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Captain Kirk
Captain James T. Kirk commanded the original U.S.S. Enterprise during its historic five-year mission. Charismatic and intensely driven, Kirk's penchant for "original thinking" made him one of Starfleet's greatest officers. During countless adventures into the unknown. Kirk always put the safety of his ship and crew first. |
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Spock
Science officer Spock, Captain Kirk's first officer, was indispensible to the success of the Starship Enterprise's adventures. Half human and half Vulcan, Spock's logical approach to problems — tempered by his latent humanity — made him a legend in his own time. |
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Dr. McCoy
Dr. Leonard H. McCoy, chief medical officer aboard the Enterprise, was a gifted physician who saved the lives of his two closest friends, Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock, on more than one occasion. McCoy's acute understanding of human nature often proved invaluable in his role as advisor to Kirk. |
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Scotty
Lt. Commander Montgomery Scott, the Enterprise's chief engineer, was one of the most resourceful starship engineers in all of Starfleet. Time and time again, Scotty improvised engineering miracles that saved the ship and crew from certain doom. |
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Lt. Uhura
Lt. Uhura served as communications officer aboard the Enterprise under the command of Captain Kirk. Intensely loyal to her ship and crewmates, Uhura was a reliable bridge officer who ably substituted at the helm whenever the need arose. |
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Lt. Sulu
Lt. Sulu, a skilled starship helmsman, was an integral member of Captain Kirk's bridge crew aboard the Enterprise. While the captain frequently tapped Sulu for landing party duties, Kirk also felt comfortable leaving his ship in Sulu's command whenever the need arose. |
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Ensign Chekov
Ensign Pavel Chekov served as navigator aboard the Enterprise under Captain Kirk's command. Despite his youth, the charismatic Chekov proved to be a reliable and proficient officer who could step in at the science station in Spock's absence. |
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Nurse Christine Chapel
Nurse Christine Chapel served aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise under Captain Kirk's command. Chapel was a capable assistant to Dr. McCoy during innumerable life-and-death medical emergencies, all while harboring an unrequited love for Mr. Spock. |
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Yeoman Janice Rand
Yeoman Janice Rand served as Captain Kirk's personal yeoman aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise in the early days of the starship's five-year mission. More than just a yeoman, the resourceful Rand joined several away missions to alien planets. |
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Captain Pike
Christopher Pike, first captain of the Starship Enterprise, commanded the legendary mission to the planet Talos IV. Captured by the Talosians, Pike fought the mentally-advanced aliens at every turn, eventually winning freedom for his ship and crew — and a life of happiness for crash survivor Vina. |
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The Keeper
As leader of the humanoids of Talos IV, the Keeper lured the Enterprise to its wasteland of a planet in hopes of starting a human colony there. The Keeper imprisoned Captain Pike and filled his mind with illusions, many of them painful, in an effort to achieve its goals. |
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Vina
Vina was the sole survivor of a ship that crashed on Talos IV. When the Talosians captured Captain Pike to be her mate, Vina did what she could to help Pike fight back, though it meant punishment for them both. She remained on Talos IV when the Enterprise departed. |
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Lt. Cmdr. Gary Mitchell
Contact with the galactic energy barrier transformed Gary Mitchell into a godlike being. Mitchell used his new extrasensory abilities to kill Lt. Kelso and threaten the entire Enterprise crew, Mitchell lost a battle to the death with Captain Kirk on planet Delta Vega. |
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Dr. Elizabeth Dehner
Dr. Elizabeth Dehner, a psychologist aboard the Enterprise, suffered the same mutations that turned Gary Mitchell into a godlike villain. Dehner, however, used her new extrasensory powers to help Captain Kirk defeat Mitchell. She gave her life in the line of duty. |
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Balok's Puppet
Balok's puppet, a menacing facade employed by the commander of the First Federation flagship Fesarius, appeared on the view screen of the Enterprise and vowed to destroy Captain Kirk's ship. Balok's attempt to intimidate Kirk ultimately failed, although the appearance of the puppet did succeed in unnerving the crew. |
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Evil Captain Kirk
A transporter malfunction created the "evil" Captain Kirk —physically identical but ruled by hostility, lust and violence. The evil Kirk swilled Saurian brandy, assaulted Yeoman Rand, and tried to take command of the ship before he was rejoined with the "good" Kirk. |
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M-113 Salt Creature
Nancy Crater was killed by the last surviving member of planet M-113's indigenous species. The creature took Nancy's form and that of several Enterprise crewmembers, whom it killed for the salt in their bodies. Dr. McCoy killed the creature as it was attacking Captain Kirk. |
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Robert Crater
Archeologist Robert Crater knew that the M-113 salt creature killed his wife, Nancy. Yet he allowed the creature to take her form and live with him. He even protected it when it began killing members of the Enterprise crew. In the end, Crater became another of its victims. |
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Charlie Evans
Charlie Evans was the sole survivor of a transport ship that crashed on Thasus. The Thasians gave Charlie extraordinary mental powers, which he used to destroy the vessel Antares. Charlie then tried to take over the Enterprise, but the Thasians intervened. |
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Romulan Commander
