Even when new Star Trek shows don't share a name with their central starship, the ships in question are still hugely important. Star Trek's ships are characters' homes-away-from-home as they explore the galaxy, and they are obviously deeply beloved by their crews. Since 2017, Star Trek has given 12 new starships screen time, showing both the exteriors and interiors of the ships in question. And a lot of these new Star Trek vessels are instantly iconic.
12San’s Ship
Star Trek: Section 31
San (James Hiroyuki Liao) is one of the most interesting characters Star Trek: Section 31 introduced. His long personal history with Emperor Philippa Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh) reveals more about the culture and politics of the Terran Empire in the Mirror Universe. But San's ship, on the other hand, is a lot less interesting. For the most part, it is impossible to evaluate this as a ship, because we only ever really see the bridge, and that bridge seems to be mostly made up of empty space
11USS Stargazer
Star Trek: Picard Seasons 2 and 3
Star Trek: Picard has done a lot to show how Starfleet and the Federation have progressed in the years since Star Trek: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine. Part of that progression, of course, is the technological progression of Starfleet vessels, and the USS Stargazer is the pinnacle of that progress, combining Borg and Starfleet technology. But on a purely aesthetic level, the four nacelles just look a little clunky. There is a classic Star Trek silhouette, and, while the Stargazer does look menacing, it doesn't look quite as elegant as other ships.
Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) was the captain of an older USS Stargazer for 22 years, until it was lost in the Battle of Maxia.
10Garbage Scow
Star Trek: Section 31
There is not very much to say about the garbage scow in Star Trek: Section 31. It makes for an interesting setting for Emperor Georgiou and the rest of the team from Section 31 - since it's so broken down that doing anything on the ship requires ingenuity. But, as a Star Trek ship, the garbage scow feels generic. It mostly looks like a bunch of boxes from the outside, and a tangle of dirty hallways inside, so there is very little to distinguish the garbage scow from any other science fiction vessel.
Star Trek: Section 31 overcame negative reviews to score impressive numbers in its opening week, lending hope to more streaming movies.
Section 31's garbage scow does have at least one major redeeming quality: it gives the characters from Star Trek: Section 31 their best opportunity to act like a Starfleet crew. They have to make emergency repairs and do creative feats of engineering that feel right at home with Lt. Montgomery "Scotty" Scott's (James Doohan) repairs in Star Trek: The Original Series. So, even if the garbage scow itself isn't that interesting, it facilitates some of the best moments in Section 31.
Star Trek: Prodigy Seasons 1 And 2
Technologically, the USS Protostar is one of the most innovative starship designs in Star Trek. The idea of a protostar drive that would allow Starfleet to cross light years in mere moments seems like it should revolutionize space travel in Star Trek. For most of Star Trek: Prodigy, the USS Protostar is the primary ship that Dal R'El (Brett Gray) and the rest of the characters from Star Trek: Prodigy treat as their home in space.
Captain Chakotay (Robert Beltran) was the original captain of the USS Protostar before a temporal anomaly crashed the ship and stranded him in the future.
There is a lot of good stuff to say about the USS Protostar, but the vessel does have one unfortunate and serious drawback: the Living Construct. The Vau N'Akat's Living Construct was essentially the ultimate computer virus that could turn any Starfleet computer system against itself, leading to the destruction of many starships. Since the Living Construct was ultimately inseparable from the USS Protostar - the device could only be defeated by destroying the Protostar - it ultimately proved a pretty severe drawback to an otherwise very cool vessel.
8USS Prodigy
Star Trek: Prodigy Season 2
The USS Prodigy and the USS Protostar are the same class of ship, but the Prodigy has the serious advantage of not housing the Living Construct. Although the USS Prodigy does not have very much screentime, it’s nevertheless an upgrade: the best of what Starfleet's Protostar Class of starships has to offer. The design of the whole Protostar Class is an homage to Admiral Kathryn Janeway's (Kate Mulgrew) original vessel, the USS Voyager. Protostar Class vessels also manage to add an additional nacelle to the ships' silhouettes without making the design seem overwrought or clunky.
Far from being "kid stuff", these episodes prove Star Trek: Prodigy is a masterful animated series with high stakes and great character development.
The only drawback for the USS Prodigy is that it is the last known starship of its kind. No other Protostar Class starships have been seen in Star Trek: Picard's 3 seasons, which take place about 15 years after Star Trek: Prodigy. If Star Trek: Prodigy gets a season 3, both the USS Prodigy and the entire Protostar Class would have had more of a chance to shine.
