William T. Riker

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William Thomas "Will" Riker was a 24th century male Human Starfleet officer . Riker served as first officer for Captain Jean-Luc Picard for 15 years on the USS Enterprise -D and USS Enterprise -E before finally accepting his own command with the USS Titan . ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint "; Star Trek: First Contact ; Star Trek Nemesis )

As captain of the Titan , Riker and his wife Deanna Troi had two children: a son named after Riker's ancestor Thaddius , and a daughter named after Troi's deceased sister Kestra . Thad contracted mendaxic neurosclerosis , prompting his family to move to Nepenthe , where Thad eventually died from his condition. The Rikers remained on Nepenthe for the rest of the 24th century. ( PIC : " Nepenthe ")

In the early 25th century , Riker had returned to active duty as he was scheduled to give a speech during Frontier Day . During Captain Vadic 's attack on the USS Titan -A , Riker was temporarily placed in command by the Titan -A's commanding officer, Captain Liam Shaw . ( PIC : " The Next Generation ", " Disengage ", " Seventeen Seconds ")

  • 1 Early life
  • 2.1 Starfleet Academy
  • 2.2.1 Service aboard the Pegasus
  • 2.2.2 Stationed on Betazed
  • 2.2.3 Service aboard the Potemkin and Duplication Incident
  • 2.2.4 Service aboard the Hood
  • 2.3.1 First year
  • 2.3.2 Combat record
  • 2.3.3 Diplomacy and cultural exchange
  • 2.3.4 Undercover missions
  • 2.3.5 Disciplinary actions
  • 2.3.6 Medical record
  • 2.4.1 First contact
  • 2.4.2 Fighting the Son'a
  • 2.4.3 Battle with Shinzon
  • 2.5 Command offers
  • 2.6.1 First assignment
  • 2.6.2 Dealing with the Pakleds
  • 2.6.3 Becoming a father
  • 2.7.1 Life on Nepenthe
  • 2.7.2 Return to duty
  • 2.8 Rescuing an old friend
  • 3.4 Other interests
  • 4.1 Marriage
  • 4.2.1 Jean-Luc Picard
  • 4.2.4 Carol Freeman
  • 4.2.5 Beckett Mariner
  • 4.3.1 Kyle Riker
  • 4.3.2 Thomas Riker
  • 4.4.1 Beata
  • 4.4.2 Minuet
  • 4.4.3 Lwaxana Troi
  • 4.4.4 Brenna Odell
  • 4.4.7 Lanel
  • 4.4.8 Carmen Davila
  • 4.4.9 Etana Jol
  • 4.4.10 Ro Laren
  • 4.4.11 Soren
  • 4.4.12 Kamala
  • 4.4.13 Amanda Rogers
  • 4.4.14 Rebecca Smith
  • 4.4.15 Deanna Troi
  • 5.1 First contact with Bragu's species
  • 5.2 Malfunctioning holoprogram
  • 5.3 Jam session on the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)
  • 6 Alternate realities and timelines
  • 7 Holograms
  • 8 Miscellaneous information
  • 9 Chronology
  • 10 Memorable quotes
  • 11.1 See also
  • 11.2 Appearances
  • 11.3.1 Character development
  • 11.3.2 Legacy
  • 11.4 Apocrypha
  • 11.5 External links

Early life [ ]

A descendant of Yankee forebears , William Thomas Riker was born on August 19th , 2335 to Kyle and Betty Riker in Alaska on Earth . ( TNG : " The Last Outpost ", " The Icarus Factor ", " Conundrum ", " Second Chances ", " Lower Decks "; PIC : " The Bounty ") His distant ancestors included Thaddius Riker , a Union Army colonel who fought during the American Civil War of the mid- 19th century , and a particularly rugged great-grandfather of note. ( VOY : " Death Wish "; TNG : " Shades of Gray ")

Betty died when Will was only two years old, leaving his father to raise him alone. ( TNG : " Interface ", " Time Squared ") The Rikers remained in Alaska at Betty's wish. The only thing which kept Kyle going was Will, but he did not feel as if he could discuss the situation with him, even when Will was older. The memories of Betty's presence at their Alaska home were also painful for both. This initial trauma created a rift between the two Rikers which lasted thirty years. ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ")

When Will first started school in 2340 , the five-year-old told all of his new friends that his mother was still alive. Eventually, he told the story so often that he began to believe the lie . Soon, his teacher learned of this problem, and both she and Kyle had to talk to Will and make him realize that his mother was dead and was not coming back. Will cried the entire night following, but later realized it was an important step in accepting his mother's death. ( TNG : " Interface ")

However, Will's relationship with Kyle continued to deteriorate into his early teens. He was often left to care for himself, learning such skills as cooking. ( TNG : " Time Squared ", " Future Imperfect ")

Will was never able to concentrate much on subjects such as math , as he constantly daydreamed about starships . ( TNG : " The Royale ")

Riker fishing, remastered

Young Will Riker with a nice catch

In 2344 , Will and his father went on a fishing trip. Will was able to hook a large fish , but Kyle insisted on reeling the fish in. This incident bothered Will for many years.

He also practiced anbo-jyutsu with his father. By 2347 , when Will was twelve, Kyle admitted that his son's skills at the sport were superior. Will did not know that the only reason he always lost was because his father used illegal hachidan kiritsu moves.

Kyle completely abandoned Will by 2350 , when Will was fifteen. Will held a grudge against his father for the following fifteen years. ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ")

Starfleet career [ ]

Starfleet academy [ ].

Will entered Starfleet Academy in 2353 . Paul Rice was at the Academy at the same time, and they were friends. Riker's superintendent was a Vulcan , who had taken the time to memorize the personnel files of each and every cadet . ( TNG : " Chain Of Command, Part I ", " The Arsenal of Freedom ", " The First Duty ")

During his first year, Riker felt at odds with everyone, as if the world was against him. ( TNG : " Frame of Mind ")

At one point, Riker calculated a sensory blind spot on a Tholian vessel and hid within it during a battle simulation . ( TNG : " Peak Performance ")

Upon graduation in 2357 , Riker was ranked eighth in his class and was commissioned as an officer with the serial number was SC 231-427. He set lofty goals for himself and hoped to reach captain before thirty-five years of age. ( TNG : " Chain Of Command, Part I ", " Gambit, Part I ", " Second Chances "; PIC : " The Bounty ")

Early postings and assignments [ ]

Service aboard the pegasus [ ].

Seven months after graduation, Ensign William Riker's first posting was to the USS Pegasus under the command of Captain Erik Pressman . He was the ship's conn officer, and his youthful appearance earned him the nickname " Ensign Babyface ," coined by fellow crewmember Lieutenant Boylen . ( TNG : " The Pegasus ") Phil Wallace was another of Riker's friends aboard the Pegasus . ( ENT : " These Are the Voyages... ")

Fresh from the Academy, Riker was still somewhat serious about his work. Loyalty and obedience to his commanding officer were top priorities, with his ears still ringing with words like "duty" and "honor". This attitude caused him to behave against the principles of the Treaty of Algeron during a crisis on board the ship.

Captain Pressman had been illegally testing a prototype phasing cloaking device aboard the Pegasus . This top secret project was in violation of the Treaty of Algeron , not to mention extremely dangerous to the crew, leading most of the Pegasus officers, such as the first officer and chief engineer, to mutiny against Pressman. Riker was the only bridge officer to defend the captain, picking up a phaser and instigating a running firefight all the way to the escape pods . Only a few other members of the crew joined Riker and Pressman. Once safely away, Riker and the others watched as the Pegasus apparently exploded, killing the remaining seventy-one personnel.

Although Pressman commended Riker for his unquestioning loyalty, over the years Riker began to have doubts about whether he had made the right decision. The Starfleet Judge Advocate General investigated the Pegasus incident, but the survivors participated in a coverup. The JAG discovered evidence of a mutiny aboard the Pegasus before its destruction. While further investigation was recommended, Starfleet Intelligence declared the entire incident classified and no follow-up was ever conducted. ( TNG : " The Pegasus ")

Stationed on Betazed [ ]

Betazed surface

Riker and Troi on Betazed

Following the Pegasus incident, Riker was stationed on Betazed . While there, he met Deanna Troi. The two began a relationship which lasted several years. ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint ", " Ménage à Troi ", " Second Chances ")

Sometime during his early career, Riker needed to wear a feathered costume while on a diplomatic mission to Armus IX . Similarly, he wore furs to meet with the leadership council on Kabatris . ( TNG : " Angel One ")

Service aboard the Potemkin and Duplication Incident [ ]

By 2361 , Riker was promoted to lieutenant and served in the operations division aboard the USS Potemkin . Aboard the Potemkin , he developed a tactic which involved using a planet 's magnetic pole and shutting down all ship's systems to confuse an enemy vessel's sensors. He also took up poker so he could ingratiate himself with the senior officers in their games, which came across as rather obvious brownnosing. Fortunately, they realized he was young and inexperienced and decided not to hold it against him. ( TNG : " Peak Performance ", " Lower Decks ")

Later that year, Riker led an away team to Nervala IV to rescue researchers stranded at the outpost on that world. Riker was the last to beam out. Atmospheric distortions threatened to dissipate his pattern, so the Potemkin transporter chief compensated by creating a second confinement beam. Only one beam was needed for Riker to rematerialize on the ship, so the second beam was shut down. In an odd twist of fate, the second transporter beam, which had exactly the same phase differential as the distortion field, maintained its integrity and was reflected back to the planet's surface, where it also successfully rematerialized a William T. Riker. The Potemkin crew did not realize that the beam had been reflected to create duplicate Rikers, resulting in the one on the planet (later known as Thomas ) remaining stranded there for the next eight years. Up until the moment of transport, both Rikers were the same person. As a result, both had an equal claim to being the "real" William T. Riker. However, as Riker and his crewmates were unaware that he was not the sole William T. Riker after returning to the Potemkin , he retained the identity thereafter. He later received a promotion to lieutenant commander for "exceptional valor" during the mission. He was quickly posted to the USS Hood as first officer . ( TNG : " Second Chances ")

Service aboard the Hood [ ]

Riker's commanding officer on the Hood was Captain Robert DeSoto . His service aboard the ship was exemplary, despite an incident where Riker, risking a court martial , refused to allow Captain DeSoto to transport into a hostile situation on planet Altair III . He was ultimately rewarded for this action, as it was what made his profile stand out in the eyes of Captain Jean-Luc Picard. ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint ", " The Pegasus ")

Riker was offered his first command, that of the ill-fated USS Drake , in 2364 . However, he turned down that position for a far more enticing offer. ( TNG : " The Arsenal of Freedom ")

Service aboard the Enterprise -D [ ]

First year [ ].

William Riker, Jean-Luc Picard, and Deanna Troi, 2364

Riker, with Picard and Troi during the Farpoint Mission

William Riker was promoted to commander and first officer of the newly launched USS Enterprise -D in 2364. He was ferried to planet Deneb IV by the Hood and met the Enterprise at the planet. The ship had undergone a saucer separation after being threatened by the entity known as Q . Riker reported aboard the stardrive section and was briefed about the current situation and was ordered to perform a difficult and unusual manual docking with the saucer module , which he conducted very well.

During the Farpoint mission, Riker led several away teams which discovered that Farpoint Station was a living entity, trapped by the Bandi for their own selfish purposes. ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint ")

Q was intrigued with Riker, so much so that he believed Riker deserved to be empowered with the abilities of the Q Continuum . Q made a bet with the Continuum that Riker would accept the gift and trapped the Enterprise while it was en route to a disaster on a mining colony on Quadra Sigma III . Most of its senior officers were then taken to a deadly illusion world. Riker used his newfound powers to save the crew from hostile aliens inhabiting the fantasy, bringing Lieutenant Worf and Wesley Crusher back to life in the process. Picard was concerned about these events and requested that Riker not use his supernatural abilities. However, Riker changed his mind after he refused to save a young girl killed in the disaster. He became angry with Picard, feeling he had suppressed his abilities and caused the death of the girl.

Further temptation by Q led Riker to grant several wishes to the Enterprise crew: to Geordi La Forge , normal eyesight; to Worf, a Klingon female mate; to Wesley, full growth to adulthood. He nearly transformed Data into a Human, but Data refused the offer, feeling that it would be merely an illusion. As Picard predicted, the other crew also turned down Riker's gifts because of their inherent emptiness. Riker learned his lesson, and the powers were taken away once Q was recalled to the Continuum. ( TNG : " Hide And Q ")

The Enterprise was stolen from Starbase 74 by a race called the Bynars . Their computer-based society was on the verge of collapse after the star Beta Magellan went supernova and damaged their central computer. They required the Enterprise in order to repair it. The crew evacuated, but Riker and Picard remained on board, infatuated by a holodeck program created by the Bynars as a diversion. The two were successful in retaking the Enterprise and saving the Bynar homeworld from destruction. ( TNG : " 11001001 ")

Riker became involved with the alien conspiracy which infiltrated Starfleet Command in 2364. The possessed Admiral Gregory Quinn attempted to infest him with a parasitic being in order to have an alien operative aboard the Enterprise , but Riker resisted. He struggled with Quinn and was knocked out but was able to alert other personnel to the situation. Dr. Beverly Crusher incapacitated Quinn with a phaser, then determined the nature of the neural parasites. She implanted a fake parasite on Riker, who then beamed down to Earth just in time to prevent the infested Starfleet officers from co-opting Captain Picard. He and Picard were able to find the mother creature, hosted in Lieutenant Commander Dexter Remmick , and destroy it before the alien conspiracy grew any further. ( TNG : " Conspiracy ")

Combat record [ ]

William T

Riker in 2365

Riker was an accomplished tactician, inventing several strategies while serving aboard various starships. He apparently acquired a reputation for using unorthodox solutions, as Enterprise Second Officer Data estimated he only used traditional tactics 21 percent of the time. In 2365 , Riker was given temporary command of the outdated USS Hathaway during a combat exercise to ready for the Borg invasion. The Hathaway was to fight the Enterprise in a simulation designed to test the response of a crew when faced with a substantially superior enemy. Although Riker's crew managed to turn the poorly maintained Hathaway into something flyable and score several hits against the Enterprise during the initial phases of battle, the test turned deadly when a Ferengi marauder intervened. The Enterprise believed that the Ferengi were a holographic trick designed to divert attention from the Hathaway , and therefore did not raise shields. The Ferengi opened fire, disabling the Enterprise 's weapons and shields. The Ferengi demanded that the Enterprise hand over custody of the Hathaway , as they incorrectly assumed the Hathaway had valuable Federation secrets on board. In order to fool the Ferengi, Riker devised a plan to have the Enterprise fire photon torpedoes at the Hathaway , which would jump to warp just before they exploded, making it appear to the Ferengi as if the Hathaway had been destroyed. Worf then fooled the Ferengi sensors into believing that a Starfleet ship had entered the system, scaring them away. ( TNG : " Peak Performance ")

Riker orders Worf to fire on the Borg cube

Riker orders Worf to fire on the Borg cube

In 2366 , the Borg launched their first invasion of the Federation . A Borg specialist, Lieutenant Commander Elizabeth Shelby , was assigned to the Enterprise . The two butted heads over protocol, and Riker felt that Shelby was trying to ingratiate herself to Captain Picard in order to prove her qualifications as a first officer, particularly since Riker had recently been offered command of the USS Melbourne and was having trouble deciding whether his reluctance to accept the post meant that he had become scared of his old ambitions to become a captain himself. Picard was eventually abducted by the Borg and assimilated , becoming Locutus of Borg . Riker was then left in command of the Enterprise and faced with the difficult decision of choosing to use a new deflector dish weapon against the Borg cube , which would destroy that ship along with Picard. When a rescue attempt failed, Riker gave the order to use the weapon. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds ") However, the assimilated knowledge of Captain Picard gave the Borg an advantage, and they altered their shields to resist the weapon.

