by means of their mental connection.
290* TractorBeam: Moya possesses one of these called a docking web. In one episode, Crichton calls it a Tractor Beam by name, but no one has any idea what it is until he describes what it does.
291* TragicBromance: The entire series - beginning to end - pretty much covers one between [[spoiler:Crichton and D'Argo.]] Despite their initial hostility and mistrust in Season 1, they eventually become FireForgedFriends proud to fight beside each other. This trope comes into play during [[spoiler:D'Argo's HeroicSacrifice in the ''Peacekeeper Wars'' miniseries, with Crichton naming his son after his fallen friend.]]
292* TraumaCongaLine: To list all the things the writers put Crichton through would take waaay too long, but the highlights include brutal torture both physical and mental, being controlled by a neural clone and forced to kill the love of his life, being cloned only to have his resurrected lover fall in love with the OTHER John and take off with her, having the other John die and her abandon him, having her come back with his worst enemy, the man responsible for the torture and the neural clone, and being raped. And that's not even touching on all the things he's been forced to do in order to survive all of the above. Really, this trope could be NAMED for John Crichton.
293* TronLines: The special effect used for Starburst.
294* JustForFun/TropeOverdosed: Click on 'related pages' and say goodbye to your free time.
295* TrojanPrisoner: While posing as a Peacekeeper Captain, Crichton manages to smuggle Chiana onto a secret research outpost by passing her off as a high-class hooker.
296* TrueCompanions: A really dysfunctional example. The crew of Moya may not like each other, and occasionally stab one another in the back, but at the end of the day, they depend on each other for survival, creating a strong bond between them. This trope eventually gets played more straight among the longer-standing crew members.
297* TrustPassword: In "Back and Back and Back to the Future", Crichton proves to D'Argo that he's glimpsed the future and knows Matala is plotting to kill them all. He does this by divulging something about D'Argo that no one is supposed to know: That D'Argo lied about why he was imprisoned by the Peacekeepers (As viewers will later learn, D'Argo was [[{{Frameup}} framed for the death of his wife]]).
298* TwoKeyedLock: In "That Old Black Magic", Crais and Lieutenant Teeg both insert hands into a pair of palm-shaped readers on a computer.
299* UltimateFinalExam: Aeryn mentions that screwing up on the last day of Prowler training will result in the simulator killing you, one of the many reasons why pilots are considered more impressive than any of the infantry divisions. For added horror, it's later revealed in "A Bug's Life" that Prowler training begins when the recruits are in their early teens, the lone exception being Aeryn - who had to wait until she was sixteen, by which time she was tall enough to reach the pedals.
300* UnderestimatingBadassery: His enemies (and even his friends) frequently forget that Crichton is both a brilliant astrophysicist and a talented engineer. The reason he's in this "distant part of the universe?" He was test piloting a spacecraft he designed to test his own theory about gravitational slingshot maneuvers. That's at least two inherently badass professions (test pilot and astronaut) and at least three other less glamorous but no less demanding ones (astrophysicist, theoretical and mechanical engineer), meaning Chrichton is at least five different flavors of badass to begin with, and [[TookALevelInBadass keeps leveling up.]]
301* UndiscriminatingAddict: "Throne For A Loss" introduces the Tavleks, a gang of extortionists hooked on a powerful stimulant. After one of them is captured during a botched raid on Moya, [[AllLovingHero Zhaan]] tries to rehabilitate the guy, and after a while, he almost seems to be responding positively... right up until he trashes one of the [[InTheFutureWeStillHaveRoombas DRDs]] and tries to jerry-rig a substitute drug from its fluid components.
302* UnfazedEveryman: John Crichton, despite his insistence to the contrary.
303* TheUnreveal: It is left deliberately ambiguous as to who killed Salis: Chiana or Durka.
304* [[TheWorldIsNotReady The Universe Is Not Ready]]: For wormholes. Einstein insists repeatedly to John that he cannot create a wormhole weapon; when John inquires about this, Einstein's answer is very simply, "You [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt cannot]]."
305* UnstoppableRage:
306** Inverted with Crais. John, remembering that Sebeceans aren't too fond of fire, blocks Crais' pursuit by tossing a torch into a [[BottomlessPits chasm]] behind him, setting it aflame. As expected, Crais shrinks away from the heat. Maldis then pops back into reality to get Crais worked up again: He conjures up a [[{{Glamour}} vision]] of Crais' late brother, Tauvo, then reenacts his death at the hands of Crichton. Tauvo explodes into flame, his flesh melting and collapsing into a smoking corpse. His hatred refueled, Crais clears the flaming pit [[{{Determinator}} in a single bound]], and the chase is back on.
