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Quiz about Name That Episode 7
Quiz about Name That Episode 7

Name That Episode #7 Trivia Quiz


If you thought the first six parts to my "Name That Episode" series were far too challenging, then maybe this one will be Lucky #7 for you?

A multiple-choice quiz by NEXUSDARKBLUE. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
377,674
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Difficult
Avg Score
5 / 10
Plays
83
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Seven is in engineering, descending from the upper level down to the lower level via the elevator before joining another Voyager crewmember, who is not a member of the senior staff, at a computer station to work together on a solution. Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. A Voyager crewmember's reflection of himself or herself is seen in a mirror somewhere on Voyager in all of the following episodes...except this one. Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. The Doctor is looking through a lens of some kind in all of the following episodes...except this one. Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. A child, who is initially unaccompanied by an adult, is caught roaming around and tampering with a computer panel by an adult man before one other adult and three other children meet up with them. Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Chakotay and another crewmember discover an alien corpse, but no living members of the alien species that the corpse belongs to are ever encountered in this episode. Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. After the fourth-season episode, "Nemesis", this was the very NEXT episode where a member of the Kradin, the alien race who were the sworn enemies of the Vori, is seen in some form or another. Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Seven is visibly injured by an energy discharge or attacked with an energy discharge of some kind in all of the following episodes...except this one. Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Paris attempts to kill an alien lifeform while on a planet, but the lifeform is instead killed by somebody else. Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. An alien performs a scan on a group of crewmembers with a hand-held device, but the scanning of one of those crewmembers doesn't register any lifesigns. Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. An alien ship patrolling in orbit of a planet intercepts another alien ship trying to gain direct access to that planet, but the non-patrolling alien ship never opens fire, even though it has the immediate means to destroy the patrolling alien ship without breaking orbit. Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Seven is in engineering, descending from the upper level down to the lower level via the elevator before joining another Voyager crewmember, who is not a member of the senior staff, at a computer station to work together on a solution.

Answer: Nothing Human

When Janeway speaks to Seven over the com in regards to taking the next actions to resolve the issue of the centipede-like creature having attacked B'Elanna, Seven is seen riding the elevator from the upper level down to the lower level where she then meets up at a computer station with a disgruntled ex-Maquis Bajoran, Ensign Tabor, who seems to have issues taking orders from her in B'Elanna's absence.

In none of the other three episodes is Seven riding that elevator in engineering, although Seven does work with several non-senior officers when she has molded them into her own little 'collective' in the cargo bay in "The Omega Directive" so that work related to the omega molecule is completed more efficiently, in her opinion.
2. A Voyager crewmember's reflection of himself or herself is seen in a mirror somewhere on Voyager in all of the following episodes...except this one.

Answer: Q2

Janeway and Q's brat of a son (nicknamed 'Junior' by the Q we know and love from the "Next Generation" series) are on the Delta Flyer following the ordeal involving Icheb and his life being in danger at the hands of the 'alien', who was really being impersonated by Q to teach Junior a lesson.

After changing back into his natural form and jokingly commenting that Janeway and Junior should see the looks of disbelief on their faces, Q uses his powers to make rectangular vanity hand mirrors instantly appear in their hands. Janeway's reflection is seen in the mirror she's holding, albeit for a split second.

In "Year Of Hell, Part 1", Seven pays a visit to Tuvok in his quarters following the fire that erupted in the Jefferies tube, which had rendered the chief of security blind. Tuvok is standing in front of a cracked mirror in his lavatory, and a reflection of himself is clearly visible.

Then when Seven enters his quarters and stands a few feet behind him to give him a verbal report, a reflection of herself is seen in the mirror as well.

In "Drone", Seven is practicing smiling at the beginning of the episode using a hand vanity mirror, then not smiling at all when she's looking into the same mirror at the end following the death of One, the 29th century Borg that was the accidental creation of Seven's nanoprobes and the Doctor's mobile emitter acquired in "Future's End, Part 2". In "Juggernaut", following the perilous adventure battling the Vihaar on the Malon freighter, B'Elanna is recuperating in her quarters and standing in front of the mirror in her lavatory when she begins having momentary flashbacks of physically beating the Vihaar, after which she then takes a sonic shower to close out the episode.
3. The Doctor is looking through a lens of some kind in all of the following episodes...except this one.