On a mission to test Federation defenses, the Romulan commander took his bird-of-prey across the Neutral Zone and obliterated three Federation outposts. He proved to be a formidable adversary in the battle with the Enterprise that followed, but in the end, he was outsmarted and defeated by Captain Kirk. |
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Ruk
Ruk was a sophisticated android built long ago by the Old Ones of Exo III. Possessing great physical strength, Ruk killed two of Captain Kirk's security men while helping Roger Korby hold Kirk captive. When Ruk rediscovered his survival instinct, Korby destroyed him. |
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Roger Korby
Dr. Roger Korby was a renowned medical archeologist who discovered an ancient android civilization on Exo III. He transferred his consciousness into an android body and planned to introduce android replicas into Federation society. Korby tried to replicate Captain Kirk, but the captain thwarted his efforts. |
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Tristan Adams
Dr. Tristan Adams took over the Tantalus V penal colony and nearly destroyed the mind of his associate, Simon Van Gelder, with a neural neutralizer. When Captain Kirk investigated, Adams subjected him to the device, too. Adams was killed when the neutralizer emptied his mind completely. |
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Dr. Helen Noel
Dr. Helen Noel, a member of Dr. McCoy's medical staff, possessed both psychiatric and penology experience. Dr. Noel accompanied Captain Kirk to the Tantalus penal colony, where she helped save Kirk from Dr. Adams and his deadly neural neutralizer. |
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Miri
When Captain Kirk met Miri, she had just reached puberty, which meant she didn't have long to live. Miri stood up to the other children, all of whom distrusted adults, and she helped Kirk's team find a cure to the virus that would have cut all their lives short. |
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Jahn
Jahn was one of the last survivors of the calamitous Life Prolongation Project. Antagonistic toward grown-ups, or "grups," Jahn orchestrated the children's interference with Kirk's landing party, nearly costing them all their lives, including his own. |
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Anton Karidian
Anton Karidian, formerly Kodos the Executioner, ordered the deaths of four thousand colonists during a food shortage on Tarsus IV. James Kirk was one of the survivors. Karidian faked his own death, only to be killed years later by his daughter aboard the Enterprise. |
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Lenore Karidian
Actress Lenore Karidian sought to protect her father from those who could identify him as Kodos the Executioner. When her itinerant company boarded the Enterprise, Lenore tried to eliminate the two remaining eyewitnesses: Captain Kirk and Lieutenant Kevin Riley. The mentally unstable woman succeeded only in killing her father. |
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Commissioner Ferris
Commissioner Ferris was single-mindedly focused on the delivery of medical supplies to Makus III. When the shuttlecraft Galileo was lost, Ferris was not sympathetic. He fretted over the delay and eventually forced Captain Kirk to abandon the search. Fortunately, most of the Galileo's crew was recovered. |
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Finney
Ben Finney, records officer aboard the Enterprise, blamed Captain Kirk for derailing his career over an incident aboard the Republic many years earlier. Seeking revenge, Finney faked his own death in a vain attemot to frame Kirk for murder. |
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Cogley
Samuel T. Cogley, attorney at law, mounted a brilliant and successful defense of Captain Kirk when Kirk faced a court-martial for the murder of Ben Finney, who had faked his own death. The unconventional Cogley loved books and shunned the use of computers whenever possible. |
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Finnegan
Captain Kirk's "own personal devil," Finnegan, was an upperclassman who tormented Kirk during his days at Starfleet Academy. A version of Finnegan on the Shore Leave Planet proved just as annoying to Kirk, prompting the captain to beat the tar out of his old nemesis. |
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Trelane
Trelane appeared to Captain Kirk's crew as a dashing human in 18th-century squire's garb, but he was actually a dangerous child from a race of non-corporeal life forms. Trelane kidnapped and toyed with several Enterprise crewmembers, earning a rebuke from his parents. |
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Gorn Captain
The Gorn captain laid waste to an Earth outpost on Cestus Ill, then fought Captain Kirk one-on-one on a desert planet. The Gorn's intelligence and superior strength made him a formidable foe. Kirk managed to win the fight, but he refused to kill the Gorn. |
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Lazarus
The time-traveler Lazarus came from the distant past. He pursued and fought with a version of himself from an antimatter universe, and their conflict threatened to destroy both universes, Captain Kirk trapped both versions of Lazarus in a negative magnetic corridor for the rest of time. |
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Marplon
Marplon, an official on Beta III, was a key member of the underground movement that opposed the will of Landru. Marplon prevented Kirk and Spock from being "absorbed," and he helped the Enterprise officers confront — and ultimately destroy — the Landru computer. |
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Landru
Landru, the sophisticated machine that ruled Beta III, enforced peace and bland civility by "absorbing" citizens into the collective "Body"— a process which robbed individuals of free will. Landru absorbed several Enterprise crewmembers before Captain Kirk induced it to self-destruct. |
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Anan 7
Planet Eminiar VII, led by Anan 7, was locked in a centuries-old war with neighboring Vendikar. When his computers declared the Enterprise a casualty, Anan 7 tried to force the crew to report to his planet for "disintegration." Captain Kirk compelled Anan 7 to make peace. |
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Khan Noonian Singh
The genetically engineered tyrant Khan Noonien Singh tried to take control of Earth in the Eugenics Wars. Awakened in his sleeper ship three centuries later, Khan tried to take over the Enterprise. Captain Kirk defeated Khan and left him to start a new life on Ceti Alpha V. |
