Why Didn't Voyager Use The Wormhole?

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  • čas přidán 6. 02. 2020
  • Plot holes are fun to plug.
    So let's see if I can tackle one that's bothered me for some time.
    The Gamma to Alpha Quadrant Wormhole at Bajor was long established by the time the USS Voyager departed DS9, so why did they not set course for that upon being stranded in the Delta Quadrant?
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    This Video is for critical purposes with commentary.
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Komentáře • 5K

  • @jonathancassels4835
    @jonathancassels4835 Před 4 lety +2651

    I'm pretty confident they would have reached home in 7 years, regardless of which route they took.

    • @MichaelHaneline
      @MichaelHaneline Před 4 lety +158

      They might as well have headed in the opposite direction, for the galactic edge 🤣

    • @Bobby.Kristensen
      @Bobby.Kristensen Před 4 lety +80

      Depending on how long they were in the turbolift, it's pretty clear that spacetime works different there.

    • @drunkrumjack
      @drunkrumjack Před 4 lety +33

      Um would've been a lot less season wise had they not up the show with Seven, her mother-daughter dynamic with Janeway and the Borg.

    • @mingnrich
      @mingnrich Před 4 lety +47

      drunkrumjack, it was not Seven’s dynamic that had us watching.

    • @drunkrumjack
      @drunkrumjack Před 4 lety +21

      @@mingnrich Not for guys anyway I always regarded the Voyager series as lady trek with its plethora of female cast and its strangely bidet shaped starship.
      Not to say Voyager was not good as a result I just found the focus on Janeway and Seven mommy/daughter type episodes one too many but then again who was dating Braga at the time. Others felt the ship and crew should have ended up more like the end of the movie Passengers than a cookie cutter ship that had more power use than they should have had. But I was DS9 biased anyway.

  • @wayfaringshaman
    @wayfaringshaman Před 3 lety +522

    Imagine if they used all their resources to reach the Gamma side of the wormhole in just 7 years, and Sisko wasn't bluffing about destroying it.

    • @Eradicator-jv9xr
      @Eradicator-jv9xr Před 2 lety +84

      Or when they returned they realised that it was lined with deadly mines

    • @Deadpool_64
      @Deadpool_64 Před 2 lety +26

      Or they get close only to get destroyed by the Dominion.

    • @Zero8880
      @Zero8880 Před 2 lety +20

      Or Voyager was the one that took down the minefield lol. Dammit Janeway!!

    • @electrictroy2010
      @electrictroy2010 Před 2 lety +16

      STUPID QUESTION. Voyager was in the Delta Quadrant which was about 60-70 years away from the Gamma Quadrant/s stable wormhole. So basically no time would have been saved
      .

    • @presidentjoethudbrandon7074
      @presidentjoethudbrandon7074 Před 2 lety +5

      He wasn't bluffing. He tried but was sabotaged.

  • @bigfathairygamer3343
    @bigfathairygamer3343 Před 3 lety +324

    I think in the very early episodes they were relying on Nelix's knowledge of the Delta quadrant and their hopes of finding the other caretaker,.

    • @theendofthestart8179
      @theendofthestart8179 Před rokem +35

      I legit have no idea why this didnt come up in the video, usually hes more thorough...

    • @Voodoomaria
      @Voodoomaria Před rokem +30

      That was the first ting i checked on the Star Charts as well.
      There was really no appreciable saving in time.
      So when it came to flipping a coin, Voyager ended up going up against the Krenim, the Kazon, the Hirogen,, The Vaaduar, the Borg , the Vidians and Species 8472.
      Had they gone through the Gamma Quadrant, who knows who they would have run into BEFORE running smack into Dominion space.
      They did not KNOW of the dominion, and the space between was a complete blank, they had NO reference to who or what might be there, BUT Voyager had picked up Neelix who claimed to have extensive knowledge of the delta Quadrant and it's races, so they at least had SOME idea what they would face.
      It was the choice between the path lit by a single candle, and the path through complete darkness.

    • @dixonhill1108
      @dixonhill1108 Před rokem +3

      @@theendofthestart8179 Simpliest answer is they assumed the federation would find a wayto expand out towards the Delta quadrant over a 75 year span.

    • @Oleoay
      @Oleoay Před rokem +9

      I think it also made more sense to head directly home. There’s no guarantee the Bajoran wormhole would’ve been there in 50 years.

    • @Voodoomaria
      @Voodoomaria Před rokem +1

      @@Oleoay Also true, after all it "just appeared, it could as easily "just vanish"

  • @ThatanOmega
    @ThatanOmega Před rokem +176

    It’s a huge gamble going 60000 light years, bleeding resources, to a region of space you know is actively hostile against you. For a possibility that you could access a wormhole to get you home. The wormhole was pretty temperamental too

    • @scpguy1381
      @scpguy1381 Před 11 měsíci +4

      By the time they reached to wormhole their would be a friendly Domion with Odo in the great link, only 3 ish years after they left

    • @jj003333
      @jj003333 Před 11 měsíci +10

      I agree, the possibility that it might be closed or not existent after 60 years, It's too great.

    • @ThatanOmega
      @ThatanOmega Před 10 měsíci +10

      @@scpguy1381 the voyager crew weren't to know. Not sure how 'friendly' the Dominan were after the war either. They could have became more isolationist and xenophobic after the war

    • @scpguy1381
      @scpguy1381 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@ThatanOmega but when Voyager left they had destroyed the USS Odyssey

    • @Vivi2372
      @Vivi2372 Před měsícem +3

      ​@@scpguy1381the federation hadn't even encountered the dominion directly when Voyager got stranded. It would have been 5 years into their journey by the time the peace treaties were signed. If they'd made it to dominion space at any point within that span not only would they not have been able to reasonably get around them (especially with Janeways consistent desire to plow straight through any obstacle in the midst direct path possible), they'd have been lucky if they didn't end up outright destroyed in their first encounter with the jem'hadar or thrown into internment camps for years of constant interrogation, torture, and summary executions.
      And how friendly they'd be after the peace treaties were signed if they just stumbled upon a Starfleet ship crossing their borders from the other side of the gamma quadrant is pretty up in the air. They'd just lost a war. Do vorta hold grudges? Do founders hold grudges and are they willing to just not tell Odo when they're overseeing things off on the fringes away from the great link? Hell a lot of jem'hadar almost definitely hold grudges so they might find themselves destroyed before it even gets as far as a founder making a decision.

  • @709mash
    @709mash Před 3 lety +554

    Imagine watching DS9, and Voyager pops out of the wormhole. The possibilities are abound.

    • @snikrepak
      @snikrepak Před 2 lety +3

      @Welsh Lad sounds like a catch 22

    • @AdamRelayson
      @AdamRelayson Před 2 lety +9

      Nah, they would just head to Earth almost immediately after.

    • @GrahamPointer1972
      @GrahamPointer1972 Před 2 lety +43

      At the time I wondered if that would be how the Dominion War would end - Voyager arriving with loads of new tech that tipped the balance

    • @kobayashibrynhild9622
      @kobayashibrynhild9622 Před 2 lety +26

      @@GrahamPointer1972 that would actually be pretty cool

    • @rdubayoo
      @rdubayoo Před 2 lety +23

      Imagine if the timing was really bad.
      Gul Dukat: Welcome, Voyager... to Terok Nor!
      Captain Janeway: 😱

  • @chrisjacobs4716
    @chrisjacobs4716 Před 4 lety +1057

    Random theory: during the war with the dominion, starfleet had a classified plan known to all captains that destroying the wormhole may have been an option to end the war. Knowing this as a possibility, Janeway didn't even consider it as a viable option.

    • @Sam-zz7oz
      @Sam-zz7oz Před 4 lety +142

      This makes a lot of sense. It was common knowledge in DS9 that the wormhole could blown up relatively easily.

    • @d.w.1567
      @d.w.1567 Před 4 lety +113

      There was no war when voyager left

    • @nicholatemple9296
      @nicholatemple9296 Před 4 lety +21

      @@d.w.1567 It's the DOMINION, and that is the only way to alpha in less than 50 years.

    • @antr7493
      @antr7493 Před 4 lety +11

      Sisko did mine the wormhole

    • @kylesteinhauser2535
      @kylesteinhauser2535 Před 4 lety +118

      Voyager was already in the Delta Quadrant before the Federation knew about the Dominion. You’ll remember when the Doctor is transmitted through the Hirogen network to the Prometheus that the mark 2 mentions the Dominion War and the Doctor has no clue.

  • @williampilling2168
    @williampilling2168 Před 2 lety +144

    According to the book Star Charts, the gamma quadrant end of the wormhole was just about as far from Voyagers spot in the Delta quadrant as the Federation.

    • @AgentExeider
      @AgentExeider Před rokem +17

      yeah I think the difference is about 5,000 light years. it was literally a difference between 65,000 and 70,000 light years.

    • @GreyAcumen
      @GreyAcumen Před rokem +25

      Add to that the major gamble of not knowing what the status of the wormhole would be when they get there. Even if they didn't know about the dominion, it had only been a year or two since finding it and was the only known stable worrmhole in existence. That means it's "stability" is based entirely on the premise that it hasn't gone away YET.
      The 70,000 light year option, with hopes of finding some shortcuts along the way, is the much more sensible option.

    • @williampilling2168
      @williampilling2168 Před rokem +7

      Add to that of course the real reason, the show runners wanted to keep the two shows as separate as possible. Its also why the Borg didn't involve themselves in the Dominion War.
      The Dominion was for DS9, the Borg were for Voyager.

  • @ricaard
    @ricaard Před 3 lety +67

    If this was a Pitch Meeting, the obvious answer would be "so the show could happen!"
    "Ok, then!"

    • @jwhippet8313
      @jwhippet8313 Před 2 lety +3

      But the Borg are going to be an insurmountable problem, no?
      Barely an inconvenience.

    • @davegarrett231
      @davegarrett231 Před 2 lety +2

      "Wormholes are tight!"

    • @ricaard
      @ricaard Před 2 lety +1

      @@davegarrett231 artificially constructed one are even *TIGHTER!!*

    • @Kaziklu
      @Kaziklu Před 9 dny +1

      Literally this.. I wish I had seen this sooner. Voyager just shouldn't have happened.

    • @Yggdrasil42
      @Yggdrasil42 Před 4 dny +1

      Then Janeway did a backflip and snapped the bad guys' neck.

  • @porpus99
    @porpus99 Před 4 lety +698

    Honestly, if it was me i would have laid in a course for the Cytherian home world. They live near the center of the galaxy and are able to move ships rapidly from one quadrant to another, as shown in the TNG episode "The Nth Degree". Very friendly, and only want to learn. If a price is needed, give them all the data you have accumulated from the Delta Quadrant.

    • @silvadelshaladin
      @silvadelshaladin Před 3 lety +71

      I agree with this idea -- definitely shorter and wouldn't add that much time to the total journey if they told them to bugger off.

    • @RonJohn63
      @RonJohn63 Před 3 lety +19

      Of course, nothing lives in the center of the galaxy because of how densely packed the stars are, and the problems that entails...

    • @kerryedavis
      @kerryedavis Před 3 lety +34

      If the Cytherian home world was located on the other side of the core, it might have taken them almost the same time, perhaps even longer, if they had to go around.

    • @SuprSBG
      @SuprSBG Před 3 lety +2

      YES

    • @sheffguy29
      @sheffguy29 Před 3 lety +29

      The question really is why dint they use the cytherian knowlegde just like barkley did to transport enterprise to the cytherian homeworld. Isnt that info in the federation database since they got that 10 years ealry or more that fact that they dint go home same day is astonishting

  • @Gojira1701
    @Gojira1701 Před 4 lety +663

    Funny Story: 24 years ago or so, i had started up a small email correspondence with Michael Okuda, I can't remember how I got his email, but he was very polite to answer a few of my emails. Seemed like a pleasant person. I was mainly contacting him on a design I had for a new star-ship and just wanted his approval whether or not it was a good design. He declined comment, stating that, if he did take a look at it, it could be problematic if my design matched something that showed up on any of the shows. I told him, I no aspirations that I would contest that in any way, I just wanted to know if my ship was bad-ass or not. Sorry, the point to this story was, that I made the very same reference to him; "Why doesn't Voyager head for the Gamma quadrant and the Bajoran wormhole? That journey, by my calculations, should only take them, roughly, 50 years instead of your 78 years." The only answer I ever got back on this was something along the lines of, "Hmmmm?? You know what? I guess we just missed that. You're right, that would have been a quicker trip." And that was my one brush with Star Trek fame LOL

    • @samhilly8518
      @samhilly8518 Před 4 lety +30

      Your a proper star trek stan.
      Me too.
      But your still looking into this with normal eyes.
      7 of 9 was there and the Borg. Her catsuit man...

    • @thomas91169
      @thomas91169 Před 4 lety +25

      I had him as a pen pal for a school project for about a year when I was 8 or 9! He even sent me a few recipe's for a class cookbook project. Antimatter Flambe if I recall was the one we used.

    • @samhilly8518
      @samhilly8518 Před 4 lety +1

      @@thomas91169 what he sent the same to u both??

    • @Chaghatai
      @Chaghatai Před 4 lety +9

      That's what I figured-basically the writers and crew never thought of it before it got locked into stone during production

    • @benjamincrew1949
      @benjamincrew1949 Před 4 lety +11

      @@samhilly8518 Not a catsuit. A "dermaplastic garment." ;)

  • @Hotobu
    @Hotobu Před rokem +59

    At the time that Voyager departed they still weren't 100% sure it was a stable wormhole. It was *more* stable than anything they'd discovered until that point, but they had no reason to believe that it would be there in 60 years. They took the guaranteed route.