307** Luxans occasionally experience ''hyper-rage'', a condition in which they become livid for several days and try to fight with other males. Crichton was on the receiving end of one of these from D'argo once ("Thank God It's Friday, Again"). They do learn to control it as they mature (and D'argo does later in the show), but D'Argo is very young for his race.
308* UnusualUserInterface: Moya's control panels and how Pilot and Moya cooperate: both are physically bonded and share nervous tissue and nutrients!
309* TheUnfettered: Scorpius. He will do absolutely anything to achieve his goals, and while accepting the immorality (or amorality) of what he's done, he never apologizes for it.
310* UnrealisticBlackHole: Averted (sort of) in "Back and Back and Back to the Future". An Illanic scientist, Verell, captures a fragment of a black hole, intending to compartmentalize it as a weapon. His assistant, Matala, steals the briefcase containing the weapon; with his dying breath, Verell activates the singularity via remote control, crushing both Matala ''and'' the Scorvians' ships into absolute nothingness. As a caveat, however, the black hole looks like a discotheque strobe light.
311* UnsettlingGenderReveal: Staanz is obviously meant to be perceived by the audience (and the main characters) as a male CampGay comic relief... until she [[TheReveal reveals]] that she's a female of her species and astonishes D'Argo with an AnguishedDeclarationOfLove.
312-->'''Crichton:''' Y'know, big guy, I think I'd better give you two a little time alone here. 'Cause you know, in a universe this vast, when two hearts collide...
313-->'''D'Argo:''' Shut up.
314* UnwantedFalseFaith: Played with. One of Rigel's predecessors purposely isolated a colony to ingrain loyalty to his line as a sovereign, which he's confused by but fine with the result. However, in the time before the crew stumbles onto them the local priest class had intentionally perverted it into a full-on messianic cult to increase their own power, which he immediately tries to dispel.
315* TheVamp: Matala has this effect on D'Argo, bewitching him to the point of (in a divergent timeline) [[ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice skewering Crichton with his qualta blade]] in a fit of jealous rage.
316* VanishingVillage: The planets within the time anomaly in "The Locket".
317* VaporTrail: With the Intellant-Virus controlling him, Larraq attempts to escape Moya in his crew's Marauder, whereupon it will dock at a Peacekeeper base and then go on to contaminate thousands. However, there's one thing the Virus has overlooked: the fuel leak which necessitated the ship's docking in the first place! Quick thinking by John results in Moya entering Starburst, which [[WeaponizedExhaust ignites the trail of fuel]] and destroys Larraq's ship.
318* VichyEarth: One of Einstein's "Unrealized Realities", as glimpsed by Crichton. Earth has long since been conquered by the Scarrans, who interbred freely with the locals during their "shore leave." The result is a species of human-Scarran hybrids with a longer lifespan, but virtually no personal freedom; everyone (including Crichton) wears tracker bracelets on their wrists, and humans are forbidden from exploring space.
319* VillainEpisode: "Incubator", focusing on [[BigBad Scorpius]], [[DarkAndTroubledPast his backstory]], [[CharacterFocus and how he came to be the person he is]].
320* VisualPun: The Nebarri are a race of humanoids who obey strict authoritarian social mores laid down by "the Establishment" and brainwash anyone who doesn't conform. They're also completely monochrome. They have a BlackAndWhiteMorality.
321* VoicesAreMental: Zigzagged in "Out of Their Minds". In the first scene, it appears as if the trope will be played straight - the voices of the character are overlaid on the voices of the actor, to make it clear who is who. Once the action gets rolling, the voices are clearly being done by the actors rather than overdubbed, however they make a great show of copying speech patterns and altering vocal tones to keep it obvious what's going on. This switches again midway through the episode when everyone jumps bodies once more, but ultimately ends up subverted.
