You don't have to play the good guys for the system to work, the same system is used for Dune - Adventures in the Imperium, and that's a setting about as morally grey as it gets. Even with Star Trek Adventures, there is the Klingon Core Rulebook if you want to be a bit more rowdy than your typical Starfleet officers. The Operations Division sourcebook has suggestions for playing as Section 31 as well.
Yeah. Some of them are a lot of fun, too.
Do people not like “Ferengi Love Songs”?
Yeah, most of my pins are from various podcasts.
I do have a couple vegan pins, and until it sadly fell off, I did have a COVID-19 Vaccinated pin designed to look like the Ninja Turtles logo. Those are the most political things I generally wear.
Who actually wears badges and pins in North America however unless they are usable in cosplay?
I have a bunch of pins on various bags. I don't like the Fansets ones that much, though.
I am of two minds.
On the one hand, some monetary recompense would make the prospect of rewatching that episode someone less objectionable.
However, the idea that anyone would be willing to part with their money for one of these lists makes me never want to do one again.
I wanted to leave him some dignity.
True, but I made the choice to only list successful incidents of CPR.
"Do it" is certainly something Janeway says a lot, but it isn't specifically her command to engage the warp drive, nor do I believe it was something that the writers room intended to be a phrase she put any thought into, but rather something they felt suited her character.
For that matter, I don't think Picard was intended to be a character that put any forethought into his *"Engage," and, "Make it so," catchphrases.
The idea that every character needs to have a "thing" irks me probably more than it should. Saru trying to come up with a phrase suited the character to an extent because he was anxious and trying to project a certain authority, and also he wasn't work on it on the bridge. I'll even forgive Captain Freeman her "Warp me!" because it's part of her character that she's trying to stand out and get more recognition. But here, when the characters are ostensibly on a rescue mission they felt was important enough to steal the Enterprise, they still take a pause to banter about the need for a "thing." Nah, this is easily the worst trope of modern Trek.
Older women love brooches, and Pelia is potentially the oldest woman.
I don't know if the base game is out of print -- I just checked a couple different stores, including GF9's web shop, and it looks like you can still get it -- but they did recently announce a Final Frontier collection coming out in 2025, which is going to include every previous expansion, and some new stuff, like the Gorn apparently, as well.