Riker commanding Enterprise-D

Riker as captain of the Enterprise

As the Borg continued on a direct course for Earth, Admiral J.P. Hanson gave Riker a field promotion to captain. Riker chose Shelby as his new first officer. Even though their relationship had a rocky start, Riker realized that they worked well together, and Shelby had the knowledge necessary to mount a successful fight against the Borg. Riker was still reluctant to accept the responsibility in light of Picard's abduction, but Guinan , an old and close friend of Picard, was able to convince him that he needed to let Picard go not only to win against the Borg, but also to save Picard. The Enterprise was repaired after its use of the deflector weapon and warped to rendezvous with the fleet at Wolf 359 . It arrived shortly after the devastating Battle of Wolf 359 , where many ships, including the Melbourne , were destroyed. At this point, Riker formulated a plan to recover Captain Picard, in hopes that the Borg might halt their approach with Locutus gone. The Enterprise caught up to the Borg and used Shelby's plan of separating the saucer section. Picard had been briefed on this plan before he was assimilated and knew that the stardrive section was the only threat. As the Borg focused their attack, the saucer launched a shuttlecraft carrying Data and Worf. They beamed aboard the cube and brought Picard back to the Enterprise . The Borg were temporarily confused but continued on course. Data and Dr. Crusher later learned that the Borg interconnectedness gave them access to the entire Collective through Picard. Data linked himself to Locutus and accessed the Borg command structure as the cube entered Earth orbit. Initial attempts to deactivate the Borg were fruitless, and Riker prepared to ram the Borg cube with the Enterprise in hopes that the collision would disable the vessel. Picard was able to tell Data to instruct the Borg to regenerate, which was a low-priority command. The cycle ended up in a feedback loop, and the cube exploded, cutting Picard's link and restoring his Humanity. Riker returned to his post as Enterprise first officer following Picard's recovery, having proven to himself and others that he was capable of shouldering the burdens of command, but chose to remain on the Enterprise because he liked the friends and relationships he had formed on the ship rather than because he was frightened of reaching for more. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds, Part II ")

During the Klingon Civil War of 2368 , Riker was placed in temporary command of the USS Excalibur along with Geordi La Forge as his 1st officer. The ship was part of an armada led by the Enterprise -D and set up a tachyon detection grid using blockade tactics in order to reveal Romulan assistance to the House of Duras . ( TNG : " Redemption II ")

On stardate 46235.7, Riker was again left in temporary command of the Enterprise when Captain Picard and three other crew members were transformed into children. The ship was attacked by a pair of B'rel -class Bird-of-Prey ships under the command of Ferengi privateers. During the battle, the Enterprise was overwhelmed and subsequently boarded by the Ferengi. The Ferengi seized control of the ship, and it was only with the help of Captain Picard and the other transformed crewmen that control was regained. ( TNG : " Rascals ")

Riker braces for impact

Riker braces himself as the Enterprise -D crashes into Veridian III

Riker and wrecked command chair

Riker with the captain's chair after the Enterprise 's destruction

Riker was in command during the Enterprise -D's final battle in 2371 . The ship had been attacked by the Duras sisters by order of Dr. Tolian Soran . The sisters were given an unfair advantage, as Soran had placed a visual transmitter in La Forge's VISOR , giving them access to the Enterprise shield modulation. Riker's quick thinking led to the identification of a plasma coil flaw on the sisters' old Bird-of-Prey , which was destroyed. Unfortunately, the Enterprise suffered catastrophic damage to its warp core . Riker ordered a saucer separation, and the saucer section maneuvered to safety before the engineering section exploded. The shock wave from the blast caused the saucer to plunge into the atmosphere of Veridian III , where it crash-landed. The entire crew survived, although Riker was disappointed that he would never have the chance to command the ship. ( Star Trek Generations )

Diplomacy and cultural exchange [ ]

Riker participated in first contact with the Ferengi in the Delphi Ardu system in 2364. The Enterprise and a Ferengi marauder were trapped in orbit, paralyzed by a Tkon energy-dampening weapon. An away team commanded by Riker contacted the Tkon portal . The portal sensed Riker's great courage and dignity, while it only found deception with the Ferengi, leading it to grant Riker's request and release both ships. ( TNG : " The Last Outpost ")

Riker conducted another diplomatic mission that year on the planet Angel I . Survivors from a Federation freighter , the Odin , were discovered on the matriarchal world and sentenced to death for advancing policies to grant equal rights for male members of the society. Riker successfully argued their case to Mistress Beata , Angel I's Elected One , convincing her that change was inevitable. She later allowed the Odin crew and their families from Angel I to be moved to an isolated continent so they could continue their lives without affecting mainstream culture. ( TNG : " Angel One ")

Riker was an early participant in the Officer Exchange Program , temporarily transferring to a Klingon Bird-of-Prey, the IKS Pagh , in 2365. To prepare for the assignment, he indulged in many different Klingon foods . Worf also gave him an emergency transponder shortly before his departure, just in case of an emergency situation. On board the Pagh , Riker had to quickly learn the Klingon way of doing things, physically fighting the second officer to prove his loyalty to Captain Kargan and enduring the abusive comments of the Klingon crew. At the same time, the Enterprise became infected with a hull-degrading bacterium, which it inadvertently transmitted from the Pagh . The Klingons believed that it was a new Federation weapon and returned to attack the Enterprise . Riker was able to relieve Kargan by giving him the transponder and sending him to the Enterprise , then staging a mock battle with the Starfleet vessel to maintain the honor of the Klingon crew. Riker returned to his post aboard the Enterprise following the incident. ( TNG : " A Matter Of Honor ")

In 2366, the Enterprise hosted negotiations for rights to the Barzan wormhole . The Federation representative, Mendoza , was poisoned by the Ferengi delegation, requiring Riker to take his place. The wormhole later turned out to be useless, as its terminus fluctuated between the Gamma and Delta Quadrants . ( TNG : " The Price ")

The Enterprise responded to sensor readings which indicated a Romulan outpost on Alpha Onias III in early 2367 , on Riker's birthday. Riker led an away team to investigate but was trapped by an alien named Barash . The alien had been hidden on the planet by his mother to keep him safe from their enemies and was given technology to generate any type of fantasy. He became lonely and hoped Riker would stay to keep him company. When Riker regained consciousness, he was confronted by an Enterprise sixteen years into the future. Dr. Crusher claimed that he was infected by Altarian encephalitis and had lost all memories since Alpha Onias III. He was a single parent with one slightly troublesome child, " Jean-Luc Riker ." "Admiral" Picard then arrived on a Romulan warbird with a diplomatic delegation. Riker was to complete the final peace accords with the Romulans, which he had been working on ever since the Enterprise rescued a damaged Romulan ship. Although Riker began to accept his new circumstances and give "Jean-Luc" attention, the simulation quickly began to fall apart as the technology was not able to keep up with Riker. The Enterprise computer was much too slow, and the senior staff were unable to answer Riker's questions about the previous sixteen years. Moreover, a recording of his wife revealed her to be Minuet , a holographic fantasy. This illusion gave way to another wherein Riker was imprisoned in a Romulan laboratory. Barash stayed in the form of the child, now called " Ethan ." Riker and Ethan plotted an escape, but Riker figured out this second deception when Ethan accidentally called Tomalak "ambassador," a rank he only held in the first illusion. Barash then revealed his true nature to Riker. Will offered him safety and companionship aboard the Enterprise , and the two transported back to the ship. ( TNG : " Future Imperfect ")

The Enterprise was crippled after a defect caused its dilithium chamber hatch to explode. Initially the incident was blamed on Romulan espionage, but it was later determined to be a problem with the hatch, which had been replaced at Earth Station McKinley a few months previously. Riker participated in the initial questioning of a Klingon suspect named J'Dan . After Admiral Norah Satie came aboard and instigated a "witch hunt" with the intention of forcing out Romulan collaborators, Riker served as defense counsel for Crewman Simon Tarses . Tarses was singled out as a spy because his grandfather was Romulan. Satie's investigation was later canceled by Starfleet Command when it became apparent her accusations had very little factual support. ( TNG : " The Drumhead ")

Riker piloted Trill ambassador Odan to a meeting on Peliar Zel in 2367. En route, their shuttle was attacked, and Odan's host body injured. The symbiont was removed, and later transplanted to Riker at his insistence. Human physiology was not totally compatible with the symbiont, but Odan survived in Riker's body long enough to complete negotiations between the two moons of the planet. Odan had been romantically involved with Dr. Beverly Crusher, and she was confused by Odan's change. She tried to avoid him as much as possible as she was uncomfortable with the Trill way of life. Eventually, Crusher realized that she was attracted to Odan's personality as much as his physical appearance and made love to him in Will's body. When a new Trill host arrived, the symbiont was removed from Riker, and he recovered with no long-term effects. ( TNG : " The Host ")

Will was left in command of the Enterprise in 2368 while Captain Picard visited Romulus in search of Ambassador Spock . He was ordered to investigate the disappearance of the Vulcan ship T'Pau from Qualor II when the wreckage of its deflector array was found among the debris of a Ferengi cargo ship . The Enterprise discovered that a mercenary vessel had been stealing ship components from the surplus depot which orbited the planet. The mercenaries were killed when they attacked the Enterprise , ( TNG : " Unification I ") forcing Riker to turn to the planet for information. He found a Ferengi trader named Omag who revealed that the Vulcan parts were being sent to Galorndon Core . The Enterprise continued to investigate, and Sela attempted to divert the Enterprise by sending a fake distress signal from a Federation colony . Riker saw through the deception and the Enterprise went to intercept the stolen Vulcan ships at the Romulan Neutral Zone , but they were destroyed by a Romulan Warbird before entering Federation space . ( TNG : " Unification II ")

Riker was to escort Iyaaran ambassador Byleth during his visit to the Enterprise in 2370 , but the ambassador insisted on Worf instead. ( TNG : " Liaisons ")

Undercover missions [ ]

Riker and Troi as Mintakans

Riker disguised as a Mintakan in 2366

While serving on board the Enterprise -D, Riker participated in away missions in which he employed disguises to protect Starfleet's Prime Directive .

When a cultural observation post on Mintaka III was severely damaged in 2366, it was discovered by a Mintakan named Liko . Liko was severely injured after being startled by the structure's appearance, requiring his transport to the Enterprise for treatment. While there he briefly woke and saw Captain Picard, whom he believed to be a deity. Several members of the observation team were also injured and wandered from the post. Riker and Troi attempted to correct the damage done to their culture by masquerading as Mintakans. They tried to convince the Mintakans that Liko was merely delusional. Riker was able to retrieve one of the observers, Dr. Palmer , from the Mintakans, but Troi was left behind. The Mintakans, terrified that Picard was a god and would come to punish them, wanted to execute her as a sacrifice to Picard. Picard later transported their leader aboard the Enterprise and convinced her that he was not a god, and Troi was released. ( TNG : " Who Watches The Watchers ")

In 2367, Riker was injured while observing the Malcorians . In preparation for the mission, his face was surgically altered to look Malcorian. He posed as Rivas Jakara . After being injured, he was treated in the local hospital. A female Malcorian nurse, Lanel , who discovered that he was an alien, offered him help when he agreed to make love with her. Unfortunately, Riker was soon discovered by others and detained. Minister Krola , a government official who was frightened of the idea of alien visitors, attempted to kill himself with Riker's phaser. Riker was eventually rescued by Dr. Crusher and Worf. ( TNG : " First Contact ")

William Riker defends himself against Suna

Riker defending himself while undercover on Tilonus IV

In 2369 , he undertook an undercover mission to Tilonus IV to find and rescue a Federation research team on the planet. He was disguised as a Tilonian merchant but was eventually discovered, ambushed, and drugged. The Tilonians then tried to operate a neural drain on him in an attempt to learn secrets in his mind, but his mind kept fighting back with recent memories that included a play about an alien sanitarium. His mental defenses eventually allowed him to regain consciousness and fight his way to his concealed communicator, allowing the Enterprise to beam him away to safety. ( TNG : " Frame of Mind ")

In 2370, Data was damaged on a mission to Barkon IV. Riker and Dr. Crusher disguised themselves as Barkonians and brought Data back to the Enterprise . ( TNG : " Thine Own Self ")

Riker as a Bajoran

Riker as a Bajoran in 2370

Also in 2370, Riker and Ro Laren were sent on a mission to infiltrate the Maquis . Riker was disguised as a Bajoran and claimed to be a relative of Ro's. Ro eventually betrayed Riker and joined the Maquis, but she allowed him to leave. Riker wished her "good luck" as he returned to the Enterprise . ( TNG : " Preemptive Strike ")

Disciplinary actions [ ]

The Enterprise left Riker and other personnel at the research station of Dr. Nel Apgar in 2366. They were to inspect his Krieger wave converter technology, as his research had been funded by Starfleet. While there, Apgar's wife, Manua , tried to seduce him. Dr. Apgar caught them kissing, and he and Riker fought nearly the entire visit. Tensions were at a breaking point when the Enterprise returned to pick up the crew. Shortly after Riker beamed out, the station exploded, killing Apgar. Riker was initially suspected of murder due to accusations by Apgar's widow and assistant , and he was placed under arrest by Tanugan authorities. The Enterprise crew began their own investigation using the holodeck. They determined that the station was not destroyed as a result of a phaser blast from Riker into the station's power core, but as a result of an energy beam directed at Riker by Apgar. Apgar had actually been developing the new technology into a weapon which he wished to sell to the Romulans, and he was worried that Riker had discovered his plan, which would terminate the research before the weapon could be created. The beam was intended to disperse Riker's pattern as he beamed off the station, but it unexpectedly deflected off the transporter beam and into the power core. Upon this revelation, chief investigator Krag dropped all charges. ( TNG : " A Matter of Perspective ")

Shortly after Cardassian withdrawal from the Bajor sector in 2369, Captain Picard was reassigned to a covert infiltration of a Cardassian outpost on Celtris III . Command of the Enterprise was transferred to Edward Jellico at the order of Admiral Alynna Nechayev . Riker tried to convince her that he was suited for the position, but she wanted an officer with experience in dealing with the Cardassians. The transition from Picard to Jellico was difficult for the entire crew. He reassigned many crewmembers from engineering to security, placed overbearing demands on all departments, and instituted new duty shift cycles which led to personnel management problems. As first officer, Riker was the recipient of complaints. Jellico saw Riker as arrogant for questioning his changes and questioned Picard's high opinion of him. ( TNG : " Chain Of Command, Part I ") Riker was present for the negotiations with the Cardassians and learned that Picard had been captured on Celtris III. Jellico deemed Picard lost and refused to attempt a rescue mission. He and Riker got into a verbal altercation in which Riker accused Jellico of sacrificing Picard's life and Jellico accusing Riker of challenging his authority. Riker was subsequently relieved of duty, with Data taking his place as first officer. The Enterprise later developed a plan to ambush a Cardassian invasion fleet in the McAllister C-5 Nebula , involving a shuttlecraft planting mines on the hulls of the Cardassian warships. Riker was the only pilot with the experience to fly the mission, and Jellico returned him to duty following a conversation wherein they both vowed not to let their opinions of one another affect their duties. ( TNG : " Chain Of Command, Part II ")

Early in 2370, Captain Picard was believed to have been killed on Dessica II . He was transported to a mercenary ship commanded by Arctus Baran and joined their crew with the name " Galen ." The Enterprise pursued the mercenaries to the Barradas system , where Riker too was abducted. He worked with Captain Picard to learn more about the mission of the mercenaries and assumed the role of a rebellious and untrustworthy Starfleet officer, trying to gain the trust of Baran. He later attempted to deactivate the Enterprise 's shields with his out-of-date command codes, giving a signal to Data to drop the shields. ( TNG : " Gambit, Part I ") Picard reconfigured the ship's weapons to a harmless setting, and the Enterprise pretended to be damaged. The mercenaries continued on their quest, and Picard eventually learned that they were planning to assemble an ancient Vulcan psionic weapon . The final component was aboard a shuttle piloted by a Klingon named Koral , who had been pulled over by the Enterprise . The mercenaries planned a raid on the Enterprise with Riker's help. Meanwhile, Baran instructed Riker to kill Picard, who had challenged Baran's authority. The group transported to the Enterprise and found the last component, but Picard then shot Riker before returning to the mercenary vessel. Riker was merely stunned, however, and reassumed command of the Enterprise . The ship went to Vulcan and stopped T'Paal , a Vulcan isolationist , from using the weapon. Back on the Enterprise , Picard jokingly suggested that Data place Riker under arrest for treason. Data did not understand the joke, and actually brought Riker to the brig . ( TNG : " Gambit, Part II ")

Pressman and Riker

Cmdr. Riker together with Admiral Erik Pressman in 2370

In 2370, the wreckage of the Pegasus was detected in the Devolin system . Erik Pressman, now an admiral, came aboard the Enterprise and the ship was sent to locate the Pegasus and to salvage it. Starfleet Security was interested in retrieving the phasing cloaking device , which also piqued Romulan interest. Pressman then told Riker that the the head of Starfleet Security had sent orders not to discuss the true mission of the Pegasus . The badly damaged Pegasus was found submerged deep within asteroid Gamma-601 , but the phasing cloak was still intact. It was returned to the Enterprise , but the Enterprise was now trapped within the asteroid as a result of Romulan weapons fire. The phasing cloak was the ship's only hope of escape, and Riker revealed its existence to the Enterprise crew, to the ire of Pressman. La Forge and Data were able to connect and activate the cloak, letting the Enterprise escape. Picard informed the Romulans of what had happened, then took Pressman into custody. Riker was also arrested, at his own insistence, and appeared before a board of inquiry at Starbase 247 . Riker, however, was allowed to return to duty despite this setback. ( TNG : " The Pegasus ")

Riker as Enterprise Chef

Riker playing the chef of Enterprise NX-01 in the holodeck in 2370

Riker had only discussed the truth about the Pegasus with ship's counselor Deanna Troi, and had difficulty deciding whether or not to reveal the true circumstances of the Pegasus incident to Captain Picard. At Troi's suggestion, Riker recreated the final mission of Enterprise NX-01 on the holodeck in order to gain command insight and to try to learn from the relationship between Captain Jonathan Archer and his chief engineer, Commander Charles Tucker III . He interacted with several Enterprise crew members as " Chef ", and as a MACO participated in the mission to rescue Shran 's daughter . By observing Tucker's willingness to disobey orders during a critical moment, saving the life of Archer and ensuring the birth of the Federation, Riker realized that telling the truth and trusting Captain Picard's faith in him was much more important than obeying Pressman's orders. ( ENT : " These Are the Voyages... ")

Medical record [ ]

While leading an away team to planet Minos in 2364, Riker was encased in a stasis field by one of the automated weapons drones reactivated by the USS Drake . Data was able to use a phaser to free him. ( TNG : " The Arsenal of Freedom ")

Riker was attacked by the Ornaran T'Jon in 2364. T'Jon wanted Picard to hand over a shipment of felicium and threatened to kill Riker if he did not comply. ( TNG : " Symbiosis ")

Later that year, Riker was "absorbed" by the malevolent entity Armus on Vagra II . He was later returned to the planet unharmed, although he was completely covered in a viscous black liquid. ( TNG : " Skin Of Evil ")

Gregory Quinn, under the influence of the neural parasites, knocked Riker out after throwing him through a table. ( TNG : " Conspiracy ")

While exploring Surata IV in 2365, Riker was stuck by the thorn of a native plant. The thorn contained an organism which began to attack Riker's central nervous system and caused him to fall into a coma. Dr. Katherine Pulaski was able to stimulate certain memory centers in Riker's brain. The emotional response provided resistance to the organism, which was suppressed. ( TNG : " Shades of Gray ")

