STAR TREK: STARFLEET ACADEMY
Review Scores (how we rate) Watch trailer →
Starfleet is rebuilding, and so is the Federation. This new chapter drops us into Starfleet Academy as a fresh class of recruits trains for a future that’s finally turning back toward exploration.
He Said / She Said
“I enjoyed being back in the Star Trek universe and feeling like it matters again.
The show nails that sense of optimism-meets-danger that classic Trek shows do so well, and the characters, especially Nahla and Caleb grabbed me fast. The world-building is confident without being overwhelming,
the pacing makes the first three episodes feel genuinely bingeable, and there’s a real sense that this is setting up something big without rushing past the emotional beats that make up the foundation of the show. It feels warm, exciting, and very ‘Trek’ in the best way. I don’t understand the poor reviews or complaining that I’m hearing about because I love it so far!
The only drawback for me is that it leans a little hard on familiarity with Discovery. If you didn’t fully watch that series (which I didn’t…it was my least fav of the franchise), there are moments where the show assumes you’re already caught up on the backstory,
which can make parts feel slightly out of reach. It’s not a deal-breaker, but a bit more onboard-the-viewer
context would’ve made the experience smoother for lapsed or selective Trekkies.”
“It’s interesting to watch how this show reflects current society. It’s very progressive, and that’s going to
land differently depending on the viewer. But for me, the bigger hurdle is that it doesn’t quite capture the
classic Trek feel (like The Next Generation or Deep Space Nine). It tackles similar themes, but in an
overly polished, high-school-drama packaging that makes it feel less believable.
If I push past that and treat it as its own thing, it’s definitely watchable (even bingeable) and I do want to
keep going. I’m hoping the show digs a bit deeper soon, because the setup is there… it just needs more weight.”
Critical reception (so far)
- Viewers seem split on the tone: some love the fresh, youthful angle; others miss the classic “Trek feel.”
- The ensemble and world-building are early standouts — especially the new species mix and Academy dynamics.
- Some reactions flag the glossy, “perfect-students” vibe as distracting or too teen-soap.
- Fans invested in modern Trek continuity appreciate the connective tissue — while lapsed viewers can feel a bit dropped in.
What it’s about
Set long after Discovery and “the Burn,” Starfleet is ready to shift from survival back to discovery, starting by reopening Starfleet Academy on Earth. A quirky new Chancellor, Nahla Ake, leads the first class into a future packed with politics, old wounds, and big-universe stakes, while one of the recruits, Caleb, arrives with brilliance, trust issues, and a personal mystery he can’t let go of.
Overall vibe
Hopeful rebuilding energy with a glossy, youth-forward vibe. Part Trek optimism, part teen drama, with humor and tension flickering underneath.
Episode-by-episode (1–3)
A confident “Welcome back to Star Trek” setup: Starfleet Academy reopens, Nahla Ake (a centuries old Human-Lanthanite hybrid who was around in Starfleet’s glory days) agrees to run the academy, and we meet a key cadet named Caleb who promises to be a challenging recruit who’s brilliant, guarded, and driven by something personal.
The world opens up with a mix of familiar and new tech, species, and a full cast of students as the series leans into Federation politics and re-integration tensions.
A competitive rivalry between the academy and the War college becomes clear with tensions between the two heating up.
Content warnings
- Violence
- Strong language
- Adult themes
- Medical emergency scenes
Who will love it / who should skip it
Will love it if:
- You want hopeful “rebuilding” Trek energy
- You like ensemble “school / training” shows
- You enjoy glossy sci-fi with humor + heart
- You’re into modern Trek continuity
Should probably skip if:
- You want classic, older-era Trek pacing + vibe
- Teen-drama packaging is an instant no
- You don’t want to feel “dropped in” without Discovery context
- You prefer darker, more grounded sci-fi