30 Years Ago, One 'Star Trek' Game Accomplished The Impossible

   

When Star Trek: The Next Generation was at its peak in the early 1990s, it wasn’t uncommon for the Boomer Trekkies from the 1960s and 1970s to complain. Kirk vs. Picard debates were all too common back then, with one of the most common complaints being that the Enterprise-D crew sat around and talked way more than the classic crew ever did. How can you hope to have a great action-adventure sci-fi story if people are discussing the minutia of alien artifacts or how to disrupt a tractor beam? Well, it turns out, not only did the contemplative and talky nature of TNG make it a wonderful show, but in 1995, these defining narrative features also made it a wonderful game.

On June 30, 1995, developer Spectrum HoloByte released the game Star Trek: The Next Generation — A Final Unity for DOS and Mac platforms of the time. This was a full year after The Next Generation aired its last episode, “All Good Things...” and almost a year after the first feature film, Generations, was in theaters. So, at the time, A Final Unity represented a kind of instant nostalgia for TNG fans, who were rewarded with a kind of Valentine to the fandom. A Final Unity features the entire TNG cast reprising their voice roles throughout the game, which isn’t just for wonky cut-scenes, but also every aspect of gameplay.

Gameplay from 'A Final Unity.'

A Final Unity had the player making nealry every major decision in the story.

Paramount/Spectrum HoloByte

Through patient and deliberate gameplay, A Final Unity achieves something that shouldn’t really even be possible in a video game, and certainly not 30 years ago. It actually recreates the feeling of living inside an episode of TNG, complete with pacing that feels almost intentionally slow at times. Very often, as Captain Picard, the player will need to talk to all members of the bridge crew to get their advice and input.

These decisions, as well as calling Starfleet and having long chats with exiled alien scientists, are the meat and potatoes of the game. A Final Unity knows that good Star Trek stories come chatting a lot on the bridge of the Enterprise before springing into action. Yes, you tango with Garidian Warbird (a sort of faux-Romulan ship) in the early moments of the game, but you can mostly delegate the phasering and destruction to Worf. The advice you get from Worf, Riker, or Troi is all more interesting and more fun than any pew-pew action.

The story of A Final Unity had input from Naren Shankar, who wrote for The Next Generation, and at the time the game came out, had also written for Deep Space Nine and Voyager. In the 21st century, science fiction fans probably think of Shankar as the showrunner of The Expanse, and some of the interstellar mystery in A Final Unity isn’t totally out of place with that series at all. But, more than anything, A Final Unity does feel like a very long, legitimate, and lost episode of The Next Generation.

Today, Star Trek fans don’t have anything near this immersive, nor authentic. The contemporary mobile game Star Trek Fleet Command is all about blowing up other starships, while the more peaceful Star Trek Timelines allows you to roleplay various missions, but (with the exception of John de Lancie) has little new bespoke dialogue from Star Trek actors. Playing A Final Unity online now is possible, including sites like Freebie Games. Once you start replaying the game, you’ll instantly be sucked into the story, assuming you have even a passing intersting in The Next Generation.

So not only does A Final Unity hold up extremely well after thirty years, it also represents something that tie-in video games have seemingly lost. In 1995, it was possible to have a slow-paced, dialogue-heavy, point-and-click game. The slowness was a feature, not a bug, and if a new developer were to make a modern Star Trek game, A Final Unity is the gold-pressed latinum standard, for now, and maybe, always.

 
Minh An -
The Latest

30 Years Ago, One 'Star Trek' Game Accomplished The Impossible

Uncategory -7 giờ

When Star Trek: The Next Generation was at its peak in the early 1990s, it wasn’t uncommon for the Boomer Trekkies from the 1960s and 1970s to complain. Kirk vs. Picard debates were all too common back then, with one of the ...

Kim “D” DePaola Shares Why Melissa and Joe Gorga Skipped Teresa Giudice’s Wedding as Kim Claims It “Backfired” on Them and Suggests They Went Against Andy Cohen’s Wishes

Uncategory -7 giờ

Kim “D” DePaola shared why Melissa Gorga and Joe Gorga skipped his sister Teresa Giudice’s wedding. Kim hinted that it “backfired” on the couple, and she suggested they went against Andy Cohen’s wishes. Credit: Instagram In August 2022, Melissa and Joe metaphorically held a middle finger to Teresa as ...

The Valley Fans Launch Petition to Get Jax Taylor Fired From Show as Report Suggests Bravo Could Be Held Liable for His Actions

Entertainment -7 giờ

The Valley, which is currently in its sophomore season, has become one of the most controversial shows on Bravo. Jax Taylor is at the center of this online discourse. Now, a new petition has been launched against the reality TV bad boy, ...

Sally Makes an Unexpected Demand — and Damian Puts Audra on Notice

Uncategory -7 giờ

Monday, June 30, 2025: Today on The Young and the Restless, Diane warns Kyle, Lily confronts Amanda, and Chance fills Devon and Abby in on Cane’s killer theory. On the train car in France, Amanda tells Lily she’s sorry about how all of ...

‘Bachelor’ Kelsey Anderson Wants Rap Star To Officiate Wedding

Uncategory -7 giờ

Joey Graziadei handed out his final rose to Kelsey Anderson on Season 28 of The Bachelor. The last rose also came with an engagement ring. Fans want them to get married soon, but the young couple isn’t in a rush. They ...