322* VolatileSecondTierPosition: Peacekeeper lieutenants don't generally enjoy happy lives, especially if they work for [[InsaneAdmiral Captain Crais]]. As the backstory reveals, Crais was always a ControlFreak with a HairTriggerTemper, but his obsession with catching John Crichton in season 1 makes him even more unreasonable than usual: over the course of the pursuit, his lieutenants are insulted, threatened, have reports thrown in their faces, worked to the brink of physical collapse, and in the case of his immediate second-in-command, [[spoiler: murdered to prevent anyone from finding out that Crais has been disobeying cease-and-desist orders from High Command]]. Eventually, Crais is replaced by Scorpius, who quickly makes a name for himself as a much more understanding boss.
323* VoluntaryShapeshifting: Talikaa is capable of taking on two forms: one a female Sebaceanoid, and the other a GiantSpider, which is her true form.
324** At least one of the Corlatas working for Xhalax's retrieval squad was capable of shapeshifting, and used it to KillAndReplace a member of the Kanvian royal family.
325* VomitIndiscretionShot: Puke all over the place in ''Farscape''. There is barely a main character who hasn't vomited on-camera, including ''Moya'' (in the ''Strange Detractors'' comic, at least).
326** This is played for laughs in "Through the Looking Glass", in which the harsh red glow of the 'alternate' Moya causes Crichton to continually retch. It gets to the point where D'Argo is hustling him out just so he won't have to watch him spew any more.
327** In "Self-Inflicted Wounds, Part 1", Moya is knocked headlong into a wormhole following a collision with another ship, and as such, Moya's symbiotic pilot is in considerable pain. When D'argo and Stark actually ask him how he feels, Pilot opens his mouth to speak and instead spews epic levels of pea-soup vomit all over them. The expression on poor Stark's vomit-splattered face has to be seen to be believed.
328-->'''D'Argo:''' I had no idea he could do that.
329-->'''Stark:''' ''(revolted)'' I had no idea ''anyone'' could do that!
330** While not up to Pilot or Rygel's levels, Scorpius would often spurt out truley epic levels of bodily fluid to signify he was injured or in pain.
331** Can't forget "Lava's a Many-Splendored Thing". Noranti feeds the hungry crew a "restorative" that makes them all...a bit nauseous. This turns out to be fortunate as Lo'La cannot be operated without D'Argo's DNA and D'Argo is away for plot-related reasons.
332* WagonTrainToTheStars
333* WalkAndTalk: Moya's corridors provided an excellent venue for characters to fill each other in on just how frelled they were at this particular moment.
334* WardrobeMalfunction: A more literal version, as the outtakes show that D'Argo had an unfortunate tendency to shed tentacles if he moved his head too quickly.
335* WarmBloodbagsAreEverywhere: M'Lee, the "calcivore," has trouble controlling her rampaging hunger around creatures with bones. Granted, at least part of this is because she's the last survivor of her people on this particular astral body, the rest having resorted to cannibalism after they did their job of ridding the place of other animal life.
336* WarringNatures: The villainous Scorpius is half-Sebacean, half-Scarran, and most of villainous actions are due to his seeking to aid the Sebaceans against the Scarrans by getting whatever technology he can.
337** This conflict is reflected more literally in his biology: Sebaceans have an extreme intolerance for heat, while Scarrans produce heat in huge amounts - thus, maintaining equilibrium is something that has always preoccupied Scorpius.
338** A large part of his hatred of the Scarrans is due to having been created as a prototype for a hybrid slave-race. By raping his mother. And keeping her alive for the ''years''-long pregnancy as she begged to be killed.
339* WeWillUseManualLaborInTheFuture: Rygel XVI, deposed Dominar of the (galaxy-spanning) Hynerian Empire, makes frequent references to servants and slaves in his royal court. Humorously, when visiting [[spoiler:Earth, he states that if humans are to be remembered for anything, it will be for the quality of our manual labor]].
340** Stark's species, The Baniks, are referred to as an entire race of slaves. ''Farscape'' also raises the interesting question of whether {{Living Ship}}s, particularly [[SapientShip sentient ones]], count as manual labor...
341** The Sykarans have all been reduced to slaves by the Peacekeepers, planting and harvesting "tannot root" for refinement into gun ammunition (Chakran Oil). The locals are fed a steady diet of the root, which has the [[MassHypnosis added property]] of keeping them pliable.
342* WeakenedByTheLight: Crichton feebly bandages his eyes to protect them from the nausea-inducing light of the "red" Moya (Though the Looking Glass"), but quickly gives up. D'Argo follows suit by donning a welding helmet, which according to him results in a big improvement. "I only retch once in a while now."