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Marla McGivers
Lt. Marla McGivers was a historian aboard the Starship
Enterprise under Captain Kirk's command. Fascinated by strong, forceful leaders, McGivers fell for Khan Noonien Singh and helped him try to seize the Enterprise. Once defeated, she accented isolation with Khan on Ceti Alpha V. |
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Kor
Klingon commander Kor invaded the planet Organia and became its military governor. A ruthless and shrewd warrior, Kor was eager to wage war with Captain Kirk and the Federation. He was gravely disappointed when the all-powerful Organians stopped the hostilities. |
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Edith Keeler
Edith Keeler, a social worker on Earth in 1930, was an outspoken and forward-thinking pacifist. Captain Kirk met Edith on a mission to restore Earth's timeline. Ultimately Kirk had to allow Edith to die in a traffic accident, even though he'd fallen in love with her. |
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Sylvia
Sylvia took Captain Kirk's landing party captive on Pyris VII. A telepathic shape-shifter, Sylvia developed a dangerous thirst for human sensations. She plotted to destroy her companion, Korob, and Kirk, too, once the captain rejected her. Kirk stopped Sylvia by destroying her power-amplifying device. |
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Korob
Korob, along with his companion Sylvia, established an outoost on Pyris VII and captured Captain Kirk's landing party. Korob's intention was to study the Enterprise officers, using frightening images drawn from their minds. |
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Zefram Cochrane
Dr. Zefram Cochrane, inventor of warp drive, was a lonely man with nothing but the entity he called "The Companion" for company. When the creature brought him Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and Commissioner Hedford, Cochrane made the difficult decision to help the Enterprise officers escape. |
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Kras
Kras was a Klingon operative sent to Capella IV to gain permission for the Klingons to mine topaline there. Kras caused trouble for Captain Kirk while supporting Maab's revolt against his own leader. Kras then betrayed Maab and was killed for it. |
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Apollo
Worshipped as a god by Earth's ancient Greeks, Apollo demanded the same adulation from Captain Kirk's crew when they found him on Pollux IV. Capable of channeling powerful energy, Apollo nearly destroyed the landing party when they rejected him. In the end, he realized his time had passed. |
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Lt. Palamas
Lt. Carolyn Palamas, the Enterprise's archaeology and anthropology officer, found the Greek "god" Apollo fascinating, both professionally and personally. Still, when she was forced to choose between Apollo and her shipmates, Palamas spurned the alien, which helped earn the crew's freedom. |
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T'Pring
T'Pring may have telepathically bonded with Spock when they were children, but she did not want to marry a legend. Cold and calculating, T'Pring rejected Spock at their wedding ceremony and forced him to fight Captain Kirk, which left her free to choose Stonn. |
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T'Pau
The Vulcan dignitary T'Pau officiated at the wedding of Spock and T'Pring. T'Pau did not approve of Spock bringing outsiders (Captain Kirk and Dr. McCoy), but she admitted that Spock "chose his friends well." T'Pau saved Kirk's career by telling Starfleet she had requested his visit to Vulcan. |
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Commodore Matt Decker
Commodore Matt Decker was a shattered man after losing his crew to the planet-killing weapon. In a last-ditch effort to destroy the machine, Decker commandeered an Enterprise shuttlecraft and rammed it down the planet killer's throat. His suicide mission led to the machine's destruction and saved countless lives. |
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Hengist/Jack the Ripper
Mr. Hengist, a city administrator on planet Argelius II, was possessed by the same evil life form — known as Jack the Ripper — that murdered dozens of women in 19th-century London. The entity thrived on terror and killed several people on Argelius II before it was beamed into space. |
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Nomad
Nomad was an early robotic space probe launched from Earth to search for life in the cosmos. it collided with an alien probe and obtained a new mission—to sterilize imperfect biological life forms. Nomad would have massacred the Enterprise crew, but Captain Kirk tricked it into destroying itself. |
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Dr. Janet Wallace
Dr. Janet Wallace, an endocrinologist, was once romantically involved with Captain Kirk. That made it especially hard for her to witness the effects of a rapid aging disease that afflicted Kirk and several others following a visit to Gamma Hydra IV. Wallace helped Dr. McCoy find the cure. |
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Arne Darvin
Arne Darvin was a Klingon operative who posed as Nilz Baris's assistant on Deep Space Station K-7. Surgically altered to look human Darvin poisoned a shipment of quadrotriticale as part of a plot by the Klingons to claim Sherman's Planet. Tribbles exposed the plot, and Darvin was arrested. |
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Koloth
Captain Koloth and his crew visited Deep Space Station K-7 ostensibly to claim shore leave rights. In reality, Koloth was part of a Klingon plot to poison the shipment of quadrotriticale destined for Sherman's Planet. The plot was discovered, and Koloth departed in disgrace. |
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Henoch
The disembodied entity Henoch was supposed to inhabit Spock's body only long enough to create an android body for himself. However, Henoch was seduced by his new physical existence and tried to keep Spock's body. Henoch's companion, Sargon, tricked him into vacating Spock, and Henoch was destroyed. |
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Merik
Captain R.M. Merrick, formerly of the S.S. Beagle, allowing [sic] himself and his crew to become integrated in the brutal society of planet 892-IV. Many of Merrick's crew died in gladiator-style games. However, Merrick redeemed himself by helping the Enterprise crew escape a similar fate. |
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Claudius