Riker injured by Spot

Treated for scratches in sickbay

Riker was part of a cultural observation team on Malcor III in 2367. The Malcorians were on the verge of warp capability, and the Federation planned to make first contact with the race. However, Riker was mugged and badly injured in a Malcorian city and was brought to a Malcorian hospital for treatment. His different anatomy and physiology perplexed the Malcorian doctors, and rumors soon spread that Riker was indeed an alien. Despite his best efforts to escape, Riker was kept captive and his whereabouts left unknown to the Enterprise . Furthermore, the strong xenophobic tendencies of the Malcorians were demonstrated when Krola , a member of Malcorian leader Durken 's staff, tried to make it look as if Riker assassinated him in order to make it appear as if the Federation was hostile and therefore discourage any contact. Riker was eventually rescued by a team from the Enterprise and treated by Dr. Crusher. However, the incident proved to Durken that the Malcorians were not ready for contact with other species, and he requested that the Federation leave the system until the culture was better prepared. ( TNG : " First Contact ")

Riker's arm was broken when the Enterprise investigated an apparent distress call from the USS Essex on Mab-Bu VI in 2368. His injury prevented one of the disembodied criminals trapped there from inhabiting his body. ( TNG : " Power Play ")

In 2368, Riker was one of three Enterprise officers mentally assaulted by a Ullian named Jev . Jev forced Riker to relive an accident in main engineering where he was forced to seal a crewmember, Ensign Keller , behind an isolation door , causing her death. Riker then fell into a coma, which was believed to be a side effect of Iresine Syndrome . Investigation by Enterprise personnel revealed that Jev was the cause of the comas, and doctors from the Ullian homeworld helped with Riker's recovery. ( TNG : " Violations ")

Riker abducted

Taken by the solanagen aliens

Riker examined

Riker being examined

Early in 2369, Commander La Forge made enhancements to the sensor array during a survey mission to the Amargosa Diaspora . The modifications involved channeling warp power through the main deflector. Unknown at the time, the energy signatures reached into a tertiary subspace domain and allowed a group of solanogen-based lifeforms from another universe to gain access to the Enterprise . They wanted to learn more about our universe and potentially discover a way to project their universe into ours. Riker and several other crewmembers were abducted and analyzed by the aliens, sometimes involving gory medical experiments. Riker's right arm was amputated and reattached at some point. The side effects from the experiments left him very fatigued and claustrophobic, and it was these symptoms which led him to speak to Counselor Troi. She brought Riker together with other Enterprise personnel who were experiencing similar feelings, and the group was able to create a holodeck simulation of the alien environment where they were taken. Later, Dr. Crusher found evidence of the medical experiments in all the abductees. In order to close the link between the normal universe and the solanagen universe and seal a spatial rupture forming in the Enterprise cargo bay, Riker wore a homing beacon which was able to isolate the tetryon emissions emanating from the solanagen universe and allow La Forge to initiate a graviton beam to seal the breach. Dr. Crusher also gave him a counteragent to ward off the sedative used by the aliens. Later that night, he was removed from the ship and taken to the alien laboratory, where the homing beacon allowed the Enterprise to seal the rupture shortly after Riker returned with another missing Enterprise crewmember. ( TNG : " Schisms ")

Also in 2369, the Enterprise stopped at the Remmler Array for a baryon sweep . While there, the Enterprise command crew was invited to a reception at Arkaria Base . A terrorist group took them hostage in order to secure trilithium resin from the Enterprise . Dr. Crusher devised a plan to use La Forge's VISOR as a way to knock their captors into unconsciousness but needed a distraction to make the modifications. Riker went up to one of the terrorists and tried to punch him but was hit in the jaw himself. ( TNG : " Starship Mine ")

Riker's frame of mind

In the play Frame of Mind

Later in 2369, Riker was sent to Tilonus IV to track a Federation research team lost when the government collapsed into anarchy . During the mission, he was abducted and held captive in a facility run by Dr. Syrus . The doctor began experiments on Riker's mind which threatened his sanity. His mind resisted the torture by accessing memories of a play, Frame of Mind , which Riker had participated in as the main character shortly before the mission. He began shifting between practicing the play on the Enterprise and actually living the plot of the play, with the characters as Tilonians . He was committed to the hospital after being found guilty of murder and was threatened with synaptic reconstruction before resorting to a procedure called reflection therapy . In the end the two events merged, with Riker being rescued from the mental hospital by the Enterprise . Syrus was present throughout the hallucinations, allowing Riker to deduce that he was fantasizing and regain consciousness. He was rescued by the Enterprise before Syrus was able to inflict further damage, and he personally dismantled the Frame of Mind set as part of his therapy. ( TNG : " Frame of Mind ")

Riker hated cats , but was one of many Enterprise crewmembers who attempted to care for Data's cat, Spot . Riker was in charge of feeding Spot while Data was away at a conference in late 2369 and was scratched on the forehead as he attempted to set down a bowl of food. Riker later passed responsibility for Spot to Dr. Crusher and was somewhat wary of entering Data's quarters. ( TNG : " Timescape ")

In 2370, Dr. Beverly Crusher treated Reginald Barclay for a case of Urodelan flu and accidentally activated a dormant gene, mutating his T cells . The gene became airborne and began to affect the rest of the crew, causing them to "de-evolve" into more primitive forms of life. Riker devolved into an australopithecine and was found by Picard and Data attempting to break open Livingston 's fish tank in the captain's ready room . He then tried to attack Picard and Data but was stunned by a phaser and taken to sickbay. Data eventually discovered a way to reverse the effects, and the crew was returned to normal. ( TNG : " Genesis ")

Service aboard the Enterprise -E [ ]

First contact [ ].

William Riker, 2063 - on the Phoenix

Riker aboard the Phoenix

Riker transferred to the new USS Enterprise -E in 2372 , along with most of the senior staff of the Enterprise -D. In 2373 the Enterprise took part in the Battle of Sector 001 against Starfleet orders. Thanks to the ship's intervention, the Borg cube was destroyed, but not before it launched a sphere which generated a temporal vortex and traveled to the year 2063 . The Enterprise pursued and destroyed the sphere before it could prevent the first flight of Zefram Cochrane aboard the Phoenix warp ship. The Phoenix was damaged during the attack, and several Enterprise -E crewmembers assisted Cochrane in repairs. Riker also needed to convince Cochrane of the importance of his first warp flight, as Cochrane considered canceling it following the Borg attack. Riker, along with Geordi La Forge, was present on board the Phoenix for Cochrane's historic flight. ( Star Trek: First Contact )

Fighting the Son'a [ ]

William Riker, 2375

Riker in 2375

In 2375 Riker, along with the Enterprise crew, defied Federation orders and rebelled against the plan to relocate the Ba'ku people from their homeworld in order to harvest the metaphasic radiation from their planet's ring system. While Picard and the rest of the senior staff protected the Ba'ku on the planet, Riker took the Enterprise out of the Briar Patch and alerted the Federation Council to the real issues surrounding the forced relocation. During the journey out of the Briar Patch, the Enterprise was engaged by two Son'a vessels. The ship was seriously damaged in the process and forced to eject its warp core to seal a subspace tear . Riker needed to invent a new tactic on the fly. Dubbed the " Riker maneuver " by chief engineer Geordi La Forge, it involved collecting metreon gas with the Bussard collectors and then venting the gas while the ship continued to move. The cloud left behind the ship reacted with the isolytic weapons of the Son'a ships, destroying one and crippling the other. Riker then returned with the Enterprise in time to disable Ru'afo's flagship and beam Picard off of the Son'a collector before it exploded. ( Star Trek: Insurrection )

Battle with Shinzon [ ]

Riker Nemesis

Commander Riker leads a team to combat a Reman boarding party

Will Riker's last mission aboard the Enterprise -E was during its encounter with Praetor Shinzon in 2379 . Although Riker was eager to begin his life aboard the USS Titan with Counselor Troi, he realized how important it was to stop Shinzon and was willing to sacrifice anything in order to prevent him from using his thalaron radiation weapon on Earth .

The Scimitar fought and weakened the Enterprise in the Battle of the Bassen Rift , sending several boarding parties to the ship. Riker and Worf took a security detail to fight off the invading Remans . The Reman Viceroy entered the Jefferies tubes in an attempt to reach the bridge and kidnap Captain Picard. Riker followed and they fought hand-to-hand, with Riker eventually killing the Viceroy by knocking him down an Enterprise maintenance shaft. ( Star Trek Nemesis )

Command offers [ ]

Riker was offered several commands during his tenure aboard the Enterprise- D and Enterprise -E. In addition to the Drake , he was offered the USS Aries in 2365 and the USS Melbourne in 2366. ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ", " The Best of Both Worlds ") The Aries command was offered to Riker because of his exceptional abilities as an explorer and diplomat. He turned down the Aries posting because he felt he was not yet ready to leave the Enterprise and the distinction that the first officer post held. ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ") Starfleet put a great amount of pressure on Riker to accept command of the Melbourne . Many admirals and even Captain Picard felt that he had remained too long on board the Enterprise and should have accepted a command by that point in his career, lest it seem like he was standing still in a sea of upstart officers like Shelby. Even Riker questioned why he remained as Enterprise first officer and was unable to understand what kept him from leaving. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds ")

Ultimately Riker did not need to make a choice, as he was field promoted to captain during the encounter with the Borg and the Melbourne was subsequently destroyed at Wolf 359. Although it was believed Riker would have a pick of any command because his decisive leadership was a major factor in the defeat of the Borg, he still elected to remain Enterprise first officer. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds, Part II ")

William Riker, 2379

Captain William T. Riker prior to taking command of the USS Titan .

By 2379, Riker decided to accept promotion to captain of the USS Titan , assuming command of the ship that year. Troi also transferred to the Titan . ( Star Trek Nemesis )

Commanding the USS Titan [ ]

First assignment [ ].

Following Riker's assuming command of the Titan , they were dispatched to the Romulan Neutral Zone to serve as the command ship for a diplomatic task force . ( Star Trek Nemesis )

Dealing with the Pakleds [ ]

William Riker and Deanna Troi, 2380

Captain Riker in command of the Titan

In 2380 , Riker, along with the Titan 's crew, saved the USS Cerritos when it was being attacked by three Pakled Clumpships . He later offered Ensign Brad Boimler a promotion to lieutenant junior grade and a position aboard the Titan based on the Cerritos ' first officer Jack Ransom 's recommendation, which Boimler accepted. ( LD : " No Small Parts ")

Three months later, the Titan fought several Pakled battle harpies . To escape, Captain Riker ordered the ship to enter a nearby anomaly , where the Titan and its crew underwent gluonic disruption . ( LD : " Strange Energies ")

Luna class observation lounge

Riker debriefing his bridge crew on his suspicions of the Pakled attacks

In 2381 , the Titan was ordered to investigate the takeover of a mining colony located on Karzill IV . While Riker expressed unabashed love for his captaincy of the Titan and her role in the fleet, he also admitted to Boimler that he wished he could return to exploration and "solving science mysteries" like during his years on the Enterprise -D, fondly noting " Damn, do I miss that ship. " ( LD : " Kayshon, His Eyes Open ")

Becoming a father [ ]

William Riker, 2381 uniform

Captain William Riker shortly after the birth of his son Thaddeus.

Later that year, Riker and Troi welcomed their first child, Thaddeus Troi-Riker , although the delivery was touch and go. Riker was on the bridge of the Titan when he was hailed from sickbay to get down there right away. It took him seventeen seconds to get down there, during which Riker thought he was going to lose his unborn son and Thad's whole future flashed before Riker's eyes.

Sometime after Thad's birth, he met up with Picard at 10 Forward Avenue on Earth to share a celebratory drink of whiskey . ( PIC : " Seventeen Seconds ")

Reserved retirement [ ]

Life on nepenthe [ ].

As of 2399 , the retired Admiral Picard still considered Riker a loyal colleague who would not hesitate to join him on a mission if asked. By that time, Riker had left active service in Starfleet, though he remained in reserve as needed and settled on the planet Nepenthe . His house there was protected by shields due to trouble with the Kzinti . He remained married to Deanna Troi and along with Thaddeus, had a second child, Kestra . "Thad", as his family called him, died in childhood from mendaxic neurosclerosis , caused by a silicon-based virus that could have been cured with the aid of an active positronic matrix ; by the time Thad was diagnosed , however, there were no active matrices to be found, and none could be made due to the ban on the technology following the attack on Mars in 2385 . ( PIC : " Maps and Legends ", " Nepenthe ")

Creek and pier on Nepenthe

Riker shares a moment with Picard

Picard soon arrived on Nepenthe later that year with Soji Asha , whom Riker immediately recognized as being an android descended from Data. As Picard had expected Riker and Troi both offered to help him without hesitation, opening their home to him and Soji for as long as they needed. ( PIC : " Nepenthe ")

Return to duty [ ]

William Riker, 2399

Captain Riker on the Zheng He in 2399

Shortly afterwards, Riker temporarily left retirement to command the USS Zheng He at the head of a fleet dedicated to helping the residents of Coppelius resist a Zhat Vash attack. There, he confronted General Oh , claiming Coppelius to be under Federation protection, but the Zhat Vash fleet withdrew before a fight could begin, due to Soji's deactivation of the beacon. Riker contacted a relieved Picard, explaining that he had returned to help after learning of Picard's SOS in order to help his old friend since he wasn't going to talk Picard out of his plan. The Zheng He then withdrew from Coppelius with the rest of the fleet to escort the Romulans from Federation space. ( PIC : " Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2 ")

Rescuing an old friend [ ]

William T

Captain Riker was temporarily in command of the USS Titan -A after its captain, Liam Shaw, was injured.

In 2401 , Riker had returned to Starfleet full time. He was scheduled to give a speech at the Frontier Day ceremony. He aided Picard when Riker learned of Crusher's message to Picard. ( PIC : " The Next Generation ")

Personal interests [ ]

Trombone, 2368

Riker plays the trombone

Riker was a jazz aficionado, and his favorite musical instrument was the trombone . Although he was an accomplished player, his skills were not quite up to that of a professional musician ( TNG : " 11001001 ") and he had trouble with certain pieces, including " Night Bird ". ( TNG : " Second Chances ") As captain of the Titan , Riker was known to frequently clean his trombone, to the point that Boimler considered it to be somewhat disruptive. ( LD : " The Spy Humongous ")

Riker could also play the piano and taught Amarie , a musician in a bar on Qualor II, some jazz routines when the Enterprise visited the planet in 2368. ( TNG : " Unification II ")

Data performed Irving Berlin 's " Blue Skies " at Riker's wedding to Deanna Troi because of his knowledge of Riker's fondness for "archaic musical forms." ( Star Trek Nemesis )

Riker first began playing poker as a junior officer aboard the Potemkin . ( TNG : " Lower Decks ") He became a notoriously good player aboard the Enterprise , participating in most of the ship's weekly poker games and even teaching master classes on the game. ( TNG : " The Measure Of A Man ", " The Price ") He also knew several card tricks, one of which was used in a failed attempt to fool Data in 2367. ( TNG : " Legacy ") His poker skills were noted by Captain Picard, and their connection to diplomatic skills was one of the reasons he was selected to replace Mendoza as the Federation representative in the Barzan wormhole negotiations. ( TNG : " The Price ")

In an alternate timeline , Dr. Crusher noted that Riker raised his left eyebrow slightly while bluffing, although she later claimed to be kidding. ( TNG : " Cause And Effect ") In 2369, Riker, La Forge, and Worf made an unconventional wager with Dr. Crusher: if any of the men won the hand, she would become a brunette, and if Crusher won, the men would shave their beards . However, the senior staff were called to the bridge before the hand was over. ( TNG : " The Quality of Life ")

Riker was skilled in other forms of gambling and won large sums of latinum at the dabo tables in Quark's during an Enterprise visit to Deep Space 9 . Quark claimed he was unable to pay Riker at the time, and later voided the winnings in exchange for information about the whereabouts of the Duras sisters Lursa and B'Etor . ( TNG : " Firstborn ") Riker met DS9 officer Jadzia Dax at Quark's about this time. ( DS9 : " Defiant ")

Riker had several sports-related hobbies. Anbo-jyutsu was one such interest, ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ") as were Parrises squares ( TNG : " Future Imperfect ", " Timescape ") and handball . ( ENT : " These Are the Voyages... ") He had skills in the martial arts, tai chi chuan in particular and took Worf's mok'bara classes. ( TNG : " Second Chances ", " Clues ") He also enjoyed fishing . One of his favorite fishing spots was Curtis Creek , which he recreated in a holoprogram . ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ", " Second Chances ", " Future Imperfect ")

Other interests [ ]

Riker was quite skilled at three-dimensional chess , as he used the Queen's Gambit coupled with the Aldabren Exchange to defeat the Ferengi Nibor during the closing reception of the biennial Trade Agreements Conference aboard the USS Enterprise -D. ( TNG : " Ménage à Troi ") Riker had an interest in cooking from when he had had to fend for himself as a child. ( TNG : " Time Squared ", " Remember Me ") He was a member of Beverly Crusher's theater troupe aboard the Enterprise -D and played the lead in two plays, Something for Breakfast ( TNG : " A Fistful of Datas ") and Frame of Mind . ( TNG : " Frame of Mind ") His favorite vacation spot was Risa . ( TNG : " Captain's Holiday ", " The Game ") Riker also enjoyed dabo, although the beckoning profits did not appear to be the motivating factor. At Quark's on Deep Space 9 , Lt. Jadzia Dax staked Riker three strips of gold-pressed latinum when his winning-streak ran dry. He later contacted Quark and traded his unclaimed winnings for information on the Duras sisters . ( TNG : " Firstborn "; DS9 : " Defiant ")

Personal relationships [ ]

Marriage [ ].