343** Subverted in "Crackers Don't Matter". John (and humanity in general) has vastly inferior eyesight to the rest of Moya's crew, so the light causing violent paranoia in the rest of them makes John merely irritable- up until Chiana knees him in the groin, and his hallucinations start coming to life. However, John is still able to recover his sanity before the fight with Aeryn.
344* WeaksauceWeakness: Sebaceans can't process heat nearly as well as humans can. Prolonged exposure will rapidly lead to heat delirium: loss of short-term memory, motor functions, long-term memory... the final stage of heat delirium is colloquially referred to as "[[FateWorseThanDeath living death]]" (a permanent catatonic state)- the only situation in which Peacekeepers [[MercyKill kill their own out of mercy]].
345** Just to add to the suck factor, the Peacekeepers' worst enemies, the Scarrans, can project beams of solid heat. That's pretty unlucky.
346*** Scorpius being a Sebacean/Scarran hybrid means he inherited both the weakness to heat and the Scarran's intense body temperature, making this weakness a whole lot worse. He's only able to survive by wearing a specially made [[strike: gimp suit]] refrigeration suit, complete with cooling rods inserted directly ''into his brain''.
347* WeaponOfMassDestruction: Wormholes, and ''[[MyGodWhatHaveIDone how!]]'' They produce [[ApocalypseHow Apocalypses]] in two delightful flavors. Low setting: point one end at an enemy [[TheDreadedDreadnought dreadnought]] or planet. Poke other end into star. Result: portable, ''localized'' and '''directed''' '''''supernova'''''. That not enough for you? Okay. [[RealityBreakingParadox Poke one into itself]]. Result:
348--> '''Crichton''': Okay boys and girls, here are the rules. Find a penny, pick it up. Double it, you've got two pennies. Double it again: four. Double it 27 more times, and you've got a million dollars and the IRS all over your ass. Round and round and round it goes, where it stops nobody knows, but it all adds up... quick. ...It eats the whole universe, a monumental black hole, a giant whirling headstone marking the spot where we all used to live and play and slaughter the innocent.
349* WeirdnessMagnet: The whole crew of Moya, basically. They can't even stop for drinking water without one of them being turned into a ManchurianAgent. They stop on a random, lifeless planet and it turns out to be home to an arms cache that's being robbed. When they go on vacation, the women get abducted by a drug dealer who wants to [[HumanResources drain their bodily fluids]] to make Space Ecstasy.
350* WeirdWorldWeirdFood:
351** The crew of Moya subsists mostly on "[[FutureFoodIsArtificial food cubes]]", which allegedly supply all of your basic needs. John adapts to the new food fairly quickly by necessity.
352** On occasions when they actually had money, they'd eat a variety of interestingly colored alien foods, some of which Crichton described as...not particularly tasty.
353* WellIntentionedExtremist: Scorpius. His motives are [[{{Revenge}} single-minded]] and he will do ''anything'' ([[MyDeathIsOnlyTheBeginning including sacrificing himself]]) if it will [[spoiler:stop the Scarrans from [[TakeOverTheWorld dominating the galaxy]]]]. Unfortunately he is absolutely fine with sacrificing everybody ''else'' too, even when they're not quite as willing to die for his cause. And his methods [[TheUnfettered aren't]] [[KnightTemplar exactly]] [[TortureTechnician painless]].
354** Tahleen, a Delvian sect leader honing the psychic abilities of her followers for use against the Peacekeepers. It's a noble goal, but Tahleen's prepared to do anything to accomplish it- including pulling a MindRape on Zhaan and murdering her own father as a dissenting voice.
355* WeNamedTheMonkeyJack: In his own comics sub-spin-off, Scorpius adopts a little lizard as a pet. Naturally, for his CatchPhrase to work, he names it after Crichton.
356-->"Hello, John."
357* WhamEpisode:
358** "Nerve"[=/=]"The Hidden Memory" is essential for many reasons. Most importantly, it [[{{Revision}} revises]] the events of a previous episode ("A Human Reaction") and reveals that "Jack" the Ancient has implanted wormhole equations in Crichton's brain, setting off the series' primary MythArc. Stark and Scorpius make their first appearances. The dynamics of various characters, most notably Crais, are upset over the course of the two-parter. Lastly, this episode is widely credited for ''Farscape's'' GrowingTheBeard, as the series becomes less episodic from this point onward.