Claudius Marcus was the proconsul and Roman leader on planet 892-IV. Claudius tried to force Captain Kirk to surrender his crew for televised, gladiator-style arena games. Then he tried to have Kirk executed. Kirk and his crew escaped, but Claudius remained in power. |
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Thelev
During the Enterprise's mission to Babel, an Orion secret agent known as Thelev posed as a member of the Andorian delegation. Thelev's mission was to destroy the Enterprise and disrupt the Babel conference. When his mission failed Thelev committed suicide. |
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Nona
Nona was a Kahn-ut-tu woman and wife of Captain Kirk's friend, Tyree, on the planet Neural. Cunning and power-hungry, Nona urged her husband to wage war against rival villagers. When he refused, Nona stole Kirk's phaser and tried to join the enemy villagers, but they killed her. |
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Galt
Galt, master thrall on planet Triskelion, forced Captain Kirk and his landing party to fight in combat games for the gambling pleasure of the Providers. Galt controlled his charges by inflicting pain on them through special collars. Despite this treatment, Kirk won a new life of freedom for Galt. |
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Shahna
The drill thrall Shahna was born into a life of servitude and combat on Triskelion. Shahna fell in love with Captain Kirk while training him to fight for the Providers' entertainment. With a little help from Shahna. Kirk earned freedom for all the thralls. |
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Enisgn Garrovick
Ensign Garrovick, a security officer aboard the Enterprise under Captain Kirk, lost his father to a blood-draining cloud creature 11 vears earlier. Garrovick and Kirk hunted the creature and ultimately destroyed it on Tycho IV before it could reproduce. |
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Bella Oxmyx
As boss of the Northside Territory on Sigma lotia II, Bela Oxmyx wanted to wipe out the other bosses and take over the planet. When Captain Kirk refused to supply him with phasers, Oxmyx threatened to kill him. Oxmyx wound up as planetary leader, but under Federation control. |
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Jojo Krako
Crime boss Jojo Krako ran the Southside Territory on Sigma lotia II, which made him enemy #1 to rival boss Bela Oxmyx. Krako kidnapped Captain Kirk and demanded phasers, but Kirk had other ideas. Krako became Oxmyx's second in command, bringing an end to the violence. |
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Rojan
Rojan and his four Kelvan officers hijacked the Enterprise, turned most of the crew into inert solids, and modified the ship for a 300-year trip to their home world. Rojan was not used to strong human emotions, however, and ultimately he was compelled to return control of the Enterprise to Kirk. |
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Kelinda
Kelinda was a beautiful but cold Kelvan, part of an expedition to the Milky Way Galaxy. Kelinda and her companions adopted human form and hacked the Enterprise where Captain Kirk awakened human feelings of attraction within her. These new sensations contributed to the downfall of the Kelvan mission. |
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Dr. Ann Mulhall
Dr. Ann Mulhall was part of the Enterprise landing party that visited Sargon's planet. Mulhall bravely agreed to allow her body to house Thalassa, one of the non-corporeal entities there, so that Thalassa and her companions could build android bodies for themselves. |
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Stonn
Stonn wanted T'Pring as his consort, and she wanted Stonn. He stood back and watched as T'Pring set into motion their cunning plan to free her from her betrothal to Spock. It meant nothing to Stonn that Captain Kirk was nearly killed in the process. |
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Melakon
If Federation professor John Gill was the architect of the Nazi-style government on planet Ekos, Melakon was its de facto leader. Melakon adopted the worst aspects of Nazi philosophy and planned a genocidal invasion of neighboring planet Zeon. He killed Gill, and in return a Zeon immigrant killed Melakon. |
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Dr. Richard Daystrom
Dr. Richard Daystrom felt underappreciated as a great scientist. To correct that perception, he created the M-5 multitronic computer. Unfortunately, the M-5 was as unstable as Daystrom himself, the device jeopardized thousands of lives during a test run aboard the Enterprise. |
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Captain Ronald Tracey
Ronald Tracey, captain of the U.S.S. Exeter, violated the Prime Directive by helping the Kohms slaughter thousands of Yangs on planet Omega IV. He demanded a supply of fresh phasers from Captain Kirk, but Kirk managed to thwart Tracey's plans and arrest the once-respected starship captain. |
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Gary Seven
Gary Seven visited Earth in 1968 to make sure mankind did not destroy itself with nuclear weapons. The crew of the Enterprise misunderstood his mission at first and tried to stop him. but Seven eventually succeeded in sabotaging the nuclear missile. |
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Elaan
Elaan, the Dohlman of Elas, was revolted by the idea marrying the ruler of Troyius. She was arrogant and disrespectful aboard the Enterprise, prompting Captain Kirk to call her a "spoiled brat." In her fury, Elaan threw a knife at Kirk and just missed. |
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Harry Mudd
Using an illegal drug, notorious con artist Harcourt Fenton "Harry" Mudd tried to sell three women to lithium miners on Rigel XII. Later, Mudd tried to strand the Enterprise crew on a planet of androids. Kirk left Mudd there with several replicas of his shrill wife, Stella. |
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Romulan Commander
The Romulan commander who captured the Enterprise was as ambitious as she was beautiful. She wanted Spock to betray Starfleet and Captain Kirk, and for Spock to serve at her side. Realizing that she'd been tricked, the commander ordered Spock's execution and tried to destroy the Enterprise, but her efforts failed. |
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Gorgan
Gorgan lived in a cave on Triacus until the Starnes exploration party released him. Gorgan drove the adults to suicide and manipulated the children to join his quest to conquer the universe. Using the children, Gorgan tried to take control of the Enterprise, but Captain Kirk defeated him. |