Riker-Troi wedding

Wedding ceremony in Alaska

Will and Deanna were finally married in 2379 , shortly before their transfer to the USS Titan . Their wedding party in Alaska included Captain Picard as best man, Dr. Crusher as bridesmaid, and Data, La Forge, Worf, and Wesley Crusher as groomsmen. Guinan was also present. Another ceremony, a traditional Betazoid wedding , was planned on Betazed shortly following. However, that ceremony was delayed when the Enterprise was diverted to Romulus . ( Star Trek Nemesis )

Friendships [ ]

Because of his fair and decisive command style and his easy-going, affable personality, Riker was popular among the Enterprise -D crew and had friendships with senior staff members as well as junior officers. ( TNG : " Data's Day ") Some junior officers, such as Sam Lavelle , found him less easy to get along with. Riker was slightly annoyed with Lavelle, claiming he was too eager to please. Later, Counselor Troi suggested that his adversity actually stemmed from the fact that Lavelle was very much like Riker when he himself had been a junior officer. ( TNG : " Lower Decks ")

Riker Wesley Guinan

Riker flirts with Guinan

Riker had known Geordi La Forge longer than any of the crew, but they didn't become friends until they served on the Enterprise together. ( TNG : " The Next Phase ") He counseled La Forge following the loss of his mother in 2370, although La Forge did not heed his advice at the time. ( TNG : " Interface ")

While Dr. Beverly Crusher was head of Starfleet Medical in 2365, Riker was one of the Enterprise officers who made sure Wesley Crusher kept up with his studies and responsibilities aboard the ship. ( TNG : " The Child ") Riker and Guinan tried to advise Wesley on his relationship with Salia , but their assistance rapidly went off track from its original intention. ( TNG : " The Dauphin ")

Jean-Luc Picard [ ]

Two to beam up

Riker and Captain Picard on the bridge of the late Enterprise -D

When choosing a first officer prior to the launch of the Enterprise in 2363 , Captain Picard nearly passed over Riker's record. He stopped when he saw the incident with Captain DeSoto and Riker's refusal to allow the captain to beam down. This was a major factor in Picard's selection of Riker as his first officer. He was impressed that a first officer would challenge a captain's authority out of regard for the safety of the captain and the crew. ( TNG : " The Pegasus ") The trust Picard held in his first officer almost certainly saved the Federation. When the Enterprise encountered the Borg cube after the massacre at Wolf 359, Locutus of Borg, being reminded of that trust by Riker, would, though he knew perfectly well it was a lie, at least listen and respond to Riker's attempt to negotiate the circumstances of assimilation, distracting the Borg long enough to locate Locutus on the cube and effect a rescue, eventually using Picard's link to the Collective to destroy the ship in Earth orbit. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds ", " The Best of Both Worlds, Part II ")

Captain Picard was very cold towards Riker during their first meeting and ordered the manual docking as a test of Riker's abilities. When he performed the docking with great expertise and skill, Picard formally greeted Riker, and requested that his new first officer made sure that he didn't allow Picard to "make an ass of himself" in front of the many children aboard the ship. One year later, Picard felt as if he had not done a good job of congratulating Riker, so he did it once more, this time making his feelings clear. ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint ", " The Icarus Factor ")

Eventually, Riker and Picard became very good friends. With the best of intentions, Riker suggested that Picard vacation at Risa in 2366, asking him to return a horga'hn . Picard did not realize the history behind the statue and kept it with him after purchasing it for Riker, making it appear as if the captain was seeking jamaharon . ( TNG : " Captain's Holiday ")

The only time Riker and Picard ever verbally fought in front of the Enterprise crew was in 2366 while under the influence of emotions projected by Ambassador Sarek (whom Picard greatly respected), suffering from Bendii Syndrome . ( TNG : " Sarek ")

Picard tried to counsel Riker when he was offered command of the USS Melbourne in 2366, reminding him that the Enterprise would continue without his presence and that officers like Shelby were very much as he himself had been before he learned the lessons necessary for command of a starship. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds ") Riker also came to Captain Picard for advice when Worf wanted his help with the hegh'bat and when he struggled with a decision involving Soren . ( TNG : " Ethics ", " The Outcast ")

In early 2369, members of the Enterprise crew, including Picard, were turned into twelve-year-olds by the effects of a molecular reversion field . Unfortunately, a group of Ferengi commandeered the Enterprise about that time. Believing Picard to be a child, they confined him to a classroom aboard the ship while Riker was held in the observation lounge . Picard threw a tantrum and demanded to see his "father," Riker. They pretended to be father and son for Picard to plant a suggestive message to Riker, requesting access to the Enterprise main computer from the classroom. Picard, along with the other affected Enterprise crew members, was able to design a plan to retake the Enterprise from the Ferengi. ( TNG : " Rascals ")

During the Pegasus incident of 2370, Picard tried to investigate the circumstances surrounding the ship's disappearance. He ran into many dead-ends, as most records had been sealed, and had to use many favors in Starfleet Command to even get a look at the findings of the board convened to investigate the loss of the Pegasus . Riker would not divulge further information under the orders of Admiral Erik Pressman, and Picard reluctantly continued the search. He made it clear to Riker that he hoped he still considered the safety of the Enterprise his top priority and said that if he found this to be untrue, he would re-evaluate his trust in Riker. After the crisis was resolved, Picard visited Riker in the brig and returned him to duty aboard the Enterprise , understanding Riker's mistake in the past and satisfied that he had made the correct decisions in the present. ( TNG : " The Pegasus ")

Picard served as Riker's best man during his wedding to Deanna Troi in 2379 . He gave a toast to Riker, calling him his "trusted right arm" for the previous fifteen years and lamenting his loss of a fine first officer. ( Star Trek Nemesis )

While aboard the Enterprise , Picard generally referred to Riker as " Number One ", a nickname he used for his first officer. ( TNG : " Disaster ") Chillingly, Locutus of Borg also called Riker "Number One" while dealing with the Enterprise crew. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds ", " The Best of Both Worlds, Part II ")

Worf considered Riker one of his closest friends, despite their vastly different personalities. Riker was one of the only Humans who participated in Worf's brutally violent holodeck calisthenics program . ( TNG : " Where Silence Has Lease ") In 2365, Worf wanted to transfer to the USS Aries with Riker, concerned for his safety. ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ") Riker also tried to convince Worf to donate his blood in order to save the Romulan Patahk , rescued from Galorndon Core in 2366. He tried to make Worf realize that this gesture of goodwill might be the first step toward healing the differences between their peoples. ( TNG : " The Enemy ")

Worf asks Riker to help him die

Riker at Worf's side after his paralysis

Worf asked Riker to assist him in the hegh'bat , a Klingon ritual suicide, following his spinal cord injury in 2368. Riker was appalled by the request, feeling that Worf's life was still worth living and that suicide would be an insult to all their comrades who had struggled for life up until their death. He researched the tradition before coming to Worf with his decision. He found that the hegh'bat was generally practiced with the oldest son, and then left it up to Worf to ask his young son Alexander Rozhenko to help. Worf was unable to ask Alexander to participate in the ritual, and later decided to attempt a risky surgery involving the genetronic replicator . ( TNG : " Ethics ")

Despite his discomfort with the androgynous nature of the J'naii , Worf helped Riker during his mission to rescue Soren , realizing how important Soren was to Riker. ( TNG : " The Outcast ")

Riker also liked to good-naturedly rib Worf, who was notorious for his lack of a sense of humor. This was proven correct as Worf only glared or growled in response to Riker's antics. During the Iyaaran visit in 2370, Riker jokingly chastised Worf for thinking the dress uniform was too feminine and weak looking, later telling Worf he thought he looked good in a dress. ( TNG : " Liaisons ")

Riker encouraged Alexander's love of jazz music by giving him several recordings. Worf, however, was not a fan. ( TNG : " Phantasms ")

Riker wanted to give Worf a surprise party for his birthday in 2370, but Deanna Troi talked him out of it. ( TNG : " Parallels ")

William T

Riker with Worf in 2371

In late 2370, Worf began dating Deanna Troi, which placed some strain on his relationship with Riker despite Worf's best efforts to prevent it. ( TNG : " Eye of the Beholder ", " All Good Things... ") Worf tried to ask Riker for his permission to date Troi, but the attempt came off as comic rather than serious. ( TNG : " Eye of the Beholder ")

Riker first met Data on the Enterprise holodeck in 2364. Data was trying to whistle " Pop Goes the Weasel ," but could not finish the last few notes. Riker helped him finish, later giving Data the nickname " Pinocchio " in reference to Data's wish to become Human. Riker later recalled this incident fondly during Data's wake, although he was unable to remember the song Data was whistling. ( Star Trek Nemesis ) At first Riker was skeptical about Data's abilities as a machine, he even assumed that his rank of lieutenant commander was merely honorary. ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint ")

In 2365, Data's status as a sentient individual came into question. A trial was set on Starbase 173 , but the base lacked a complete legal staff. As Enterprise first officer, Riker was forced to act as attorney for Bruce Maddox and was given the difficult task of convincing Judge Phillipa Louvois that as an android , Data was not sentient. He very nearly proved that Data was a simple machine by deactivating him, but Picard's defense later made Louvois grant Data complete rights as a sentient being. Riker was distressed over the incident and felt terrible that he nearly cost Data his rights. Data did not hold any ill will towards Riker, though, and was grateful that Riker participated, for if he had not, the ruling would have been a default in Maddox's favor. He assured Riker that he would not forget that the actions the commander found so upsetting had saved his life. ( TNG : " The Measure Of A Man ")

Data and Riker aboard the Cleponji

Riker with Data aboard the Cleponji in 2366

Riker was also aware of the fondness the rest of the crew felt for Data. In 2366, after Data's apparent death in a shuttlecraft explosion (while ferrying hytritium , a compound too unstable for transporter use), upon seeing La Forge's furious refusal to accept that Data himself might have been responsible for the accident, Riker told Picard that, for someone incapable of feeling emotions, he was quite capable of bringing them out in others. Soon afterward he accidentally brought about Data's recovery, as it was Riker's suspicions – that since the hytritium, needed to purge tricyanate from the water on Beta Agni II , did so in seconds rather than hours, the water must have been poisoned – which launched an investigation of Kivas Fajo , who had provided the hytritium (in exactly the amount needed). Upon learning of Fajo's status as a collector, the crew, deducing that their friend's death had been faked, quickly tracked down Fajo's ship and returned Data to the Enterprise . ( TNG : " The Most Toys ")

Data sought Riker's help and advice on several occasions. One instance was when he asked for Riker's advice on friendship and betrayal following a mission involving Ishara Yar in 2367. ( TNG : " Legacy ") Data also asked for Riker's help when Keiko Ishikawa temporarily called off her wedding to Miles O'Brien in 2367. ( TNG : " Data's Day ") He also came to Riker for advice when he started to date Jenna D'Sora . ( TNG : " In Theory ")

Years after Data's physical death in 2379 aboard the Scimitar , Riker continued to remember Data with great fondness. His daughter Kestra Troi-Riker learned a great deal about Data and his life through stories from the past. ( PIC : " Nepenthe ")

Carol Freeman [ ]

Riker and Freeman

William T. Riker and Carol Freeman.

Riker was one of Captain Carol Freeman 's old friends, close enough for Riker to consider Freeman his cha'DIch and reminisce about the times they got into trouble together, although Freeman contended that Riker alone was responsible for starting incidents. Riker was also a mentor to Beckett Mariner , Freeman's daughter. He was also the source of many contrabands that Mariner collected. Seeing Riker was the source of Mariner's frequent insubordinate behavior, Freeman was slightly annoyed when they met again in 2380. ( LD : " No Small Parts ")

Beckett Mariner [ ]

Riker and Mariner

William T. Riker and Beckett Mariner.

Riker was a mentor to Ensign Beckett Mariner and a source of Mariner's contrabands, such as Romulan ale. Riker owed Mariner a favor sometime prior to 2380, which he considered paid when his ship, the USS Titan , saved Mariner's ship, the USS Cerritos from being captured and destroyed by the Pakleds.( LD : " No Small Parts ")

Kyle Riker [ ]

Will saw his father Kyle Riker for the first time in fifteen years when he came aboard the Enterprise to brief him on the USS Aries command. The two remained adversarial, despite Kyle's wish to heal any wounds before Riker departed on his mission. Dr. Pulaski, an old flame of Kyle's, told Will about Kyle's bravery following the Tholian attack and suggested that the time had come to resolve their conflict. Will and Kyle decided to settle their differences with a match of anbo-jytsu, at which time Will discovered that Kyle had been cheating since Will was twelve. The activity allowed them to vent the tension and have an actual conversation about their true feelings, which they had never done. Kyle finally told Will that he loved him before returning to Starbase Montgomery . ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ") After this incident, Will was finally able to put their past difficulties behind him. ( TNG : " Second Chances ")

Thomas Riker [ ]

Thomas and William Riker

Thomas and William

The Enterprise was sent to Nervala IV in late 2369, when the atmospheric disturbances began to subside. Riker led an away team to the surface, and discovered his duplicate, later known as Thomas Riker . The two quickly clashed over various issues, including Tom's resistance to direct orders and his attempts to rekindle a relationship with Deanna Troi. Tom felt that Will was the one who had benefited from his misery of being stuck on the planet for eight years. After working together to retrieve log files from the station computers and saving one another's lives, they began to accept one another. Thomas transferred to the USS Gandhi , and Will gave him their trombone as a parting gift. ( TNG : " Second Chances ")

By 2371, Tom had resigned his post to join the Maquis . He pretended to be Will Riker in order to gain access to the USS Defiant , which he then stole for use by the Maquis. ( DS9 : " Defiant ")

Romance [ ]

Riker spent the night with Mistress Beata during his mission to Angel I in 2364, presenting her with an Albeni meditation crystal . She was fascinated by his strength and power, traits which were not abundant in the males of her world. Riker donned the traditional clothing of the planet, drawing snickers from Counselor Troi and Lieutenant Natasha Yar . ( TNG : " Angel One ")

The Bynars created a holographic woman named Minuet to distract Riker while they hijacked the Enterprise -D in 2364. Riker found her convincingly real and was disappointed when her program was lost after the Bynars left the ship. ( TNG : " 11001001 ") Her image was used by Barash 's holosimulators to create a wife for Riker in the illusory future he experienced in 2367, making Riker realize the deception. ( TNG : " Future Imperfect ")

Lwaxana Troi [ ]

Ambassador Lwaxana Troi entered the Betazoid phase in 2365. When she visited the Enterprise , she set her sights on several male crewmembers as potential mates, including Riker. She announced their "wedding" on the bridge of the Enterprise shortly before moving on to Captain Picard. ( TNG : " Manhunt ")

Brenna Odell [ ]

Riker was romantically linked to the Bringloidi colonist Brenna Odell , but the relationship was limited to her brief stay aboard the ship in 2365. ( TNG : " Up The Long Ladder ")

The Enterprise worked to reunite the Gatherers with their Acamarian home in 2366. Riker became involved with one of Sovereign Marouk 's aides, Yuta . Yuta was actually a Tralesta who had been genetically altered to deliver a microvirus to members of another clan, the Lornak , which the Tralestas had fought centuries earlier. The last Lornak , Chorgan , was now leader of the Gatherers, and Yuta attempted to assassinate him. Data and Dr. Crusher later discovered Yuta's true nature, and Riker was forced to kill her in order to prevent Chorgan's death. ( TNG : " The Vengeance Factor ")

Riker returned from shore leave in late 2366 and saw Data's "daughter" Lal in Ten Forward . He did not realize that she was an android and flirted with her. Lal immediately picked Riker up and planted a kiss on his lips, copying behavior she had observed earlier. When Data asked Riker what his intentions were with his daughter, Riker hastily left, embarrassed and confused. ( TNG : " The Offspring ")

While Riker was held captive in the Malcorian hospital in 2367, a nurse named Lanel approached him and offered to help him escape if he made love to her, as it had long been her dream to do so with an alien. Riker tried to maneuver his way out of the situation by claiming there were differences between their cultures, but Lanel was persistent. It is unclear just how far the two went with their relationship, but Lanel eventually helped Riker try to escape. When asked if she would ever see him again, Riker somewhat sarcastically responded he would look her up next time he passed through her star system. ( TNG : " First Contact ")

Carmen Davila [ ]

Riker romanced Carmen Davila in early 2368 while some of the Enterprise crew helped establish a colony on Melona IV . However, Davila was killed when the Crystalline Entity ravaged that world. Riker wrote a brief letter to Davila's family when Starfleet informed them of her death. Riker believed that her death and the loss of countless other lives at the hands of the Entity were reason enough to destroy it rather than attempt communication. ( TNG : " Silicon Avatar ")

Etana Jol [ ]

Riker visited Risa later that year and met a Ktarian female named Etana . Jol was actually working for a Ktarian dissident movement which attempted to take over the Federation in 2368. She was able to get Riker addicted to the game they used in the mind control plot, which he then returned to the Enterprise . Fortunately, Data, Wesley Crusher and Robin Lefler were able to reverse the effects of the game and foil the Ktarian plot. ( TNG : " The Game ")

Ro Laren [ ]

When the Enterprise was affected by a Satarran memory weapon in 2368 , Riker and Ensign Ro Laren felt an attraction to one another. They spent several nights together before Dr. Crusher discovered a way to restore the memories of the entire crew. ( TNG : " Conundrum ") Later that year, Riker later wanted to say a few words about Ro at the funeral planned when it was believed she and La Forge were dead. Ro was frustrated because she and La Forge were rephased before Riker made his speech. ( TNG : " The Next Phase ")

In 2368 Riker helped the J'naii rescue the crew of one of their shuttlecraft trapped in a pocket of null space . During the planning stages of the mission, he became close to one of their pilots, Soren . The two were attracted to one another, a relationship forbidden by the oppressive government of the J'naii. Their relationship was discovered, and Soren was arrested. She was given psychological treatment to remove her inclinations to be female. With help from Worf, Riker mounted an illicit rescue mission, but it was too late. She refused to go along with him and did not wish to be returned to the way she was before treatment. ( TNG : " The Outcast ")

Kamala , a Kriosian empathic metamorph , tried to work her charms on Riker in 2368 . He was able to resist her but needed to visit the holodeck after the encounter. ( TNG : " The Perfect Mate ")

Amanda Rogers [ ]

Amanda Rogers came aboard the Enterprise in 2369. She had a somewhat obvious crush on Commander Riker, which he found flattering but did not reciprocate. Q used her interest in him to discern whether she had the abilities of the Q, causing several cargo barrels to fall from a ledge onto Riker. Amanda deflected the barrels to Riker's side. Later, after Q had begun to tempt Amanda with her new-found abilities, she abducted Riker and brought him to a romantic fantasy environment. Will still turned down her advances, but Amanda then used her powers to cause him to fall in love with her. Ultimately, Amanda realized that the encounter was devoid of meaning and sent him back to the Enterprise . ( TNG : " True Q ")