359** "Die Me Dichotomy"[=/=]"Season of Death", where [[spoiler:Scorpius gets the wormhole data from Harvey and fakes his death, removing him as a direct threat to the heroes. Crichton finally manages to subdue Harvey, turning Harvey from terrifying villain to comic relief. Aeryn dies, then Zhaan becomes terminally ill after sacrificing her life force to save Aeryn's life.]]
360** "Eat Me", where Crichton gets twinned into two completely identical people, neither of which can claim to be any more real than the other. This sets up the cast split that defines the bulk of Season 3.
361** "Into the Lion's Den", where [[spoiler:Crais and Talyn sacrifice themselves to destroy Scorpius's command carrier, putting an end to his wormhole research and ending Scorpius's two-season run as BigBad.]]
362** "Promises", where [[spoiler:Scorpius joins the crew, greatly changing his dynamic with Crichton.]]
363** "Unrealized Realities", where [[spoiler:Crichton gets a lecture on how wormholes really are absurdly dangerous and finally makes it back to Earth.]]
364* WhatDoYouMeanItsPhlebotinum: In "I.E.T.", Crichton frantically searches for a chemical compound which can be used as medicine for Moya. It turns out to be the local equivalent of salt on the planet on which they've landed.
365* WhatHappenedToTheMouse:
366** What happened to M'Lee? And did Natira make it out alive or not?
367** Although ''Peacekeeper Wars'' ends with [[spoiler: the Peacekeepers and the Scarrans signing a peace treaty]] and this is treated as a good thing that will bring peace to the galaxy. But the ending ignores that both sides are still evil, and all the bad stuff they've done--like the Peacekeepers enslaving Leviathans and occupying client worlds--gets zero resolution, turning what's supposed to be a happy ending into EvilVersusEvil.
368** The comics add to this: Who hired Roiin? It's built up as a Pretty Important Thing (even devoting a whole Unrealized Reality and two story arcs to it), but is dropped altogether when his PunchClockVillain status comes into play.
369* WhatTheHellHero:
370** Crichton gives himself one in "My Three Crichtons," after he was prepared to let his more primitive self die simply because he saw him as stupid. Chiana also gives him down the road, for the same reason.
371** Sikozu's reaction to the crew's abandonment of an unsavory ally in "We're So Screwed, Part II: Hot to Katratzi."
372** Scorpius, of all people, calls out Crichton for breaking a blood oath in "We're So Screwed, Part III: La Bomba."
373** In the first season episode "DNA Mad Scientist," Aeryn gives D'Argo, Zhaan and Rygel an earful for slicing off one of Pilot's arms in order to buy a star map from a MadScientist.
374** In "Vitas Mortis," Crichton lets D'Argo have it for tolerating a lover who's [[spoiler: siphoning off Moya's life force]].
375** Crichton gives a great one to Chiana and Jothee [[spoiler: after it's revealed to the crew that they've been sleeping together.]]
376** D'Argo is quick to call Crichton out whenever he thinks his quest for wormhole technology is dangerous or selfish; Crichton will usually counter by bringing up the time that D'Argo cut off one of Pilot's arms in exchange for a starchart home, or the time D'Argo put the entire crew in danger in his attempt to rescue Jothee. Appropriately enough, the only time Crichton has no real reply for the condemnation is during "Self-Inflicted Wounds," when he was so eager to access the data in the Pathfinder ship, he almost let Neeyala convince him to abandon Moya and Pilot to their deaths.
377** Pilot's reaction to Crichton's willingness to create a wormhole weapon in the miniseries.
378** Crichton's reaction to his own participation in Stark's MindRape (albeit that it was to save the galaxy) in "The Peacekeeper Wars."
379* WhenThingsSpinScienceHappens: The Aurora Chair.
380* WhosYourDaddy: Alluded to during Crichton's visions of married life with a now-pregnant Aeryn. In the dream world, Crichton is anxiety-ridden about his wife's not-so-subtle dalliances with other men.
381-->'''Crichton''': ''(about the baby)'' Maybe it's not mine at all.
382-->'''Dream Aeryn:''' You just won't let that rest, will you?
383-->'''Crichton''': Nah, maybe it's got a little pony tail and a teeny tiny goatee.
384-->'''Dream Aeryn:''' Maybe.