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Kara
Kara was the leader of the Eymorgs on Sigma Draconis VI. Though simple-minded, Kara was able to steal Spock's brain with the help of a special helmet. She refused to return Spock's brain, as it was powering her society, but Dr. McCoy managed to perform the procedure. |
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Dr. Miranda Jones
Dr. Miranda Jones, a blind telepath, accompanied Medusan ambassador Kollos aboard the Enterprise for a trip to the ambassador's home world. When Spock lost his sanity from exposure to Kollos' true appearance, Dr. Jones put aside her jealousy of the Vulcan and used her telepathic ability to cure him. |
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Gem
Gem was a mute humanoid empath from a planet in the Minaran star system. When the Vians tested Gem's compassion by subjecting Captain Kirk and Dr. McCoy to physical torture, Gem overcame her fears and healed their injuries. She even offered her life to save McCoy's. |
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Vians
The Vians captured Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock and Dr. McCoy as part of a test to awaken the instinct for self-sacrifice in the empath Gem. Their cruel treatment of the Enterprise officers proved the Vians had lost the ability to feel the same benevolent emotions they sought from Gem. |
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Kang
Commander Kang blamed Captain Kirk for the deaths of 400 of his crew. Kang mounted a violent uprising aboard the Enterprise, pitting his remaining crew against Kirk's crew in a bloody battle for control. In reality. Kang was being manipulated by an entity that thrived on violence. |
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Alexander
Alexander served as jester and slave to his fellow Platonians because he lacked their psychokinetic powers. He helped the Enterprise landing party escape a similar fate, and he refused psionic powers for himself out of disgust for the Platonians' laziness. When the Enterprise crew departed, Alexander went with them. |
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Parmen
Parmen, leader of the psychokinetic Platonians, used his powers to torment and enslave others. Dr. McCoy rejected Parmen's demand that he remain on Platonius, prompting Parmen to use his psionic power to humiliate Captain Kirk. Mr. Spock, Lt. Uhura and Nurse Chapel. |
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Deela
As queen of the Scalosians, Deela needed fertile men to propagate her species. She led the plot to hilack the Enterprise, and she chose Captain Kirk for her own consort. Kirk and Spock thwarted Deela's plan and returned her people to Scalos. |
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Rael
Rael served his Scalosian queen, Deela, and helped her hijack the Enterprise. As Deela's lover, Rael did not appreciate the attraction he saw developing between the queen and Captain Kirk. In a jealous rage, Rael tried to kill Kirk. Fortunately, Deela intervened. |
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Losira
Losira was the commander of a Kalandan outpost who died long before the Enterprise came. Computer-generated replicas of Losira defended the outpost by killing members of the Enterprise crew with a single touch. When the landing party destroyed the computer, the Losira copies vanished. |
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Bele
Bele, from the planet Cheron, was the chief officer of the Commission on Political Traitors. Bele's racial bigotry led him to hilack the Enterprise in his pursuit of Lokai, whose black and white colors were the reverse of his own. |
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Garth
Garth of Izar was a decorated fleet captain before an accident made him criminally insane. Admitted to the asylum on Elba II, Garth — who could alter his appearance at will — took control of the facility and tried, unsuccessfully, to capture the Enterprise. |
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Marta
Marta, an Orion, was incarcerated at the asylum on Elba II until Garth of Izar freed all the inmates. A pathological liar, Marta was as seductive as she was delusional. She wanted to blow off one of Spock's ears, and she tried to stab Captain Kirk. |
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Hodin
Ambassador Hodin was the leader of the Gideon Council. In an attempt to relieve his world from overpopulation, Hodin sent his daughter, Odona, to acquire a deadly disease from Captain Kirk. Odona's death — had McCoy not saved her — would have been an acceptable compromise to Hodin. |
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Plasus
Plasus, high advisor of the cloud-city Stratos, enforced apartheid against the Troglyte miners on the planet below. Plasus denied the Troglytes privileges that the Stratos city residents had, and he used torture to put down resistance. Captain Kirk forced Plasus to negotiate with the Troglytes. |
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Droxine
Droxine lived a privileged life in the cloud city Stratos, high above the planet Ardana. Though she admired Spock's logic, Droxine tolerated the torture and subjugation of Troglytes, as she believed these injustices were part of the natural order of things. |
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Dr. Sevrin
Dr. Sevrin, a renowned research engineer on Tiburon, came to reject modern technological society. Deemed insane by Spock, Sevrin forced the Enterprise to take him and his followers to the mythical planet Eden. The planet proved toxic, and Sevrin died after eating a poisonous fruit. |
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Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln, a personal hero of Captain Kirk, was recreated from Kirk's mind by the Excalbians to help them understand the concepts of "good" and "evil." Lincoln fought side-by-side with Kirk and sacrificed his life in an effort to save Spock's hero, Surak. |
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Colonel Green
Colonel Green was a 21st-century military despot who led a genocidal war on Earth. The Excalbians used a recreation of Green to represent "evil" in a fight against "good." The duplicitous Green tried tricks and all-out combat to defeat Captain Kirk's side, but failed. |
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Surak