Rebecca Smith [ ]

Will dated a new tactical officer, Rebecca Smith , in 2370. They went for a walk in the arboretum and became intimate, but the mood was ruined when Riker rolled into Cypirion cactus and was stuck by several thorns. ( TNG : " Genesis ")

Deanna Troi [ ]

Troi and Riker, 2375

Will Riker with Deanna Troi in 2375

Deanna Troi and Will Riker began an intense and close relationship shortly following his posting to Betazed. They referred to each other as imzadi , a Betazoid word for "beloved". Troi apparently taught Riker how to communicate telepathically, but he seemed to have lost the ability by 2364. ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint ") Will later remarked that he knew Deanna better than anyone. ( TNG : " Man Of The People ") One of their favorite and most special locations was Janaran Falls . After Riker was transferred to the Potemkin , the two stayed in touch and planned to meet at Risa in 2361 , but Will was promoted shortly after the Nervala IV mission and forced to cancel their date. He made his career a priority over their relationship, and they gradually lost touch and did not see one another until they were both posted to the new USS Enterprise in 2364. ( TNG : " Second Chances ") It was difficult to see each other again, and Troi tried to speak to Riker alone during their mission to Farpoint Station . He maintained a distance, and she did not make another attempt. ( TNG : " Encounter at Farpoint ") They eventually decided to keep a professional yet friendly relationship. They stayed close friends and confidants, often approaching each other either to talk or for support in times of crisis. ( TNG : " Violations ", " Second Chances ") As first officer and counselor, they were required to manage crew evaluations every three months. ( TNG : " Man Of The People ", " Lower Decks ")

While under the influence of the polywater intoxication in 2364, Troi attempted to seduce Riker, but Riker maintained control and brought her to sickbay . ( TNG : " The Naked Now ")

Riker was dismayed to learn of Troi's betrothal to Wyatt Miller in 2364. Troi reassured him that he would always be a special part of her life and that she still cared for him greatly. Riker was delighted when Troi remained aboard the Enterprise after Miller left to help the Tarellians recover from a plague . ( TNG : " Haven ")

Riker and Troi attended the funeral service for Natasha Yar together after she was killed by Armus in 2364. Riker comforted Troi during and following the event. ( TNG : " Skin Of Evil ")

Troi was impregnated by an alien life form in early 2365. Riker had mixed feelings about the pregnancy and resultant child but was with Troi for the birth and supported her during the ordeal, especially after the child sacrificed himself to save the Enterprise . ( TNG : " The Child ")

Troi was visibly upset when Riker almost accepted assignment to the Aries in 2365. ( TNG : " The Icarus Factor ")

When Riker was affected by the predatory plant microbe picked up on Surata IV , Troi stayed with him through his convalescence. She was present during his treatment and relayed the emotions Will was experiencing to Dr. Pulaski, giving her indication of which memories to activate and which to suppress. ( TNG : " Shades of Gray ")

During the negotiations for the Barzan wormhole in 2366, Riker was challenged by the Chrysalian representative, Devinoni Ral , in more ways than one. Ral and Troi began a romantic relationship, and Ral used this to intimidate Riker. However, the Barzan wormhole was later determined to be worthless, and Riker gleefully withdrew the Federation bid in front of Ral, who had just secured rights for the Chrysalians through underhanded means. ( TNG : " The Price ")

Later that year, Troi backed off when Riker made his interest in Yuta known. ( TNG : " The Vengeance Factor ") She stood by him after he was accused of Dr. Nel Apgar 's murder, even when it seemed he must be guilty. After he was exonerated, she squeezed his hand in affection. ( TNG : " A Matter of Perspective ")

The couple tried to take a romantic holiday on Betazed in 2366 but were interrupted by Lwaxana Troi . A Ferengi DaiMon , Tog , later arrived to kidnap Lwaxana, taking Deanna and Riker with her. They later engineered an escape and were rescued by the Enterprise . ( TNG : " Ménage à Troi ")

The Enterprise became trapped by two-dimensional lifeforms in early 2367. They also suppressed Deanna's telepathic abilities and she found it difficult to deal with her loss. Will tried to help her cope with the trauma, but she resisted. He then called her "aristocratic" and thought she was upset because her empathic powers helped her feel superior to her shipmates. When the Enterprise was freed, her abilities were restored. She apologized to Will, but also made it clear that he was not to call her aristocratic again. ( TNG : " The Loss ")

Will and Deanna attended the wedding of Keiko and Miles O'Brien together. ( TNG : " Data's Day ")

Sometime prior to 2368 , Riker and Troi had a romantic encounter following a poker night. Troi was reluctant to continue a relationship at the time and the incident remained isolated. ( TNG : " Violations ")

Both Riker and Troi were affected by the Satarran energy weapon, but Troi still felt a connection to Will. Her suspicions were confirmed when Riker found a copy of Ode to Psyche given to him by Troi, with the inscription "To Will, all my love, Deanna". ( TNG : " Conundrum ")

When Riker expressed interest in Soren, he went to see Troi in order to gain her approval of the relationship. Once again, Troi assured him that they would always be special to one another, even if they saw other people. ( TNG : " The Outcast ")

Ambassador Ves Alkar telepathically linked with Troi in 2369, using her as a receptacle for his "psychic waste". Troi's behavior was drastically altered, and she began to rapidly age due to the stress. She appeared for a crew evaluation meeting with Riker in a seductive outfit, then revealing that she had just slept with a male junior officer. Riker claimed that he felt her love life was none of his business, but Troi continued to press the issue, causing Riker to leave. Troi later tried to kiss Riker, then scratched him for no apparent reason. Riker reported this behavior to Dr. Crusher, who uncovered Alkar's plan and broke his link with Troi. Troi thanked Riker for his support, and he promised to love her even when she became old and gray. ( TNG : " Man Of The People ")

The discovery of Riker's double on Nervala IV complicated his relationship with Troi. That Riker had spent eight years pining for Troi and was eager to resume their relationship. He tried to have her transferred to the Gandhi , but she refused, not wanting to give up the life she had spent so long building on the Enterprise . ( TNG : " Second Chances ")

Lwaxana Troi felt that Riker was partly the reason Deanna was still unmarried by 2370. While suffering from strain due to repeated telepathic contact with the Cairn , Lwaxana approached WRiker in Ten Forward and yelled at him, telling him to leave Deanna alone. She later had Deanna apologize for her behavior. ( TNG : " Dark Page ")

Troi attempted the Bridge Officer's test in 2370. Riker supervised the tests and did not show any favoritism towards her. After she attempted the engineering qualification several times without much luck, he came to tell her the tests were canceled. However, by insisting to her that, despite their relationship, his loyalty was to the Enterprise , he gave her a hint which told her what the test was really about – her ability to send a crewmember to their death. Knowing that she would never simply give up, he entered the holodeck just in time to congratulate her on passing the test. ( TNG : " Thine Own Self ")

Worf began courting Troi in 2370, thankful for all the help she had provided in Alexander's care over the prior two years. ( TNG : " Parallels ") Worf was concerned that Riker might feel betrayed by their relationship and wanted to discuss the issue with Riker late that year. ( TNG : " All Good Things... ")

Riker and Troi stayed friends into their early years aboard the Enterprise -E. He helped her through the outcome of an alcohol binge instigated by Zefram Cochrane while they were trying to convince him to conduct his warp flight in 2063 (though he made no attempt to hide his enjoyment of witnessing her drunken behavior). ( Star Trek: First Contact ) However, things changed when they encountered the radiation of the Ba'ku planet in 2375 . They began to playfully flirt with one another and ended up taking a bubble bath together. Their rekindled romance continued after the Enterprise left the Briar Patch . ( Star Trek: Insurrection )

The two were planning to vacation in 2377 . Troi arrived at the beach first; Riker was going to meet her a few days later. They later decided to spend the rest of their vacation in Tiburon instead. They invited Reg Barclay to accompany them, wanting to introduce him to a mutual friend, Maril . ( VOY : " Inside Man ")

Anything but canon scenarios [ ]

First contact with bragu's species [ ].

William T

William T. Riker when he met Bragu

According to an anything but canon account, when the Enterprise-D arrived at a planet that was inhabited by a race that just achieved warp drive technology , three officers were assembled to make first contact with them, and Riker served as the commanding officer of the away team .

They beamed down to the building where the scientific breakthrough took place, and it's there that they met Bragu . Upon talking to them briefly, it took little time for them to learn about their fixation with boogers . They were extremely grossed out by this, especially when the scientists offered them some leftover fish cooked in a microwave . It only got worse when Bragu blew his nose on the fish, using his own snot as sauce . This was the last straw for Riker, who distracted them, telling them there was Gorn invaders behind them. They actually looked behind them, and he seized the moment to use his phaser to destroy their warp engine , and he tells them it must not be ready yet after all. The landing party then returned to the ship . ( VST : " Worst Contact ")

Malfunctioning holoprogram [ ]

William Riker (Holograms All the Way Down)

Riker hologram 2

William T

Riker hologram 1

In a malfunctioning holoprogram , two different holograms of William T. Riker showed up in this program . The first one seemed to be a holosuite program that Quark was showing to Garak in the holosuite at Quark's on Deep Space 9 to prove that he can make a fake worthy to trick the Romulans into entering the Dominion War . That too ended up actually being part of the simulation .

Another hologram of Riker shows up later in the program . This time, it seems that scene changes to the USS Voyager , where Neelix was watching a holonovel on his PADD . He decides to go to bed , and he lies down. Then Trip Tucker tells the computer to pause playback . But to his surprise, he's not the real Trip Tucker. In fact, he was part of a hologram that was a five- headed monster . The other heads were Nyota Uhura , T'Pol and Spock . Riker's head was also part of this five-headed holo- beast , in fact he was the head on the far right side of the monster's body , where the right arm was located.

At this point in the program, the computer voice begins speaking , saying that something is clearly wrong. The computer then says: "Computer, freeze program." The head of Tucker realizes that there must really be a malfunction, because it seemed as though the computer was talking to itself, and he said: "You are the computer! Who are you talk--" -- but he was cut off before he could finish his sentence , because he was frozen along with the rest of the program. ( VST : " Holograms All the Way Down ")

Jam session on the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) [ ]

Post Mainframe Acid-Cadassian Ten Forwardcore

Riker playing along with the rest of his band

In a very unusual setting , Riker was present on the Federation 's original starship Enterprise during the 50th aniversary of Star Trek: The Animated Series .

He and Hikaru Sulu step off of the turbolift and onto the bridge with their musical instruments in hand . Riker was carrying a trombone , while Sulu was carrying his keyboard . They then decide to start jamming to one of their songs , which Riker described as falling into the genre of Post Mainframe Acid-Cardassian Ten Forwardcore .

While they were playing their music , a fleet of Klingon D7 class battle cruisers unexpectedly attacked the Enterprise . D'Vana Tendi informed everyone that the alert wasn't part of the song , nevertheless they continued to play their instruments and finally there was a violent explosion on the bridge. ( VST : " Walk, Don't Run ")]]

Alternate realities and timelines [ ]

Riker 6 hours ahead

Riker from six hours in the future

In 2365, the USS Enterprise -D encountered the shuttlecraft El-Baz from six hours in the future, including a future version of Captain Jean-Luc Picard . Using a variable phase inverter , a future log entry was retrieved showing Riker having escorted Captain Picard to the shuttlebay and standing in the bay while Picard departed the ship. ( TNG : " Time Squared ")

Riker killed, alternate timeline

Riker is killed in an alternate timeline

In 2366, the USS Enterprise -C emerged from a temporal rift . Its disappearance from the year 2344 caused an altered timeline, wherein the Federation was losing a war against the Klingons. Riker was still the ship's first officer, but he was much more toughened due to the horrors of war. He questioned the plan to send the Enterprise -C back to the past, especially after Captain Rachel Garrett was killed, but Captain Picard allowed Richard Castillo to assume command and return the Enterprise -C to 2344 . Riker later worked the tactical station following Tasha Yar's transfer to the Enterprise -C but was killed in a subsequent Klingon attack. ( TNG : " Yesterday's Enterprise ")

In 2367, Beverly Crusher became trapped in a warp bubble . Her thoughts created a universe where people and objects rapidly began disappearing. Riker was one of the last Enterprise crewmembers to vanish. ( TNG : " Remember Me ")

Riker gone mad

Captain Riker of a quantum reality where the Borg had decimated the Federation

Lieutenant Worf encountered a quantum fissure which caused him to begin shifting between quantum realities in 2370. In several universes, Riker was still Enterprise first officer and planned a surprise birthday party for Worf even though Worf had made it expressly clear he did not want one. In others, he had been promoted to captain. In the final universe in which Worf arrived, Riker was the captain, as Captain Picard had been lost in the Borg encounter of 2367. In another reality, the Borg had conquered the Federation and the Enterprise was one of the few ships left. Riker was in command of that ship as well and was desperate not to return to his universe once all the Enterprise s began spilling into a single universe. After attempting to get the attention of the present-reality Enterprise by firing lightly upon them, the Borg-damaged ship was destroyed by Capt. Riker with the alternate Riker on board to prevent further damage to his ship. The events following Worf's encounter were erased from the timeline once the fissure was sealed. ( TNG : " Parallels ")

In an alternate 2364 , Riker was left on Farpoint Station when the Enterprise was diverted to investigate a temporal anomaly in the Devron system . ( TNG : " All Good Things... ")

In an alternate 2370 , Riker became uncomfortable with the growing relationship between Worf and Deanna, but he refused to voice his concern. ( TNG : " All Good Things... ")

William T

Admiral Riker in the anti-time future timeframe

In an unknown, alternate future timeframe , Riker had been promoted to admiral and was assigned to Starbase 247. The USS Enterprise -D, substantially refitted and upgraded, was his flagship . In this timeline, Deanna Troi had died twenty years previously, causing Worf and Riker to become estranged, as each blamed the other for preventing a relationship with her. Riker attempted to make amends at Deanna's funeral, but was rejected, possibly due to the bad timing.

Picard contacted him for help in investigating the anomaly, but Riker refused to allow him passage to the Neutral Zone, thinking Picard had been affected by Irumodic Syndrome and was delusional. Later Picard convinced his ex-wife, Beverly Picard , to take her medical ship, the USS Pasteur , to investigate the anomaly. The Pasteur was attacked and destroyed by Klingon attack cruisers , but the Enterprise arrived to rescue the crew and fight off the Klingons. Immediately Worf and Riker began to bicker. Picard once again pleaded with Riker to return to the Devron system, but he was then sedated and returned to quarters. Armed with new information gathered from the other two timeframes, Picard woke and went to talk to Riker and the other former Enterprise officers. He convinced them that the anomaly existed, and the Enterprise returned just in time to watch it form. Riker ordered the Enterprise into the anomaly, where it used a static warp shell in concert with the other Enterprise s to collapse it. During this time, Riker made an overture to Worf that was accepted, asking for his old friend's help on the bridge.

After the anomaly was sealed, the timelines were erased and only Captain Picard retained memory of those events. Picard told his staff of his experiences in the future, in hopes that things such as the conflict between Worf and Riker would never happen. ( TNG : " All Good Things... ")

Holograms [ ]

Riker with Riker and Manua holograms

Riker seeing himself in Krag's holoprogram

William Riker was holographically duplicated on several occasions.

  • In 2366, on Stardate 43610.4, a series of holographic simulations , Deposition Program Riker One , Hypothetical Krag One , Manua Simulation One , Tayna Simulation Three , and La Forge One , were used by Krag in his investigation into the murder of Nel Apgar , of which Riker was suspected. ( TNG : " A Matter of Perspective ")
  • Later that year, on Stardate 43807.4, at least two holographic recreations of Riker were created by Lieutenant Reginald Barclay when he suffered from holoaddiction . One was on a recreation of the Enterprise -D; the other was part of The Three Musketeers and was considerably shorter than the real Riker. Troi believed that the latter's short stature was due to the fact that Barclay found Riker's height intimidating. ( TNG : " Hollow Pursuits ")
  • In 2368 , on Stardate 45254.8, a hologram of Riker was used to fool Sela so Spock , Captain Picard , and Data could escape from Romulus . Picard told Data that he did not get the hair quite right. ( TNG : " Unification II ")
  • In 2369, on stardate 46424.1, a hologram of Riker was used by James Moriarty to trick Picard into releasing his command codes. Another was used in turn by Picard to trick Moriarty into releasing his control over the Enterprise -D. ( TNG : " Ship In A Bottle ")

Miscellaneous information [ ]

Rikers personnel files

The personnel files of Thomas and William T. Riker in 2371

Riker's quarters on the Enterprise -D were on Deck 8, room 0912. ( TNG : " The Best of Both Worlds ", " Night Terrors ", " Chain Of Command, Part II ")

By 2369, Riker had been decorated by Starfleet five times. ( TNG : " Chain Of Command, Part I ")

Riker replaced the trombone that he had given Thomas Riker with a King 3B 2103 "Legend" tenor trombone. ( TNG : " Thine Own Self ")

Riker spoke "a little" of the Klingon language ( TNG : " The Emissary ") and had a rudimentary knowledge of the Romulan language , specifically Romulan curses. ( TNG : " The Enemy ", " The Defector ")

By early 2365, Riker had permanently grown out his beard because he was tired of people always telling him how young he looked. ( TNG : " The Neutral Zone ", " The Child ", " The Pegasus ") He also felt the beard was a proud, ancient tradition and a symbol of strength. However, he did not see it as an affectation and was not opposed to shaving it; he had just gotten used to it. ( TNG : " The Quality of Life ") He briefly shaved it in 2375 after he resumed his relationship with Deanna Troi. ( Star Trek: Insurrection )

In Reg Barclay's holofantasies of the Enterprise crew programmed in 2366, Riker was a short toady fellow who followed The Three Musketeers : Picard, Data, and La Forge. Riker was incensed to discover his holosimulation, which Troi believed Reg made short on purpose because Riker's height may have been intimidating. Riker then deleted the character. ( TNG : " Hollow Pursuits ")

Ginsberg, Newton and Riker

Riker pulled from the timeline for Q's trial

Q "called" Riker to testify during the trial held to determine whether the Q later known as Quinn should be allowed to die. The trial was held in 2372 aboard the USS Voyager while it was still lost in the Delta Quadrant, and Q plucked Riker from a time period between 2366 and 2370. Riker explained the significance of a portrait of his ancestor, Thaddius "Iron Boots" Riker , colonel of the 102nd New York Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War , and later realized that Quinn was standing next to Thaddius, as he had saved Thaddius from death during the Battle of Pine Mountain . Q concluded by saying that had Quinn never existed, Q would have lost at least a dozen good opportunities to insult Riker over the years. Riker was then returned to his timeframe without any knowledge of being aboard Voyager . ( VOY : " Death Wish ")

Chronology [ ]

William T

Starfleet's personnel file on William T. Riker, circa 2401

Memorable quotes [ ]

" Riker, W.T. reporting as ordered, sir. "

" He calls that a little adventure? "

"Fate protects fools, little children, and ships named Enterprise ."