385-->'''Crichton:''' Maybe there's half a metal face on it.
386-->'''Dream Aeryn:''' Maybe.
387-->'''Crichton''': Maybe it's a royal pain in the ass, eats all the time and farts a lot.
388-->'''Dream Aeryn:''' Then we'll '''know''' it's yours.
389* WholeEpisodeFlashback: "Dream a Little Dream", which was originally produced as the Season 2 premiere episode, but later pushed to later in the season, with some framing scenes added to make the main story a flashback.
390** Scratch 'N Sniff from the third season, as told by a drunken Crichton as Pilot occasionally interjects with some disbelieving snark.
391* WindowLove: At the end of "Revenging Angel", Crichton and D'Argo touch hands apologetically through one of Moya's windows (and Crichton's spacesuit).
392* WireDilemma: [[DiscussedTrope John explicitly brings this up]] when describing Hollywood action movies to Gilena in "PK Tech Girl". The conversation then segues into a HeldGaze, which Crichton also points out is a common feature of Earth movies.
393* WithFriendsLikeThese: The crew of Moya frequently try to kill each other or screw each other over for one reason or another.
394** This was even the subtitle of one multi-part episode...
395* WithOurSwordsScene: In "Crackers Don't Matter", John is the only member of the crew who isn't incapacitated by an alien who has altered the bioluminescence on Moya (due to his comparatively poor eyesight). His crewmates each give him items to prepare him for the confrontation with T'raltrixx -— including D'argo giving him his sword, and Zhaan pasting Crichton's face with some light-reflecting vomit. They all take a look at the finished product, and he resembles some tacky, failed superhero. Aeryn says [[ThisIsGonnaSuck they're going to die]].
396* WondrousLadiesRoom: Actually becomes a plot point in one episode. And it ''makes sense''.
397* TheWorfEffect: Ka D'Argo suffers from this very badly. He is disarmed with embarrassing regularity, despite being the most physically imposing member of the main cast. Out of the initial four episodes, he loses at least three fights, and the third episode is mostly about Crichton figuring out a way to keep him from getting his ass kicked by a woman.
398** Justified in that it's established within those first four episodes that D'Argo is the Luxan equivalent of a teenager, and not nearly as experienced in combat as he claims to be. Retroactively justified further when it's revealed that he'd much rather be a farmer than a soldier.
399*** Also [[spoiler: the rank his tattoo states is false, but he had it done in order to save his injured commanding officer.]]
400* WorldOfBadass: Between the [[BadassBookworm hero]] who builds [[DoomsdayDevice doomsday devices]], the two [[PregnantBadass pregnant badasses]] (one heads up an armada, the other one guns down enemies while in hard labor), the priest who used to be an [[HitmanWithAHeart assassin]], the skinny girls who know WaifFu (and will resort to a GroinAttack if necessary), and the [[BadassBureaucrat mousy]] gay guy who survives three [[BadBoss bad bosses]], it's hard to find anyone who isn't a badass by normal standards. Even [[TheScrappy a scrappy]] will be able to melt metal with her voice or mystically survive dispersal at the molecular level.
401* TheWorldIsNotReady: The introduction in Series 3 lampshades this, with Crichton wondering whether Earth deserves to know the nightmares of the universe, compared to all of it's wonders. Likewise, it's later implied the reason why Crichton makes the decision to leave Earth in Series 4 is because he recognizes they have a long way to go before they can face what's out there.
402* TheWormThatWalks: The bad guy in "Beware Of Dog", to be as unspoilery as possible.
403* WorthyOpponent: After hours of menacing Moya's crew ("PK Tech Girl"), Teurac decides to cut his losses and leave. Though he realizes that D'Argo's claims of having an entire troop of Luxan warriors on-board was all a lie, he concedes that there is nothing shameful in losing to a clever opponent.
404-->'''Teurac:''' You had nothing. ...But you used it well."
405** Inverted in how Scorpius spent much of his early time admiring Crichton as a capable, intelligent and even genius tactician for getting the best of the Peacekeepers so often. When circumstances forced Scorpius to join the crew, he was utterly stunned and even disappointed to realize Crichton had no idea what the hell he was doing most of the time and his victories were all pretty much pure blind luck.
406* WrapItUp: Got the miniseries "The Peacekeeper Wars" thanks to a fan campaign, after the show was unexpectedly cancelled at the end of the fourth season.