Answer: Critical Care

Although the Doctor does handle quite a few medical instruments and looks at various computer screens while being held hostage in the alien medical facility in "Critical Care", none of them includes a lens of any sort that he has to look into. In "Future's End, Part 2", when the Doctor is in Henry Starling's office at the Chronowerx building, he remarks to Starling that he doesn't feel pain nor fear of death while curiously picking up a magnifying glass on Starling's desk and using it to look at his hands.

In "Latent Image", the Doctor puts his holo-imager (the 24th century equivalent to a digital camera) to good usage in solving the mystery of his tampered and corrupted program, plus earlier in the episode when he's taking snapshots of various crewmembers in sickbay.

In "Scientific Method", the Doctor and B'Elanna take turns looking into the microscope in the science lab when they're looking at slides of Chakotay's and Neelix's DNA in an effort to pinpoint the source of their mutations.
4. A child, who is initially unaccompanied by an adult, is caught roaming around and tampering with a computer panel by an adult man before one other adult and three other children meet up with them.

Answer: Ashes To Ashes

This is a rather tricky one. Mezoti, the Borg girl among the group of four child drones encountered in "Collective", is roaming around Astrometrics at the beginning of the episode, tampering with various computer panels until she makes contact with Ensign Ballard. Tuvok catches Mezoti first when he enters the room, then moments later, Seven and the three male ex-Borg drones enter as well, with Seven being particularly displeased that Mezoti broke away from the group and engaged in disorderly conduct...for a child on a starship, that is.

In "Innocence", the three Drayan children Tuvok is stranded on the planet with actually weren't children at all, as what is considered to be an adult is reversed in Drayan culture, even though the Drayan 'children' do play around with some of Tuvok's equipment inside of his crashed shuttle, their disorderly conduct reprimanded by the Vulcan chief of security by having them sitting in separate places outside the shuttle (the teacher forcing them to stand in their own 'corners' in the classroom, so to speak?).

The only children who could be considered to be 'roaming around' in "Child's Play" would be the ones on the surface of the Brunali homeworld, although they were pretty much just doing what kids normally do--playing around. But none of these children are tampering with computers, and certainly not Icheb, who was the one being PLAYED like a computer in his parents' plot to infect the Borg collective with his genetically-altered body. In "Real Life", the only children featured in the episode are the Doctor's two holographic kids--Belle and Jeffrey--but they aren't seen tampering with computers, and there are no other children besides them in this whole episode.
5. Chakotay and another crewmember discover an alien corpse, but no living members of the alien species that the corpse belongs to are ever encountered in this episode.

Answer: Blood Fever

Technically, "Blood Fever" was the very first episode in which the crew encounter the Borg. At the end of the episode, Chakotay and Janeway are walking through the woods on the surface of the Sakari homeworld and find a dead Borg corpse hidden in plain sight in the dense vegetation.

But no actual Borg drones are encountered; that would happen, however, in the following episode, "Unity", where Chakotay links up with the ex-Borg drones. In "Emanations", there is a graveyard full of Vhnori corpses on the planet's surface, but living members of the Vhnori, of course, are encountered by Harry, who wakes up in the alien's device that supposedly transcends their deceased into the afterlife.

In "The 37's", none of the bodies discovered in the stasis chamber nor on the planet's surface are alien; all were humans abducted by the unseen aliens, the Briori, back in 1937.

In "Friendship One", the only alien corpses encountered in this episode belonged to those aliens suffering from the radiation on the planet where the Friendship One probe was found. All of the bodies of the aliens, both above the surface in the arctic environment and below the surface in the underground cave, are alive and well all throughout, including the infant that Paris and Neelix helped to revive with their Federation technology.
6. After the fourth-season episode, "Nemesis", this was the very NEXT episode where a member of the Kradin, the alien race who were the sworn enemies of the Vori, is seen in some form or another.

