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"Fallen Hero"
Star Trek: Enterprise episode
Episode no.Season 1
Episode 23
Directed byPatrick Norris
Story by
Teleplay byAlan Cross
Featured musicDavid Bell
Production code123
Original air dateMay 8, 2002 (2002-05-08)
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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"Vox Sola"
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"Desert Crossing"
Star Trek: Enterprise season 1
List of episodes

"Fallen Hero" is the twenty-third aired episode (production #123) of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise. The episode first aired May 8, 2002, on UPN as a double-bill followed by "Desert Crossing".

Captain Archer is ordered to transport Vulcan Ambassador V'Lar from a planet where her integrity has been called into question.

Plot

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After ten months without a break, Sub-Commander T'Pol notes efficiency on board Enterprise is down, and suggests shore leave on Risa. Captain Archer agrees. En route, Archer receives a transmission from Admiral Forrest, informing him of a Vulcan Ambassador in need of extradition. With the closest Vulcan starship over a week away Enterprise is ordered to retrieve and deliver her to the Vulcan cruiser Sh'Raan.

Arriving at Mazar, Archer and T'Pol are surprised to hear the Ambassador has been expelled for abuse of her position. Archer is called to the bridge and speaks to a Mazarite captain who requests that V'Lar be returned for further questioning. Archer stalls for time to contact Starfleet, but the Mazarite ship opens fire. The Enterprise's phase cannons disable the enemy ship's engines, allowing Enterprise to escape. Confronting V'Lar, Archer finds her unwilling to reveal more, stating that it is a matter for Vulcan High Command only. Petulant about the history of Vulcans withholding information, Archer orders Ensign Mayweather to set a course to return V'Lar to the terrorists on Mazar.

Later, after speaking with V'Lar in private, T'Pol persuades Archer to turn around – again – to rendezvous with the Sh'Raan. However, having backtracked towards Mazar, Archer has placed Enterprise close enough for the Mazarites to attack with three ships. Archer opts to flee, but even at Warp 5, the Mazarite ships still gain steadily. V'Lar suddenly confesses that her reputation was intentionally sullied to make the Mazarites believe she would no longer be a credible witness against corrupt officials. V'Lar offers to surrender herself for the safety of the crew, but Archer refuses. Again stalling for time, Archer informs the Mazarites that V'Lar suffered injuries and is in critical condition, allowing them to board Enterprise. The Sh'Raan arrives and threatens to destroy the Mazarite ships unless they surrender immediately. At this point, Archer's ruse is revealed, and V'Lar appears unharmed. A grateful V'Lar tells Archer and T'Pol that their bond of trust and friendship bodes well for future human-Vulcan relations.

Production

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Guest star Fionnula Flanagan

The story began with the idea of a disgraced Vulcan ambassador to be ferried home. Writer Chris Black suggested "what if we make it a woman and someone who had been an idol of T'Pol's?'" The show had been criticized for the inconsistent characterization of the Vulcans, the lies and deception in '"The Andorian Incident" seemed out of line with what was previously known about the Vulcans, but Black felt there was a logic to their acting in their own self interest when they needed to. Black felt that "Fallen Hero" provides balance by showing a Vulcan "who's noble, who is self-sacrificing, who—when confronted by Archer—tells him the truth because he deserves to know". Black said the episode was one of his favorites; he particularly liked the detail that the ship was pushed to Warp 5 for the first time and that Trip was stressed about the engine ("I don't know how much more I can give you") as fun homage to Scotty in the original series. He also said that V'Lar's comments about there being "a great bond" between Archer and T'Pol was a nod to the relationship between Kirk and Spock in the original series.[1]

Guest star Fionnula Flanagan played Ambassador V'Lar. Flanagan was offered the part without having to audition. She previously made guest appearances on Star Trek: The Next Generation in the episode "Inheritance" (as Juliana Soong, Data's "mother"), and on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine in the episode "Dax".[2] Bakula compared her character Ambassador V'Lar to Indira Gandhi and praised her performance: "She is incredible. She has this whole thing with T'Pol and me. It's a really good episode."[3] She found it challenging to play such an emotionally reserved character, a change from the roles she usually plays that have a lot of emotion attached to them. She found the role interesting as the character was both tough and also affectionate.[2] John Rubinstein, who plays the Mazarite Captain previously appeared in the Voyager episode "The 37's" as John Evansville.[4] J. Michael Flynn previously appeared in Star Trek:The Next Generation "The Hunted"[5] and would return in a recurring role in season 4 as the Romulan scientist Nijil.

