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The final season opens with Sisko waiting for the Prophets to instruct him on what to do next after having returned to Earth a couple of months ago. When he receives one, he begins searching for the woman behind the face in the sand in his vision.
CRITICS OF "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Season 7"
PopMatters
Like the best of the Star Trek franchise, the show pushes viewers to consider the moral, ethical, and political questions surrounding foreign aid and nation-building.
Deep Space Nine, for all its Prophets and visions and prophecy, was always more interested in the complicated ways that people fit together than it was in god fights and prophecy.
It's an exciting and moving close to a series that still had so much life left in it. Major arcs are brought to an end and entirely new ones are begun, but the most important thing is that the show left on its own terms and in its own way
A welcome change of pace from the horrors of season seven's war arc, this episode was a brave study of post-traumatic stress and its devastating repercussions for an endearing character.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine is much better than The Next Generation and worthy your time. It is a surprisingly mature, complex, ambitious, and exciting Star Trek endeavor.
Simultaneously downbeat and optimistic in its refusal to bring the story to an end, there's something effortlessly fitting about the way that Trek's most challenging incarnation draws to a close.
Special effects during the extensive battle sequences, with fleets of starships attacking each other in outer space, are unprecedentedly complex for Star Trek.