Legendary philosopher Surak was the father of modern Vulcan civilization. The Excalbians created Surak from Sock's mind to help the Enterprise officers fight evil, but Surak, a pacifist, wanted no part in it. He was killed while seeking a peaceful settlement. |
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Kahless
Kahless, founder of the Klingon Empire, was considered a ruthless tyrant by the Federation. Kahless had a near-perfect ability to mimic voices, a talent he used to lure Abraham Lincoln to his death on the Excalbian planet. When forcibly confronted. however, Kahless ran off. |
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Dr. Janice Lester
Dr. Janice Lester hated being a woman, which she blamed for hindering her Starfleet career. Intensely jealous of Captain Kirk, Lester used an alien device to transfer her mind into Kirk's body. Once in control of the Enterprise. Lester's hysterics — including an attemot to execute Spock — led to her downfall. |
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Top - Main Base Card 1
Bottom - Parallel Base Card 1 |
1 |
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Captain Kirk |
2 |
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Spock |
3 |
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Dr. McCoy |
4 |
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Scotty |
5 |
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Lt. Uhura |
6 |
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Lt. Sulu |
7 |
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Ensign Chekov |
8 |
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Nurse Christine Chapel |
9 |
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Yeoman Janice Rand |
10 |
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Captain Pike |
11 |
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The Keeper |
12 |
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Vina |
13 |
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Lt. Cmdr. Gary Mitchell |
14 |
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Dr. Elizabeth Dehner |
15 |
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Balok's Puppet |
16 |
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Evil Captain Kirk |
17 |
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M-113 Salt Creature |
18 |
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Robert Crater |
19 |
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Charlie Evans |
20 |
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Romulan Commander |
21 |
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Ruk |
22 |
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Roger Korby |
23 |
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Tristan Adams |
24 |
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Dr. Helen Noel |
25 |
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Miri |
26 |
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Jahn |
27 |
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Anton Karidian |
28 |
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Lenore Karidian |
29 |
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Commissioner Ferris |
30 |
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Finney |
31 |
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Cogley |
32 |
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Finnegan |
33 |
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Trelane |
34 |
|
Gorn Captain |
35 |
|
Lazarus |
36 |
|
Marplon |
37 |
|
Landru |
38 |
|
Anan 7 |
39 |
|
Khan Noonian Singh |
40 |
|
Marla McGivers |
41 |
|
Kor |
42 |
|
Edith Keeler |
43 |
|
Sylvia |
44 |
|
Korob |
45 |
|
Zefram Cochrane |
46 |
|
Kras |
47 |
|
Apollo |
48 |
|
Lt. Palama |
49 |
|
T'Pring |
50 |
|
T'Pau |
51 |
|
Commodore Matt Decker |
52 |
|
Hengist/Jack the Ripper |
53 |
|
Nomad |
54 |
|
Dr. Janet Wallace |
55 |
|
Arne Darvin |
56 |
|
Koloth |
57 |
|
Henoch |
58 |
|
Merik |
59 |
|
Claudius |
60 |
|
Thelev |
61 |
|
Nona |
62 |
|
Galt |
63 |
|
Shahna |
64 |
|
Enisgn Garrovick |
65 |
|
Bella Oxmyx |
66 |
|
Jojo Krako |
67 |
|
Rojan |
68 |
|
Kelinda |
69 |
|
Dr. Ann Mulhall |
70 |
|
Stonn |
71 |
|
Melakon |
72 |
|
Dr. Richard Daystrom |
73 |
|
Captain Ronald Tracey |
74 |
|
Gary Seven |
75 |
|
Elaan |
76 |
|
Harry Mudd |
77 |
|
Romulan Commander |
78 |
|
Gorgan |
79 |
|
Kara |
80 |
|
Dr. Miranda Jones |
81 |
|
Gem |
82 |
|
Vians |
83 |
|
Kang |
84 |
|
Alexander |
85 |
|
Parmen |
86 |
|
Deela |
87 |
|
Rael |
88 |
|
Losira |
89 |
|
Bele |
90 |
|
Garth |
91 |
|
Marta |
92 |
|
Hodin |
93 |
|
Plasus |
94 |
|
Droxine |
95 |
|
Dr. Sevrin |
96 |
|
Abraham Lincoln |
97 |
|
Colonel Green |
98 |
|
Surak |
99 |
|
Kahless |
100 |
|
Dr. Janice Lester |
|
T38 |
|
Charles Maxwell
as Virgil Earp
in "Spectre of the Gun"
b. 28th December 1913
d.
7th August 1993 |
T39 |
|
Rudy Solari
as Salish
in "The Paradise Syndrome"
b. 21st December 1934
d.
23rd April 1991 |
T40 |
|
Melvin Belli
as Gorgan
in "And the Children Shall Lead"
b. 29th July 1907
d.
9th July 1996 |
T41 |
|
Willard Sage
as Thann
in "The Empath"
b. 13th August 1922
d.
17th March 1974 |
T42 |
|
Kathie Browne
as Deela
in "Wink of an Eye"
b. 19th September 1930
d.
8th April 2003 |
T43 |
|
Arthur Batanides
as Lt. D'Amato
in "That Which Survives"
b. 9th April 1922
d.
10th January 2000 |
T44 |
|
Steve Ihnat
as Garth
in "Whom Gods Destroy"
b. 7th August 1934
d.
12th May 1972 |
T45 |
|
Keye Luke
as Cory
in "Whom Gods Destroy"
b. 18th June 1904
d.
12th January 1991 |
T46 |
|
Jeff Corey
as Plasus
in "The Cloud Minders"
b. 10th August 1914
d.
16th August 2002 |
T47 |
|
James Daly
as Flint
in "Requiem for Methuselah"
b. 23rd October 1918
d.
3rd July 1978 |
T48 |
|
Lee Bergere
as Abraham Lincoln
in "The Savage Curtain"
b. 10th April 1918
d.
31st January 2007 |
T49 |
|
Kermit Murdock
as The Prosecutor
in "All Our Yesterdays"
b. 20th March 1908
d.
11th February 1981 |
Rewards card not inserted in packs |
T50 |
|
Roger C. Carmel
as Harry Mudd
in "Mudd's Women" & "I, Mudd"
b. 27th September 1932
d.
11th November 1986 |
|
The following Tribute cards were initially announced for this set but presumably have been reserved for later |
- |
|
Sam Gilman
as Doc Holliday
in "Spectre of the Gun"
b. 5th February 1915
d.
3rd December 1985 |
- |
|
Liam Sullivan
as Parmen
in "Plato's Stepchildren"
b. 18th May 1923
d.
19th April 1998 |
- |
|
Barry Atwater
as Surak
in "The Savage Curtain"
b. 16th May 1918
d.
24th May 1978 |
- |
|
Michael Dunn
as Alexander
in "Plato's Stepchildren"
b. 20th October 1934
d.
29th August 1973 |
- |
|
Charlene Polite
as Vanna
in "The Cloud Minders"
b. 30th June 1943
d.
21st June 1999 |
- |
|
Ian Wolfe
as Mr. Atoz
in "All Our Yesterdays"
b. 4th November 1896
d.