The episode featured a Vulcan spaceship, a Suurok-class combat cruiser called the Sh'Raan. The ship was based on a design by Doug Drexler, revised and updated by Pierre Drolet.[6] It was ranked as the 22nd most powerful spacecraft of the Star Trek franchise by CNET in 2016,[7] and the 14th best spacecraft of Star Trek by Space.com in 2017.[8] The Sh'Raan class starship made an appearance in the Star Trek book The Romulan War: Beneath the Raptor's Wing by Michael A. Martin.[9]

Reception

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"Fallen Hero" first aired May 8, 2002, on UPN as a double-bill followed by "Desert Crossing".[10][11] According to Nielsen Media Research, it received a 3.2/5 rating share among adults. It had an average of 5.34 million viewers.[12][13][14]

Michelle Erica Green of TrekNation wrote: "despite lots of space battles and some verbal fireworks, it plods." Green praised guest star Fionnula Flanagan for her memorable performance as V'Lar, and said John Rubinstein was delightfully menacing as the Mazarite captain, and that they gave the episode some entertaining moments, but was critical of how the regular cast were used.[15] Keith DeCandido of Tor.com gave it 7 out of 10, in his 2022 rewatch.[16]

In 2021, The Digital Fix said this was a "strong episode" that explores the Vulcans interactions with humans, centering on a Vulcan Ambassador played by guest actress Fionnula Flanagan.[17]

Home media

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This episode was released as part of Enterprise season one, which was released in high definition on Blu-ray disc on March 26, 2013;[18] the set has 1080p video and a DTS-HD Master Audio sound track.[19]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Fallen Hero is a series of interactive novels written by Swedish author Malin Rydén and published by Hosted Games, in which players control a former superhero who, after betrayal and experimentation by the Rangers organization, acquires telepathic powers and embarks on a path of villainy to exact revenge in the fictional city of Los Diablos.[1][2] The first installment, Fallen Hero: Rebirth, released on March 15, 2018, is a 380,000-word text-based experience without graphics or sound effects, where choices shape the protagonist's dual identities, relationships with allies and former friends, and development of abilities such as mind possession and customizable combat armor.[2] Players can select the character's gender (male, female, or non-binary), romantic orientations (straight, gay, bisexual, or aromantic), and personality traits, leading to branching narratives focused on secrecy, alliances, and moral ambiguity in a superhero setting.[2] The sequel, Fallen Hero: Retribution, released on February 2, 2023, expands to 1,400,000 words and builds directly on Rebirth's endings, allowing players to pursue villainous careers as a thief, mob boss, politician, or hero hunter while managing multiple bases, identities, and deepening relationships amid escalating conflicts.[3][4] A third book, Fallen Hero: Revelations, is in development as part of a planned tetralogy, with a demo released in October 2025 that explores the protagonist's past and preparations for further vengeance, maintaining the series' emphasis on player-driven storytelling and psychological depth.[5] The series has garnered positive reception for its nuanced exploration of identity, betrayal, and redemption, available on platforms including Steam, iOS, and Android.[2][3]

Episode Overview

Synopsis

The Fallen Hero series follows the protagonist, known as Sidestep, a former superhero who, after being betrayed and experimented on by the Rangers organization, gains telepathic powers and turns to villainy in the fictional city of Los Diablos. Players control Sidestep's actions, managing dual identities, relationships, and power development through branching choices.[2] In the first book, Fallen Hero: Rebirth (2018), Sidestep awakens in a puppet body after the betrayal, using telepathy to navigate secrecy while stealing resources like a nanovore sample and a targeting matrix. The story culminates in a villainous debut at a museum gala, involving confrontations with former allies such as Charge and Lady Argent, and alliances with figures like Dr. Mortum, all while balancing personal vendettas and moral ambiguities.[2][6] The second book, Fallen Hero: Retribution (2023), picks up one month after the debut, with Sidestep choosing a villainous path as a thief, mob boss, hero hunter, or anarchist. Key events include infiltrating a mansion, dealing with explosions and pursuits by heroes like Marshal Steel, and managing multiple bases and identities. The narrative deepens relationships with characters including Herald, Ortega, and returning allies, amid escalating conflicts and power growth.[3][7] The third book, Fallen Hero: Revelations (in development), explores Sidestep's past through multiple demo paths released as of October 2025. Players escape predicaments, investigate Los Diablos' kingpin, recruit new allies like Sky-Raider and Dove, and confront unresolved issues such as a call from the Heartbreak Site. The story emphasizes telepathic expansion, trust decisions, and events like Charge's 40th birthday, building toward further vengeance.[5][8]