Answer: Random Thoughts

Another tricky one! If you paid close attention to the sequence of violent images shared by Tuvok with the Mari telepath, Guill, who was secretly trafficking violent thoughts to other Mari citizens, one of those images included a rather spooky shot of a Kradin that seemed as if it were reacting to something violent himself (or herself).

The question is, though, why would images of a Kradin, which were mostly dealt with Chakotay while he was brainwashed to be a soldier for the Vori back in "Nemesis", appear in Tuvok's mind? I would've expected aliens that Tuvok actually had closer encounters with (Borg, Species 8472, Vidiians or, perhaps, Klingons) to be among those thoughts. "Infinite Regress" also showed various blurred and distorted images of numerous aliens during Tuvok's mind meld with a schizophrenic Seven, but paying even closer attention to these images, there are no members of the Kradin among the assimilated personalities.

In "Living Witness", with all of the representatives of the alien species that made up the imagined Warship Voyager in the initial simulations in the Kyrian museum (Borg, Kazon, to name a few), none of the aliens were Kradin. Too bad we couldn't see B'Elanna as a full-fleshed Klingon again like she was back in "Faces"; that would've been so cool! In "Flesh And Blood", the opportunity to have various alien species represented arose again with the Hirogen-created holograms appearing as Bajorans, Jem Ha'dar, Borg, Cardassians, Humans and others, but none of those holograms were Kradin.
7. Seven is visibly injured by an energy discharge or attacked with an energy discharge of some kind in all of the following episodes...except this one.

Answer: Revulsion

Harry and Seven get to work side by side on Voyager for the first time since the ex-drone was severed from the collective back in "Scorpion, Part 2". While in a Jefferies tube, the pair works together in removing a part of a wall panel when Seven is accidentally cut on her hand, noting that she would've regenerated immediately had she still been a full drone.

Other than the laceration, Seven isn't attacked or injured in any way in this episode. In "Fury", when a vengeful Kes enters engineering en route to the ship's warp core, B'Elanna and Seven are blocking the Ocampan's way, so Kes uses her enhanced powers to throw the two ladies aside while she continues to the warp core.

When B'Elanna rushes to a computer panel to analyze what Kes is trying to do, Kes further causes an electrical discharge to zap B'Elanna and render her unconscious.

In "Warhead", Seven's attempt to use her assimilation tubes to interface with and disable the 'smart bomb' that has possession of the Doctor fails when an electrical surge emits from the device, shocking Seven and rendering her unconscious in the process.

In "Bliss", when a determined Janeway is wanting to enter the 'wormhole' to get back home, she sends a feedback surge through the computer station in engineering where Seven is working in order to shock the ex-drone, rendering her unconscious and temporarily putting a halt to further delay in Voyager proceeding deeper into the space-dwelling creature's digestive chamber.
8. Paris attempts to kill an alien lifeform while on a planet, but the lifeform is instead killed by somebody else.

Answer: Gravity

When Paris and Tuvok are trapped on the surface of the planet, which itself is netted inside a subspace sinkhole having a temporal variation (hours on Voyager are perceived as months on the planet), they are having to resort to basics to survive while co-existing with the planet's inhabitants.

In one scene, Paris is eagerly trying to stab an arachnid-like creature for consumption, but after his attempts to kill the creature fail, Noss, the woman who befriends him and Tuvok, expertly kills the soon-to-be gourmet delicacy herself and drops it safely into a bag.

In "Parturition", Paris isn't trying to kill the alien baby that he and Neelix discover on 'Planet Hell', and definitely not the baby's alien mother who appears at the end, although he probably did feel like killing Neelix at one point during their scuffle over Kes in the mess hall prior to their departure from Voyager.

In "Blood Fever", neither the rock-indigenous Sakari nor Ensign Vorik, the young Vulcan suffering from the pon farr, is the target of attempted murder by Paris, and he certainly didn't kill the Borg drone that is found in the woods at the end by Chakotay and Janeway.