23rd January 1992 |
GB1 |
|
Captain Kirk vs. Khan
Space Seed
Captain Kirk treated Khan, a genetically engineered tyrant from Earth's Eugenics Wars, as a guest aboard the Enterprise. Khan repaid Kirk's hospitality by trying to take his ship. Kirk managed to overcome Khan in a fight in Engineering and the captain exiled the despot on Ceti Alpha V. |
GB2 |
|
Captain Kirk vs. Gary Mitchell
Where No Man Has Gone Before
Captain Kirk and Gary Mitchell had been friends for years, which made it particularly painful for Kirk to watch Mitchell transform into a dangerous god-like being with no trace of humanity. Kirk fought and killed Mitchell on Delta Vega, burying his old friend under tons of rock. |
GB3 |
|
Capt. Kirk vs. Romulan Cmdr.
Balance of Terror
The Romulan Commander destroyed three Earth outposts along the Neutral Zone. Captain Kirk pursued him, and the two men engaged in a battle of wits that Kirk ultimately won. Just before the Commander set his ship to self-destruct, he admitted that in another reality, he could have called Kirk "friend." |
GB4 |
|
Captain Kirk vs. The Gorn
Arena
The Metrons deposited Captain Kirk and the Gorn captain on a desert planet to settle their differences. Kirk fashioned a cannon from natural elements and used the makeshift device to blast his lizard-like adversary. When Kirk refused to finish the Gorn off, the Metrons spared both their lives. |
GB5 |
|
Captain Kirk vs. Shahna
The Gamesters of Triskelion
Captain Kirk didn't want to fight the Triskelion drill thrall Shahna, but his crew's freedom — and that of all the thralls — hung in the balance. Shahna brought Kirk down, but Kirk gained the upper hand and held his knife to her throat. Shahna surrendered, ending the fight. |
GB6 |
|
Captain Kirk vs. Kang
Day of the Dove
An alien entity incited the conflict between Captain Kirk and Klingon commander Kang aboard the Enterprise. Kang tried to take control of the ship, but Kirk confronted him in Engineering and the two men fought while their crews looked on. Ultimately, Kirk convinced Kang that the alien was their real enemy. |
GB7 |
|
Captain Kirk vs. Spock
Amok Time
At Spock's wedding, Captain Kirk agreed to fight his Pon farr-stricken friend before he knew it was a fight to the death. Spock's physical superiority gave him the upper hand, and he apparently strangled Kirk to death. When Spock later found that Kirk was fine, he responded with uncharacteristic emotion. |
GB8 |
|
Capt. Kirk vs. Romulan Cmdr.
The Enterprise Incident
Captain Kirk seemed irrational and unstable at the outset of his battle with the Romulan Commander. In fact, Kirk was conducting a secret mission to steal the Romulan's cloaking device. With Spock's help, Kirk posed as a Romulan and stole the device. |
GB9 |
|
Captain Kirk vs. Captain Kirk
The Enemy Within
Captain Kirk battled his dark side when a transporter malfunction split him into two people. The evil Kirk attacked and tried to replace the good Kirk, but neither half could function properly without the other. Following a confrontation on the bridge, the two Kirks were successfully rejoined. |
MM1 |
|
Kirk/Mirror Kirk
Captain Kirk was shocked by the cruel behavior of his crew in the Mirror Universe. Kirk risked his life by showing mercy to the Halkans, and to the Mirror Spock, who threatened to kill him. Before returning to his own universe, Kirk challenged the Mirror Spock to work toward change. |
MM2 |
|
Spock/Mirror Spock
Sporting a goatee and a willingness to torture crew members for the slightest infractions, Mirror Spock was a dangerous but loyal first officer in the Mirror Universe. He saw the illogic of supporting his Empire and promised Captain Kirk that he would consider working toward change. |
MM3 |
|
McCoy/Mirror McCoy
Dr. McCoy was aghast at the mirror Enterprise's sickbay, which he compared to a "chamber of horrors." When the Mirror Spock was injured, McCoy insisted on taking the time to save the Vulcan's life, even though it meant risking his own chance to return home. |
MM4 |
|
Scotty/Mirror Scotty
Scotty took the lead in recreating the conditions that would allow the Enterprise landing party to escape the Mirror Universe. With Dr. McCoy's help, Scotty made changes in the Jeffries tube and in Engineering so that the ship's transporter could send them home. |
MM5 |
|
Uhura/Mirror Uhura
Lt. Uhura was particularly uncomfortable in the Mirror Universe. She had to play along with the Mirror Sulu's unwanted advances in order to keep the helmsman from noticing Scotty's unauthorized transporter alterations. Later, she disarmed the Mirror Marlena who pulled a phaser on Captain Kirk. |
MM6 |
|
Sulu/Mirror Sulu
The Mirror Sulu was both security chief and helmsman on the Enterprise. Mirror Sulu tried to kill both Kirk and Mirror Spock, which would have made Mirror Sulu the new captain. He also tried to force himself on Uhura, who rejected his advances with a hard slap to his scarred face. |