    • @oldtwinsna8347
      @oldtwinsna8347 Před 11 měsíci +8

      Also it was already well known that the wormhole was under strict alien control (the prophets) so this increased the risk that it may not be a passageway available to the ship by the time they would get there.

    • @Kaziklu
      @Kaziklu Před 9 dny

      So if your option are go through a mine field where you don't know where the mines are or go around but the bridge could potentially be washed out but you know there is a bridge right now... which option will you take... the route you know will get you to your destination but will almost certainly get you killed? or the route that might not get you home as fast if the bridge is washed out... but you would still get home it would just take longer but you don't know of any mine fields that is almost certainly going to kill you?
      Personally I'll take the route that isn't going to get me killed by a known hostile force over going the way that will get me killed.

    • @Hotobu
      @Hotobu Před 9 dny +1

      @@Kaziklu This is a bad analogy, here's how to fix it.
      There's also "mine field" albeit slightly smaller on the way to the "bridge". It's funny how you just made the other path completely safe. Also making a bridge analogy makes it seem like everything is in easy walking distance where you can just double back, you can't. Because if you get to "the bridge" and it's out you die of old age/starvation by the time you try to take another path.
      If you actually looked into people who've talked about this before the distance to the wormhole, and the path that they took were almost the same. 40-60 years to the wormhole 70 years as a straight shot.

    • @Kaziklu
      @Kaziklu Před 9 dny

      @@Hotobu What minefield?
      That is just it when Janeway arrived in the Delta Quadrant the Dominion threat was totally unknown. They had known of no threat at all.
      So one way was known to be suicidal. The other way had no known threats but the wormhole might not be stable.. but is not showing any signs of instability when you left.
      So you have two options. One that has no known threats... and one that has a threat that if not for plot armor is suicidal.
      For Janeway to go through the Delta Quadrant makes her a monumental idiot.
      So lets use a different example.
      There are two ways home. One way takes you directly through the yard of a Serial Killer Preper Cannibal that will literally hunt you down and kill and eat you the second you step on his property. If you get past that you have to also go through the a town that has a history of locking people up for no good reason.
      The other way requires you to go down a road that may have a few towns that you know nothing about.
      Both will take you the same time... but there is a bridge going the way without the serial killer... that IF it is out means you could be stuck a lot longer than if you were to go the other way if there were no serial killer that would for sure kill and eat you.
      Which way do you go? The way that will result in you being killed and eaten or the way that you are much less likely to get killed and eaten?

  • @hudsonball4702
    @hudsonball4702 Před 2 lety +55

    I'm pretty sure that the Voyager crew never heard of the Dominion until they were able to have limited contact with Starfleet in a later season. B'elanna and Chakotay got a letter from one of their old Maquis friends telling that that they had been wiped out "By something called the Dominion."

    • @pgee886
      @pgee886 Před rokem +16

      I agree with this, also, in the episode "Message in a bottle" where the Doctor goes to the Promethius, he is told the federation is at war with the Dominion, and he never heard of them. So I would assume, that the rest of the Voyage crew would not have either.

    • @Vivi2372
      @Vivi2372 Před měsícem +3

      Yeah. Even if they left after the Odyssey had been destroyed it's possible that information was still highly classified and need to know. Since Voyager wasn't going through the wormhole, they weren't considered in need of knowing.

    • @v8matey
      @v8matey Před 14 dny

      Which time period is first?
      DS9 or voyager?
      If voyager is before DS9 then voyager wouldn't know about the wormhole.
      Was the wormhole open during the Cardassian run DS9 era.

    • @hudsonball4702
      @hudsonball4702 Před 14 dny +1

      @@v8matey DS9 aired before Voyager. Go watch them to get your answers.

    • @johncox7169
      @johncox7169 Před 3 dny

      @@v8matey Voyager is 2nd, just over 2 years after the Wormhole was discovered. They definitely knew about the wormhole (as they visited DS9 before getting lost in the Delta Quadrant), and would have knowledge of the Dominion, but the Dominion war hadn't started yet.

  • @noenken
    @noenken Před 4 lety +192

    If you are starting a journey that takes a lifetime to complete, you'll make sure that at the end you actually arrive at the place where you want to go. You're not leaving that up to chance.

    • @jamham69
      @jamham69 Před 3 lety +25

      fair point. imagine attempting to save the 20 or so years by going to the wormhole only to find it long since collapsed and DS9 abandoned or relocated.
      Suddenly you find yourself faced with the continued journey and the knowledge that none of the original crew will survive the journey. it will be the following generation that will return the ship to the federation, assuming they even survive that long, as the ship gradually loses the skilled crew required to keep it together through the issues it faced.

    • @spikedpsycho2383
      @spikedpsycho2383 Před 2 lety +5

      No. It would take longer FOR TWO REASONS.
      1: Voyager would have been anxious about using such a passage.
      - Bajoran Wormhole discovered Stardate 46379.1 (May, 2369)
      - First Contact with Dominion before Stardate 48212.4 (March 2371) along with abduction of Sisko/Qwark and destruction of USS Odyssey.
      - Voyager's Mission into Badlands before being Sent to the Delta Quadrant, Stardate 48315.6 (April 2371)
      So Federation was already well aware of Gamma quadrant was dominated by Dominion. Starfleet didn't know the extent of "Borg controlled space" but did know the Dominion had territorial holding not to mention already destroyed several starships; Janeway would have been made aware of, Traveling thru Dominion space besides being geopolitically enraging would also be Suicidal.
      Second, Look at a map of the Milky Way Galaxy, there's gaps of empty space between Galactic arms, THOUSANDS of lightyears long with few stars. Much like the Voyager episode "Night" where the ship is in a 2500 lightyear void, with no contact of others or various ports of call/trade and virtually No interstellar medium to replenish their most essential supply; Deuterium. Traveling 1000+ lightyears with NO hope of resupply. The solution would be to travel within perimeter of galactic arms where stars and presumably civilizations exist not all of them warp capable, traveling where you can stop for supply is a much longer voyage and add 10-20 thousand additional light years making it EVEN Longer to go to the wormhole.

    • @homertipton2102
      @homertipton2102 Před 2 lety +6

      Excellent point. I imagine most Starfleet captains accepted the idea of a stable wormhole with a grain of salt, especially at first. Hard to believe Janeway would have had enough faith in its stability to risk nearly doubling the length of their journey for the sake of saving only about 12.5 years.

    • @homertipton2102
      @homertipton2102 Před 2 lety +1

      @@spikedpsycho2383 I thought about the spiral arms and empty space, too, but you said it much better than I could. :)

    • @Dee_Just_Dee
      @Dee_Just_Dee Před 8 dny +1

      The sheer length of the trip had me always wanting to see an episode exploring what the trip would've been like for an alternate-dimension version of the ship and crew minus all the shortcuts. A 75 year voyage would've made _Voyager_ a so-called "generation ship" - assuming that the crew was aged 25-40 upon departure, they would be absolutely elderly on arrival, even by 24th century standards. The active crew would mostly be composed of their children and people that they had picked up along the way, very few or none of them having any firsthand experience living in Federation space. Interesting concept, wouldn't you agree?

  • @dmkatelyn
    @dmkatelyn Před 4 lety +599

    I think the capricious nature of the Prophets, who Starfleet never really got comfortable with, is also a factor. 55 years is a big investment if you can't be sure the door will be open.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Před 4 lety +51

      They can't be threatened, bribed, or even understood by humanoids. Trusting your crew's lives to such an unknown over decades sounds foolish.

    • @chemputer
      @chemputer Před 4 lety +35

      Yeah, it was "stable" _then_ but they didn't know it wouldn't be closed artificially or something else. The direct route, when it's a sure bet, is (to me) worth it over a maybe, especially when it's that big of a deal. They could have gotten to the Gamma quadrant only to find the "stable" wormhole wasn't stable, was mined, or was destroyed. You never know.

    • @dmkatelyn
      @dmkatelyn Před 4 lety +19

      @@chemputer Worse, it was stable because the aliens who lived there, who Starfleet doesn't understand, trust or even really like keep it stable. At the point Voyager left they had no reason to believe those aliens wouldn't arbitrarily slam the door, let alone do so because of the problems of trying to communicate with a species who literally has no common frame of reference with you.

    • @dmkatelyn
      @dmkatelyn Před 4 lety +17

      @Ajay Sharma They had Sisko's reports of wormhole aliens who had at best a loose understanding of the physical universe.

    • @mb2000
      @mb2000 Před 4 lety +12

      Ajay Sharma Sisko found the wormhole and made contact with the Prophets in 2369 at the start of DS9s first season. Voyager’s first season was 2371, around the time the Defiant came to the station and they got the new Generations commbadges.

  • @iamise
    @iamise Před 3 lety +105

    Having them return back where they started, DS9, would have been a poetic ending

    • @JoeKawano
      @JoeKawano Před rokem

      Here, here!

    • @RicStorm616
      @RicStorm616 Před rokem +1

      But they didn't actually start there, they started at earth and then went to DS9 on the way to the badlands,
      Kathryn Janeway visited Tom Paris in New Zealand penal colony on Earth before going on to DS9, Tom Paris was then later shuttled presumably from another ship.
      We know that the badlands mission was Voyagers maiden voyage and was launched from Earth Station McKinley after being built at the Utopia Planitia Fleet Yards at Mars as seen in later episode 'Relativity' and that Kathryn Janeway was present on the ship prior to visiting Tom Paris. 😁

    • @iamise
      @iamise Před rokem +3

      @@RicStorm616 They were there in the first episode, at the start of the series.

    • @RicStorm616
      @RicStorm616 Před 11 měsíci

      @@iamise yes but the series did end with them returning to where they started off which was Earth 😉

    • @iamise
      @iamise Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@RicStorm616 You made your opinion clear already, and obv mine differs. In my mind, DS9 and the badlands was where they started together. I don't remember seeing them all together on Earth.

  • @FractalNinja
    @FractalNinja Před 3 lety +35

    I love how voyager used a huge space relay that one time and then they broke it, making the hirogen pissed at them even more xD

  •  Před 4 lety +278

    I think you’ve hit on the reason in this video: traversing the Delta Quadrant followed by the Beta Quadrant gives Voyager a fighting chance, as the Beta Quadrant contains familiar species and familiar territory; whereas going to Delta to Gamma Quadrant route means traversing two unknown regions, in the hope that the wormhole is still there once they arrive. Janeway chose the route that was more likely to be successful because it cuts the risks down to a relative minimum.

    • @CJ-Wolf
      @CJ-Wolf Před 4 lety +31

      not to mention the known risk of traversing Dominion space at the time they were catapulted into the Delta Quadrant. And not knowing how far towards the Delta Quadrant the Dominion spread, but it was suggested by many encounters in the Gamma quadrant that the Dominion ruled the ENTIRE quadrant

    • @tyranes1088
      @tyranes1088 Před 4 lety +16

      Also, they may be able to contact starfleet through the help of the Klingons.

    •  Před 4 lety +18

      Darth Tyranes Yes! That’s an excellent point! Hell, even the Romulans might have helped out in exchange for maps and other info on the Delta Quadrant.

    • @unremoved
      @unremoved Před 4 lety +3

      The nature of the Dominion was not known to Voyager at the time it was lost in the Delta Quadrant. A single Borg ship could have destroyed Voyager if it had taken the route through the Gamma Quadrant, without the ship acquiring some protections beforehand (7 of 9's intel, the tech from fluidic space, etc).

    • @RequiemPoete
      @RequiemPoete Před 4 lety +7

      @@unremoved You forget at the time all they knew of Borg territory was that they were active SOMEWHERE in the Delta quadrant a few years travel from the Federation borders thanks to Q's warning disguised as douchery. With what they know at the time, Janeway actually decreases the chance of running into the Borg by heading towards the Gamma Quadrant.

  • @craze1701
    @craze1701 Před 4 lety +160

    That's similar to the situation of being on foot away from home.
    You can walk straight home, through familiar neighborhoods. Or walk through neighborhoods you don't know, to a bus stop that is a shorter distance away.
    You know the first route, but unsure of the second.
    You have to think about the possibility of the bus not showing up for some reason, like the possibility of the wormhole not being there for some reason. If Voyager showed up in the Gamma Quadrant, and couldn't use the wormhole, their trip would have doubled.
    Me, I'd rather take the slightly longer, more guaranteed route.

    • @NextWorldVR
      @NextWorldVR Před 4 lety +5

      And familiar... I'm an Artist, Musician and Programmer,.. i'm so in my head, I get lost easier than those Ants in 'ANTS' when the Leaf fell on their 'trail'!

    • @johnnyscifi
      @johnnyscifi Před 4 lety +1

      Yes...this^

    • @RequiemPoete
      @RequiemPoete Před 4 lety +2

      Except in this case BOTH Routes are unfamiliar

    • @craze1701
      @craze1701 Před 4 lety +7

      @@RequiemPoete No. Once Voyager gets to the Beta Quadrant (half way mark), it's familiar. They'll encounter Romulans and Klingons. Going to the Gamma Quadrant would be almost 100% unfamiliar.

    • @MotoCat91
      @MotoCat91 Před 4 lety +1

      Or you could, you know, call a cab

  • @Omnisprime
    @Omnisprime Před 3 lety +40

    Because flying right into Dominion space didn’t seem like a good idea. At all.

  • @patdro1662
    @patdro1662 Před 2 lety +11

    There is also the fact that Neelix was guiding them thru a good part of the trip and know his way around to get missing ressources.

