Season 7 is sort of a mixed bag. It has some good and many very mediocre episodes. Worse than 6 and 5 (of course it's better than one, two, three). Thank Shmullus and Seven - they are still strong enough characters to keep the show alive. Not even sure whether the stories' quality in season 7 are worse, but the "Seven effect" wears off. And the writers are incapable to come up with new stories. Thus they go back to old recipes: Borg, Hirogen warriors, dangerous holograms, the Doctor's rights and his limitations and so forth. These recurring patterns become very dull very quickly. The finale makes clear how bad this show is to create a coherent overarching storyline: it's really as if they got - on one random day - the call from the studio that the show won't be renewed for another season. Thus they had to came up with a end quickly: not much prepared us for how this show ended. They basically threw everything at us what they got (Borg, time travel and whatnot) just to tell a half-decent final episode. It's not even a bad last double feature but it feels isolated from what happened in this season before.
Funniest episodes: Body and Soul, Author, Author. Most ambitious concept: Shattered. Most uplifting: The Void. Not great but my guilty pleasures: Inside man and Q2. Most disappointing: Nightingale, Workforce and Drive. Season premiere and season finale are also quite entertaining if you classify them as pure action episodes.
Shout by Dann MichalskiBlockedParentSpoilers2020-06-15T00:00:02Z— updated 2020-07-14T14:06:02Z
Voyager’s journey comes to an end in the seventh and final season of Star Trek: Voyager. The show returns to the well one last time, exploring the usual themes of Seven’s reclaiming of her humanity, Q’s meddling with Janeway, The Doctor’s civil rights, and the Borg. Additionally, there’s a continuing story arc of Paris and Torres having a child and another TNG crossover episode with Marina Sirtis and Dwight Schultz. And Alice Krige, the original Borg Queen from Star Trek: First Contact, reprises her role for the series finale. However, the finale is kind of a mess, throwing in time-travel, the Borg, and romance; and while it can be entertaining and exciting at times, it’s a disappointing conclusions to the series. Yet, the finale notwithstanding, Star Trek: Voyager delivers a solid seventh season full of thought-provoking and thrilling adventures.