This article contains minor spoilers for Star Trek: Lower Decks.
Just in case you’re confused, the new animated comedy series, Star Trek: Lower Decks, is not a spoof. Although there are some meta-fictional elements (just how the hell did Mariner have dreams about Khan?) the series isn’t a comedy-spoof of Star Trek, but rather, a comedy series that is set within the Trek canon. As creator and showrunner Mike McMahan has said many times, Lower Decks is canon, meaning things that happen on this series, could, in theory, affect other shows.
But, in terms of the Lower Decks timeline, what does that really mean? How does it fit into the large story of Star Trek, and does it really matter? Here’s how it works, and why the placement of Lower Decks in the Trek timeline might be a bigger deal than we thought.
So, here’s the easy answer to the Lower Decks chronology question: The series takes place in 2380, which is one year after Nemesis and two years after Voyager returned to Earth. It’s also five years prior to the earliest flashbacks in Star Trek: Picard, meaning the Synth Revolt on Mars and the Romulan Supernova of 2387 is all in the relatively near future. Lower Decks also takes place five years after the end of the Dominion War, which could indicate that Starfleet and the Federation are experiencing a period of rebirth and renewal. In other words, Lower Decks is sandwiched in a “stable” period in the Trek timeline. There are no major wars, and the majority of the superpowers in the Alpha and Beta Quadrants are behaving the way you remember in TNG or DS9, only, if anything, even calmer.
That said, because everything is about to change in five years, Lower Decks could subtly gesture at what’s coming.
Synth Labor
Holographic Rights
So far, in the first two episodes of Lower Decks, we have not the USS Cerritos version of an Emergency Medical Hologram, or any other kind of sentient holograms. In Voyager, the Doctor was able to start a movement for holograms to be recognized as sentient lifeforms, much in the same way Data was protected in TNG as an android. But did it happen? We know that in 2399 — during the time of Picard — that all sorts of emergency holograms exist on starships. But, it should be noted that the various holograms used by Captain Rios on the La Sirena, are all non-Starfleet. The La Sirena is a commercial vessel, and it stands to reason its pre-programmed hologram package is commercial, too. So, the question remains, did Starfleet stop using sentient holograms after 2378, or what?
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What’s up with the Borg?
Humanoid Augmentation
Of all the sly canon changes Lower Decks has slipped in, the one that seems the most subtle is the way in which everyone on the ship accepts the fact that Rutherford recently has had cybernetic augmentation. Other than Airiam in Star Trek: Discovery, willing cyborgs in Trek are fairly rare, and almost unheard of in Starfleet. If anything, Rutherford’s augmentation seems to be a close cousin of the kind of genetic or artificial enhancement that the Federation generally frowned-upon. Seemingly, Airiam was an exception because her life was saved by her Cybernetic augmentation, but what about Rutherford? Is this kind of cybernetic enhancement common in the Federation, and we’ve just not seen much of it? Or did some cyber laws actually change?
Even if Lower Decks doesn’t outright address Rutherford’s enchantment, or any of these other fun canon questions, you can bet that at some point, in the future, some version of Star Trek, totally will.
Star Trek: Lower Decks airs new episodes on Thursdays on CBS All Access.
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