  • @charleslong221
    @charleslong221 Před 4 lety +304

    When Seven and Kim created the Astrometrics Lab, Seven managed to plot a quicker route home based on Borg alphanumerics. If she thought it was quicker to go to the Bajoran Wormhole, she would have done

    • @kadindarklord
      @kadindarklord Před 4 lety +64

      They were also quite a ways into the journey at that time. So it may have been from the start, but not by the time they got that.

    • @MichaelBradley1967
      @MichaelBradley1967 Před 3 lety +19

      In-Universe, absolutely. Real-World, they didn't want to end the show that early.

    • @adamskyj69
      @adamskyj69 Před 3 lety +23

      @@kadindarklord Writers missed an opportunity to have a comedic moment for Seven going along the lines of decrying their first season decision to head for the Beta quadrant.

    • @rjjacob101
      @rjjacob101 Před 3 lety +19

      @@adamskyj69 Oooo yeah! "I've plotted a quicker route to Earth using Borg alphanumerics... however, this would have been irrelevant if Captain Janeway had simply plotted a course to the gamma quadrant wormhole in the first place. Or use the superior technological advantages of this vessel to destroy the Kazon and utilize the Caretaker's Array instead of destroying it with Tricobalt torpedoes that we don't use anymore. Were those the only one's we had Captain?"

    • @darianleyer5777
      @darianleyer5777 Před 3 lety +4

      Assuming, of course, Seven knew bout the womhole.

  • @luketurner314
    @luketurner314 Před 4 lety +88

    Having the show end at the same place it started would have been a fitting ending, I think. Would have also served as nostalgic advertisement to rewatch DS9 without breaking the fourth wall

    • @danielhausser8038
      @danielhausser8038 Před 4 lety +1

      @petulant Why?

    • @110100111000
      @110100111000 Před 4 lety +2

      @petulant Dramatic irony. Remember the audience knows what the characters do not. The original mission was to go in as SWAT van, find & tow a specific Maquis hot rod to the impound lot, then observer Tom gets cut loose and it's off on the next mission. Instead...

    • @orthohawk1026
      @orthohawk1026 Před 3 lety

      @Pope Marinus III but their original mission was to capture the Maquis ship that was in the BAdlands. It was the natural set-off point for it.

  • @kortclan45
    @kortclan45 Před 2 lety +24

    Voyager did play a very small role in the dominion war when they prevented the prometheus from being taken by Romans. Likely not a significant event, but consider the ship was an advanced starship it likely saw action following that incident and played some role in the overall outcome.

  • @avernion
    @avernion Před 2 lety +24

    I am so glad there as so many ST fans that can map things out so clearly and who have so much info to offer up. It’s really awesome to see how invested people are in this show.
    You guys are great!

  • @downthetubes
    @downthetubes Před 4 lety +547

    Janeway didn't have Wesley Crusher on board so she was willing to take the long way home.

    • @Torian1o1
      @Torian1o1 Před 4 lety +8

      Get the hell outta here with your pro-Wesley propaganda

    • @ahumanbeingfromtheearth1502
      @ahumanbeingfromtheearth1502 Před 4 lety +53

      @@Torian1o1 Uh, op was insulting Wesley, how was that pro Wesley?

    • @oida10000
      @oida10000 Před 4 lety +36

      @@Torian1o1 The joke was that she took the longer root just to avoid seeing him.

    • @lukasperuzovic1429
      @lukasperuzovic1429 Před 4 lety +24

      Janeway would toss Wesley out of a air lock without a suit.

    • @Ruisu101
      @Ruisu101 Před 4 lety +30

      Shut up, Wesley.

  • @MikeSassman
    @MikeSassman Před 4 lety +110

    Putting myself in Janeway’s shoes, the Neelix factor is most important. Being surrounded by unknowns, listening to someone with knowledge and experience in the neighborhood is the most practical choice.

    • @jamiemarchant
      @jamiemarchant Před 4 lety +4

      Yes, that would be why, either that or the agreement between Janeway and Chakotay was that they would not go near the Mokkey.

    • @JeanLucCaptain
      @JeanLucCaptain Před 4 lety +6

      In an insane quadrant, he was the only sane choice 😎

    • @TheRobbiUno
      @TheRobbiUno Před 4 lety +7

      Neelix should have been put out of an airlock at earliest opportunity.

    • @teabearchurchill5600
      @teabearchurchill5600 Před 4 lety +2

      @@jamiemarchant Do you mean the Maquis?

    • @jamiemarchant
      @jamiemarchant Před 4 lety +1

      @@teabearchurchill5600 Yes sorry, my spelling is not the greatest.

  • @MrSheckstr
    @MrSheckstr Před 2 lety +10

    The Galaxy is not a perfect disc at its “edge “ but instead has spiral arms … with large areas of empty space between. From this perspective we should view voyager as a large wagon, the areas with stars as dry land and the areas without stars as empty seas rivers or lakes. Voyager is in constant need to replenish its resources , something it cannot do in very deep space. Therefore it is not possible for voyager to plot a straight line course to the Bajorian worm hole’s terminus in the Gamma quadrant as that would require it to cross the void space between spiral arms several times… where as a voyage back to the alpha and Beta Quadrants border is achieved by traveling along the spiral arm it is currently on and traveling through the denser packed main mass of the galaxy . The safest and easiest path is rarely a straight line

    • @kahlzun
      @kahlzun Před 2 lety

      thats a very good point and accounts for the little dogleg in their projected path as they pass the centre

    • @DigitalJediMaster
      @DigitalJediMaster Před 9 dny +1

      Similarly, and the thing that always bothered me when people reference these star charts, is everybody treats these things as if they are flat maps charting land. The galaxy is a massive three-dimensional object that's not just 100,000 light years across, but also about 1000 light years thick. So any journey across its breadth has to also account for its depth, which could tack on thousands of light years depending on the angle.

  • @Tap-a-roo
    @Tap-a-roo Před rokem +19

    Imagine if Voyager was responsible for saving the Federation from the Dominion by providing valuable intel back to the Federation from their journey through the Gamma Quadrant.

  • @ddoyle11
    @ddoyle11 Před 4 lety +302

    Any theoretical route home that might have prevented Voyager from encountering Seven of Nine is totally unacceptable.

    • @mathgasm8484
      @mathgasm8484 Před 4 lety +32

      You will adapt.

    • @jasonsharp7862
      @jasonsharp7862 Před 4 lety +16

      Since it was mentioned that they, probably, would still have encountered the Borg, Seven could still have been easily injected into the series. So, no loss of Seven would have occurred.

    • @PaleRider54
      @PaleRider54 Před 4 lety +13

      A definite and unacceptable travesty.

    • @2bituser569
      @2bituser569 Před 4 lety +11

      Jason Sharp I don’t think I could have turned down Seven’s proposition to Kim if it was me.

    • @mathgasm8484
      @mathgasm8484 Před 4 lety +12

      @@2bituser569 Take off your clothes, Resistance is futile.

  • @pozspeakerau
    @pozspeakerau Před 4 lety +186

    What constantly amazes me is the incredible history of Star Trek, your narratives amazing...

  • @paulden3158
    @paulden3158 Před 3 lety +29

    Why didn't the Captain just sleep with Q and then talk him into sending them back?

    • @polarknight5376
      @polarknight5376 Před 2 lety +8

      She has standards. Also she didn't want to cuck Picard.

    • @nwat1993
      @nwat1993 Před 2 lety +1

      So captain repeat that one more time for the council.... You slept your way home? In which way to you mean?

  • @nicholasavasthi9879
    @nicholasavasthi9879 Před rokem +11

    While the Dominion War had not yet begun the Dominion had already closed its borders to the Federation. Shortly before the destruction of the Odyssey the Dominion declared that they would no longer allow Federation vessels to violate their territory. Going to the Bajoran Wormhole would require either a circuitous route around the Dominion or fighting through them. Even without the war it was still a non starter as a route

    • @danielkorladis7869
      @danielkorladis7869 Před měsícem

      Plus the Dominion were actively looking for Federation ships near the wormhole at that point.

    • @kabobawsome
      @kabobawsome Před 7 dny

      There's an argument to say that the original route also had the same issue with the Romulans, but I suppose the Romulans are a lot more known and open to diplomacy, and, worse case scenario, they take a couple months detour to pass through allied Klingon space instead.

    • @nicholasavasthi9879
      @nicholasavasthi9879 Před 7 dny

      @@kabobawsome Yeah, I’ve wondered about what their plan was for Romulan space, though like you said it was probably just to go through the Klingon Empire. How they would know where the northern Romulan border was in order to avoid accidentally entering their space I have no idea.

  • @MarkStark-dx9dm
    @MarkStark-dx9dm Před 4 lety +512

    More importantly, why didn't they just beam timed bombs onboard the Caretaker Array and go back home in the second episode?

    • @MrBubbleJet
      @MrBubbleJet Před 4 lety +91

      Plothole! I thought this from the first episode. Besides this, they violated the prime directive by destroying the caretakes.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Před 4 lety +100

      @@MrBubbleJet Has there ever been an episode where the prime directive has so much as been mentioned that didn't involve violating it? It originally just meant hands off pre-warp societies which is good. Everything added to it later is just utter nonsense at best, evil at worst.

    • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat
      @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat Před 4 lety +27

      That’s exactly what they did with the Borg right?

    • @jamiejones2745
      @jamiejones2745 Před 4 lety +95

      Voyager was badly damaged from both the Caretakers array pulling them into the Delta quadrant and the battle with the Kazon. Activating the technology to take them home would have taken several hours to do whilst enemy reinforcements were already on route. There's no way Voyager would have been able to hold the Kazon off long enough. All that would have happened is that the crew would be dead and the Kazon would have both the array and what ever tech they could salvage from Voyagers burning hull.

    • @j.rileyindependentproductions
      @j.rileyindependentproductions Před 4 lety +81

      You know Picard would have negotiated with the Kazon to teach them now to use the array in exchange for using it to go home... Only sabotaging it to blow as soon as they use it to retuen home.

  • @retrorandy77
    @retrorandy77 Před 4 lety +603

    "Set course for the Gamma quadrant wormhole"
    "But captain, the Gamma quadrant hasn't been fully mapped so we're not entirely certain of it's position? Besides, it may collapse in the 60 years it takes us to get there"
    "Shut up Paris"

  • @tteros5998
    @tteros5998 Před rokem +5

    I thought this was obvious? The worm-hole leads to the Gamma quadrant, and Voyager was in the Delta quadrant. The distance between Voyager and the worm-hole exit in the Gamma quadrant was almost as far as Earth was to them, and it's not like they'd know for a fact it was still operational by the time they'd get to it.

    • @donnamorrell1895
      @donnamorrell1895 Před rokem +1

      Thank you for pointing out the obvious, it saved me from pointing it out.

  • @Zybun
    @Zybun Před rokem +8

    I'd say Janeway took the route she did because she is a part of Starfleet. They are all about exploring new parts of the galaxy, so being flung into the delta quadrant would be an opportunity that she, and probably the rest of the Starfleet crew, wouldn't want to pass up.

  • @Argonova
    @Argonova Před 4 lety +209

    Wormhole stability is always questionable in the Star Trek universe. 55+ years through hostile Dominion territory only to find that the mouth of the wormhole has either closed or changed locations would be a very bad investment.

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Před 4 lety +10

      You're forgetting what made the DS9 wormhole a big deal in the first place. It's stable and consistent, barring active destruction by an outside force. It existed in that location for literally thousands of years without *known* issue.
      That makes it a pretty safe bet. Moreover, given the Federation's history of turning foes into at least frenemies, the Dominion's in the "devil I know" territory vs all those various people that Voyager pissed off along the way.

    • @toffeecrisp2146
      @toffeecrisp2146 Před 4 lety +13

      @@InfernosReaper But with the state of hostility with the Dominion, being a known quantity, it's entirely possible that Janeway, ever cautious, dismissed the Gamma Quadrant=Bajoran Wormhole option, due to too many unknown variables.
      The Dominions territorial expanse is unknown, but likely comparable to the Fed. The wormhole while being stable, might not be after 55 years, it may have even been purposefully de-stabilised by either the Fed or Dominion during a conflict. There is still a vast swath of unknown territory between their current position in the Delta Quadrant and Dominion space in the gamma quadrant. Thats alot of room for trouble, with definate problems at the other end, compared to similar uncertainty with the beta quadrant route, with another "sometimes" enemy on the other end, the Romulans, yet an enemy with whom Starfleet is more familiar, in colose proximity to a Federation ally (the Klingons, who were still allies when Voyager departed) and the Federation in possible commuincation distance, if worst came to worst, voyager could go around romulan space.
      I think both options, when weighed, present similar risk, but the one they chose, does make more sense. If perhaps, only just slightly.

    • @teamredshirt
      @teamredshirt Před 4 lety +4

      InfernosReaper, problem with that is the lack of knowledge as to the size of the Dominion controlled space, and that basically the only intel they had wa sweat they gathered from the world that Bashir visited, what they got from Quark and the Nagus’ misadventure in the Delta Quadrant (the first mention of the Dominion the series), and the fact that three or four bugships rather unceremoniously killed a Galaxy-class cruiser, which is significantly more combat capable than Voyager is when she left DS9. Even if we assume that they had an easier time of it than they did with the route they chose, there would still be 8-10 years of wear and tear on a vessel that would then have to spend about the same number of years dodging Jem’Hadaar bugships to get to the wormhole. Seems risky to me.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys Před 4 lety +19

      Also think about the route - if you assume there is a non-zero risk of the wormhole not being there when you arrive...
      You've just spent 55 years travelling in the wrong direction! (the Gamma quadrant end of the wormhole is further from federation space than where they started from)
      Basically, trying to get to the wormhole leaves you NO contingency options.
      If it doesn't work out you're worse of than when you started.
      ANY path into the Gamma quadrant leaves you worse off every day you travel in that direction in terms of changing your mind and trying for an alternate plan.
      It's a BIG gamble, and puts all your hopes on a single wormhole that somehow defies the known logic of wormholes...