407* WrenchWench: Gilina. Furlow might also count, although she's a lot less pretty than your typical WrenchWench, is an AffablyEvil HonestJohn, and has ChronicBackstabbingDisorder.
408* WritingAroundTrademarks: John is initially employed by IASA, the '''Inter'''national Air and Space Administration, after NASA refused to allow the use of its name and logo without having oversight on the production. The writers opted to just change the name instead because NASA would not have been seen often enough in the show to justify that much of a behind the scenes presence. And after the first fifteen minutes of the pilot, the show swings all the way over to soft science fiction and keeps pushing, so NASA script oversight wouldn't have accomplished much anyway.
409* WroteTheBook: In "Revenging Angel", Crichton comments that [[Creator/ChuckJones Dr. Chuck Jones]] wrote the book on these sorts of situations.
410* YankTheDogsChain: Happens to Crichton all the time, both in his quest to get home and his relationship with Aeryn.
411* YearInsideHourOutside: In "Through the Looking Glass", John enters the realm of the Inter-Dimensional Entity in order to persuade it that Moya's crew pose no harm. When John pops back out of the rift, Zhann and Rygel comment that he barely stuck his head in before reappearing, meaning there was no time for him to have a conversation.
412** Happens again in "The Locket," where the ratio is eight hours on the inside to every 50 years on the outside.
413* YouAllMeetInACell
414* YouCantGoHomeAgain: Subverted. [[spoiler:Crichton does eventually make it home, but is so utterly disillusioned with all the post-9/11 paranoia, military protocol and lack of understanding that he decides to leave again -- saving Earth at the end of the series, but having finally made up his mind that it is no longer his home. He does, however, leave his notes on the moon, containing technical information he was recording the entire series giving Earth a chance to uplift itself.]]
415%%* YouDontWantToCatchThis: Hynerian dermaphollica.
416* YouHaveFailedMe: When the first attempt at manned wormhole travel leaves the pilot in a condition to be collected with a sponge, Scorpius forces the subordinate who pushed for the test to take his place.
417* YouWillBeAssimilated: That's how [=NamTar=] rolls. By the time our heroes encounter him, he's already implanted the traits of countless alien species into himself, including [[HealingFactor regeneration]] and [[MindOverMatter psychokinesis]].
418** Tahleen's goal is to absorb Zhaan's mental barriers on her destructive impluses. As the sole Delvian Pa'u who ever killed anybody and regained their sanity, Zhaan could potentially propagate a whole army of Delvian Priests able to use their psychic abilities as a weapon, but Zhaan doesn't want to do this- so Tahleen decides to steal her self-control.
419* YourApprovalFillsMeWithShame: The look on Zhaan's face when Bekhesh leaves with the words "Farewell, my friends! Thank you for teaching me to kill again!" is priceless.
420* YourPrincessIsInAnotherCastle: Almost a signature trope of the show. Get towards the end of seasons two, three and four and you'll get an '''epic''' two- or three-parter, with gunfights, explosions and baddies galore, the heroes pulling off some ridiculous stunt, escaping by the skin of their teeth... and ''then'' you'll hit the season finale with it's obligatory TearJerker and {{Cliffhanger}}.
421** Moreover, about halfway through each two, three, or four parter, once escaping with whatever they went for, they usually discover someone got left behind, or some new complication has presented itself and they must now formulate a new plan, often to break back into the very place they just escaped from to retrieve whatever new goal they must.
422** Done within those long story arcs too. Going into season four's epic three-parter, the big objective seems to be [[spoiler:to rescue Aeryn from the Scarrans. "We're So Screwed, part 1"? They rescue Aeryn from the Scarrans, and as a bonus, they get rid of Scorpius too. Seems like a brilliant ending for our heroes... until Harvey shows up in the last two minutes to make things even more complicated]].
423* YouWontFeelAThing: In the episode "Coup by Clam", the crew of Moya are being examined by a doctor for SpaceMadness.
424-->'''John:''' Hey look I know you guys lie and all, but th-this is not gonna hurt too bad is it?
425-->'''Doctor:''' ''(cheerfully)'' Not a bit.
426-->''(The doctor turns on his MindProbe, causing John's head to light up as he shrieks in agony)''
427-->'''D'Argo:''' ''(later)'' If you'd held your scream off one more microt I would have [[SideBet won the pool]].

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