" Mr. Worf… fire. "

" So what did you wish for, Will? " " Music lessons. "

" I'm going to miss this ship. She went before her time. "

" Smooth as an android's bottom, eh, Data? "

" Serving with you has been an honor. " " The honor was mine... captain. "

" Carol! I guess those Cali -class ships can hold their own longer than people say. " " Thanks for the assist, Captain. " " No need to be so formal. You know, I was her mentor. " " Uh, yeah, well I remember it differently. " " You were sort of my cha'DIch ! We used to get in so much trouble! " " 'We'? "

" Hey, how about you buy me a drink? You know, since we're even? Remember? The thing with the aliens where I saved your ass? " " We are not even, and we don't use money. What happened to you, man? You used to be sharp. "

" I'm sorry I'm late, I was watching the first Enterprise NX-01 on the holodeck. You know, Archer and those guys ? What a story. Those guys had a long road getting from there to here . "

" Red alert! I'm starting to think this jam session's got too many licks and not enough comp! " " WHAT DOES THAT EVEN MEAN?! "

" General, or commodore, or whatever you're calling yourself, right now I'm on the bridge of the toughest, fastest, most powerful starship Starfleet has ever put into service, and I've got a fleet of them at my back. We've got our phasers locked on your warp cores, and nothing would make me happier than you giving me an excuse to kick your treacherous Tal Shiar ass. But instead, I'm going to ask you one time to stand down. "

Appendices [ ]

See also [ ], appearances [ ].

  • " Encounter at Farpoint "
  • " The Naked Now "
  • " Code of Honor "
  • " The Last Outpost "
  • " Where No One Has Gone Before "
  • " Lonely Among Us "
  • " Justice "
  • " The Battle "
  • " Hide And Q "
  • " The Big Goodbye "
  • " Datalore "
  • " Angel One "
  • " 11001001 "
  • " Too Short A Season "
  • " When The Bough Breaks "
  • " Home Soil "
  • " Coming of Age "
  • " Heart of Glory "
  • " The Arsenal of Freedom "
  • " Symbiosis "
  • " Skin Of Evil "
  • " We'll Always Have Paris "
  • " Conspiracy "
  • " The Neutral Zone "
  • " The Child "
  • " Where Silence Has Lease "
  • " Elementary, Dear Data "
  • " The Outrageous Okona "
  • " Loud As A Whisper "
  • " The Schizoid Man "
  • " Unnatural Selection "
  • " A Matter Of Honor "
  • " The Measure Of A Man "
  • " The Dauphin "
  • " Contagion "
  • " The Royale "
  • " Time Squared "
  • " The Icarus Factor "
  • " Pen Pals "
  • " Samaritan Snare "
  • " Up The Long Ladder "
  • " Manhunt "
  • " The Emissary "
  • " Peak Performance "
  • " Shades of Gray "
  • " Evolution "
  • " The Ensigns of Command "
  • " The Survivors "
  • " Who Watches The Watchers "
  • " The Bonding "
  • " Booby Trap "
  • " The Enemy "
  • " The Price "
  • " The Vengeance Factor "
  • " The Defector "
  • " The Hunted "
  • " The High Ground "
  • " A Matter of Perspective "
  • " Yesterday's Enterprise "
  • " The Offspring "
  • " Sins of The Father "
  • " Allegiance "
  • " Captain's Holiday "
  • " Tin Man "
  • " Hollow Pursuits "
  • " The Most Toys "
  • " Ménage à Troi "
  • " Transfigurations "
  • " The Best of Both Worlds "
  • " The Best of Both Worlds, Part II "
  • " Brothers "
  • " Suddenly Human "
  • " Remember Me "
  • " Reunion "
  • " Future Imperfect "
  • " Final Mission "
  • " The Loss "
  • " Data's Day "
  • " The Wounded "
  • " Devil's Due "
  • " First Contact "
  • " Galaxy's Child "
  • " Night Terrors "
  • " Identity Crisis "
  • " The Nth Degree "
  • " The Drumhead "
  • " Half a Life "
  • " The Host "
  • " The Mind's Eye "
  • " In Theory "
  • " Redemption "
  • " Redemption II "
  • " Ensign Ro "
  • " Silicon Avatar "
  • " Disaster "
  • " The Game "
  • " Unification I "
  • " Unification II "
  • " A Matter Of Time "
  • " New Ground "
  • " Hero Worship "
  • " Violations "
  • " The Masterpiece Society "
  • " Conundrum "
  • " Power Play "
  • " The Outcast "
  • " Cause And Effect "
  • " The First Duty "
  • " Cost Of Living "
  • " The Perfect Mate "
  • " Imaginary Friend "
  • " The Next Phase "
  • " The Inner Light "
  • " Time's Arrow "
  • " Time's Arrow, Part II "
  • " Realm Of Fear "
  • " Man Of The People "
  • " Schisms "
  • " Rascals "
  • " A Fistful of Datas "
  • " The Quality of Life "
  • " Chain Of Command, Part I "
  • " Chain Of Command, Part II "
  • " Ship In A Bottle "
  • " Face Of The Enemy "
  • " Tapestry "
  • " Birthright, Part I "
  • " Birthright, Part II "
  • " Starship Mine "
  • " Lessons "
  • " The Chase "
  • " Frame of Mind "
  • " Suspicions "
  • " Rightful Heir "
  • " Second Chances "
  • " Timescape "
  • " Descent "
  • " Descent, Part II "
  • " Liaisons "
  • " Interface "
  • " Gambit, Part I "
  • " Gambit, Part II "
  • " Phantasms "
  • " Dark Page "
  • " Attached "
  • " Force of Nature "
  • " Inheritance "
  • " Parallels "
  • " The Pegasus "
  • " Homeward "
  • " Sub Rosa "
  • " Lower Decks "
  • " Thine Own Self "
  • " Eye of the Beholder "
  • " Genesis "
  • " Journey's End "
  • " Firstborn "
  • " Bloodlines "
  • " Emergence "
  • " Preemptive Strike "
  • " All Good Things... "
  • Star Trek Generations
  • Star Trek: First Contact
  • Star Trek: Insurrection
  • Star Trek Nemesis
  • DS9 : " Defiant " ( okudagram )
  • VOY : " Death Wish "
  • ENT : " These Are the Voyages... "
  • " Nepenthe "
  • " Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2 "
  • " The Next Generation "
  • " Disengage "
  • " Seventeen Seconds "
  • " No Win Scenario "
  • " Imposters "
  • " The Bounty "
  • " Surrender "
  • " The Last Generation "
  • " No Small Parts "
  • " Strange Energies "
  • " Kayshon, His Eyes Open "
  • " Worst Contact "
  • " Holograms All the Way Down " (hologram)
  • " Walk, Don't Run "

Background information [ ]

Filming Gambit I

Jonathan Frakes goes before the cameras as Riker

Riker was played by Jonathan Frakes in all the character's film and television appearances. The young Riker seen in photographs, in the episode " The Icarus Factor ", was portrayed by an unknown actor .

Character development [ ]

During the early production stages of Star Trek: The Next Generation , Riker's name was spelled "Ryker". According to Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion  (2nd ed., p. 13), his description in the original casting call was as follows:

" NUMBER ONE (AKA WILLIAM RYKER) – A 30-35 year old Caucasian born in Alaska. He is a pleasant looking man with sex appeal, of medium height, very agile and strong, a natural psychologist. Number One, as he is usually called, is second in command of the Enterprise and has a very strong, solid relationship with the Captain. "

Other background details which were eventually added to Riker's preproduction character bio claimed Riker "doesn't fully appreciate the female need to be needed" and that he is "privately called William by Picard and Bill by 'female friends'" (Troi does refer to him as "Bill" in " The Naked Now " and " Haven ", although this nickname was apparently dropped in favor of "Will". However, in the script for "Encounter at Farpoint", Picard refers to him as "Bill".) The preferred spelling of "Will" is not clear; scripts and closed captioning often alternate between "Wil" and "Will".

The original concept of Will Riker had much in common with the Willard Decker character intended for Star Trek: Phase II ; indeed, the background story of the love affair between Riker and Troi is somewhat similar to that of Decker and Ilia as seen in Star Trek: The Motion Picture . ( Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion  (2nd ed., p. 66))

Another source of inspiration when fleshing out the character was James T. Kirk . According to the writer's guide for the second season , " Like the legendary 23rd century Kirk (when in his early thirties), our Number One is very strong and agile and has a tendency toward 'derring-do'. Also like Captain Kirk, Riker has a healthy sex drive. " ( Star Trek: The Next Generation 365 , p. 007) Riker was also given the same middle initial T. as Kirk, although his middle name was not actually decided until " Second Chances " in the sixth season . According to Jeri Taylor , a variety of names including "Tecumseh" was considered before the writing staff settled on "Thomas" as the "simplest" choice. ( Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion  (2nd ed., pp. 13 & 250))

Among the actors who originally auditioned for the role of William T. Riker were James Horan [3] [4] , William O. Campbell , Jeffrey Combs , Christopher McDonald , Eric Pierpoint [5] , Erich Anderson , and Vaughn Armstrong (each of whom later played at least one Star Trek role). Campbell was Gene Roddenberry 's preference for the role. However, Jeffrey Combs, Ben Murphy , and Michael O'Gorman were also regarded as front runners for the part.

In a memo from John E. Ferraro to John Pike , dated 13 April 1987 , Frakes, Gregg Marx , Murphy and O'Gorman were named as being considered for the role, with O'Gorman described as a favorite and an atypical but good choice for the role. [6] Campbell was at one point even cast as Riker. " [John] Pike didn't like him, " recalled Rick Berman . " He didn't feel he had a sense of command. He wouldn't follow this guy into battle. I think it was really more that he didn't audition that well for the part, and that's when we went to our second choice, who was Jonathan Frakes. " Frakes himself reflected, " I auditioned seven times over six weeks for this part. Unlike anything I have ever had to fight for before. The last few auditions, I would be sent to Gene's office prior to going to whichever executive needed convincing on this particular audition. I kept going up the food chain. In Gene's office, Gene would give me a pep talk, and Corey Allen , the director of the pilot , was there [....] As a young actor, eager and willing, I really got caught up in [Roddenberry's] vision. " Berman concluded that Frakes "turned out to be a terrific choice." ( The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years , p. 95)

Riker is one of four characters to appear in two series finales ( TNG : " All Good Things... " and ENT : " These Are the Voyages... "), the others being Deanna Troi , Worf , and Miles O'Brien .

One of Riker's costumes from the first season of TNG was added to the ScienceFictionArchives.com collection and was showcased at Paris science museum during a 2010-2011 exhibition, "Science (and) Fiction: Imagination Meets Reality". [7]

Riker was the inspiration for the custom Minecraft skin of Yogscast co-founder Lewis Brindley, better known as Xephos. Originally, the skin was Riker, but it evolved into its own character. [8]

Riker was the inspiration of the TV Tropes ideal of "Growing the Beard" – the concept of a series or franchise becoming markedly better than previous installments after a certain point – by the fact that, after actor Jonathan Frakes grew a beard for season two, TNG began to take a turn for the better in various ways. [9]

Riker narrated the commentary on the Star Trek: The Next Generation Interactive Technical Manual and also appeared in the original Star Trek: The Experience : Klingon Encounter ride at the Las Vegas Hilton.

According to StarTrek.com , William Riker was born on August 19 2335, in Valdez , Alaska, and his mother's middle initial was "C." [10] The Star Trek Encyclopedia  (3rd ed., p. 411), also, stated that Riker was born in Valdez.

Apocrypha [ ]

In the alternate future of the Pocket DS9 book series Millennium , Riker was made captain of the Enterprise -F after Jean-Luc Picard was promoted to admiral. Among his crew were Deanna Troi, Geordi La Forge, Tom Paris , and B'Elanna Torres . However, the Enterprise -F was lost with all hands during a bloody battle with the Grigari. This timeline was eventually erased.

Before Riker's middle name was established as "Thomas", it was given as "Thelonius" – perhaps after famous jazz musician Thelonious Monk , as a way to reflect Riker's love of that music style – in Peter David 's novel, Imzadi . That book also delved into the relationship between Riker and Troi.

The novel Q-Squared gives Riker's full name as "William Thomas Thelonius Riker".

In the Star Trek: Destiny trilogy, Riker and the crew of the USS Titan were one of three ships that were instrumental in the final conflict with the Borg , including connecting the Columbia NX-02 to the Borg and locating the Caeliar and Captain Hernandez . In the follow-ups, Riker and Troi have a child together and name it Natasha, after their old friend from the Enterprise -D.

Riker is promoted to admiral in the Star Trek: The Fall miniseries, as Fleet Admiral Leonard James Akaar suspected a conspiracy in the upper echelons of Starfleet Command and needed someone in the admiralty that he knew he could trust. Despite his new position, Riker retains the Titan as his flagship and attempts to go on missions on it whenever he can.

External links [ ]

  • William T. Riker at StarTrek.com
  • William T. Riker at Wikipedia
  • William T. Riker at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • William T. Riker at the Star Trek Online Wiki
  • 1 Abdullah bin al-Hussein

Star Trek: The Next Generation - The Best Riker Episodes

Riker has appeared in multiple Star Trek projects, but his episodes on Star Trek: The Next Generation are the most definitive.

One of the appeals of the Star Trek franchise is its vast range of iconic characters, a list that grows with every new project. Star Trek: The Next Generation was the first spinoff/soft reboot to follow Star Trek: The Original series , and it had the difficult job of making its audience love the new crew as much as Kirk, Spock, and Dr. McCoy. The characters took a while to earn affection, including William T. Riker, the successor to Spock’s former position as first officer on the Enterprise. Even in the 80s, the Star Trek fanbase was reluctant to accept change, but ultimately Riker became legendary in his own right .

In popular culture, Riker became known as a womanizer, but his true character was more complex. In the series, Riker is a steadfast right-hand man to Captain Picard and an impeccable officer. He also has deep issues with his deadbeat father, insecurity about his Starfleet Academy days, and secrets from previous postings before he landed on the Enterprise. Riker goes on to have more adventures in other movies and TV series, but it is in Star Trek: The Next Generation that he develops into the bearded icon audiences love today. What were Riker’s best episodes?

RELATED: Star Trek: What Are The Origins Of The Riker Maneuver?

S3 E26/S4 E01: The Best of Both Worlds

Easily ranked among the best stories of any Star Trek show, this two-part set of episodes puts Riker to the test when the Borg kidnap and assimilate Captain Picard. The Borg are defined as series antagonists in the season 3 finale, and Picard falls victim to trauma that will impact him for the rest of his life in the season 4 opener, but both episodes are very much about exploring Riker’s ambition and ability to lead. He’s Picard’s Number One , but he’s also a fearless commander in his own right. He doesn’t hesitate to protect the Enterprise, even if he has to fire on a ship holding Picard to do so.

S6 E21: Frame of Mind

The darker episodes of Star Trek are always memorable, especially when executed in a creatively creepy way. Riker is the star of this psychological thriller, which features him struggling to maintain his sanity as his reality is undone and restored over and over again. Both Riker and the audience will debate what is real as Riker’s life becomes intertwined with the events of a play, descending into a true uncanny valley the more time goes on. There are elements of Rosemary’s Baby (1968) and Gaslight (1944) within this episode, putting Riker in an atypically vulnerable position.

S5 E17: The Outcast

Star Trek is known for engaging with contemporary political and social discussions, as evident in this episode. Riker falls for a member of a traditionally androgynous race, a people who consider gender conformity and sexuality perverse. The alien, named Soren, explores her appreciation for her new gender identity and her romance with Riker; this proves to be contentious when her people object. This episode is an emotional one for Riker, and is one of the rare early Star Trek episodes to discuss LGBTQ+ themes and sexuality with nuance.

S4 E08: Future Imperfect

Another episode that gives more depth to Riker’s behavior, this story takes the audience almost two decades further into the future, where everything and everyone has changed. Riker wakes up, seemingly inexplicably, in a reality where he is captain of the Enterprise. Picard is an admiral, Data is Riker’s number one, and Riker is widowed with a young son. The vision becomes more scattered as Riker pushes at the logic of it , and it is revealed to be a simulation created by a scared child. Riker’s shrewdness and kindness are the stars of this episode, as is the fact that Riker knows when he’s ready to be a captain – and it’s not yet.

S6 E24: Second Chances

Everyone’s seeing double in this episode, which features twice the Riker due to a transporter glitch. Riker of the Enterprise comes face-to-face with his clone, whose life diverged only four years earlier, when the glitch left him accidentally abandoned on a Federation Starbase. There is a complicated love triangle with Deanna Troi , a flouting of the chain of command, and a great deal of jealousy from both Rikers, as they try to wrest back control of their identity. Riker’s character is explored through two lenses in this episode, and while it touches on absurd, there’s also plenty of reflection (often literal) for him.