Series Context

The Fallen Hero series is a tetralogy of interactive novels published by Hosted Games, an imprint of Choice of Games, emphasizing player agency in a superhero genre with villainous protagonists. Set in the 22nd century-like world of Los Diablos, the books examine themes of identity, betrayal, and redemption through text-based choices that affect over 380,000 words in Rebirth, 1.4 million in Retribution, and ongoing development for Revelations and the planned Revolution.[9][10] Unlike traditional superhero narratives, the series inverts tropes by allowing players to shape Sidestep's gender, orientation, and personality, leading to nuanced explorations of alliances and conflicts with the Rangers. It builds on the Choice of Games format of no graphics or sound, focusing on psychological depth and branching paths that carry over between books, fostering replayability and long-term narrative investment. The tetralogy's structure highlights evolving interstellar politics and personal agency in a sci-fi setting, distinct from broader franchise lore but resonant with interactive fiction traditions.[2][11]

Cast and Characters

Principal Characters

The protagonist, known as Sidestep, is a customizable player character who was once a vigilante hero in Los Diablos but turned villain after a betrayal by the Rangers organization and experimentation that granted them powerful telepathic abilities, including mind possession (body surfing). Players can choose Sidestep's gender (male, female, or non-binary), appearance, personality traits, and villain name, influencing relationships and story branches across Rebirth and Retribution. Sidestep's arc focuses on revenge, secrecy, and moral choices while managing dual identities and a puppet body.[9][12] Ortega, also known as Charge, is Sidestep's former partner and a key Ranger hero with cybernetic enhancements granting superhuman strength, agility, and electrokinesis via a plasmacore generator. A potential romance option, Ortega's relationship with Sidestep ranges from close friendship to complicated tension due to the protagonist's villainous turn, shaped by player decisions in Rebirth.[9][13] Dr. Mortum (Mirlene/Merle Abelard) is a brilliant Afro-Caribbean scientist and former villain who designs Sidestep's customizable power armor and gadgets, such as the Disintregun. Affably evil and a romance option, Mortum collaborates with Sidestep through the puppet body, providing technical support and comic relief while pursuing their own interests in miniaturization technology. Their backstory involves overcoming transphobia and a turn to villainy in 2009.[9][14]

Guest Appearances

Supporting characters include the Rangers, a team of heroes opposing Sidestep. Lady Argent (Ximena Vega Ruiz) is a boosted Ranger with silver nanovore-altered skin, technopathy, enhanced strength, and shapeshifting abilities. A proactive villain hunter and potential romance in Retribution, her relationship with Sidestep mixes enmity and gratitude for averting a catastrophe.[4][15] Herald is a young, idealistic Flying Brick-type hero and the newest Ranger, serving as a rival to Sidestep who idolizes the protagonist's heroic past. Other notable figures include Marshal Steel, the cyborg leader of the Rangers, and the Rat King, a loyal henchman whose role varies by player choice. Antagonists like Hollow Ground, a telepathic supervillain controlling the underworld, add to the conflicts in Retribution.[4][16]

Production Details

Development and Writing

"Fallen Hero" is an interactive novel series written solely by Swedish author Malin Rydén, who developed the games using ChoiceScript, a programming language designed for creating multiple-choice interactive fiction.[17] The first installment, Rebirth, was based on an unfinished book and took nearly three years to complete, resulting in a 380,000-word narrative released on March 15, 2018, by Hosted Games, a division of Choice of Games.[18][2] The sequel, Retribution, expanded significantly to 1,400,000 words, with writing completed by early 2021 and a closed alpha version reaching about 1.36 million words at that stage; it was released on February 2, 2023.[19][3] Rydén has described the writing process as involving extensive branching narratives based on player choices for character identity, relationships, and moral decisions, emphasizing themes of trauma, revenge, and psychological depth.[20] The third book, Revelations, entered full development around 2023 as Rydén transitioned to full-time writing, with a demo released on October 23, 2025, exploring multiple opening paths to accommodate diverse endings from prior games.[8][5] The series is planned as a tetralogy, with Rydén managing complex plotting through techniques like character arguments to develop personalities and ensure narrative coherence.[1]

Filming and Design

As a text-based interactive novel series without graphics or sound effects, Fallen Hero required no filming or visual design production. The focus remained on textual storytelling and ChoiceScript implementation for branching choices, with no external design teams involved beyond the author's solo development.[17]

