
Of all the recent reboots in the Star Trek universe, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds has quietly become my favorite. It just feels different. Itโs not playing it safe. This show actually leans into ideas that older series would have tiptoed around, and somehow makes them work. The teaser for season four drops that perfect line, โSpace is limitless in its beauty. And in its terror,โ and you immediately get the sense theyโre about to push things even further.
And yeah, theyโre doing a puppet episode. That alone tells you everything. Itโs like The Muppet Show wandered onto the bridge and no one stopped it. โPigs in Spaceโ going full Starfleet? Iโm all in.
At its core, the show still follows the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise under Captain Christopher Pike, played with steady, grounded charm by Anson Mount. Theyโre out there exploring the unknown, but what makes it stick is how personal everything feels. The missions hit, sure, but itโs the inner battles, the quiet moments, the connections between characters that carry it. Youโve got Spock and James T. Kirk continuing to evolve in ways that actually feel fresh, not just nostalgic callbacks.
Season four looks like itโs doubling down on that mix. Big, serious storytelling right alongside the weird and the slightly unhinged. Dinosaurs in space. Puppets. Existential dread. Somehow it all fits under the same banner.
Thereโs also that underlying weight now. With a fifth and final season already announced, this feels like the beginning of the end. That usually sharpens a show. Stakes get higher. Stories get tighter. Characters get pushed further.
Thatโs what makes this one stand out. Itโs bold in a way that feels earned. It respects what came before, but doesnโt get trapped by it. In a franchise built on exploration, this series is actually still exploring.

About the Author
Tony Medeiros is the founder and publisher of Sandbox World. For more than 20 years, he has written about pop culture, books, comics, movies, television, music, gaming, and the nostalgic moments that continue to shape fandom. His goal is simple: help readers discover something worth talking about.
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