Episode 9:
-I didn't have much hope for the season finale, but the writers have taken a page from GoT season 8 and decided that the most "exciting" firefight in the series should take place in near-darkness. While thankfully not as dark as the Winterfell battle thank God, I couldn't stop laughing how the most advanced Borg mall cop squad had to rely on freakin' laser pointers to find their targets, which only had the effect of scaring their targets away. What, the Borg Queen forgot to give them night vision? The Borg eyepiece was described in the past as being capable of seeing most of the entire EM spectrum, surely the Queen could have had those nanoprobes she used to (partially) assimilate the mercenaries to at least give them IR vision, I mean the assimilation did alter their eyes for a moment.
-Also why did the Observer had a late 24th century Romulan disruptor rifle in 2024? It sure as hell didn't come from Rios' ship.
-"Janeway went to bat for me, threatened to resign"
You know that there are other ways to solve this issue without having to threaten to resign from your position, who writes this crap? For fucks sake, by "Nemesis", Janeway was promoted to not just an admiral, but to a very high ranking admiral, if she really wanted Seven to join Starfleet, she would have just snapped her fingers and it would have been done. People in military, politics or businesses don't end up high positions by lottery, they have friends and contacts in most if not every branch of the government and rely on their tacit approval and influence to get where they want to get. And such things have happened in OldTrek, so the Federation isn't that different from our modern day world.
-Ah yes, the hologram Elnor is just as dumb as his flesh and blood counterpart. Apparently using handguns in close quarter battle is not a good idea, but a long sword somehow is.
What, his programming couldn't have included point the gun at target and shoot? I guess Jurati must have thought of that scene from "Pulp Fiction" from Zed's shop.
-Why did Seven beamed those Borg soldiers into the bedrock near Picard? Why not... in space? Stargate Atlantis did it better with that human-form Replicator.
-So what condition was Picard's mom supposed to have? PTSD? Depression? Schizophrenia? BPD? Cause all she did was appear depressed and then she just offed herself. And where is Picard's brother? Nah, who cares.
-Oh and Borg-Jurati is now a thing and she just decided to leave. With their only mean of going back to the future. And they just let her go. OK...
I don't even know what to make of this episode. It's the second to last episode of the season and very little has changed significantly. Are they seriously gonna cram the rest of the plotlines in the final episode? Or are they gonna wrap it all in season 3? It's the season finale yet for some reason I feel like we're at episode 4. I get the sensation that the story barely progressed at all.