7La Sirena
Star Trek: Picard
At the start of Star Trek: Picard, Admiral Picard has distanced himself from Starfleet, so it makes sense that one of the most important starships in Picard is a non-Starfleet vessel. It is both deeply interesting and incredibly fun to spend a lot of time in a non-Starfleet starship. In most Star Trek shows, the only ships that get a lot of screen time are incredibly ordered and put-together Starfleet vessels, but the La Sirena is none of those things
The rough-around-the-edges qualities of La Sirena make it feel more like a home and less like a science lab. Indeed, Captain Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) was completely correct about the La Sirena when she said "A few dents look good on her.” But the fact that La Sirena is not a Starfleet vessel is also the ship's greatest downside. Because it is not a Starfleet ship, La Sirena feels less uniquely like a Star Trek ship, and from its aesthetics, it seems like it could just as easily fit in with Star Wars or Battlestar Galactica.
6USS Dauntless
Star Trek: Prodigy Season 1
"Hope and Fear" is an episode in Star Trek: Voyager season 4 where an alien called Arturis (Ray Wise) attempts to trick the then-Captain Janeway with a fake Federation ship he calls the USS Dauntless. That Dauntless runs on a slipstream drive, allowing it to go faster than warp, and the Dauntless in Star Trek: Prodigy runs on that same technology. Prodigy's Dauntless even looks like the Dauntless Arturis designed. Since Star Trek: Prodigy is a sequel to Star Trek: Voyager, seeing subtle references to the original show always seems like a love letter to Star Trek from decades past.
5USS Voyager-A
Star Trek: Prodigy Season 2
And, after Admiral Janeway stepped down as the commanding officer of the USS Voyager-A, Captain Chakotay was given the command in a true Star Trek full-circle moment. And the Voyager legacy goes even further. In Star Trek: Picard, Commander Raffaela Musiker (Michelle Hurd) runs a search on La Sirena that reveals that the USS Voyager-B was an active Starfleet vessel in 2401. Through the USS Voyager-A, Star Trek: Prodigy gives a final salute to Star Trek: Voyager.
4USS Discovery
Star Trek: Discovery
The USS Discovery is just an iconic Starfleet vessel in any time period.
With every iteration of Star Trek, ship designs have gotten more detailed as special effects technology has improved, and the USS Discovery is the perfect aesthetic continuation of that trend. The only potential complicating factor of the Discovery is its signature spore drive. Depending on personal taste, the Discovery's spore drive can either feel like awesome futuristic technology or a little too much like magic. But ultimately, the USS Discovery is just an iconic Starfleet vessel in any time period.
3USS Cerritos
Star Trek: Lower Decks
The only potential drawback to the USS Cerritos is that its design seems like it would be a little impractical. The only way to get to the warp core of the Cerritos is through the nacelles, and given how prone those are to overloading, it really seems like there should be a central pillar connecting the saucer to the core. Nevertheless, Lieutenant Sam Rutherford (Eugene Cordero) and the ship's Engineering team are more than capable of keeping the Cerritos running, so the design is working well enough.
2USS Titan-A / USS Enterprise-G
Star Trek: Picard Season 3
Although the Titan took up the name "Enterprise," it is unclear whether or not it also became the flaghsip of the Federation like Admiral Picard's Enterprise had been.
The Neo-Constitution Class USS Titan-A / Enterprise-G really does look like the ideal Star Trek ship. It has a very similar design to the Enterprise NCC Constitution Class from Star Trek: The Original Series, so every time it appears onscreen, the Titan carries a wave of Star Trek nostalgia. The Titan went on some incredible adventures in Star Trek: Picard, such that by the time it is renamed "Enterprise," it seems to have absolutely earned the iconic moniker and legacy of Star Trek's most famous ships.
1USS Enterprise
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
Of course, there is no USS Enterprise quite like the Enterprise that Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner) commanded in Star Trek: The Original Series. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is set several years before The Original Series, and it shows a slightly earlier version of that same classic ship. What really makes the Enterprise from Strange New Worlds so compelling and cool is the incredible job that the show's creative team has done with the ship's set design and overall aesthetic.Strange New Worlds' Starship Enterprise manages to take contemporary television budgets, special effects, and technology to make a modern-looking ship that still fundamentally looks, and more importantly feels, like the Enterprise from Star Trek: The Original Series. Ultimately, the USS Enterprise is both aesthetically cool in its own right and the pinnacle of Star Trek's legacy in the streaming era.