Videos by ComicBook.com
These spaceships are many things for the main casts of their series; usually, they’re a home, and often they’re a weapon and a shield. Some of them have minds of their of their own, while others need a good pilot at their helm. Ultimately, the best spaceships are solid representations of the shows they inhabit. Here are 10 of the best.
1) USS Enterprise (Star Trek: The Original Series)

The original Enterprise introduced an idea of an incredible future of space travel a few years before man’s first steps on the Moon. The Enterprise glided through the vast reaches of space effortlessly; it had impulse engines and a powerful warp drive. The men and women aboard the NCC-1701 were able to walk freely around the ship, thanks to artificial gravity generators. The original Star Trek took place in the 23rd century and promised a future of space exploration that was open to many, not just a few able-bodied men at a time. As a spaceship, it offered a grand vision of what the future could be.
2) USS Defiant (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)

The USS Defiant, as introduced in the third season of Deep Space Nine, was unique among Starfleet vessels; it was always intended to fight wars, not go on ambitious expeditions. The Defiant was designed in response to the Borg threat introduced in The Next Generation, but its small, fast design (and its cloaking device) meant it also worked well in the unknown reaches of Dominion space, beyond the wormhole. While many of the spaceships introduced in the Trek spinoffs are interesting, the Defiant offered a new evolution; the Enterprise-D and Voyager were huge and almost unwieldy. The Defiant felt more like a submarine, and it gave more breadth to an expanding franchise.
3) Planet Express (Futurama)

The Planet Express ship, or “Old Bessie,” was often whatever Futurama needed it to be. It could’ve just been the futuristic version of a UPS truck, but on at least one occasion, it had its own personality. It was the perfect spaceship for a comedy sci-fi cartoon; it evolved and changed and had many secrets to discover. With its electric mucus color, it also stands out in a televisual world full of blandly colored spaceships.
4) Serenity (Firefly)

The crew of Firefly got to fly around the universe in Serenity, a tightly designed ship. It’s a smaller ship than most on this list, as it can mainly carry 18 passengers and cargo. In that sense, it’s more of a freighter than a battleship, but that does mean it can “fly” better than most of the space cruisers in pop culture. In many ways, it’s a TV version of the Millennium Falcon. Quantum Mechanix, who create screen-accurate replicas, have even produced blueprints of the ship for fans.
5) Moya (Farscape)

Stranded astronaut John Crichton ends up spending most of the series on this living spaceship, the Moya. The Moya is sentient; it’s a cool idea, especially considering a lot of other TV spaceships aren’t living at all (no matter how much Scotty talks to the Enterprise). That means Moya is a character in her own right; she even gives birth to another spaceship over the course of the show. Her species, the Leviathans, had no weapons, and only one defense maneuver, the Starburst, where they could quickly run away, but have no real idea of where they would end up. Farscape was truly one of a kind, and its main ship represents that.