MM7 |
|
Chekov/Mirror Chekov
The Mirror Chekov was as ruthlessly ambitious as anyone aboard the I.S.S. Enterprise. He schemed to overthrow Captain Kirk and enlisted several others to join his mutiny. When his assassination attempt failed, he was sent to the agony booth. |
MM8 |
|
Marlena/Mirror Marlena
The Mirror Marlena was proud to be the captain's woman. Beautiful yet deadly, she used the Tantalus field to vaporize the Mirror Sulu's men when they attacked Captain Kirk. Later, she pointed a phaser at Kirk and demanded that he take her to his universe, but Uhura disarmed her. |
MM9 |
|
U.S.S. Enterprise/I.S.S. Enterprise
The I.S.S. Enterprise of the Mirror Universe was the second Imperial starship to bear the name. Captain Kirk took command of the vessel through the assassination of Mirror Captain Pike. The I.S.S. Enterprise featured a dagger emblem on interior doors, and had agony booths to keep the crew in line. |
S1 |
|
Captain Kik |
S2 |
|
Spock |
S3 |
|
Dr. McCoy |
S4 |
|
Scotty |
S5 |
|
Uhura |
S6 |
|
Sulu |
S7 |
|
Chekov |
|
A202 |
|
Maggie Thrett
as Ruth Bonaventure
in "Mudd's Women"
© 2010 |
A236 |
|
Victor Brandt
as Watson
in "Elaan of Troyius"
© 2009 |
A242 |
|
Arlene Martel
as T'Pring
in "Amok Time"
© 2009 |
A249 |
|
Steve Sandor
as Lars
in "The Gamesters of Triskelion"
© 2009 |
A250 |
|
Robert Phillips
as Space Officer
in "The Cage"
© 2009 |
A251 |
|
Carolyn Nelson
as Yeoman Atkins
in "The Deadly Years"
© 2009 |
A253 |
|
Morgan Jones
as Colonel Nesvig
in "Assignment: Earth"
© 2009 |
A254 |
|
Dyanne Thorne
as Iotian Woman
in "A Piece of the Action"
© 2010 |
A255 |
|
Garth Pilsbury
as Wilson
in "Mirror, Mirror"
© 2010 |
A257 |
|
Brioni Farrell
as Tula
in "The Return of the Archons"
© 2010 |
A258 |
|
Sean Morgan
as Brenner
in "Balance of Terror"
© 2010 |
A260 |
|
Michael Barrier
as Lt. DeSalle
in "The Squire of Gothos"
© 2010 |
A262 |
|
David L. Ross
as Lt. Galloway
in "Turnabout Intruder"
© 2010
|
A264 |
|
Diana Muldaur
as Ann Mulhall
in "Return to Tomorrow"
© 2010 |
A268 |
|
Nichelle Nichols
as Lt. Uhura
in "The Corbomite Maneuver"
© 2011
|
A269 |
|
William Shatner
as Captain Kirk
in "Court Martial"
© 2012 |
|
Gaps remain for A256, A259, A261, A263, A265, A266, A267 |
DA5 |
|
Leslie Shatner & Lisabeth Shatner
as Onlie Girls
in "Miri"
© 2008
Mis-spelt ONLINE GIRL
for each character on the front of the cards |
DA7 |
|
William Shatner & Joan Collins
as Captain Kirk & Edith Keeler
in "The City on the Edge of Forever"
© 2009
There is at least one with the two signatures in the wrong panels (image on the right) |
|
|
|
DA8 |
|
Grace Lee Whitney & Robert Walker Jr.
as Yeoman Rand & Charlie Evans
in "Charlie X"
© 2009 |
DA14 |
|
Nichelle Nicholls & Walter Koenig
as Lt. Uhura & Ensign Chekov
in "The Trouble with Tribbles"
© 2009 |
DA20 |
|
Venita Wolfe & William Campbell
as Yeoman Ross & Trelane
in "The Squire of Gothos"
© 2009 |
DA21 |
|
Anthony Call & Clint Howard
as Dave Bailey & Balok
in "The Corbomite Maneuver"
© 2009 |
DA22 |
|
Bruce Hyde & Stewart Moss
as Lt. Kevin Riley & Joe Tormolen
in "The Naked Time"
© 2009 |
DA24 |
|
Warren Stevens & Barbara Bouchet
as Rojan & Kelinda
in "By Any Other Name"
© 2009 |
DA25 |
|
Sherry Jackson & Harry Basch
as Andrea & Dr. Brown
in "What Are Little Girls Made Of?"
© 2009 |
DA26 |
|
Charles Napier & Victor Brandt
as Adam & Tongo Rad
in "The Way To Eden"
© 2009 |
DA27 |
|
Victor Brandt & Deborah Downey
as Tongo Rad & Mavig
in "The Way To Eden"
© 2009 |
DA28 |
|
Charles Napier & Deborah Downey
as Adam & Mavig
in "The Way To Eden"
© 2009 |
DA29 |
|
Susan Howard & Michael Ansara
as Mara & Kang
in "Day of the Dove"
© 2009 |
DA30 |
|
Gary Combs & Bobby Clark
as Gorn
in "Arena"
© 2009 |
DA31 |
|
Michael Forest & Leslie Parrish
as Apollo & Lt. Palamas
in "Who Mourns for Adonais?"
© 2009 |
DA33 |
|
Diana Muldaur & David Frankham
as Dr. Miranda Jones & Larry Marvick
in "Is There in Truth No Beauty?"
© 2010 |
DA34 |
|
Joseph Ruskin & Steve Sandor
as Galt & Lars
in "The Gamesters of Triskelion"
© 2010 |
CT1 |
|
Heroes Montage |
CT2 |
|
Villains Montage |
|
|
|
- |
|
3 Case Incentive
Nichelle Nichols Autograph/Relic Card
as Uhura
© 2005 |
- |
|
6 Case Incentive
Leonard Nimoy Silver Series Signature Card
as Spock
© 2012 |
|
T50 |
|
Roger C. Carmel
as Harry Mudd
in "Mudd's Women" & "I, Mudd"
b. 27th September 1932
d.
11th November 1986
Not inserted in packs |
|
- |
|
Binder with 1 nine-pocket page and P3 Promo |
- |
|
Marked on outside |
- |
|
Not marked on outside |
P1 |
|
Khan & Kirk
General distribution |
P2 |
|
Spock & Kor
Non Sport Update Magazine (Vol. 24 No. 1) |
P3 |
|
The Keeper & Pike
Binder exclusive |
- |
|
Sell sheet (digital download) |
|