Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (or SNW) is a Star Trek series that was announced on 15 May[citation needed], 2020. Produced by CBS Paramount Television, starring Anson Mount as Christopher Pike, Ethan Peck as Spock, and Rebecca Romijn as Number One. The S
This is not the case, however, asStrange New Worldshas also added no less than six more recurring characters. One of these characters that were also inDiscoveryis Number One (Una Chin-Riley) played byRebecca Romijn. She is the X.O. of Enterprise but appears to have at least a few secr...
years before Star Trek: The Original Series. After a critically-acclaimed first season in 2022, Strange New Worlds returns for its second season this summer. Below is information about the release date, time, channel, and plot for the first episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 2....
Archer also has shown possessing Sha Nagba Imuru, a clairvoyance Noble Phantasm that allows him to see nearly all possibilities in the world and even look through parallel worlds. However, he rarely uses this Noble Phantasm and is unable to see the timeline of the Fuyuki Grail Wars due to ...
The documentary Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin is trenchant and moving, while the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine documentary What We Left Behind makes a strong case for the best but least-loved entry in the franchise. In comics, Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie stuck the landing on The Wicked ...
in addition to being the Sorcerer Supreme. He only takes the cases that no other medical professional was willing to do thanks to an agreement with his hospital’s new Chief of Staff, a newly resurrected Dr. Druid. His two worlds collide when the emergency room fills up with victims of a...
While we don't expect Dormammu to dominate the action of this film, we wouldn't be surprised to discover that he may be pulling strings behind the scenes, or that he may even be in league with Thanos or Loki, as part of some long-term plan to conquer more and more worlds. Baron Mo...
“Steve’sDoctor Strangematerial demonstrated what was, at the time, an absolutely unique ability to visualize worlds that had no apparent laws of physics yet seemed to have internal consistency,” says comics historian Paul Levitz. College students and psychonauts loved Strange — inThe Electric Koo...