    • @russellmz
      @russellmz Před 4 lety +3

      @@InfernosReaper you're forgetting all those episodes where they were worried about the wormhole collapsing from natural phenomena or sabotage attempts. it only truly stabilized when the dominion messed with the federation's attempt to collapse it.

  • @samanthadavidson1653
    @samanthadavidson1653 Před 4 lety +62

    Could you imagine if they had done a 2 part cross-over episode where Voyager finally makes it through dominion space to the wormhole and then it picks up on the finale of DS9, and VOY breaks through the wormhole to help out.
    That would be epic.

    • @theragingplatypus4743
      @theragingplatypus4743 Před 4 lety +10

      Too obvious. If they were setting a course for the worm hole, you'd see that coming a light year away.

    • @Shadothecat
      @Shadothecat Před 4 lety +5

      Dominion war ended two years prior

    • @grayscribe1342
      @grayscribe1342 Před 4 lety +8

      I knew this wouldn't happen, but I thought it would have been nice if Voyager picked up some advanced technology or replaced Voyager with a more advanced ship, loosing their original and renaming the new one as Voyager NCC-74656-B and returning in time to help out at the Battle of Deep Space 9.
      Deep Space 9 with the Defiant, Voyager and the Enterprise-E at the same time in the same place. Now that would have been a finale.
      Fanboying here, sorry.

    • @HepCatJack
      @HepCatJack Před 4 lety

      They could have done that by getting their hands on Starlin's files.

    • @hatchet0711
      @hatchet0711 Před 4 lety +1

      Samantha Davidson that would of been epic

  • @brookemickelson3559
    @brookemickelson3559 Před 3 lety +5

    Their primary mission was still to explore. So it would make sense for them to go through the Gamma quadrant and learn as much as they can considering that they might not be able to make it home either way

  • @sparkyshore3543
    @sparkyshore3543 Před 3 lety +5

    There’s also the fact that Federation Space is a much bigger target than the wormhole, and there’s something comforting about heading in the direction of home, even if it’s not the fastest route.

    • @FreelanceDev4life
      @FreelanceDev4life Před rokem +2

      This is the main reason. Uncharted space, with a rotating galaxy, dwindling resources, no backup, no one to trust, and you'll most likely all die right upon arrival so the physiological implications of the mission are overwhelming.
      That's why it's called K.I.S.S. or Keep It Simple Stupid.

  • @man100111
    @man100111 Před 4 lety +258

    Even "stable" wormholes in Star Trek have the tendency to close and never open again so it would be a great risk to fly in one direction just to come to a collapsed wormhole

    • @Ami-vh7sr
      @Ami-vh7sr Před 4 lety +12

      The issue with your comment is that the Federation knew for Sure that the Bajoran Wormhole to the Gamma Quadrant was stable and not going anywhere. This is due to Sisko having met the Entities inside that created the Wormhole....

    • @man100111
      @man100111 Před 4 lety +19

      @@Ami-vh7sr As far as I know its possible to collaps a Wormhole artificially as they did in DS9 so that would be a risk as well...
      Also when the Voyager started the Prophets where still a mystery so they couldn´t be sure that they keep the Wormhole open forever

    • @Ami-vh7sr
      @Ami-vh7sr Před 4 lety +4

      @@man100111 Possibly, but by the time Voyager left and got pulled into the Delta Quadrant the Federation had been sending ships through the Wormhole for 2 years.....
      Would the Federation had let ships go through on Year to Multiple year assignments through the Wormhole had they not known it was stable?

    • @leonanderson2473
      @leonanderson2473 Před 4 lety +10

      Jordan Kopal It’s also under the control of aliens with motivations that can not be understood by linear beings, and it was collapsed after Dukat and the Pah-wraiths attacked the Orb of Contemplation. If Sisko hadn’t been able to reopen it, the wormhole would have been a single point of failure in the plan, leaving Voyager as far from home as they started.

    • @Ami-vh7sr
      @Ami-vh7sr Před 4 lety +1

      @@leonanderson2473 You are sadly functioning upon the idea that the 'Prophets' would cut their 'Emissary' off.....
      You are also functioning under the Idea that beings who live outside of Time, viewing the past, present, and future all at the same time didn't already know the outcome of the 'Pah Wraith' issue.....

  • @JarOfRats
    @JarOfRats Před 4 lety +58

    Another factor I look at is there is a far higher density of stars on the original path of Voyager. More stars means more potential civilizations with potential technology. Also, more stars means more potential raw materials they'd need to resupply.

    • @fathead8933
      @fathead8933 Před 4 lety +11

      JarOfRats that’s actually a really good theory. Long distant road trip, do you go the little bit longer way to ensure you’re not running out of gas on a dirt road in the sticks, or do you go the “short cut” route.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Před 4 lety +1

      What, how much, and when they need raw materials is less consistent than WTH a warp factor means. Even so, fictional nebulae, M class worlds, etc. are what they care about. And those could be more or less common in an area irrespective of the raw number of stars of all types.

    • @mhelvens
      @mhelvens Před 4 lety +9

      @@patrickmccurry1563 Stars are gravitational attractors, so a higher concentration of stars does kind of imply a higher concentration of everything else, including civilisations, planets of every flavor, and nebulae.

    • @johnw1743
      @johnw1743 Před 4 lety

      Stars only generate the carbon necessary for life when they reach a particular age. Clustered stars are newer stars & so less likely to be carbon-producers. Counter-intuitively, life is actually more plausible in emptier areas of space.

    • @histguy101
      @histguy101 Před 4 lety +1

      They need supplies like all the time. They're always trying to set up trade, or mine for raw materials, or looking to harness some new technology. They even visit galactic scrapyards and scavenge battlefields. It's usually these kinds of missions going on that initiate the episode's shenanigans.

  • @Catchmyep3
    @Catchmyep3 Před 2 lety +7

    I love this idea! It's a concept I never thought about. I woukd love to see them make another Roddenberry lore version of trek and give us an exploration of the gamma quadrant.

  • @danielprivate7442
    @danielprivate7442 Před 3 lety +52

    The question I've always wondered is, how come Starfleet's fastest vessel is seemingly incapable of outrunning any and all hostile ships it encounters?

    • @darianleyer5777
      @darianleyer5777 Před 3 lety +8

      Invasion! cycle #4. The Voyager can have either Warp 9.999 or an irregular shield geometry. Irregular geometry selected. Voyager peaks at 9.666. Hostiles peak at 9.6663. Still a long chase.

    • @christopherwilson7092
      @christopherwilson7092 Před 3 lety +3

      Like a car you try to max out the speed, you use more power and fuel, so even if you out ran them you may just run out of puff sooner

    • @darianleyer5777
      @darianleyer5777 Před 3 lety

      @@christopherwilson7092 That, and Subspace Radio & Sensors use signals that travel at 90,000c in a similar manner to how lightspeed is Mach 90,000.

    • @rustyshackleford7385
      @rustyshackleford7385 Před 3 lety +1

      It's an Intrepid class ship, not a Galaxy class ship. White it was suitable to send Voyager on a mission to capture the Maquis (who used outmoded flyers/shuttles), I don't think Starfleet would have assigned Voyager to combat missions in the AQ. In the DQ, Voyager struggled to hold their own during combat due to low energy reserves and a lack of photon torpedos.

    • @williamteskey528
      @williamteskey528 Před 2 lety

      It’s probably also because they mention several times that they can’t go at maximum warp because of damage and lack of fuel

  • @abrakadabra6507
    @abrakadabra6507 Před 4 lety +131

    They knew that they’d get home in X years aiming directly at earth. Aiming at the wormhole MIGHT save them 20 years, or it might not even be there when they arrive. Thus adding what, like 60+ years?
    Probably just not worth the risk

    • @nickl5658
      @nickl5658 Před 4 lety +9

      Given that all other worm holes are unstable. And beta quadrant while not federation is at least known.

    • @kaguya6900
      @kaguya6900 Před 4 lety +10

      Abra Kadabra's response was pretty much my response too. They projected 70 years to Federation Space, so the time to the wormhole would be 55 or so? The wormhole had only been stable for less than a decade, so they couldn't really count on its still being open when they got there. On the other hand, the direct route to Federation space is more of a sure thing.

    • @mingnrich
      @mingnrich Před 4 lety +9

      Agreed that the best reasoning is that it’s unknown if the wormhole would still be around by the time they got to it. However it’s still a plot hole that it was never mentioned. Chakotay: “what about heading to the Gamma Quadrant wormhole?” Janeway: “it’ll take us 55 years to get there, it’s stable now but it might not be for that long.” Chakotay: “good point.”...and that’s it, plot hole filled.

    • @ericdossey5657
      @ericdossey5657 Před 4 lety +2

      This seems like the most logical answer
      A sure thing 75 year trip OR a gamble on a 50 year trip that if you lose, means another 75 years

    • @adammclaughlin845
      @adammclaughlin845 Před 4 lety

      It seems that the Voyager writers were under instructions to avoid all mention of the Dominion. They are mentioned twice - once when Chakotay calls them "an ally" of Cardassia, once when an EMH mk2 tells the Doctor about them. It should have been the Jem'Hadar on board the Prometheus.

  • @Returns2006
    @Returns2006 Před 4 lety +48

    As briefly touched on at the end of the video, I always figured there was no guarantee that the wormhole would still be open by the time they reached the gamma quadrant; imagine travelling 60,000LY in the wrong direction, only to find out the wormhole is closed for business

    • @JoshTyrReece
      @JoshTyrReece Před 4 lety +6

      I think that theory is a pretty good one. They knew that it was stable at the moment they left, but they were still exploring it at the time. Scientists were interested why it worked and how it worked. Even what was on the other side was a new world for the Federation.
      There was absolutely no guarantee that it still would be a stable wormhole some decades later. Like you said...worst case you fly in the wrong direction just to land in front of a closed door...and then explain it to the crew that you now have another 30-40 years in front of you...years that you could have skipped if you had gone the direct route. I would say it's 50 : 50 that they throw you right out of the airlock after your speech.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 4 lety +5

      It's a bit like walking 10 miles home, or walking 9.98 miles to the bus stop and taking the bus from there.
      In the end you take the same time, but one of these brings you closer to where you want to go with each step.

    • @cgvapors963
      @cgvapors963 Před 4 lety

      Good theory.

    • @-Yurkey
      @-Yurkey Před 4 lety +6

      Imagine if they did go to the wormhole (maybe even found a shortcut to it so they werent great grandparents by the time they got there), the wormhole was active so they could go thru... and then we would've had a glorious scene of Voyager emerging infront of DS9 with a hail "Voyager, welcome back to DS9, you've been gone for too long" ...also I felt like they should've expanded on the Voyager landing on earth scene. It was too quick and final. No words from Janeway, no farewells by the crew...felt empty at the end...

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Před 4 lety +3

      It's not really a good theory, because what made the DS9 was that it was stable and had been so for thousands of years, since it was created and maintained by beings of fairly great power, the likes of which most foes of the era couldn't defeat.

  • @Slavir_Nabru
    @Slavir_Nabru Před 3 lety +13

    You have a 70 minute journey to work, you've heard of a different route that would only take 60 mins if the final stretch of road is open, but you'd still be a further 60 mins away if you get there and it's closed, you have no way of finding out ahead of time if the road is open or not, do you take the alternative route and risk doubling your journey time to save 10 mins?
    The wormhole was nearly the same distance as Earth, through completely unmapped space (flying direct from DQ to Earth at least has the final 3rd or so of the journey traversing the much better understood Beta quadrant) and might be gone or blockaded by a Dominion fleet by the time they get there. It would be a stupendously reckless gamble to risk doubling your journey time in the hope to shave off 10%.

    • @cairosilver2932
      @cairosilver2932 Před 2 lety

      Yes, any instability in the wormhole that makes it collapse means for Sisko that he gets a new job. For Janeway it could mean the long way around and part or all of her crew dies.
      But it'd be nicer if there was more of a concrete reason rather than just probability risks, because concrete reasons are more fun.

    • @Palisis
      @Palisis Před 2 lety

      This is exactly what my 16 year old self deduced when watching both DS9 and VOY while it was current. Literally every other wormhome EVER in Star Trek is not stable. The Bajoran wormhole was barely discovered 2 years before... I know, most ppl assume it was always there, but it wasn't open... it wasn't until Sisko arrived and discovered that it appeared and connected both quadrants. Also, plenty of wormholes have different exits points. This is stablished in various Star Trek series.

  • @EricRuskoski
    @EricRuskoski Před 5 dny

    4:55 love the mirrored entry footage, as if "They went the other way" XD

  • @celticlass8573
    @celticlass8573 Před 4 lety +37

    Imagine what it would have been like for the Voyager crew, after they finally passed into the Beta Quadrant (if they had to take the whole journey with no short-cuts), seeing something familiar for the first time, even if it WAS the Romulans. What an incredible feeling.

    • @oldtwinsna8347
      @oldtwinsna8347 Před rokem +1

      Also, I don't agree that the Romulans would have posed a threat. It's more than likely the Romulans would have helped Voyager get provisioned up and return safely to the alpha quadrant. It would serve zero purpose to antagonize the Federation over something like this and more of an opportunity to show good faith in this in exchange for something else.