Themes and Analysis

Narrative Elements

The narrative structure of the Fallen Hero series employs interactive fiction mechanics, where player choices shape a branching storyline centered on revenge against the Rangers organization following the protagonist's betrayal and transformation. In Rebirth, the story unfolds through second-person narration, immersing players in the protagonist's fractured psyche as they rebuild their life in Los Diablos, managing dual identities as a civilian and the villainous Sidestep. Key decisions, such as selecting gender, romantic orientation, and personality traits early on, influence relationships with allies like Dr. Mortum and former hero Ortega, as well as the development of telepathic abilities like mind possession.[2] The narrative builds tension through secrecy and moral dilemmas, culminating in the protagonist's public villain debut, with endings that set up Retribution.[21] Character development emphasizes psychological depth, particularly the protagonist's trauma from experimentation, which manifests as body dysmorphia, isolation, and repressed memories. Players navigate internal conflicts, such as balancing vengeance with potential redemption, through "blind choices" that mirror the character's limited agency post-betrayal. In Retribution, this evolves into managing multiple bases and identities while pursuing paths like thief, mob boss, or politician, deepening relationships amid escalating conflicts with heroes.[3] The demo for Revelations (released October 2025) further explores the protagonist's past, unearthing secrets and confronting "ghosts" to prepare for ultimate vengeance, maintaining the series' focus on player-driven emotional arcs.[22] Pacing balances introspective monologues on trauma and identity with action-oriented sequences, such as combat using customizable armor or telepathic intrusions, ensuring replayability across 380,000 words in Rebirth and 1.4 million in Retribution. This structure avoids linear exposition, instead revealing backstory through dialogue and choices, fostering empathy for the villainous protagonist.[23]

Cultural and Sci-Fi Tropes

The Fallen Hero series subverts traditional superhero tropes by centering a fallen hero's descent into villainy, exploring moral ambiguity rather than clear heroism. The protagonist's acquisition of telepathic powers through unethical experimentation evokes sci-fi themes of transhumanism and the cost of power, drawing parallels to narratives like Watchmen where heroes grapple with ethical gray areas. Betrayal by the Rangers organization critiques institutional corruption in superhero societies, portraying a world where "heroes" enforce control under the guise of protection.[2] Cultural motifs include identity and queerness, with player-customizable gender (male, female, non-binary) and orientations (straight, gay, bisexual, aromantic) influencing not just romance but self-perception and societal interactions in Los Diablos. Themes of depression, loneliness, and not feeling at home in one's body highlight mental health struggles, using the superhero genre to metaphorically address real-world issues like trauma recovery and acceptance. Romances often stem from sources of hatred or conflict with former allies, underscoring tension between love and revenge.[23][24] As a sci-fi innovation, the series integrates interactive elements to simulate psychological fragmentation, with telepathy allowing possession and manipulation that blurs consent and autonomy—tropes seen in works like Philip K. Dick's explorations of reality. The planned tetralogy, including Revelations, continues to bridge personal vendettas with broader societal critiques, emphasizing redemption's complexity in a genre dominated by binary good-vs-evil conflicts.[21]

Broadcast and Reception

Release and Availability

Fallen Hero: Rebirth was released on March 15, 2018, as a digital interactive novel available on Steam, iOS, Android, and the Choice of Games website.[2] The sequel, Fallen Hero: Retribution, followed on February 2, 2023, building on the first game's endings and expanding the narrative.[3] A demo for the third installment, Fallen Hero: Revelations, was released in October 2025, accessible via the Choice of Games demo portal and Steam.[8] The series is distributed exclusively through digital platforms, with no traditional broadcast or physical media release. As of November 2025, both Rebirth and Retribution remain available for purchase on Steam, where Rebirth has accumulated over 421 user reviews and Retribution over 380.[2][3] Mobile versions on Google Play report a 4.8 out of 5 rating for Rebirth based on 3,632 reviews.[25]

User and Critical Reception

The Fallen Hero series has received very positive reception from players, praised for its deep character development, branching narratives, and exploration of moral ambiguity in a superhero setting. On Steam, Rebirth holds a "Very Positive" rating with 93% positive reviews out of 421 as of November 2025, while Retribution scores 97% positive out of 380 reviews.[2][3] Users frequently highlight the writing quality, emotional depth, and replayability due to player choices affecting identity, relationships, and abilities. Community discussions on the Choice of Games forum describe Rebirth as "one of the best" interactive novels, with praise for its intensity and connection to the protagonist.[23] Retribution is similarly acclaimed for expanding the story while maintaining psychological nuance, with forum users noting its length (1.4 million words) and variety of villainous paths.[10] The October 2025 demo for Revelations has generated anticipation in ongoing forum threads, focusing on its flashbacks and continuation of player-driven vengeance themes.[8] No major professional reviews from outlets like IGN or GameSpot were identified as of November 2025, but the series' strong user feedback underscores its appeal within the interactive fiction genre.

References

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