The third season begins…
- …with the two-parter "The Search". In a misguided attempt to improve the show, Sisko returns to the station with an experimental ship, the Defiant. It was built to fight the Borg but then mothballed. The Feds managed to get the Romulans to loan them a clocking device--and an officer to go along with it. Now the cast can run more conventional Trek ship missions--they start with a search for the "Founders" in the Gamma Quadrant, and hopefully defuse the whole Jem'Hadar issue. Sisko bullies Quark into joining them, but then he almost immediately decides to return--the whole script seems like it was written by a committee. Odo makes quite a fuss when a new security officer arrives, but I don't see why--if I was Starfleet, I would be nervous about Odo too. He starts to obsess about a nebula--as if he had a homing instinct. During a battle, he grabs Kira and a shuttecraft. They find a rogue planet with a lake of goo--it's others of Odo's race, and they greet him warmly.
- Part Two begins with Sisko and Bashir on another shuttle--they abandoned the Defiant. Dax and O'Brien manage to find them, and learns that the Dominion and the Federation are writing up a peace treaty back on the station. Meanwhile, Odo is trying to understand his new race, and is getting frustrated. He then gets some "Changeling" history from one of the others, and we get some "Changeling After Dark" action. Back on the station, the Federation is making plans for an alliance with the Dominion, the Jem'Hadar are running roughshod over the station, and the Dominion are taking over the Bajoran sector--and the wormhole. Sisko and the crew are being reassigned--so they go rogue and destroy the wormhole. Odo and Kira finds the crew all safe and sound--the whole thing was just a simulation. It turns out the Changelings are the Dominion! Odo rejects them and joins our heroes back at the station.
- Quark's wackiness meets Klingon mumbo-jumbo in "The House of Quark". The Ferengi accidentally kills a Klingon at the bar, and ends up in an arranged marriage. Googly-eyed Klingon leader Gowron (Robert O'Reilly) guest stars, as does Mary Kay Place as the scheming widow. Meanwhile, Keiko loses the teacher gig (families are moving off the station due to the Dominion), and Miles wants to cheer her up. The solution is a botanist job on Bajor, which also provides an excuse for Rosalind Chao appearing so rarely on the show (only 19 episodes all together). Seems like they needed a cheap episode to counter the costs of the two-parter.
- Dax's history catches up to her in "Equilibrium". Dax's normally serene character gets a chance to be hostile and confrontative in this episode. She also has some hallucinations that reminded Mindy of a Doctor Who episode involving masks. The whole thing turns into a medical drama--will Jadzia lose her symbiont? We do get to see the Trill home world and hear more of her back story. Trills (the symbioses, not the hosts) apparently breed in weird underground pools. The whole thing turns out to be a Trill conspiracy involving a murder and a botched joining. The fix is to send Jadzia into the weird pool to "absorb" a lost host.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (and all the Trek series) is available on Netflix.