Interestingly, Trek Core got up close and personal with Seven’s outfit from Picard at NYCC, and there’s a lot of little Romulan-esque details too it, from the avian-themed zipper to the brown and green hues that could seemingly indicate that Seven is working with the Romulans—or a faction of Romulans that isn’t too keen on whatever the ones on the Borg Cube are up to—to investigate.

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Look. I’m not even going to explain what’s going on here. Just...rejoice in it. Rejoice in its splendor. Resistance is futile, indeed.

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That moment of Star Trek: Voyager fanservice smash-cuts into a moment of profound The Next Generation fanservice. A young boy calls for his busy father to leave their ramshackle cabin and greet a guest: Picard himself. The father turns...

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...and facing the arrived Picard is Number One himself. Not the dog this time, but former Enterprise first officer William T. Riker (Jonathan Frakes). “Hello, Will,” Picard says to a very surprised-looking Riker.

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That’s not the only familiar face however, as outside the Riker residence we see Picard embrace Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis). Frakes and Sirtis’ return for the series were confirmed at San Diego Comic Con too, but this is our first time since Enterprise’s controversial final episode that we’ve seen them again. It’s been too long, for either or us Jean-Luc it seems.

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Another rapid-fire set of shots tease some peculiar moments. We get to see more of Rio’s ship battling the Bird-of-Prey, someone dribbling a soccer ball aboard Rio’s ship, a mysterious conclave of black-robed individuals circling a suddenly-activated circle of light on the ground, and Hugh leading both Dahj and Picard through the bowels of what is presumably the Borg Cube.

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“We all have a story...” Picard’s narrates, as we see a few more intriguing scattered shots—a triangular-card-game being played, Jurati and Rio getting romantic, and those same ships from Picard’s flashbacks, now with blue lighting, assaulting some kind of space station.

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“...that is waiting to be claimed,” Picard continues, as a few more shots flash by. A distressed Seven. A young girl at a rain-soaked window (maybe it’s a young, pre-assimilation Dahj?). Musiker, checking a phaser. And Dahj seemingly in agony as she’s horrifically burned. The Dahj shot is the most interesting, as, judging by her outfit, this is from her initial escape to Jean-Luc—in the background, you can see the steps she was fighting a bunch of mysterious masked soldiers on while Picard looked on in the original trailer. So maybe what’s happening here is some kind of violent disabling or transporter effect and she’s recaptured?

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Image for article titled Breaking Down the Old Friends and New Secrets of Star Trek: Picard's Latest Trailer

Anyway, one more shot of that classic Bird of Prey chasing Rio’s ship later, and we’re back outside the Riker household, as Jean-Luc and Will relax by the waterfront. “Thank you for not trying to talk me out of all this,” the good Captain says to his former Number One.

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“Believe me, I know better,” Riker retorts. Damn straight, Will.


While this latest look at Picard might be a little less dense than our first glimpse back in San Diego, it still gives us plenty of mysteries to ponder—we get to at least see more of what has happened to the Romulans in the time since Nemesis and the destruction of their Homeworld, but are also left with intriguing hints of what has become of the Federation itself in the time since Picard left service. Changes that, it seems, have inspired other familiar faces to join in him making their own paths beyond the uniforms of Starfleet. And that’s before we get into the mystery of what Soong Androids could have to do with all this...

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Not much longer till we get some answers, though: Star Trek: Picard hits CBS All Access starting January 23, 2020.


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