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The World’s Hardest ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’ Quiz

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The World’s Hardest ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’ Quiz

By Andy Greene

Andy Greene

View all posts by Andy Greene March 28, 2026 LOS ANGELES - APRIL 28: Jonathan Frakes as Commander William T. Riker, Patrick Stewart as Captain Jean-Luc Picard and Michael Dorn as Lieutenant Worf in the STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION episode, "Hollow Pursuits." Original air date, April 28, 1990. Season 3, episode 21. Image is a screen grab. (CBS via Getty Images) Jonathan Frakes, Patrick Stewart, and Michael Dorn (from left) in the "Star Trek: The Next Generation." CBS via Getty Images

Before it started airing in 1987, the very idea of Star Trek: The Next Generation was sacrilegious to most Trekkies. For two decades, Captain Kirk’s Enterprise crew simply was Star Trek. That was true in the endless reruns of the original show, the cartoon series, the novels, and the big-screen movies. But Stark Trek creator Gene Roddenberry felt there was a market for a new show as long as no attempt was made to replicate the original characters or their unique dynamics. Things got off to a very rocky start in the first season due to painfully bad episodes like “Code of Honor,” which deals with matters of race in, let’s just say, unfortunate ways. But the show slowly found its rhythm in Season Two (despite the ill-fated decision to temporarily jettison Dr. Crusher), and became truly brilliant by Season Three. (And yes, Season Seven had jump-the-shark moments: Worf and Troi shouldn’t have dated. It felt very much like Joey and Rachel dating near the end of Friends — icky and wrong.) As we approach the 40-year anniversary of TNG, here’s a quiz designed to test even the most hardcore fan’s knowledge.

Take Our Survey

Zero to 30 percent correct: Set your television to Paramount+. Engage! You need to take a seven-season journey through Star Trek: The Next Generation. Be warned: It’s very inconsistent, and the lows can be painfully low. (We won’t judge you if you skip the Season Seven episode “Masks.” And would it have killed them to let Geordi have a romantic victory at least once? Even Data gets laid.) But the highs are amazingly high. If you don’t cry at the end of “The Inner Light,” you were born without an emotion chip.

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