    • @christinamaier5610
      @christinamaier5610 Před rokem

      @@oldtwinsna8347 in one episode the Voyager had contact to the Romulans. Well from the past, but the romulans were not hostile nor friendly. I think they would have to explain theirselfs.

    • @paladinboyd1228
      @paladinboyd1228 Před rokem

      @@christinamaier5610, That could have been a nice call back if the romulans knew they were coming and let them through.

  • @howardoberg5847
    @howardoberg5847 Před 4 lety +93

    if I was Janeway, i'de made the same decision of not heading for the wormhole. the wormhole had mysteriously appeared out of no where just a few years before. there was no guarantee that come some 50+ years from now it would still be there. if they headed that way and, surprise, the wormhole had closed up then they had another 60+ year trip on top of the one they just experienced.

    • @mavoc3094
      @mavoc3094 Před 4 lety +17

      Agreed, no sane Captain nor Janeway would take that unnecessary gamble which would reduce the trip by about 20% if it worked and increase the trip by about 100% if it didn't.

    • @FirebirdPrince
      @FirebirdPrince Před 4 lety +4

      Yup, when in doubt choose the most direct route home

    • @daleatkin8927
      @daleatkin8927 Před 4 lety +8

      Agreed. Don’t rely on something to shave a marginal amount of time off your trip, when failure means doubling trip time...

    • @Lunas2525
      @Lunas2525 Před 4 lety +4

      If i was janeway i would have fought to keep the caretaker array and had a bomb get made so that immediately after sending them home it would explode...

    • @LordPadriac
      @LordPadriac Před 4 lety +3

      I think that facet of it would be a judgement call. Janeway was an accomplished scientist on top of being a ship's captain and would have had access to the most current information about the wormhole as a potential concern or path of flight for the Marquis she was in pursuit of. The wormhole hadn't suddenly appeared but was know already to have been there all along. It was known to be stable and a very long term stellar fixture.
      I think the overriding concern would have been the Dominion. They had shredded well defended colonies and a heavily armed convoy already with relative ease. As far as anyone in Starfleet knew at the time Voyager left the Alpha Quadrant the Dominion had complete control over the entire Gamma Quadrant and would obliterate any Starfleet vessel it found. Janeway would have known that Voyager would have been laughably outmatched against the Dominion and be facing them with a crew of elderly officers past their prime and whatever younger officers had been born to the crew and half trained as best as possible during their journey. Add in that she knew they would have been traveling through essentially the entire Gamma Quadrant to reach a wormhole she knew was heavily guarded by cloaked ships...

  • @Andreas-gh6is
    @Andreas-gh6is Před 3 lety +2

    There are two really good reasons not to shoot for the wormhole: The first is that even without knowing about the Dominion Voyager can't assume that this particular piece of real estate is in friendly hands. The second is that they could only use shortcuts that lead them closer to that particular wormhole terminus, as opposed to the much bigger "target" of the federation space

  • @Chanoramik
    @Chanoramik Před 2 lety +2

    i would only assume they were following resources to plot their course home, every piece of knowledge of the area was collected to plot their course. maybe Neelix just said “don’t go that way, you’ll die” or maybe it is just GPS style and it told them it was the fastest route and no one in the car was like “why you going this way? i know a a short cut!”

  • @jedsithor
    @jedsithor Před 4 lety +29

    I can imagine the crew discussing it. Heading for the wormhole would, if all went well, shave a couple of decades off their journey but it would have been a massive risk in large part due to the inherent instability of wormholes.
    Furthermore, there's the issue of morale. While many species served on Voyager it was made up of a largely human crew. Voyager wasn't just heading for the Alpha Quadrant, it was heading for Earth. Going to the Gamma Quadrant would have meant moving further away from Earth and even if meant a shorter journey, given that we're talking about decades either way I think it would have been demoralising to many in the crew to be going further away from Earth with each passing day whereas by going in a relatively straight line towards Earth it was at least always directly ahead of them and getting closer every day.

  • @BenjiMan1701
    @BenjiMan1701 Před 3 lety +77

    Voyager: Enters Dominion space during the war
    Is destroyed immediately like she just went out of bounds on CoD

    • @nunyabisnass1141
      @nunyabisnass1141 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah i miss when playing halo youd suddenly get sniped by the (cant remember the name) fo going out of bounds in one of the creator maps. Sometimes theyd just kill you just to mess with you randomly. Plenty of times id be running the map and just die along with my streak. No reason.

    • @Nighthawk1066_
      @Nighthawk1066_ Před 2 lety

      @@nunyabisnass1141 killed by the guardians

    • @nunyabisnass1141
      @nunyabisnass1141 Před 2 lety

      @@Nighthawk1066_ yes, the guardians, lol. Miss those guys. I also miss teleporting across the map at light speed into a wall. My fav glitch was being in a wraith getting ready to plow through a a crowd on 8v8, and i get teleported into the sky. I come down and land on them, but their goes my invincible. The glitches were the best part of that game.

    • @rodscarbrough2337
      @rodscarbrough2337 Před rokem

      there was an episode where three ferengi ended up in the Delta Q, they were last seen in the Price a STNG episode. they had been using the population of a planet, can't remember why, but there was a wormhole involved which brought the ferengi back to the Alpha Q. I always imagine they showed up just as a dominion ship saw them and sent them to the afterlife.

  • @thepope98
    @thepope98 Před 2 lety +5

    Would have probably been the better option in hindsight, as spooky as the Dominion is the Delta quadrant proved to be a utter hellhole. But they didn't know that at the time...
    Also the real best route would have been "use the caretaker array in episode 1" :)

  • @Guy-zf5of
    @Guy-zf5of Před 3 lety +15

    In theory, a parallel universe voyager did use the bajoran wormhole

    • @mainstreetsaint36
      @mainstreetsaint36 Před 2 lety +3

      That means in another branching AU Voyager is either captured or destroyed.

    • @paladinboyd1228
      @paladinboyd1228 Před rokem

      @@mainstreetsaint36 And in another Voyager stayed and founded their own federation.

  • @diosoth
    @diosoth Před 4 lety +25

    Memory Alpha lists "Caretaker" as stardate 48315.6 which puts it in between DS9 season 3's "The Abandoned"(stardate 48301.1) and "Civil Defense"(stardate 48388.8). So yes, Voyager would have known the Dominion was hostile at that point and that the gamma quadrant was too dangerous to go near. Let alone the whole "the wormhole may not even be there for all we know" aspect in the time it would take to get there as, until that point, "stable" wormholes were thought impossible and no one knew that one would last as the Prophets kept it going and could close it whenever they wanted. Plus even with the possibility of massive shortcuts and getting past Dominion ships, it would have been a tremendously bad ending if they somehow got there when DS9 had the other side blocked with a minefield.
    They also likely weren't totally aware of the location of "Borg space" until they got close enough to it to see it, since the Borg typically expanded and relocated their domain constantly.
    I know Voyager wasn't perfect but I swear some people(as seen in the comments section, not directed at any one person, but several) have an irrational hate of the show- more annoying when it's the crowd that defends that smear of used toilet paper that is Discovery or the trashfire canon defilement that was the Abrams film. Especially since these canon stardates took all of 2 minutes to look up to debunk the "they didn't know of the Dominion" argument(what? I don't remember this stuff! Memory Alpha does the job for me)

    • @iancassidy3717
      @iancassidy3717 Před 4 lety +1

      Not to mention the intrepid class is almost as close to being a warship as the defiant and bleeding edge tech at the beginning of the show. Definitely a ship that would be really bad to fall into a potential enemy's hand right before a war.

    • @Shadothecat
      @Shadothecat Před 4 lety

      It was the perfect size ship for their journey. Galaxy class would have most of the usable decks for supplies and defiant and nova class would be to small.

    • @populuxe1
      @populuxe1 Před 4 lety +2

      I don't think it was that clear at all. "Message in a Bottle" takes place in stardate 51462.0 and the Doctor doesn't even appear to know what the Dominion is. It seems unlikely Voyager would be aware of the extent of the Dominion or the level of threat it posed.

    • @Croftice1
      @Croftice1 Před 4 lety

      @@populuxe1 The Doctor isn't a reliable source or proof, that they embarked prior to the Dominion. Before the first Voyager's mission, the EMH was basically just a program, that got a "reset" after each use. In the sense of information about the surrounding world, it didn't have the need for updates other than medical progress. Surely not political situation. After he became the main doctor of Voyager, he spent more and more time in developing himself, but that happened after Voyager took their route towards the Beta (and eventually Alpha) Quadrant, not prior.
      The "Message in a bottle" is another thing, I give you that. But I don't remember that episode, so can't give you counter arguments for that (if there are some, that is).

  • @CRanapia
    @CRanapia Před 4 lety +126

    Yeah, I'm going to seriously under-think this and go for the simplest possible explanation. Voyager was thrown into the Delta Quadrant when all that is known about The Dominion is that it is a vast, technologically advanced and extremely hostile power in the Gamma Quadrant. Beyond that, intelligence about 'The Founders' is as close to non-existent as makes no odds.
    Janeway isn't above taking risks; but they're calculated ones. Soon after their arrival, she has more than enough on her plate -- most of her command crew is dead, she's trying to fill the gaps with the surviving terrorists she was sent to capture, and she can't exactly book her battered ship in at the nearest Starbase for repairs. Heading through totally uncharted space for the terminus of a wormhole she doesn't even know is still there, and probably through the space of an intensely xenophobic galactic empire.
    Yeah, but... no.

    • @sreser111
      @sreser111 Před 4 lety +4

      right...i normally like this guys vids...but this is way stupid.

    • @acmenipponair
      @acmenipponair Před 4 lety +3

      Well, but in light years, the nearest friendly space station they can encounter is 60000 lys and a Worm hole away. On the other side they have to travel through THREE territories of other species, of which one is hostile and one is a nightmare.

    • @BigBazz-Clips
      @BigBazz-Clips Před 3 lety

      @@sreser111 still an interesting question even if this is the answer

    • @roepi
      @roepi Před 3 lety

      And the borg dominating the delta quadrant are so much mroe friendly for sure... It was a choise of shorter route and dealing with asshole dominion or longer route and dealing the storm that is the borg. Neither are ideal but gambling the dominion won't try to assimilate you into the collective seems the safer way to go. It's not like they didn't know they would have to cross through the very heart of borg territory and at the time Voyager got stranded there was no war with the Dominion. Sure, the UFP and Dominion didn't exactly get along very well but that still makes it a less deadly route then confronting the borg and possibly in the process inviting them to invade again. ("Do not provoke the borg" - Q)

    • @shauntempley9757
      @shauntempley9757 Před 3 lety +2

      @@roepi The Borg were already planning an invasion of Earth specifically. It is why the Borg had a full fleet at the Unimatrix when Voyager got there in Endgame.
      They were planning to assimilate Earth in a swoop, since they went to the effort to pop a transwarp portal entrance in Earth's orbit.
      The Borg only do that for full fleet wide invasions, and the Borg Queen was almost ready to give the invasion order when Voyager showed up.
      The fact of the reality is, if Voyager goes to the Wormhole, then there is no Earth to go back to, let alone a Federation. Instead of Starfleet fighting a full war against the Dominion starting from the Wormhole, it is a full war against the Borg starting at Earth, with the planet already gone.