S7 E12: The Pegasus

This critically acclaimed episode sees Riker at his best: a loyal first officer, a clever diplomat, and good-hearted man. Riker is put into an awkward position when his former captain, Pressman, boards the Enterprise, looking to exploit the ship and her crew in pursuit of material for Starfleet Intelligence . Riker is revealed to have defied a mutiny against Pressman, but at the cost of his peace of mind.

Pressman is devious, eager to challenge Picard’s authority and reckless with the safety of his crew, but Riker is no longer impressionable enough to be manipulated into helping him. Riker exposes Pressman’s secret Federation-compatible cloaking device, which saves the day. It also gets Riker a stint in the brig for keeping secrets, but his good character can never be questioned again.

Every member of the crew in Star Trek: The Next Generation went on profound journeys of self-discovery while on board the Enterprise , and Riker is no exception. While empathizing with his clone, sacrificing his captain to save his crew, or standing up to a superior officer in defense of truth and justice, Riker became a man who embodies the best of Starfleet. He made his own mark on the title of first officer, and set a standard for the ones to come after him.

MORE: New Picard Poster Reunites Star Trek: The Next Generation Cast

Star Trek's Jonathan Frakes Reveals The Real Reason Behind Riker's TNG Beard

Riker looking to side

As far as memorable "Star Trek" faces go, it's tough to beat Jonathan Frakes' William T. Riker and his impressive beard. The actor's appearance is an iconic part of " Star Trek: The Next Generation" in particular, which is why it makes revisiting the show's earliest days a bit strange. As fans may recall, Riker doesn't actually grow his trademark beard until the second season of the series — a rather unexpected turn from the fresh-faced first officer in the inaugural season.

In an interview included in the "Star Trek" oral history "The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years," Frakes explained the real-life reason that Riker grows a beard in "The Next Generation" Season 2. According to the actor, production on the show's second season was impacted by the 1988 writers' strike, and he made the decision to grow out his beard out of a contempt for shaving. "During the strike we had a meeting with [Gene] Roddenberry and [Rick] Berman and [Maurice] Hurley, who was the producer at the time, and Roddenberry kept looking at me and said, 'I really like this, it looks nautical,'" Frakes said.

The show's creatives then decided to integrate Frakes' beard into the design of Riker. "What ensued was this bizarre executive beard trimming contest," Frakes explained. "It became absurd in terms of the length and the shape and everything else. Gene wanted the beard to be decorative and it stuck and I'm very glad to have it. Fortunately, my wife liked it, or else I'd have had real problems."

Riker's beard has become a pop culture staple

Despite the humble real-life origin of Riker's beard on "Star Trek: The Next Generation," the character's facial hair has grown into a defining element of the series as a whole, as well as a major piece of pop culture iconography. In the decades since the sci-fi show's original run, the phrase "Riker's beard" has become a shorthand term used to refer to a show coming into its own — just as many fans feel "The Next Generation" did after its first season.

For Jonathan Frakes' part, the actor has indicated on multiple occasions his happiness regarding the way the "Riker's beard" phrase has transcended the show it was born from — as well as its hallowed place in the Urban Dictionary. "There are few people who understand the importance in the Urban Dictionary of 'Riker's beard,'" he once said in an interview with TrekMovie.com . "I have had to explain it to some people and I am so proud of it."

As the "Star Trek" franchise continues to boldly go where no one has gone before, Frakes is happy to see newer series like "Star Trek: Discovery" undergoing the "Riker's beard" process of growth. "I think 'Discovery' has done it and I think a lot of it has to do [with] the settling in of both sides of the camera: the writing and the actors," he said. "The show feels to me like it is very much on the tracks now and running with real strength."

Star Trek Just Doubled Down on Its Wildest Body-Switching Concept

Welcome back to Trill.

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5, Episode 3.

Body switching is a classic sci-fi trope. From Freaky Friday to Farscape , and of course, most of Quantum Leap, the idea of the consciousness from one person inhabiting the body of a different person will never stop being the fuel for speculative stories that are both hilarious and profound. But, when Star Trek invented the “joined” species of the Trill in 1991, it took the body-switching/body-surfing trope to a new level. While a specific Trill symbiont might live for several hundreds of years, this slug-like creature generally inhabited a humanoid host. This “joining” often created a new hybrid personality each time, sort of like Time Lord regeneration from Doctor Who mashed up with internal alien parasites from Alien; a chest-burster that never burst, but just stayed in you forever.

And if all of that wasn’t wild enough, on June 12, in the episode “Facets,” 1995, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine added a new wrinkle to Trill canon. Not only were the memories of all the previous hosts alive and well in the current symbiont, but, through a process called “zhian’tara,” a specific host’s personality could leave the symbiont and enter into the body of... anyone! Basically, this was Trill joining via spacey magic, and now, 29 years after “Facets,” Star Trek: Discovery is doubling down (tripling down?) on this very specific form of consciousness transfer in the Season 5 episode “Jinaal.” Spoilers ahead.

The Trill host trick

Dax and Odo in 'Deep Space Nine.'

Dax and Odo discuss sharing memories in “Facets.”

Although the Trill were established in The Next Generation episode “The Host,” the vast majority of Trill canon comes from Deep Space Nine , thanks to the presence of Jadzia Dax, who later, in Season 7, switched hosts and became Ezri Dax. But, in the memorable Season 3 episode “Facets,” Jadzia’s previous host, Curzon, left her body through the zhian’tara process and settled in the body of the station’s resident shapeshifter, Odo. From that point, Odo’s entire personality was merged with Curzon’s, which put everyone on the station in a deeply uncomfortable position.

As a stand-alone episode of DS9 , “Facets” remains a fantastic story about memory, regret, and what one generation owes the next. But, the legacy of “Facets” is easily the concept of zhian’tara, which was used to save Gray Tal’s consciousness in Discovery Season 4, and now, in Season 5, is being employed again to unravel an 800-year-old mystery.

Discovery’s return to Trill

Culber and Gray in 'Discovery' Season 5.

Cubler (Wilson Cruz) takes on an ancient Trill tradition in Discovery Season 5.

The planet Trill was first seen in DS9 in the episode “Equilibrium,” but Discovery has actually visited the planet more times, starting in the Season 3 episode “Forget Me Not,” and now again, in “Jinaal.” This time the need to transfer the memories of one previous Trill host into someone else is all connected to the secrets Jinaal Bix has about researcher of the Progenitors in the 24th century.

After transferring Jinaal’s consciousness into Culber, the entire personality of our stalwart Starfleet doctor changes, and, just like “Facets,” he suddenly becomes cockier, and more evasive. If you watch “Facets” right after watching “Jinaal,” the parallels are clear. While Curzon’s secret was connected to something personal, Jinaal’s secret has broader implications. Turns out, Federation scientists were working on cracking the Progenitor tech during the era of the Dominion War, and so they decided to bury any knowledge of the technology to prevent any planet or government from weaponizing their research.

Interestingly, this detail dovetails with Picard Season 3 a bit, in which we learned that Section 31 was pushing different Federation scientists to weaponize the organic nature of Changelings. Basically, the Dominion War created a lot of corrupt scientific research within the Federation, making the top-secret Daystrom labs that Riker, Raffi, and Worf raided perhaps just a small sample of the horrible top-secret weapons the Federation has developed.

What Discovery does is make it clear that Jinaal did the right thing at the time by hiding the research — even if that doesn’t help our heroes at the moment.

A classic Original Series nod

Kirk and Sargon in 'Star Trek: The Original Series.'

Sargon enters Kirk’s body in “Return to Tomorrow.”

Of course, within the canon of Trek, the Trill weren’t the first time the franchise explored the concept of sharing consciousness. Spock transferred his katra to Bones in The Wrath of Khan , and Kirk switched bodies with Janice Lester in the controversial final TOS episode “Turnabout Intruder.”

But, one wonderful 1968 episode from TOS Season 2 — “Return to Tomorrow” — featured ancient beings borrowing the bodies of Kirk, Spock, and Dr. Ann Mulhall in order to build more permanent, android bodies. When the ancient being of Sargon enters Kirk’s body, one of the first things he says is: “Your captain has an excellent body.”

Now, 56 years later, when Jinaal finds himself in Culber’s body, he says something similar: “Wow, this guy really works out!”

Across decades of internal canon, Star Trek can make the same body-switching joke, and make it work, in any century.

Star Trek: Discovery Season 5 drops new episodes on Fridays on Paramount+.

Phasers on Stun!: How the Making — and Remaking — of Star Trek Changed the World

  • Science Fiction

star trek tng 2 rikers

You'll soon be able to watch Commander Riker play D&D alongside other Star Trek actors, and it's all for charity

Live long and prosper.

Jonathan Frakes sitting at a desk

Todd Stashwick and other celebrities are teaming up to play D&D in a charity livestream, which will be on Twitch, so even if you weren't lucky enough to snag a seat at the table, you'll still be able to enjoy all the hilarious hijinks from afar. 

The crew taking part in the D&D campaign Legends of Eleanora includes Todd Stashwick, who played Captain Liam Shaw from Star Trek: Picard as the Dungeon Master for the session. There's also Jonathan Frakes, who portrayed Commander William Riker in Star Trek: The Next Generation; Deborah Ann Woll, who starred in Daredevil as Karen Page; Michelle Hurd, who played Raffi Musiker in Star Trek: Picard; and Wil Wheaton, best known for portraying Wesley Crusher in Star Trek: The Next Generation. 

This livestream is in support of The Pablove Foundation , a charitable organization that invests in underfunded pediatric cancer research and tries to improve the lives of children living with cancer. All of the Net proceeds from the D&D livestream will go to this charity. 

As part of raising money for The Pablove Foundation, there was a chance to snag a seat at the table, with one seat going in a virtual big on Charitybuzz . Before the sale ended, the highest bid was $7,600 (via Wargamer ), so you would've needed to donate a pretty substantial wad of cash to have a chance at winning.

Even though the opportunity to play with the crew is over,  you can still watch the session via Twitch—it's not the same thing as sitting down with all the stars, but it's a close second and as good as it gets for the rest of us, unfortunately. The livestream will take place on Saturday, April 20, at 5 pm PDT/ 8 pm ET / 1 am BST (on Sunday, April 21). All you have to do is check out the Mini Terrain Domain Twitch channel and search for Legends of Eleanora: Zephyr Against the Mist. 

Correction: A previous version of this article incorrectly stated that the livestream is on a Wednesday. It is taking place on Saturday April 20.

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Riker Is A Great Star Trek Captain, But Not In This TNG Episode

  • Riker shines as a capable First Officer under Picard, but stumbles in "Samaritan Snare" as acting Captain, ignoring crucial advice.
  • Riker's controversial command decisions lead to Geordi's capture by the unintelligent Pakleds, showcasing his rare missteps as a leader.
  • Riker's character growth shines in later TNG seasons and Star Trek: Picard, where he becomes a skilled Captain.

Commander William T. Riker (Jonathan Frakes) became a great Starfleet Captain, but you wouldn't know it from watching this episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation . For seven seasons and four movies, Commander Riker served as First Officer on the USS Enterprise-D under the command of Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart). Riker generally performed well when left in command, and Picard once referred to Will as: "the finest officer with whom I have ever served." Riker turned down several promotions over the years, choosing to remain a part of the Enterprise crew rather than take command of his own ship.

In Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2 , episode 17, "Samaritan Snare," Captain Picard must travel to Starbase 515 for a procedure to replace his artificial heart. Ensign Wesley Crusher (Wil Wheaton) accompanies Picard, and the two have some interesting discussions on their six-hour shuttle ride, making their part of the episode the better of the two stories. But the main plot of "Samaritan Snare" focuses on Riker's near-disastrous turn as Captain . Soon after Picard departs, the Enterprise receives a distress call from the Mondor, a Pakled ship. Riker then makes a series of uncharacteristic decisions that make him look like a much worse commander than he typically is.

The Pakleds are strange aliens, even for Star Trek , and their depiction borders on offensive. The dumb aliens would not be seen on screen again until the animated Star Trek: Lower Decks , where they feel significantly less out of place.

Commander Rikers 10 Best Star Trek TNG Episodes, Ranked

Riker was a shockingly bad captain in star trek: tng's "samaritan snare", riker ignores both worf and troi, which feels very out of character..

When Commander Riker opens communications with the unintelligent Pakleds , the aliens use only simple language and do not seem to understand Riker's questions. The Pakleds need help to "make their ship go," and Lt. Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) thinks it will be an easy fix. Riker suggests sending Geordi, alone, over to the Pakled ship to fix the problem, prompting Lt. Worf (Michael Dorn) to ask: " Do we truly need to send our Chief Engineer over to them?" Riker never offers an answer to this question. Although the Commander acknowledges Worf's statement that they know nothing about the Pakleds, he ultimately ignores it and sends Geordi to the Pakled ship alone.

After La Forge beams over to the ship and begins repairs, Counselor Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) arrives on the bridge and tells Riker that Geordi is in "grave danger." It's already odd that Riker did not consult Troi about the Pakleds in the first place (as Picard almost always does with new alien species), but it's stranger still that he completely ignores her worries. Not only does Riker underestimate the Pakleds, he also ignores the advice of both Worf and Troi , which results in the Pakleds taking Geordi hostage. Riker then concocts a ridiculous ruse to give information to Geordi without the Pakleds' understanding, but this, too, makes little sense.

Star Trek: Picard Is The Best Version Of Captain Riker

Riker returned briefly in picard season 1, before making a more substantial return in picard season 3..

Will Riker becomes a better commander as Star Trek: The Next Generation continues, and by the excellent TNG two-part episode "The Best of Both Worlds," he's saving Earth from the Borg. Riker's performance in "Samaritan Snare" is one of the few outliers among his otherwise accomplished career , and he does successfully get La Forge back in the end. Still, Riker does not take on his own command until Star Trek: Nemesis , when he becomes Captain of the USS Titan. Although little has been revealed about Riker's time as Captain of the Titan, he did get to fight off some Pakled ships on Star Trek: Lower Decks.

Star Trek: Picard season 3 has some of Jonathan Frakes' finest acting and some of Riker's best moments.

When Admiral Picard and the reunited Enterprise-D crew must take on the Borg and the Changelings to save the Federation in Star Trek: Picard season 3, Will Riker proves what a skilled Captain he became after TNG . In Picard season 3, episode 3, "Seventeen Seconds," for example, Riker takes Picard's advice to fight Vadic (Amanda Plummer) and her warship, when it might have been better to flee, as he initially suggested. Picard season 3 not only has some of Jonathan Frakes' finest acting and some of Riker's best moments but also shows how far the former Number One has come since his time on Star Trek: The Next Generation .

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Cast Michael Dorn, LeVar Burton, Brent Spiner, Wil Wheaton, Jonathan Frakes, Patrick Stewart, Marina Sirtis, Gates McFadden

Release Date September 28, 1987

Writers Jeri Taylor, Michael Piller, Rick Berman, Brannon Braga, Ronald D. Moore

Directors David Carson

Showrunner Jeri Taylor, Michael Piller, Rick Berman

Where To Watch Paramount+

Star Trek: Picard

Cast Orla Brady, Michael Dorn, LeVar Burton, Brent Spiner, Jonathan Frakes, Jeri Ryan, Patrick Stewart, Alison Pill, Isa Briones, Evan Evagora, Marina Sirtis, Amanda Plummer, Whoopi Goldberg, Gates McFadden, Todd Stashwick, Santiago Cabrera, Michelle Hurd, John de Lancie, Ed Speleers

Release Date January 23, 2020

Writers Akiva Goldsman, Terry Matalas, Michael Chabon

Directors Terry Matalas, Jonathan Frakes

Showrunner Akiva Goldsman, Terry Matalas, Michael Chabon

Riker Is A Great Star Trek Captain, But Not In This TNG Episode

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Star Trek: The Next Generation

Michael Dorn, Jonathan Frakes, Gates McFadden, Marina Sirtis, Brent Spiner, LeVar Burton, and Patrick Stewart in Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)

Set almost 100 years after Captain Kirk's 5-year mission, a new generation of Starfleet officers sets off in the U.S.S. Enterprise-D on its own mission to go where no one has gone before. Set almost 100 years after Captain Kirk's 5-year mission, a new generation of Starfleet officers sets off in the U.S.S. Enterprise-D on its own mission to go where no one has gone before. Set almost 100 years after Captain Kirk's 5-year mission, a new generation of Starfleet officers sets off in the U.S.S. Enterprise-D on its own mission to go where no one has gone before.

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  • Trivia When the cast decided to lobby for a salary increase, Wil Wheaton 's first offer from the producers was to instead have his character promoted to Lieutenant. His response was, "So what should I tell my landlord when I can't pay my rent? 'Don't worry, I just made Lieutenant'?!"
  • Goofs It is claimed that Data can't use contractions (Can't, Isn't, Don't, etc) yet there are several instances throughout the series where he does. One of the first such examples is heard in Encounter at Farpoint (1987) , where Data uses the word "Can't" while the Enterprise is being chased by Q's "ship".

[repeated line]

Capt. Picard : Engage!

  • Crazy credits The model of the Enterprise used in the opening credits is so detailed, a tiny figure can be seen walking past a window just before the vessel jumps to warp speed.
  • Alternate versions The first and last episodes were originally broadcast as two-hour TV movies, and were later re-edited into two one-hour episodes each. Both edits involved removing some scenes from each episode.
  • Connections Edited into Reading Rainbow: The Bionic Bunny Show (1988)

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Published Apr 15, 2024

Star Trek 101: Trill History

Learn everything you can about the Trill after Discovery's latest episode with this curated watch list.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

StarTrek.com

While there are a number of fan favorite species in the Star Trek universe, perhaps one of the most beloved is the Trill.

Made popular with the character of Jadzia Dax on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine , the Trill have always been a fascinating part of the Star Trek universe, and their culture has been the source of many fan discussions.

