Episode that made Deep Space Nine's first season.
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This episode may had been the one that made Deep Space Nine's first season. The pivotal point of the episode being the willingness of the Kai to exile herself in a Hell like planet in order to help a race she doesn't even know.
This is of course a pivotal episode as well in the sense that this is the end of Opaka's reign as Kai. Given the importance of her character (she is referenced many times later in the series) and her importance to her people, I would had expected her and the conflict of this planet to be revised at some point. Surprisingly it never was in the series, although it was in apocrypha. Did Sisko and the others keep the whereabouts of Opaka's planet moon? If not, I would had expected it to become a place of pilgrimage for Bajorans or settlers wishing to help her in her plight to convert the warring convicts to the teaching of the prophets.
Although its not spelled out at this point, its probably safe to assume that the power that set up with penal moon was the Dominion. I say this because it is shown later that the Dominion has a precidence of setting up bizarre punishments for races that oppose their will.
One thing about this episode that I found accept to fathom was the total inability of the convicts to kill one another. Although the explanation of the microbes was nice, it still doesn't explain how they could prevent the total destruction of a humanoid body by disintegration by a phaser for instance, or even incineration by fire. Would the microbes be able to regenerate a body that had been so completely devastated? This is never made clear. Furthermore how would this affect beaming? My understanding of beaming involves a process by which the target is copied and the original is then destroyed. (Opinions vary widely on this in fanon) Would the microbes actually prevent transportation, or would they create a new copy of individual on the moon. If a new copy is always created perhaps it impossible for the inhabitance to die even if they left the moon? Although their original bodies would cease to function when the microbes did, perhaps a new copy would be generated on the moon below? Of course this is all speculation, but it does start to make the episode look silly once one starts to analyse it and with the technology that the Federation has, these are very valid questions indeed.
Finally I don't like the line where Bashir says the microbes are programmed not to function outside of the ecosystem of the moon. Perhaps the those satellites in orbit have more uses than just defence. I would had much preferred the idea that the satellites are responsible for keeping the system working. They could perhaps use the same technology that prevent the moon's inhabitance for dying to prevent themsleves from being destroyed? Perhaps if the crew had beamed over to one of the satellites to investigate it might had made the episode more entertaining. Just some food for thought.