  • @matveicat5594
    @matveicat5594 Před 6 dny

    We also probably had a fair amount of data on the "near" Delta Quadrant from probes like Friendship One, which we know made it through the Beta quadrant and fair way into the Delta. Another factor is that Voyager may have surmised that many opportunities to go faster like Worhmholes and Subspace corridors may have take them ROUGHLY in a direction, but between their less than optimal outlets and also the scarcity of nav data trying to find specific location in the Gamma Quadrant through enemy territory by making crude leaps might be less optimal than the same heading to Earth. Like easier to decide if you want to go through conduit or not, in the case of going towards that gamma its taking you ROUGHLY towards a location you roughly know where is, and literally further from home, but the same crude jump "south" towards basically anywhere in the deep Beta quadrant is still useful. We kind of see this that Voyager almost always took the speed boost because it was almsot always better than warp along the way ans simple choice even if it deviated from the ideal straight line they might have plotted as best as they could early on. We see also that they refined their navigation along the way and realize just HOW off coarse they where and yet it was only like 5-6 years shaved off by plotting a better course with Astrometrics, eg not ideal, but far from a waste of years leading up to that. Another concept is that as they got closer the the Beta quadrant not only should their own maps get better, but the ability to contact federation space and Romulan space should have improved effectively meaning that while still snail mail the likelihood of cooperating with allies to get home safe/faster increased with each light year. Its not unreasonable to assume Janeway hoped that after 50+ years that Voyager would find itself in position to talk more routinely with earth even if slow and that rescue plan might be devised on the next few years to end the journey way early, not exactly naive optimism either as we see that they eventually do crack hyper subspace tech in a comparatively short time. But the odds that Starfleet might have charted another cyclic wormhole too into the delta quadrant till ahead of them or the far side of the beta where greater than zero, but also easier to explore. Each step towards gamma quadrant only pays off if they find and get through the bajoran wormhole, and in fact makes them THAT much harder to contact or provide useful data too to cooperate, so Janeway's choice while "longer" was more reliable. Another logical supposition is that if there was an alternate Gamma Alpha or Gamma Beta connection, that a empire as large as the Dominion would likely already have found it and used it especially during a war, or for that matter very early in their trip a Gamma Delta connection but with no evidence of this prior, Janeway had little reason to surmise that there might be any beneficial time savers other than the Bajoran wormhole along a Gamma route, whereas we do no while unstable the Barzam wormhole was still connecting to the Alpha quadrant and was in temporal synch so even though a ways off it was not the worst odds. Arguably I think the known's and Known-Unknowns quantities of navigate, couple with the the way statistical probability evolved with each light year is the best excuse for Janeway's decision. The biggest argument against...The Borg, they didn't know as much as they would eventually learn, but they knew enough to maybe factor in that decision being Risky. Another possible reason might be, trying to avoid to many stellar voids...from the spiral arms, as we see that Voyager was barely able to theoretically cross "The Void" it eventually encountered, after years of training and adjustments to the ship that had made it more self sufficient. Fresh to the Delta quadrant Voyager did not likely have the endurance to cross a LARGER stellar void between spiral arms hypothetically should they encounter one and might have had to deviate decades coreward to avoid one to far to cross, then decades back rimword to restore the course to the Bajoran Wormhole, if we assume the this is a factor in their navigation it might have while not mentioned on screen put the Gamma route off the table right off the gate. Another reasoning might be that the USS Enterprise D had some luck opening some forms of Transwarp conduits laid by the Borg and that by approaching their territory she hoped to have figured out a way to do that reliably enough to leap frog through their vast space and well on her way home in multiple leaps if she was lucky, effectively cutting out 2/3 of their journey, while it didn't pan out thta way as planned, in effect it almost did because rescuing 7 of 9 and finding the transwarp Hub while occurring after they left the heart of Borg Space did offer a even better version of that route. (I'm assuming the Hard unsupported routes of transwarp we see are of different order than what the Borg network or ship coils produce, and so maybe have all been replaced around Borg space, and its only a thing on some expeitionary routes like the one we see in TNG: Descent a shorter local route that requires no borg tech, but is still very useful, or the one we see in Picard season 1. It's likely that had those sorts been scanned by voyager its sensors could have detected them and thier deflector tech opened them without the help of Seven or Borg Transwarp Coil, or a hub, this to someone like Janeway would be logical gamble that jsut turned out to be wrong.

  • @johnsnowshoe6009
    @johnsnowshoe6009 Před 3 lety +11

    I always loved their photon torpedo's, and how they kept multiplying lol.

    • @sigmasquadleader
      @sigmasquadleader Před 2 lety +6

      Every time a photon torpedo is fired, an anti-photon torpedo is generated in and unloaded from the adjacent tube. Then they simply reconfigure the power conduits and modulate the carrier wave so it's inverted, and you have a photon torpedo again, ready to quantum-tunnel in an endless series of torpedoes, although some stipulate there only ever has been and always ever will be only one photon torpedo that tunnels through spacetime.

    • @naverilllang
      @naverilllang Před rokem

      My head canon is just that photon torpedoes can be manufactured, they just weren't set up to do so at the time they said that line. They can replicate all the parts, so it's really just getting the antimatter that's a challenge. A problem which they had to solve repeatedly.

  • @BlackHoleForge
    @BlackHoleForge Před 4 lety +87

    I can't believe I've never thought of that question myself. Oh, I know, it's Nelixes fault. He said we should go this way. There's some good food down there and some traders that are friendly. Lol

    • @OggerFN
      @OggerFN Před 4 lety +21

      Yes it's actually Neelix's fault.
      He knew the space in the direction they went.

    • @ciaranbrk
      @ciaranbrk Před 4 lety +1

      Same I kinda feel like a dick head now 😂😂

    • @andreware2039
      @andreware2039 Před 4 lety +2

      Oh my gosh 😂

    • @difficultbastard
      @difficultbastard Před 4 lety +6

      For someone who sat and thought about interesting aspects of Star Trek over the years, I'm absolutely stunned that I never considered this.

    • @CedarHunt
      @CedarHunt Před 4 lety +5

      More likely they had no way of finding or determining the location of the wormholes opening from the delta quadrant side. On the other hand Voyager knows where earth is and how to get there.

  • @ChocolateFrog
    @ChocolateFrog Před 3 lety +19

    I think there's also a human element. Feeling you're heading in the right direction is reassuring even if you think it's not the shortest route. The pull would be to plot a direct course to federation space.

    • @akosbarati2239
      @akosbarati2239 Před rokem +1

      Exactly, the parallels to Odyssey and why it happened cannot be ignored.

    • @naverilllang
      @naverilllang Před rokem +2

      The wormhole was also fairly new at that point. It was known to be stable, but would it still be stable in 30 years when they finally reach it? It would be a big bummer to show up in Dominion Space, ask for safe passage to the wormhole, and learn that it collapsed 20 years ago because the Romulans inverted a deflector array or something.

  • @parmis_dax
    @parmis_dax Před 2 lety

    Excellent video, I have pondered this myself throughout the years

  • @sparklesmagic2584
    @sparklesmagic2584 Před rokem +1

    Relying on a wormhole is a more risky strategy. They could go all the way there and find that it has collapsed, become unusable or cut off by a hostile alien power , necessitating an even longer journey home. The risk was further increased by the fact the Bajoran Wormhole was effectively an artificial construct under the control of a largely unknown alien species, who may have decided to side against the Federation at any time.
    IRL of course, Janeway had her dramatic moment when she reveals to the crew how long it was going to take them to get home and having someone pipe up “what about the Bajoran wormhole?” during that would have killed the moment, so I can see why the writers left it out. Likely the possibility was discussed in private later on between Janeway and Chakotay.

  • @niekwesseling4355
    @niekwesseling4355 Před 4 lety +18

    I can imagine two additional reasons. First one being that the closer they would get to federation space the easier it would be to establish communication with the federation and receive their assistance as they actually did.
    Another reason would be the moral of the crew of the ship. When they started from the other side of the Galaxy with the combined crew of two opposing factions the tensions must have been quite high and their moral quite low. To keep the crew together they had to have some goal they all could stand behind and focus on. And what grabs the imagination of everyone involved better than aiming for home. Then getting the sense of everyday getting closer to home. Instead of increasing the literal distance to home that aiming for the wormhole in the gamma quadrant would have meant.

  • @robeomega
    @robeomega Před 4 lety +203

    If I were in command I would travel to the Cytherian's from the TNG episode "The Nth Degree". They are apparently in the centre of the galaxy, so closer than earth would be. They have tech that can travel long distances in what seems like seconds. Which has the added benefit of having demonstrated compatatibility with Starfleet technology (unlike that think Turvok stole that ended up not being compatible.
    As for what information I would trade in return for being taken home, you could trade all the information you have of the space and species encountered up to that point, and trade any new information about the alpha quadrant since they were last encountered.

    • @darkage5
      @darkage5 Před 4 lety +26

      That's what I am saying!!! They had to have had the ability to contact them since the cytherians were willing to dialogue.

    • @shmee123ful
      @shmee123ful Před 4 lety +6

      It's possibly Janeway didn't know about them after all not every SF captain knows everything but even if they have a file that Janeway looks up. It's shown in course oblivion voyager couldn't normally go into the galactic core. The sliver blood copy voyager had to have a massive refit using tech that it would appear that prime voyager never came across. It be like trying to expore the bottem of the deepest part of the ocen in a tinny. They'd be crushed like a tin can

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 Před 4 lety +16

      Knowledge of the Cytherians could be classified, because Voyager probably has the logbooks of all other Starfleet ships.
      Another possibility is the galactic core is too dangerous to navigate.

    • @johnwang9914
      @johnwang9914 Před 4 lety +8

      Presumably, if they had such advance travel the technology, they would already have the information you may have gathered and any historic and cultural information would already have been exchanged during the earlier contact featured in TNG.

    • @thrashjf83
      @thrashjf83 Před 4 lety +8

      I'm not sure Voyager can pass safely through the Barrier, as TOS and TNG established there is a Galactic barrier at the core and one at the rim of the galaxy that does bad things if you pass through them.

  • @raw6668
    @raw6668 Před 3 lety +1

    I think another reason not properly explained is that while the path is shorter, it could take longer to travel. From what we see in the show, Subspace works in many ways like ocean currents in Earth seas. That could mean that depending on the "current" could mean that travel is either faster and slower. This is shown in material as travel time can be vastly different from the calculated distance. For example, it was calculated it should take 32 years for Voyager, but it was calculated 79 years in the show, possibly due to "currents." Also, it should take 4-6 years to cross Federation space, but in TNG, it took months at most, weeks at best due to how much Federation space has been mapped, meaning they found ideal currents to travel to new locations. Finally, we also see when Voyager got advanced Astrometrics using borg sensors, and more accurate maps, their travel time was reduced by years. So, travel time could have been longer
    Also, another reason is they may have avoided distantly populated clusters. As generally the more stars in an area, the increased likelihood of civilization and an Empire they had to devoid. This is seen when Voyager negotiates trips through Empires takes weeks, if not months of their journey as well. It also explains that unless the plot demands it, they only see far fringe colony worlds than a species homeworld or major world.

  • @andeeharry
    @andeeharry Před 3 lety +1

    From what I read somewhere, blame the producers and writers. The cast and writers always argued about the long trip home, instead of taking the easy routes. It was for the show apparently. 7 years they had, but the producers wanted it longer. There had been many fights and arguments behind the scenes over this. Many of the cast had had enough because they had been away from home for long hours, and had to do thier thing. Which is why Kes warned the crew about the dangers ahead, and why the Admiral also broke rank to get Voyager home, shorter than 14 years. Now, that means the Future Janeway knew something the other didn't and didn't tell anyone, Temporal Prime Directive thing, which they choose to follow when they want to. Either way, there is no telling on what would happen at that wormhole, if it actually existed by the time it got there.
    Now, the ship itself existed in DS9 time, as it was seen in the final years of DS9, which meant that the ship and crew came back somehow. I love to know how Janeway climbed the ranks quickly during First Contact and the other Star Trek film.
    Anyway, at some point during DS9, they did come back, as thier ship was a prototype, but in Voyager's case, we never see that, as they made it home, not the station. I know Voyager had many plot holes anyway. There is a theory that Janeway knew about the Dominion and the ugly thing going on in Star Fleet, other than the hit from the fake Human colony that the species from Subspace did. Nobody seems surprised by that. Only the Doc questioned the existence of the Dominions once. Yeah. 7 of 9 in her labs, she knew and saw things nobody else did, she plotted. She knew what was going on and conducted secret meetings off camera. Not sure how many were in the know really, but like if the wormhole existed, they would have known about the others, or those mines. Someone certainly saved them that night with that map.

  • @trevordelepine7708
    @trevordelepine7708 Před 4 lety +45

    I would have loved to have seen this addressed in Voyager, even if it was just a quick throw away line in the first couple of episodes, like someone suggests it but then Jayneway gives reasons for why it’s a bad idea.

    • @DavidStrchld
      @DavidStrchld Před 4 lety +6

      Yes, it should have been addressed, even in a quick Q and A where a crew member asked the question and Janeway said that would be longer. Something, anything of this should have been mentioned.

    • @Figgy20000
      @Figgy20000 Před 4 lety +1

      Honestly, it's such a stupid idea it's not even worth addressing.
      For one, they don't know where it is and have no way to update their maps. For two, they wouldn't be in comms range of the federation until they literally went through the worm hole. Three, wormholes in the Star Trek universe are extremely unstable. Not a single one has ever been open for that long without collapsing, absurdly high odds it doesn't last that long. Four, even if the wormhole was still open the federation doesn't even have control of it and they might not have been allowed access to it anyways.

    • @MaxLaingDMP
      @MaxLaingDMP Před 4 lety +2

      Wait Wait Wait...) at that point the station was still close to Bajor and thye wormhole had yet to be discovered. Voyager was lost very shortly after leaving the station as they headed out to capture the Maquis.
      Originally, the Federation took over the station to offer protection while Bajor was recovering from the occupation. A couple of episodes later the "only known stable wormhole" was discovered.
      It was even hypothesized that the Cardassians would have never left had they knew the wormhole existed.
      So, at the time Voyager was lost due to its runnin with the Caretaker, no one, including anyone in Star Fleet, was aware that the wormhole even existed.
      Homework People! Lets do our homework before we run out and make videos based on inaccuracies.
      Matter of fact, they could have only learned of the wormhole AFTER the Doctor was sent into Federation Space to deliver a message that those on Voyager were still alive. They could only have learned about the wormhole after Barclay was able to establish communication with Voyager through The Pathfinder Project a number of years into their journey.

    • @thebatman8895
      @thebatman8895 Před 4 lety +3

      @@MaxLaingDMP The wormhole was discovered in the first episode of DS9, which was about two years before the first episode of Voyager. Voyager would certainly have known about the wormhole, but would have had limited info at the time.