With the planet Trill and an important ritual making a reappearance in the latest episode of Star Trek: Discovery , we’re counting down the most important legacy Trill centric episodes to watch to best understand who the Trill are, what a symbiont is, and much, much more.

" The Host ," Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 4, Episode 23)

Star Trek: The Next Generation – The Host

The Trill were first introduced in this episode, where Dr. Crusher falls in love with a Trill ambassador.

However, when the ambassador is injured, he confides in Crusher that he's carrying a symbiont and explains that while a Trill host can die, the symbiont must be protected and transferred to a new Trill host as soon as possible. Riker plays host to the symbiont until it is transferred into a new Trill. This episode plays with the idea of the symbiont being part of a host's personality and shows how the symbiont carries the memories of each past life before it.

" Dax ," Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 1, Episode 8)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Dax

Can you be blamed for something done in a past life?

This first Dax-centric episode in Deep Space Nine ’s seven-season run establishes that Jadzia remembers all things that Dax has done in the past, but questions if she can be blamed for those actions.

Delving deep into the ethical quandaries of being a host, this classic episode written by Star Trek scribe D.C. Fontana is one that's key to revisit to understand the history of the Trill, and what their culture represents. After all, as Sisko argues, Jadzia is a different person than Curzon Dax, or any of Dax's previous lives. A current host shouldn’t have to take the fall for something done in a past life that could have happened before they were even born.

" Invasive Procedures ," Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 2, Episode 4)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Invasive Procedures

A Trill named Verad attacks the station and tries to take the Dax symbiont from Jadzia in this Season 2 episode.

While mostly centering on the crew's attempts to save Jadzia and her symbiont from the invaders and take back the station, this episode still reveals some key points about the Trill. Namely, they don’t give symbionts to any Trill who applies and the process for application is grueling. Jadzia insists that a Trill can live a good life without being a host, but Verad is insistent that he be joined, even going so far as to force Dr. Bashir to transfer the Dax symbiont to him. Ultimately, Dax is returned to Jadzia and she is able to be joined once more with the symbiont that has become such a part of her.

" Equilibrium ," Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 3, Episode 4)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Equilibrium

When Jadzia starts having hallucinations and begins playing the same musical motif over and over, she journeys back to the Trill homeworld to understand what’s happening to her.

Ultimately, it is revealed that Dax had a host she never knew about — a murderer named Joran. Joran Dax was considered to be unsuitable, and yet he was able to host the Dax symbiont without being rejected. This revealed that the process for choosing the host unfairly shut out most Trill from being able to be joined, due to the smaller number of symbionts compared to the Trill population. Sisko uses this knowledge to save Jadzia’s life, and in the end, Jadzia reconciles with Dax's missing memories and Joran.

" Facets ," Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 3, Episode 25)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Facets

"Facets" centered on a ceremony in which the previous Dax hosts were able to inhabit another's body so that Jadzia could converse with them and learn from their experiences.

This establishes that while a host can die, their memories and experiences live on within the symbiont itself, and as a result, Jadzia can learn from them, even if they’re technically gone. She can also summon them to the forefront of her mind or even have them sent to others, who can then be, well, a host to the former host. The episode also features a delightfully comedic turn as Odo shares his consciousness with Curzon Dax, who’s far more relaxed than the usually stoic and buttoned up constable.

" Rejoined ," Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 4, Episode 6)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Rejoined

Perhaps Star Trek ’s most famous episode centered on LGBTQIA+ themes, "Rejoined" sees Jadzia reunited with fellow Trill Lenara Kahn — both the Dax symbiont and the Kahn symbiont had been paired with married hosts.

Jadzia and Lenara realize they have more in common now than they ever did in the past, and slowly begin to fall in love again. The episode features the first same sex kiss in Star Trek history, establishes that Jadzia is not straight, and that the Trill are a fluid species that don’t judge based on sexuality. However, due to Trill culture and taboo, Lenara and Jadzia are not allowed to be together, which makes their doomed romance all the more heartbreaking.

" Afterimage ," Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 7, Episode 3)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Afterimage

After Jadzia’s untimely death at the hands of Gul Dukat in the Season 6 finale, the Dax host is passed on to a new Trill, Ezri.

Ezri faces uncertainty from those on Deep Space 9 who knew Jadzia, ranging from discomfort to outright hostility. This episode makes it clear that it's difficult for a new host to pick up where their old life left off, as Ezri tries to forge her own identity in a world that's so used to Jadzia and who she was.

" Field of Fire ," Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 7, Episode 13)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Field of Fire

It’s up to Ezri to solve a murder, with the help of past host Joran Dax.

Ezri is able to summon Joran to the forefront of her subconscious and has visions of him helping her as she works to solve the murder of a Deep Space 9 crewmember. At the end of the episode, a counter-ritual sends Joran back into her subconscious, where he remains with the other Dax lives. This episode serves to show how Trill can access past lives and even interact with them, though to an outside observer, they only see the current host.

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This article was originally published on November 8, 2020.

  • Star Trek 101

Stylized and filtered image of Michael Ansara as Commander Kang

Screen Rant

1 star trek: tng episode was so bad, it inspired 3 writers to write their own episode.

Three Star Trek writers decided they could write a better episode than one from Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2 they disliked.

  • A weak Star Trek: TNG season 2 episode inspired 3 writers to write a better season 3 story.
  • "Samaritan Snare" was criticized for TNG characters behaving oddly.
  • "Tin Man" offers a better TNG episode, even if it's not one of the classics.

One particularly weak episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation inspired three writers to write their own, much better, episode. Following the adventures of Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and the USS Enterprise-D, TNG took a couple of seasons to truly find its footing. While there were some genuinely great episodes during TNG season 2, there were also a few flops. Still, the characters were what ultimately made TNG a success, and even the bad episodes sometimes inspired others to imagine their own stories with Captain Picard and his crew.

In Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2, episode 17, "Samaritan Snare," Captain Picard travels to Starbase 515 for a cardiac replacement surgery, leaving Commander William Riker (Jonathan Frakes) in command . When the Enterprise receives a distress call from a Pakled ship, Riker underestimates the dumb aliens, and Lt. Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) is taken hostage. Although Riker has proven himself to be a capable commander in the past, he makes several questionable decisions throughout "Samaritan Snare," behaving out of character in service of the plot.

Best Star Trek: TNG Episode From Each Of The Show’s 7 Seasons

3 star trek writers decided to write their own tng episode after seeing "samaritan snare", dennis russell bailey, david bischoff, and lisa putman white went on to write tng's "tin man.".

According to Captains' Logs: The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages by Edward Gross and Mark A. Altman, "Samaritan Snare" inspired writers Dennis Russell Bailey, David Bischoff, and Lisa Putman White to pen their own Star Trek: The Next Generation episode. When talking about "Samaritan Snare," Bailey said: "None of the plot could have happened if all of the characters hadn't suddenly become morons that week." Morons may be a bit harsh, but Commander Riker does send the Chief Engineer alone to an alien ship they know little about. He also ignores the advice of both Lt. Worf (Michael Dorn) and Counselor Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis), which is, again, out of character.

In the secondary storyline, Captain Picard's surgery has complications, and Dr. Katherine Pulaski (Diana Muldaur) has to travel to the Starbase to complete the operation. Initially, Picard refused to have Pulaski perform the surgery on the Enterprise because he did not want to appear weak in front of the crew. Although it's stated multiple times that the procedure is routine, something still goes wrong and none of the doctors on the Starbase are equipped to handle it. This is another element that Dennis Russell Bailey points out as being odd, and he eventually decided to write his own episode. Together with David Bischoff and Lisa Putman White, Bailey then wrote the script that became Star Trek: The Next Generation season 3, episode 20, "Tin Man."

The story for "Tin Man" was based on a short story called Tin Woodman by Dennis Russell Bailey and David Bischoff. Co-writer Lisa Putman White was not officially credited for the episode, but Bailey was listed as Dennis Putman Bailey.

"Tin Man" Is A Much Better Star Trek: TNG Episode

The name of the episode is inspired by the tin woodman from l. frank baum's the wonderful wizard of oz..

The Star Trek: The Next Generation season 3 episode "Tin Man" may not be perfect, but it's a better episode than season 2's "Samaritan Snare." When the Enterprise-D encounters a living alien ship, Betazoid Federation emissary Tam Elbrun (Harry Groener) comes aboard to the aid with first contact. Because of his extremely powerful telepathic abilities, Elbrun struggles to tune out the voices of the many crewmembers on the Enterprise-D . He forms a connection with Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner), whose thoughts Elbrun cannot hear.

Tam Elbrun was the first male Betazoid seen on screen. Actor Harry Groener also appeared as different characters in episodes of Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Enterprise .

Elbrun begins communicating with the sentient ship, who is initially referred to as Tin Man before revealing his name to be Gomtuu. In the end, Elbrun helps save Gomtuu and ultimately decides to remain with the alien ship creature. Elbrun is a fascinating character and Gomtuu makes for a truly alien lifeform. The story of "Tin Man" is classic science fiction, and the episode avoids the out-of-character behaviors that plagued "Samaritan Snare." Not every episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation was a winner, but sometimes even the bad episodes led to something great.

Star Trek: The Next Generation is available to stream on Paramount+.

Star Trek: The Next Generation

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COMMENTS

  1. "Star Trek: The Next Generation" Second Chances (TV Episode 1993)

    Second Chances: Directed by LeVar Burton. With Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Michael Dorn. Riker's exact duplicate is discovered on Nervala IV. His first order of business: resume his relationship with Deanna. Second order: obey orders from his superior - himself.

  2. Second Chances (Star Trek: The Next Generation)

    List of episodes. " Second Chances " is the 150th episode of the American syndicated science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, the 24th episode of the sixth season. It was directed by series regular cast member LeVar Burton ("Geordi La Forge"). This episode has a cameo by Mae Carol Jemison, the first Black woman in space ...

  3. Second Chances (episode)

    The Enterprise finds a second Will Riker on a planet that he helped evacuate eight years ago. "Captain's log stardate 46915.2. The Enterprise is orbiting Nervala IV and waiting for an opportunity to retrieve scientific data left there by Starfleet researchers when they were forced to evacuate eight years ago." In Ten Forward, people are gathered together and a jazz band, with Will Riker at the ...

  4. Why Riker Grew A Beard In TNG Season 2 (& Lost It In Star Trek

    In Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2, Commander William T. Riker famously grew a beard on the show, solidifying the character's classic look and giving birth to a popular television trope. Played by Jonathan Frakes, Riker debuted in TNG's very first episode "Encounter At Farpoint" where he settled into his new job as first officer of the USS Enterprise-D.

  5. William Riker

    William Thomas "Will" Riker is a fictional character in the Star Trek universe appearing primarily as a main character in Star Trek: The Next Generation, portrayed by Jonathan Frakes.Throughout the series and its accompanying films, he is the Enterprise ' s first officer, and briefly captain, until he accepts command of the USS Titan at the end of Star Trek: Nemesis.

  6. Star Trek: The Next Generation

    Star Trek: The Next Generation — Two Rikers Come Face to Face. "Second Chances," Season 6, Episode 24. "The episode had a sort of happy ending, sending 'Thomas' Riker off to his new life, until he was ready to make a second appearance on Deep Space Nine ." — 8 Of Star Trek's Most Bizarre Transporter Accidents.

  7. "Star Trek: The Next Generation" A Matter of Honor (TV Episode 1989)

    A Matter of Honor: Directed by Rob Bowman. With Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Michael Dorn. Under an Officers Exchange Program, Riker serves aboard a Klingon ship, whose aging captain seeks an unwarranted bloody retaliation for suspected Enterprise treachery.

  8. "Star Trek: The Next Generation" Future Imperfect (TV Episode 1990

    Future Imperfect: Directed by Les Landau. With Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Michael Dorn. Riker awakens sixteen years after an away mission where he contracted a disease which destroyed his memory back to the point of infection - or so he's told.

  9. A Matter of Honor

    The teleplay is written by Burton Armus, based on a story by Armus, Wanda M. Haight and Gregory W. Amos, and directed by Rob Bowman. [1] Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the Starfleet crew of the Federation starship Enterprise-D. In this episode, Commander Riker is assigned to temporarily be first officer aboard a ...

  10. Star Trek and Personal Identity: A Tale of Two Rikers

    In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Second Chances," Commander William T. Riker discovers that he has a transporter duplicate who has been living ...

  11. What Happens When Your 'Second Chances' Aren't Yours?

    In the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Second Chances," Commander William T. Riker experiences just that. Eight years after a transporter accident clones Lieutenant Riker without his knowledge, the Enterprise and Commander Riker encounter the lieutenant — who had been living in solitude on Nervala IV's surface since the malfunction.

  12. William T. Riker

    William Thomas "Will" Riker was a 24th century male Human Starfleet officer.Riker served as first officer for Captain Jean-Luc Picard for 15 years on the USS Enterprise-D and USS Enterprise-E before finally accepting his own command with the USS Titan.(TNG: "Encounter at Farpoint"; Star Trek: First Contact; Star Trek Nemesis) As captain of the Titan, Riker and his wife Deanna Troi had two ...

  13. Commander Riker's 10 Best Star Trek TNG Episodes, Ranked

    10 "The Measure of a Man" (TNG Season 2, Episode 9) One of Star Trek's best-ever courtroom episodes, TNG season 2, episode 9, "The Measure of a Man" may focus more on the character of Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner), but it also gives Commander Riker a chance to shine. When Data's existence as a sentient being is called into question, Riker ...

  14. Which Star Trek Shows & Movies Does Riker Appear In?

    Riker makes an appearance in only one episode of Star Trek: Voyager, season 2's "Death Wish," and it's the episode that also introduces Captain Katheryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) to Picard's old nemesis, Q (John de Lancie).When another member of the Q Continuum known as Quinn (Gerrit Graham) wishes to commit suicide rather than return to his imprisonment, Janeway acts as an intermediary between ...

  15. Star Trek: The Next Generation

    S3 E26/S4 E01: The Best of Both Worlds. Easily ranked among the best stories of any Star Trek show, this two-part set of episodes puts Riker to the test when the Borg kidnap and assimilate Captain ...

  16. Star Trek's Jonathan Frakes Reveals The Real Reason Behind Riker's TNG

    In an interview included in the "Star Trek" oral history "The Fifty-Year Mission: The Next 25 Years," Frakes explained the real-life reason that Riker grows a beard in "The Next Generation" Season 2.

  17. "Star Trek: The Next Generation" Shades of Gray (TV Episode 1989 ...

    Shades of Gray: Directed by Rob Bowman. With Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Michael Dorn. When Commander Riker comes down with a dangerous alien infection after an away mission, the only way to treat it may be through reliving his memories.

  18. Riker can't keep a straight face. It's so hilarious

    59 votes, 10 comments. 8.9K subscribers in the StarTrekTNG community. Star Trek: The Next Generation

  19. Jonathan Frakes Explains How Riker Got His Star Trek TNG Beard

    Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2 also marked the beginning of TNG's improvement, with additional changes for the better.The striking visual difference of a beard helped Riker to be seen as much more than a thinly-veiled substitute for Kirk, and Riker evolved into a more familiar version of himself.Riker's beard became a symbol of the rise in overall quality that came when Star Trek: The ...

  20. Star Trek: The Next Generation

    Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG) is an American science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry. It originally aired from September 28, 1987, to May 23, 1994, in syndication, spanning 178 episodes over seven seasons. ... Riker also appears in an episode each of Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Enterprise, ...

  21. 29 Years Later, Star Trek's Wildest Body-Jumping Episode Just ...

    As a stand-alone episode of DS9, "Facets" remains a fantastic story about memory, regret, and what one generation owes the next. But, the legacy of "Facets" is easily the concept of zhian ...

  22. Star Trek Recycles Riker's TNG Doppelganger (And It's Brilliant)

    Warning: SPOILERS for Star Trek: Lower Decks season 2, episode 2 - "Kayshon, His Eyes Open".. Star Trek: Lower Decks episode 2 rehashed the Star Trek: The Next Generation transporter accident that created two William Rikers (Jonathan Frakes), and it was a brilliant solution to the dilemma of how to transfer Ensign Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid) back to the USS Cerritos.

  23. You'll soon be able to watch Commander Riker play D&D alongside other

    The crew taking part in the D&D campaign Legends of Eleanora includes Todd Stashwick, who played Captain Liam Shaw from Star Trek: Picard as the Dungeon Master for the session.

  24. Riker Is A Great Star Trek Captain, But Not In This TNG Episode

    In Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2, episode 17, "Samaritan Snare," Captain Picard must travel to Starbase 515 for a procedure to replace his artificial heart.Ensign Wesley Crusher (Wil ...

  25. Star Trek: The Next Generation (TV Series 1987-1994)

    Star Trek: The Next Generation: Created by Gene Roddenberry. With Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Marina Sirtis. Set almost 100 years after Captain Kirk's 5-year mission, a new generation of Starfleet officers sets off in the U.S.S. Enterprise-D on its own mission to go where no one has gone before.

  26. Star Trek 101: Trill History

    While there are a number of fan favorite species in the Star Trek universe, perhaps one of the most beloved is the Trill.. Made popular with the character of Jadzia Dax on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the Trill have always been a fascinating part of the Star Trek universe, and their culture has been the source of many fan discussions.. With the planet Trill and an important ritual making a ...

  27. How Old Is Riker In TNG & Star Trek: Picard?

    Now 66 years of age, Riker reunites with his old Star Trek: The Next Generation crew members on the rebuilt USS Enterprise-D and helps stop the Borg/Changeling plot to destroy the Federation. Star Trek: The Next Generation & Star Trek: Picard are available to stream on Paramount+. The TNG films are available on Max. Cast.

  28. 1 Star Trek: TNG Episode Was So Bad, It Inspired 3 Writers To Write

    In Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2, episode 17, "Samaritan Snare," Captain Picard travels to Starbase 515 for a cardiac replacement surgery, leaving Commander William Riker (Jonathan Frakes) in command. When the Enterprise receives a distress call from a Pakled ship, Riker underestimates the dumb aliens, and Lt. Geordi La Forge (LeVar ...