Star Trek Comics Weekly #138
Let’s delve into how IDW’s Star Trek: The Q Conflict offered a plethora of episode sequels, prequels, and tie-ins.
Rich Handley Author and Editor
Let’s delve into how IDW’s Star Trek: The Q Conflict offered a plethora of episode sequels, prequels, and tie-ins.
Some Star Trek fans are upset over canon changes supposedly made in the most recent episode of Strange New Worlds. My thoughts on the subject differ.
Ever since the 1990s, fans of Babylon 5 and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine have noted many similarities between the popular science-fiction franchises. Such comparisons were inevitable, given the controversy involving the two series’ genesis.
I’ve been delayed in promoting the most recent installments of Star Trek Comics Weekly. So this week, I’m combining them into a single update.
This week, I look back at Scott and David Tipton’s Star Trek: Deep Space Nine—Fool’s Gold, from IDW Publishing.
This week’s column revisits WildStorm’s two miniseries based on Deep Space Nine: N-Vector and Divided We Fall.
The second half of Marvel’s Deep Space Nine offered strong storytelling and illustrating, as well as a slew of prequels, sequels, and tie-ins to onscreen Star Trek.
My latest column covers the next batch in Marvel’s brilliant STARFLEET ACADEMY, written by Christian Cooper.
This week’s column examines Marvel Comics’ 1996 Starfleet Academy miniseries, from writer-artist Christian Cooper.
This week, we’ll examine the first seven issues of Marvel’s Deep Space Nine in terms of how the publisher approached sequels, prequels, and tie-ins to televised Star Trek.