    • @MaxLaingDMP
      @MaxLaingDMP Před 4 lety +5

      @@thebatman8895 over the past hour I have sat here in complete embarrassment and humility while forced to ponder how it is I have made such a vast, and monumental mistake in the timeline.
      Though the easy path would be to scurry away - I will further expose my embarrassment by revealing the fact that for the past 20 years my wife and I cycle through the seasons of each series (minus TOS) averaging around 2 episodes a night about 5 nights per week. Every now and then, as other shows make their respective appearences (The Orville, The Mandalorian, etc), or the time arises to pepper in something from the Marvel Universe, we give Trek a slight break though always returning faithfully to our "staple".
      The only thing that offers the slightest momentary respite from this most painful, public blunder, is the fact that we literally just made it to the end of DS9 and started Voyager. Before Voyager's "voyage" begins, we see a couple of her crew at Quark's bar as they are handing the viewers over from the "familiar and proven" to the "new and yet to be established" as the sendoff for the new show.
      Though the way we watch the episodes offers not a reason nor an excuse, the fact of the matter is (as you have brought to mind) the series are not successive as they run partially parallel with a 2 year offset.
      So, having just "started" a new series, coupled with the fact of the show (Voyager) "starting" at DS9, and having just finished the entirety of DS9 a few days ago, I can only guess that in my eagerness to praticipate in one of these threads, to my detriment, a number of things became conversationally misaligned.
      What makes this all the more painful is the fact that my position is that of CEO over Project Development. It is literally my job to keep a vast array of facts straight during the development of the large-scale projects we are called upon to forge into existence. Something I have taken great pride in over the years. Having gotten what I injected into a conversation so wrong as a direct result of the incorrect compilation of data - data that I should have had a rather extreme handle on - has really knocked me back on my ass.
      So, in closing to this self-induced smackdown, thank you for the correction and my deepest apologies for having to suffer through reading that crack-headed submission I initially put forward. Should I ever decide to brave an expedition into such public waters again, I will surly redouble my efforts prior to offering an opinion in an effort to prove my worthyness of being allowed to play along in the first place.
      Sincerely and without hesitation,
      Max Laing

  • @MrZenzio
    @MrZenzio Před 4 lety +11

    Flaws and all, I still have very fond memories of Voyager; and I still rewatch it after rewatching TNG. Thank you for this video.

    • @josephamendolea3431
      @josephamendolea3431 Před 4 lety +1

      and imagine if a wormhole or transwarp conduit had deposited them at the rear end of the romulan Star Empire....who could greet them there but none other than the son (or daughter as the case may be) of Telek R'Mor....who'd made a promise to his/her dying dad to see Voyager safely home should he/she encounter it

  • @shrews12001
    @shrews12001 Před rokem +1

    i think the simplest explanation is that since we don't have a canon star chart of Gamma that the wormhole is closer to Alpha than the middle and would, from where Voyager started, in the end be as far if not farther than the straight line

  • @MB-uu3mu
    @MB-uu3mu Před 2 lety

    Great theoretical hypothesis, enjoyed it! Keep up the super content. :)

  • @Allangulon
    @Allangulon Před 4 lety +152

    If Janeway had ignored those Ferengi they would have been home in two years.

    • @matthew8153
      @matthew8153 Před 4 lety +1

      My head hurts
      When did Janeway encounter the Ferengi?

    • @batfleckforever3594
      @batfleckforever3594 Před 4 lety +36

      @@matthew8153 The ones that were stranded in the Delta from the Barzan Wormhole- TNG's The Price.

    • @Allangulon
      @Allangulon Před 4 lety +14

      @@matthew8153 Season three episode five. False Profits.

    • @balgur29deathknight49
      @balgur29deathknight49 Před 4 lety +18

      True! Janeway is an expert in sabotaging herself with her moralility.

    • @DavidBrown-hn9cv
      @DavidBrown-hn9cv Před 4 lety +31

      That's the problem with the whole series: Janeway was Gilligan.

  • @user-vn7ce5ig1z
    @user-vn7ce5ig1z Před 4 lety +60

    • The Pythagorean theorem is more reliable than a temperamental wormhole. Ultimately it was as Rick said, between going throw two unknown quadrants or one mostly familiar quadrant and one that is mostly familiar to Neelix.
    • If they had decided to _Go West_ instead, they would still have had Kes and Neelix, but they wouldn't have had Seven or the Doctor's mobile-emitter.

    • @Thomas-qy3ox
      @Thomas-qy3ox Před 4 lety +1

      @The Premier thus ending all life

    • @RobertZiomekSHS17
      @RobertZiomekSHS17 Před 4 lety +4

      I think they still would have gotten the mobile emitter, the time ship came to them in that episode, not the other way around.

  • @arthurjamesforbes6883
    @arthurjamesforbes6883 Před rokem +1

    One thing that MAY have not been considered is the 3D aspect of where the exit from the Bajoran wormhole is located in the Gamma Quadrant.
    Although it appears to be a shorter distance, It may be longer should Voyager have a vertical diagonal course to the Bajoran wormhole.
    For example, as Spock said to Kirk in The Wrath of Khan; Khan was only thinking TWO dimensionally.
    Taking this possibility into account may have factored into Janeway’s choice of route.
    You not only have to factor in the x and y axis but the z axis also.

  • @-GeordieDan-
    @-GeordieDan- Před 9 měsíci +5

    Because there’d be no show.

  • @nathancorliss9347
    @nathancorliss9347 Před 4 lety +75

    The galaxy is 1,000 light years “thick” on average. I wonder where our known landmarks exist in terms of the z-axis of that map.
    Not saying it would make up for the distance problem, just a stray thought.

    • @demonmonsterdave
      @demonmonsterdave Před 4 lety +5

      Most people only think in two-dimensions.

    • @martincoates96
      @martincoates96 Před 4 lety +9

      The milky way galaxy (as best known) is relatively (the x-y plane relative to the z axis) flat away from the the center. So cross quadrant interstellar space travel would be vaguely two dimensional in concept.
      It is closer spacial aspects that would be more 3-D but are usually presented as flat, case in point the shows nearly always show a group of ships (even opposing vessels in combat) with the same "up" orientation.
      Like why do they never encounter a Klingon Bird of prey approaching with a 90 deg roll from the enterprise, (nope always flat like they are surface vessels on the water)...
      I think that would have looked cool.
      P.S. Babylon 5 did the spacial geometry far better.

    • @acmenipponair
      @acmenipponair Před 4 lety +2

      @@vrooooom4487 Also, the navigation screen on the NCC 1701 in TOS exactly showed that: it was a "flat" screen, but with a pointer, that could be raised or lowered, to show how much you move on the Z axle.

    • @Quode001
      @Quode001 Před 3 lety

      @@martincoates96 even every station/ array appeared right side up, though I guess it couldve just been shown that way 'on screen'. Itd be cool if they arranged to meet at a rendezvous point just for the other ship to show up upside down 😅

    • @OccupyForeverBand
      @OccupyForeverBand Před 3 lety +4

      This question raises a really cool, crazy point - according to Memory Alpha, any given warp factor is not a relative speed, but variable based on proximity to mass and other spatial conditions. It tends to be faster in relation to more massive objects (thus the slingshot effect) and much, much slower (approaching c*1) in the void of intergalactic space. So as you move away on the z-axis, you move much slower (and become much less likely to be able to mine any dilithium), so the galaxy is effectively a 2d space. So wild to think about.

  • @brianstraight9308
    @brianstraight9308 Před 4 lety +77

    I'd say the easiest answer is kind of... "Meta."
    It's easier to explain to the audience to set a course "for home" than it is "set a course for a place that's nowhere near home but wherein lies a portal than can get us home 20-something years sooner."

    • @ianshaliczer
      @ianshaliczer Před 4 lety +11

      Brian Straight its also the reason a crew composed of dozens of different species (and statistically speaking, probably many humans who were from colonies) always talked about getting home to Earth.
      Because UPN thought the viewers were morons and would get confused by Tuvok wanting to go home to Vulcan.

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 Před 4 lety +9

      @@ianshaliczer Of course, that's like a two day hop if you're not in a hurry from Earth.
      Earth was like a hub airport for them- look, no one wants to go to Atlanta, but that where you're going to get the connecting flight

    • @iner22
      @iner22 Před 4 lety +7

      Plus, worst-case scenario, the trip takes 50-60 years. There was never a stable wormhole in existence before, and even if the Bajoran wormhole was considered "stable," 60 years is a long time to hinge your hopes on a method of travel that is notoriously unreliable.
      Not to mention that the wormhole came close to being closed before Starfleet even became aware that Voyager was still out there, and had been kept open only by the will of one of the most alien beings Starfleet was aware of.
      So even if Janeway were to consider using the Gamma Quadrant wormhole, it would probably be too great of a risk to leave to chance, especially if failure meant adding another 40 or so years on Voyager's trip.

    • @ianshaliczer
      @ianshaliczer Před 4 lety +2

      Jeremy Owens The Sol System is in the middle of the sector designated as “Sector 001” because it is (more or less) the astrogeographic center of the UFP... Vulcan and Andoria are in the same sector. It’s also right on the boundary between the Alpha and Beta Quadrants.
      So it’s like being lost at sea in the middle of the Pacific and being desperately trying to get home to Des Moines... when half your crew are from Northern Ireland.
      Yes, sure, if you are 75,000 LY from Earth, it’s basically inconsequential that you’re 74,984 LY from Vulcan when it comes to travel time. The sixteen light years between Sol and 40 Eridani A can be crossed in about a weekend at cruising speeds for ships like the Enterprise-D or Voyager. It’s just weird that _every_ member of the crew talked about Earth as their home.
      Approximately half of Voyager’s crew were Marquis terrorists/freedom fighters trying to reclaim their colonies on the UFP’s frontier with the Cardassian Union. They shouldn’t feel so fondly about Earth!
      Then there’s all the aliens. Of the top of my head, there were at least two Vulcans, a couple Betazoids, a Bollian, and whatever the hell Naomi Wildman’s father’s species was named... I think there might have been a Trill as well.

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ianshaliczer Yeah, I'm generally familiar with Trek stellar cartography... but it's less like Des Moines, and more like London (presuming the destination was the UK). We're talking about the Capital, not a provincial backwater- plus, it is also the HQ of the military organization they are in- not to mention, Sector 001 could easily be Voyager's home port- they DID start there, after all (while recruiting Paris). (Granted, I couldn't find anything supporting or countering this- aside from being constructed at Utopia Planatia) But, if Earth was their home base, er, port, that would make a lot of sense that everyone wanted to get there, (since military families tend to move with the servicemember).

  • @robbyb.8905
    @robbyb.8905 Před 2 lety +3

    they also really wanted to explore the Delta quadrant while they were there so that could’ve been a big reason

  • @cmedtheuniverseofcmed8775

    You make a lot of good points. A simple dialogue would have closed the argument that the wormhole was almost as far as just heading back home. If anything, there was the risk that if they made it and the wormhole had been closed, then the whole trip would have been for nothing.

  • @dangutridge3783
    @dangutridge3783 Před 4 lety +83

    Unofficial maps do place Ocompa "geographically" closer to the Gamma aperture of the wormhole
    Janeway (and Tuvok) probably knew about The Dominion....Voyager launched a few scant weeks after the Odyssey Incident, likely they decided to give the Gamma Quadrant a wide berth without knowing the extent of Dominion Territory

    • @Joesolo13
      @Joesolo13 Před 4 lety +17

      Honestly the most sensible assumption is that the Wormhole in the Gamma Quadrant was simply as far from the voyager's starting position as the furthest most reaches of the Federation, or possibly Klingon territory. Or even further.

    • @fatdaddyeddiejr
      @fatdaddyeddiejr Před 4 lety +16

      Nope Janeway and Tuvok didn't know about the Dominion. Voyager was lost before contact with the Dominion was made.
      And remember when the Doctor was sent to the Prometheus. The EMH on the Prometheus told Voyager's EMH that the Romulans have not entered the war against the Dominion. The Doctor responded with "Who?" Then when crewmembers got mail from home. Commander Chakotay got a letter from a friend that was in the Maquis. The letter told him that Cardassia allied with a power alien empire from the Gamma Quadrant. And this power wiped out the Maquis.

    • @rinoz47
      @rinoz47 Před 4 lety +4

      The doctor comes back and says the federation is at war with the dominion. Janeway says "the dominion?" As if she hadnt heard of them

    • @puidwen
      @puidwen Před 4 lety

      @@Joesolo13 I tend to agree. The assumptions about where the gamma end of the worm hole is must be wrong.

    • @mahorosan1
      @mahorosan1 Před 4 lety

      @@rinoz47 What if she did actually know about them, but it was regarded as classified knowledge like Omega?

  • @ShadeMan78
    @ShadeMan78 Před 3 lety +6

    Don’t forget, Janeway would have known about the Barzan Wormhole. She also knew it was unstable in the Delta Quadrant but that it remained in one place long enough to possibly get through. She would not have told the crew about this as to not get their hopes up only to be disappointed. This may have been Janeway’s motivation for the course set she did. They did find the Barzan Wormhole, but thanks to Ferengi greed the Delta quadrant side became even more unstable and disrupted the Alpha quadrant end as well.

    • @patsk8872
      @patsk8872 Před rokem +1

      You could also say it was because Janeway bothered interfering with what was really a small-time exploitation of an insignificant planet by 2 Ferengi shlubs.

  • @derekisthematrix
    @derekisthematrix Před rokem

    This was a fun thought experiment. You could essentially write a complete 'Voyager 2' by changing this premise and I would definitely watch it in earnest (especially when compared to what they're calling Trek these days)

  • @DeadlyNightshadeZ
    @DeadlyNightshadeZ Před 4 dny

    At one point they went through a wormhole that brought them to Dominion space. They checked their star charts and realized they were on the other end of the Bajoran wormhole, located a ship which happened to be a Dominion vessel, asked to use the wormhole to go home, and were told to piss off.

  • @maharai23
    @maharai23 Před 4 lety +9

    My thoughts? Trusting a wormhole, even a rather stable one, to remain open for 55 years (and they couldn't count on it being less at the outset) is a gamble. The payoff is a 15 year reduction in trip length, but the risk is 55 years wasted (if it closes in that time). I would think that gambling 55 years to save 15 wouldn't be something Janeway would have done at the outset of the journey. She didn't really favor high risk strategies until later in the show.

