765874: Unification: Episode list
In this 32-second opening chapter of 765874: Unification, JM Colt appears alone, delivering a moment of quiet resolve that frames the entire series. Portrayed by Mahé Thaissa—best known for her work on Star Trek: The Cage—Colt embodies a figure standing at the threshold of an unnamed but inevitable convergence. Through minimal dialogue and deliberate presence, the episode establishes unification not as an event, but as a decision already made. The world is not explained; it is implied. Colt’s expression, posture, and final beat suggest that what follows is irreversible. This episode serves as a human anchor for the series, introducing unification as a personal reckoning before it becomes a global one.
Memory Wall explores unification through remembrance rather than action. Lawrence Selleck as Spock and Mahé Thaissa as J.M. Colt appear in a quiet exchange where a mind meld reveals fragmented memories—images, emotions, and moments preserved but incomplete. The meld exposes memory as something curated rather than lived, suspended between past and identity. The episode concludes with the image of Leonard Nimoy appearing before the 765874 logo, positioning memory itself as the bridge between separation and unification.
In Regeneration, Lawrence Selleck as Spock continues the journey through an AI-generated rendering of Leonard Nimoy’s Spock, bridging legacy and renewal. A lone ship moves low over forested terrain, passing the silent wreckage of the Enterprise-D. On the ground, Spock discovers a makeshift grave marking Kirk’s final resting place, echoing the events of Star Trek: Generations. When Spock lifts a discarded com-badge, the moment triggers a flashback to his youth—memory and identity collapsing into one. The episode frames regeneration not as rebirth of the body, but of purpose, carried forward through remembrance.
The fourth and final episode of 765874: Unification reframes the series as an act of preservation. Through archival imagery and deliberate stillness, the episode situates unification within recorded memory rather than linear time. References to The Archive and dated fragments evoke a convergence of past moments—cataloged, observed, and remembered. Rather than presenting resolution through action, the episode allows unification to emerge as recognition: the understanding that connection persists through what is kept, revisited, and carried forward. The season closes not with explanation, but with continuity—memory itself becoming the final meeting point.