In "Faces", the only two people killed in this episode are Lieutenant Durst, who is gutted by the Vidiian surgeon, Dr. Sulan, and the full-blooded Klingon half of B'Elanna. Durst surely wasn't an alien, and Paris certainly made no attempts to kill either of his own crewmembers, Klingon or not.
9. An alien performs a scan on a group of crewmembers with a hand-held device, but the scanning of one of those crewmembers doesn't register any lifesigns.

Answer: Phage

Towards the end of this episode, two of the Vidiian surgeons have transported onto Voyager and come to sickbay where an ailing Neelix is awaiting a lung transplant. One of the surgeons takes out his pointed surgical scanner and begins scanning everybody in the room one at a time (and getting a tensed reaction each time he does), only to be perplexed when his scanning of the Doctor indicates that the EMH is not actually there.

In "False Profits", there are no aliens scanning anybody with tricorders or other similar instruments at any time during the episode.

The same holds true for "Live Fast And Prosper", although the alien man impersonating Tuvok does take a phaser shot at the Doctor, who himself had impersonated the lady impersonating Janeway, at one point, much to his shock and soon realizing that his phony captain wasn't actually there inside the caves like everyone else was.

In "Retrospect", Kovin, the Entharan weapons specialist whom Seven erroneously believes violated her body, is seen using various instruments with a female Entharan in an operating room during a few blurry momentary flashbacks Seven has while she's being analyzed by the Doctor in sickbay and in the cargo bay, but beyond that, nobody else is being scanned by Kovin or an other Entharans with instruments of any kind in this episode.
10. An alien ship patrolling in orbit of a planet intercepts another alien ship trying to gain direct access to that planet, but the non-patrolling alien ship never opens fire, even though it has the immediate means to destroy the patrolling alien ship without breaking orbit.

Answer: Course: Oblivion

Before answering this question, keep in mind that the substance Paris and Kim came into contact with back in "Demons" was actually a sentient lifeform that copied their DNA, so the duplicates of the two men not seen wearing the EVA suits, plus all of the duplicates created subsequently by that episode's end, were all actually aliens.

They simply had the physical appearance and memories of the crew. So the non-patrolling alien ship referred to in this instance is the duplicated Voyager. At one point during "Course: Oblivion", when the duplicate crew is searching for a planet with an atmosphere similar to the Y-class environment of the planet the real Voyager crew had encountered in "Demon", another alien ship controlled by an unseen species blocks the duplicate Voyager's path, threatening to destroy them if they don't leave orbit.

The duplicate Tuvok proposes an idea which could turn the tables on the situation and instead allow them to destroy the patrolling alien ship, but the duplicate Janeway, wanting to hold onto Federation principles, even in their distressed situation, gives the order to break orbit and leave the alien ship unharmed.

In "Prototype", no planets of any kind are encountered; only the two ships manned by the Pralor and Cravic automated units. In "Dragon's Teeth", it's true that the Turei are patrolling in orbit above the planet where the Vaadwaur have been reawakened from their 900-year stasis by Seven, and it could be that the Turei's main purpose of hoping to intercept Voyager on its way back from of the surface also had a secondary purpose of preventing anybody else from gaining access to the planet as well, considering Voyager had accidentally got caught in the wake of one of the Turei's subspace corridors. However, the Vaadwaur and the Turei do eventually get involved in an all-out weapons attack once the battle shifts into open space as Voyager ascends from the surface, reigniting the 900-year-old war between the two alien races. In "Scorpion, Part 2", there were no planets encountered in this episode either. There was one Borg planet seen at the end of "Scorpion, Part 1", however, but the Borg didn't have the immediate means to destroy the Species 8472 bio-ships using the Doctor's idea for using nanoprobes at the microscopic level because the weapon hand't even been perfected yet.
Source: Author NEXUSDARKBLUE

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor ladymacb29 before going online.
Any errors found in FunTrivia content are routinely corrected through our feedback system.
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