  • @matthewbradley3395
    @matthewbradley3395 Před 4 lety +135

    Why? That's easy to answer.
    As my wife says when I ask such questions;
    "That's because dear heart...it wasn't in the script."

    • @bryanwoods3373
      @bryanwoods3373 Před 4 lety +2

      Kind of reminds me of an argument I had with this friend of some friends back in college. I think we'd tried dating prior to this, so that might have factored as well. We were watching Star Trek: First Contact on tv, and she was pondering why they chose to make Data's eye blue. I think she intended to try and sound smart, but she didn't know this was the kind of thinking I did by nature. She didn't like when I said it was because Brent Spiner's eyes are blue so they just left the contact out. Then she didn't like when I said because the dead crewman that the Borg Queen took it from had blue eyes. I think I had a few more answers just off the top of my head, and she just got madder at me and changing the parameters of how she meant the question. I just had all the obvious answers.

    • @andreasklindt7144
      @andreasklindt7144 Před 4 lety +8

      That's true, but lame unimaginative thinking and boring. Part of the fun is to get into a story and try to speculate about story elements from inside the story's world and logic.

    • @jefferygeter4998
      @jefferygeter4998 Před 4 lety +1

      That would have been dumped and very stupid if they would have went to the gamma quad..... They would have ran into the Dominion...... And then they never would have got home 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

    • @Mega6501
      @Mega6501 Před 4 lety +1

      But your wrong the dominion are in the script season 4 Ep:15

    • @thebuddercweeper
      @thebuddercweeper Před 4 lety

      @Maintenance Renegade at first I thought this was a plot hole, but I thought about it and I think I have a possible explanation, at least as to why they didn’t use a time delayed explosion to destroy the array. The only weapons in Voyager’s possession powerful enough to destroy the array were tricobalt devices, which (and this requires a bit a of a leap) may need to be fired at the target in order to detonate.
      Another possible explanation is that Janeway had to be absolutely sure that it was fully destroyed, which she couldn’t be if she wasn’t around to do the destroying.

  • @matthewwestcott9138
    @matthewwestcott9138 Před 3 lety +1

    I've always wondered as well, but one that leaps out is that if the Dominion had not allowed them use of the wormhole, they'd now have been almost exactly where they'd started, distance wise, from earth. In presumably unfriendly territory. 55 vs 70 years isn't a great discount if there's a decent chance you'd need to add on 70 to the 55 anyway.

  • @DocFunkenstein
    @DocFunkenstein Před 10 dny +1

    More correctly, why did it take Voyager that long anyway? The original series Enterprise managed to get to the center of the galaxy quickly enough, and we know they tried to break through the edge of it at least once. Also Earth is located squarely between the Alpha and Beta Quadrants (for some reason), and they seem to be able to go anywhere in either of those quadrants pretty quicky, too.
    The galaxy being so big it would take half a dozen decades+ to span seemed to really only crop up in Voyager...

  • @detoxfidelity
    @detoxfidelity Před 4 lety +81

    Thank goodness they went the way they did. If they hadn’t been there to help, Species 8472 would have killed the Borg and like half the galaxy.

    • @2bituser569
      @2bituser569 Před 4 lety +19

      I don’t think 8472 was after humanity till Janeway went in league with the Borg

    • @tingley428
      @tingley428 Před 4 lety +18

      More importantly the series would've been cancelled early if not for the addition of a ridiculously hot Borg to the cast if not for that storyline

    • @patricklyons794
      @patricklyons794 Před 4 lety +13

      @@tingley428 Seven of Nine 😍😍😍. Jeri Ryan is 50, and still looks hot in her pictures from Picard.

    • @tingley428
      @tingley428 Před 4 lety +5

      @@patricklyons794 dude I'm 48 & still sexy af... No I'm not sending you pix, just sayin don't age-shame the poor girl hahahahaa
      Also tho she's a Brazilianare so she can afford to spend the time to look good, have trainers & cooks etc

    • @3Rayfire
      @3Rayfire Před 4 lety +4

      @@Endeavour255 Species 8472 never seemed to distinguish between species in the Galaxy. Which makes sense as they were the only life form in their universe. They were also very intolerant from what we saw initially.

  • @adammclaughlin845
    @adammclaughlin845 Před 4 lety +4

    When you mention Voyager approaching Romulan space, it is directly stated in a later episode of Voyager that the Romulans "have been interested in Voyager for years". They would have known it was coming.

  • @bobbybob713
    @bobbybob713 Před 3 lety +1

    They wouldn't because they would have ran into the Dominion. The same time that Voyager got stranded into the Delta Quadrant, Deep Space Nine, starfleet, Klingons, etc were at war with the Dominion. I remember this one voyager episode when Chakotay told Be Lana Torres that there were no more Maquis left because the Cardassians got weapons, help from aliens that came from the Gamma Quadrant(Jem Hadar, Vorta, Dominion). There was even a Deep Space Nine episode that there was only one Maquis left. They all were wiped out.

  • @alexbruce9499
    @alexbruce9499 Před 13 dny

    Honestly, until watching this video I'd thought that heading to the Bajoran Wormhole WAS Voyager's planned route home. I expect it was mentioned at some point early on in the show that they weren't going that route, but if so then it's fundamentally immaterial to the plot and you can pretty much watch it under the presumption that it is what they're going to do. It could actually have made for a decently tense final season arc though if the last leg of the journey was creeping through Dominion territory trying to get to the wormhole entrance safely.
    What always baffled me more was why they were going a route that would take them through a region that was either known or strongly believed to be Borg territory.

  • @Norvo82
    @Norvo82 Před 4 lety +54

    I'd like to think they'd have encountered an Iconian gateway or two on their way through the Gamma Quadrant. That would have been the ultimate shortcut to look for, really.

    • @Shapes_Quality_Control
      @Shapes_Quality_Control Před 4 lety

      Jef Willemsen Assuming Iconian security features don’t force a self destruct and they are able to work a hopefully functioning example of their sub space tech if they find one at all. It’s a long shot.

    • @xR0N1Nx
      @xR0N1Nx Před 4 lety

      Voyager was in the delta quadrant not the gamma quadrant

    • @travissmith2848
      @travissmith2848 Před 4 lety +6

      @@xR0N1Nx Ummm.... the whole video is a hypothetical about making for Gamma and the wormhole.......

    • @zach99998
      @zach99998 Před 4 lety +1

      @@xR0N1Nx dude lol

    • @AsbestosMuffins
      @AsbestosMuffins Před 4 lety

      problem was the single gateway discovered was person sized and also blew up every starship that tried visiting it. Also the federation probably classified that to way above new captain paygrade, though they did tell her about Omega so who knows.

  • @schwarzerritter5724
    @schwarzerritter5724 Před 4 lety +17

    Just by the information given in the show itself, we do not know for certain the Bajoran wormhole is closer. Although it would have been nice of the show to discuss it.
    But even if we assume it was:
    -Heading for the alpha quadrant means they had more navigation data than for the mostly unexplored gamma quadrant.
    -There is no guarantee the wormhole was still there when they reach it.
    -The wormhole could be controlled by a hostile power when they reach it. Since their target is a single point, they can't go around enemy space.
    -The other side of the wormhole could be controlled by a hostile power when they reach it. It would be quite a nasty surprise to be greeted by a minefield on the other side. I remind you the exit of the wormhole really was mined at some point.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 4 lety

      Would be something interesting to point out somewhere in ep 2-5 while they were still close to where they landed.
      Like if some onboard prefer that route for whatever reasons and they have a big talk and Janeway questions if she should have a vote on it (since the crew will be there for most of their lives instead of a few weeks like promised)
      It could get an interesting moral showdown that ends with her staying with Starfleet principles etc.

    • @joelellis7035
      @joelellis7035 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah, what if they did manage through some plot magic to get through to the Bajoran Wormhole while it was still mined.
      "Yay! We just made it back to DS-9!"
      "Captain! Sensors are detecting numerous small objects decloaking and heading towards us"
      "Ships?"
      "They're too small! It's like they're . . . "
      "MINES!"
      *BOOM*

    • @CrossRoadsOfTime
      @CrossRoadsOfTime Před 4 lety

      Also I do believe they had mentioned in at least one DS9 episode that while they knew exactly where one end of it was. The other end moves about, either that turned into a plot hole latter or the Dominion developed a way to track it's movements so they could make more stable use of it when they started their war.

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Před 4 lety

      @@joelellis7035 They'd have run into the Dominion fleet before then. Of course, by the time they actually got there, the war would've been over and the mines would've been gone anyway.

    • @InfernosReaper
      @InfernosReaper Před 4 lety

      @@CrossRoadsOfTime If it did that, then the wormhole would've been utterly useless for the exploration and trade that was its primary use before the Dominion war....

  • @SaturnDreamingofMercury

    The DS9 episode "The Ship" has Sisko directly stating that the officers who died on the mission did so "50,000 light-years" from home. That's 25,000 LYs closer than Voyager's starting point, which is precisely a difference that could indeed make the two potential routes roughly equidistant (in which case why _not_ take the route that goes straight home?). Even by just halving the difference, the Wormhole's Gamma Quadrant point need be only 12,500 LYs closer to Federation space if the Caretaker pulled Voyager the other 12,500 LYs deeper into the Delta Quadrant _relative to that same point,_ thus still making Voyager's journey to the Wormhole of equivalent distance, nevermind with the possibility of additional aforementioned 50,000 LYs of travel if the Wormhole (say) collapses or destabilizes over the course of the initial 70K LY-plus excursion. In short, you hardly have to shatter any star-charts to make it work.
    (Though the common depiction of the Dominion being on the distant end of the Gamma Quadrant cannot be correct, if we otherwise take it as authoritative that Earth hangs inside the Alpha Quadrant's border with the Beta Quadrant, about 15,000 LYs or so inside galactic edge; given drawing a 50k to 55K LY arc leaves you shy of even covering _half_ the GQ's space.)

  • @Bob-gy6ud
    @Bob-gy6ud Před 4 dny

    Interesting theoretical question aside from the writers wanting to develop a stand alone story, I’ll comment on my life experiences in/out of war.
    When you suddenly are thrust into a sudden unexpected catastrophic change your mind goes into linear thought process for most direct route of survival. Once mind has restored orderly/calm thinking rational debate on decisions can be made. There is no time table on this it can be seconds, minutes, hours, days and so on. In her case with so many lives in her hands hard impossible decisions have to be made in seconds. So she’s trapped in linear thought in fight or flight. So immediate gamma quadrant wormhole realistically wouldn’t be an immediate thought. Then add in Federation exploration mindset of “seek out and discover” her route makes perfect sense as no Federation was actively or planning on Delta exploration whereas it was just opening Gamma. Therefore Janeway was being Janeway and doing it her way to be first and to prove her way was right. To feed her DaVinchi complex

  • @ashe4711
    @ashe4711 Před 4 lety +55

    The wormhole had only been discovered for a year ish, and before that point wormholes were not stable, so they wouldn't bank on that chance.

    • @admiralbob77
      @admiralbob77 Před 4 lety +4

      Exactly, and why this video is utterly unnecessary. No one would take that chance to save a few years on a generational trip, when there's a good chance by the time you got there that there'd be nothing there for you.

    • @paulminshall8793
      @paulminshall8793 Před 4 lety

      Plus the Dominion threat made it highly likely that the Federation would try and collapse the wormhole. Starfleet captains would have been aware of this scenario.

    • @seraphina985
      @seraphina985 Před 4 lety

      Also, it was stable for now and perhaps for much of the Bajoran's recorded history which in cosmological time scale is all of 5 seconds in a human time scale. That is to say that it would not make much sense to assume that a few thousand years of stability was not, in fact, a mere short term anomaly in the timeline of an object that for all anyone knows could have been around for billions of years perhaps even dating back to the early universe who knows?

  • @ritzlart
    @ritzlart Před 4 lety +10

    I've wondered this as well and personally concluded that it was due to the uncertainty of the wormhole being there or even if DS9 would be under federation control in the 50 years or so it takes to get there.
    However, now that the Dominion has been defeated I assume that future slipstream journeys to the delta quadrant would launch from DS9 and use the wormhole.

  • @redonslaught3019
    @redonslaught3019 Před 2 lety +1

    It would of been almost poetic, both leaving and returning to DS9 it's sister show... Also would allow for some crossover with stories and props...
    But I'd guess they didn't use it as they wouldn't have had much of the Gamma charted, as exploration into the wormhole had just began when Voyager was lost.
    Not sure if they knew the exact point in the Gamma Quadrant where the wormhole opened, or that it was somewhere out in the unknown sector.
    So it would be more logical if you will, to head for the Alpha and Beta Quadrants of space as you know sooner or later you'll find something you'd recognized...
    If they did go for it, what would they look for to find it? Seems like no one used it in the Gamma Quadrant, and if no one used it did anyone know of it?
    More likely than not is they'd fly no where near or right past it's small system and never know any better... Starfleet would have much on that side to find either...
    Heck Voyager may of even sided with the Dominion, not knowing any better. Who would intentionally keep them away from the system and study their ship...

  • @Colin-xv3bc
    @Colin-xv3bc Před 3 lety +1

    Because voyager was happening during the time of TNG(The next generation) it encounters the borg, that is discovered and collapses during TNG. The collapse is mentioned during the arc where data’s brother rules over the borg that he found, they said that the entire borg collective collapsed when they introduced individuality.
    But that presents a problem because of the maqui on the ship. The maqui didn’t exist until DS9, after the destruction of the enterprise D and, therefore the collapse of the borg collective.