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AudiobookSoul
Star Trek: Lost Frontier audiobook cover
⭐ 2.5 Overall
🎀 2.0 Narration
Sample First
7h 16m
Sarah Chen, audiobook curator
Reviewed bySarah Chen

FAANG engineer, 2hr daily commute. Rates books by commute-worthiness.

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Perfect For 🎧

Commute
Workout
Focus
Bedtime
Chores
Travel

The Setup

Okay, so I'll be honest - I grabbed this one during a particularly brutal week of on-call rotations. 7 hours of Star Trek content seemed like exactly the escapism I needed while debugging Kubernetes pods at 2 AM. Enterprise F? 25th century? Post-war Federation rebuilding? This is basically Mass Effect meets Trek, and I was here for it.

Except... well. Let me explain.

What We're Actually Dealing With

So here's the thing about Star Trek: Lost Frontier - it's fan-produced content. And look, I have nothing against fan productions. Some of my favorite Trek experiences have come from the community. But this one has that particular vibe of "ambitious fan project that maybe needed another editing pass." The premise is genuinely interesting - the Federation coming out of a massive war, the galaxy fractured, a new Enterprise trying to reconnect lost worlds. That's good Trek DNA right there. It's the execution that gets wobbly.

The story itself has moments that really work. There's this underlying tension about what the Federation even means after catastrophic loss, and when the writing leans into that philosophical territory, it feels authentically Star Trek. The problem is it doesn't stay there long enough. Plot threads get introduced and then kind of... drift. Characters show up, seem important, then fade into the background. It's like watching someone try to set up a serialized show but forgetting to pay off the setups.

I finished it in about 4 commutes, and honestly? By commute 3, I was half-listening while scrolling through Slack on my phone. Not great.

The "Various Readers" Situation

This is where things get complicated. "Various Readers" is doing a lot of heavy lifting as a narrator credit, and not in the good full-cast drama way. The production has multiple voice actors, which should be great for Trek content - you want different voices for different crew members, right? But the quality is... inconsistent. Some narrators clearly understand their characters and bring real energy. Others sound like they're reading cold from a script they just received.

The pacing between narrators doesn't always match up either. One scene will have this urgent, dramatic delivery, and then we cut to another narrator who's going at half speed. It's jarring. Like when you're in a meeting and someone shares their screen and their audio is desynced from their video - technically functional, but your brain keeps snagging on it.

I couldn't find much detailed info about the specific voice actors online, so I can't tell you who's doing what. But I can tell you the captain's voice actor (whoever they are) actually does solid work. There's a weariness there that fits the post-war setting. The villain voices, though? Ugh. A bit over-the-top in that "community theater" way.

The Production Quality Question

So the audio itself is clean - no weird background noise or obvious editing artifacts. There are sound effects and music cues that try to give it that Trek atmosphere, and sometimes they work really well. The warp drive sounds, the bridge ambiance, the comm chirps - that stuff hit my nostalgia centers pretty effectively.

But then there are moments where the effects feel... I don't want to say cheap, but maybe "enthusiastic amateur"? Like someone discovered a sound effects library and got a little excited. During one battle sequence, there was so much layered audio that I literally couldn't follow the dialogue. I had to rewind twice, and on a packed Caltrain at 6:47 AM, that's not ideal.

Who This Is Actually For

Look, if you're a hardcore Trek fan who's consumed all the official content and you're desperate for more - especially content that goes darker and more serialized than classic Trek - this might scratch that itch. It's clearly made by people who love the franchise. The 25th century setting gives them freedom to play without contradicting canon, and there are some genuinely creative ideas about how the Federation might evolve (or devolve) after major trauma.

But if you're expecting the polish of an official Simon & Schuster Trek audiobook? Or even the quality of the better Trek podcasts out there? You're gonna be disappointed. This is fan content priced like professional content, and that's a tough sell.

Perfect for: Die-hard Trek completionists, people who already love fan productions, background listening while doing something else.

Skip for: Commuters who need to follow plot closely, anyone expecting professional production values, people new to Trek.

The Verdict

The ROI on this audiobook is... mixed. Seven hours is a decent chunk of time, and while I don't regret listening, I also wouldn't recommend it to most people. It's got heart. It's got ambition. It's got some genuinely interesting ideas about Trek's future. What it doesn't have is the execution to make those ideas land consistently.

If this were free fan content, I'd say "absolutely check it out." As a paid audiobook competing with professionally produced alternatives? It's a harder sell. Sample first if you can. And maybe keep it at 1.25x - the pacing issues become less noticeable when you speed things up a bit.

Kevin asked me what I thought when I finished, and I said "it's fine." That's basically where I land. Fine. Not bad. Not great. Just... fine. Sometimes that's enough. Sometimes it isn't.

Technical Audit πŸ”

Audio production quality notes that may affect your listening experience

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Full-cast

Features multiple voice actors performing different characters.