As a finale, I think that was satisfying. I'm glad they got the cameos out of their system last week, and primarily focused on the core cast this week.
The main thing that I wanted to see this season - a tie-in with the impending Romulan supernova - didn't come to fruition, but I'm trying not to hold that against them. They've very clearly left themselves a path for continuation in some form, so we'll have to see what comes of it.
Boimler eventually turning away from the alt-universe PADD was an inevitable conclusion, but I like the reason they provided, avoiding the low-hanging fruit of alt-Boims turning out to be a dick or something.
The overall Rutherford arc was less successful. I guess they seeded it previously, but I always just assumed his implant was on the fritz, so it was odd to see him suddenly blaming the ship.
Is that an angry bullpup version of the unicorn dog from the Original Series?
I like the Sense-oars pronunciation I spotted.
OMG I should've expected them to address the different Klingon looks but I didn't expect to see a T'kuvma / Discovery era Klingon reappearing. When they said "solidton" particles I imagined it was going to be a metaphor about keeping "canon" stagnant.
First time I see a ST character say "those words aren't real" to Treknobabble.
I'm glad they're keeping the Star Trek tradition of holding up way too many Pads on the table where one should've done the trick.
I never wondered if Klingons had claws for toenails, now I am.
I like how Brad tries to convince others that William's the worst.
How'd they know they were dropping out of warp if the next shot shows them cloaked?
I expected as much with the ship changing. Never really cared much for the different classes of ships though.
This Rutherford bitterness feels like it came out of nowhere.
Those whales are thirsty again.
I thought she was going all Kamehameha.
I have a feeling the clam is a reference to something but I'm not sure what.
IDK why, but that one shot of Boimler turning his head and us being able to see under his chin particularly stood out as a "bump the lamp" moment.
Was there a cut scene, what was (silver?) Badgey doing there? Or was that Goodgey? Have I forgotten about them?
I like how Ransom made his own rule for provisional first officers.
Engage the core is a perfect Warp catchphrase.