Star Trek is an epic American science fiction . The Star Trek fictional universe created by Gene Roddenberry is the setting of six television programs including the original 1966 Star Trek, in addition to ten feature films, dozens of computer and video games, hundreds of novels and other fan stories, as well as a themed attraction in Las Vegas.
A Star Trek RPG or Star Trek Role Playing Game is a role-playing game that is set in the Star Trek fictional universe.
The Star Trek text game is a classic text-only computer game that originated from the BASIC programming language hacker culture of the 1970s. The original game is thought to have been created by Mike Mayfield in 1971, originally on a Sigma 7 minicomputer and then ported to the HP BASIC dialect for Hewlett-Packard minicomputers. The original Star Trek game spawned many ports and variants (see list below); in fact, it may have been one of the most ported computer games ever made.
Star Trek was a text-based mainframe computer game written by Don Daglow on a PDP-10 timesharing computer at Pomona College in 1972, and upgraded periodically through 1974, including contributions by Jonathan Osser. The game was picked up by the Digital Equipment DECUS file sharing network in 1972 and distributed to many universities and other PDP-10 installations around the world, often appearing on the same systems alongside the Star Trek text game. Daglow only learned of the game's publication when he began receiving fan letters at his college dorm.
"Star Trek" is an episode of the animated series American Dad!. The title is the same as that of the TV series Star Trek.
Star Trek - Strategic Operations Simulator is an arcade game released by Sega in 1982. The game is based on the original Star Trek television program. It is a vector game, with both two dimensional and three dimensional displays.
James Blish wrote a series of short stories adaptations of Star Trek episodes from 1967 onwards, called simply Star Trek. The adaptions were generally written based on scripts (often earlier versions than filmed), and initially without reference to the finished episodes, which would not air in the United Kingdom until later.