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The result was a series that could balance hope and horror in equal measure. Across its seven seasons, Voyager experimented with suspense and psychological drama in ways that still unsettle fans decades later. From parasitic viruses to murderous holograms and creepy clowns, some stories pushed the franchise into pure nightmare territory! Some of these episodes are chilling because of their unnerving villains, others because they tap into deeper fears like isolation, death, or loss of control. As well as the usual Trek charm and sense of adventure, these episodes still resonate because they donโt just shock, they explore what fear does to us, and how we choose to face it, and proved that Voyager could rival the scariest of horror movies at times.
10. โPersistence of Visionโ (Season 2, Episode 8)

In this certifiably creepy episode from Voyagerโs second season, what is real and what is hallucination begins to blur. When Voyager seeks to pass through the space of a psychic, territorial alien race, the Bothans, one of them starts to manipulate the crewโs perceptions of reality. Despite some truly strange ideas from the writers slipping in there (including Chakotay and BโElannaโs imagined romance), some of the more disturbing visions are as unsettling for the audience as they are for the crew, as Janeway begins to hallucinate
However, the real terror of this episode comes from the fact we never discover why exactly the Bothan attacked the ship, when asked why he would traumatize the crew in this way, he simply replies “Because I can” the lack of a clear resolution as to the nature of the beast in โPersistence of Visionโ makes this one of Voyagerโs most unsettling hours.
9. โMacrocosmโ (Season 3, Episode 12)

Part horror, part viral outbreak thriller, โMacrocosmโ was Voyagerโs answer to the Alien franchise, unleashing giant โvirus creaturesโ aboard the ship. Granted, the CGI used to create the Macrovirus CGI may look dated now, but the concept of a virus we can literally see hunting us down like a predator is genuinely terrifying.
Watching the talented Kate Mulgrew as Captain Janeway stalk the corridors with a phaser rifle against swarming, slimy monsters is equal parts action-packed and grotesque. The body-horror concept behind it all remains terrifying.
8. โFacesโ (Season 1, Episode 14)

Although “Phage” was the episode that introduced the terrifying Vidiians (more on that later) โFacesโ was a terrifying new outing for perhaps the series’ scariest alien species. In the episode, B’Elanna Torres is kidnapped by the Vidiians, who are attempting to extract her Klingon DNA to fight their deadly epidemic, (the phage), a kind of skin-rotting disease. BโElanna Torres is split into her Klingon and Human halves, giving Roxann Dawson a chance to stretch her acting chops.
But the real horror of the episode is the Vidiian doctor Sulan (Brian Markinson), who murders a crewman, removes his face, and literally wears it, all while believing what he is doing is for the greater good. This gruesome act cements the Vidiians as one of Trekโs most disturbing alien species, and โFacesโ remains a standout example of body horror in the franchise.
7. โRevulsionโ (Season 4, Episode 5)

When the Voyager crew answers a distress call that leads them to a desolate ship, they encounter a lone survivor, a hologram named Dejaren, who claims his crew all died of a virus. It soon transpires that all is not what it seems and that Dejaren has come to despise organic beings โ and has slaughtered his own crew.
Dejarenโs unhinged hatred of everything organic leads to scenes straight out of a slasher film, including an attempt to crush BโElannaโs heart with his bare hands. Leland Orser does a fantastic job of portraying the unhinged killer and it raises some interesting questions about Artificial Intelligence and sentience, especially contrasting Dejaren with the crew’s benevolent holographic Doctor. But above all, itโs one of Voyagerโs most violent and genuinely frightening stories.
6. โThe Phageโ

Voyager didnโt waste any time diving into horror. Just five episodes into its first season, โPhageโ introduced fans to the Vidiians โ one of the most disturbing species in Star Trek, who many fans argued should have become the main villains of the series rather than the underwhelming Kazon. Ravaged by a disease that slowly consumes their organs, the Vidiians turned to harvesting replacement body parts from other beings to survive. The result is grotesque, with the disfigured aliens portrayed as both tragic and terrifying.
The episodeโs most shocking moment comes when they steal Neelixโs lungs during an away mission, forcing the Doctor to improvise a life-saving holographic solution. While โPhageโ tries to lend the Vidiians some sympathy, the unsettling imagery and moral ambiguity make it one of the most disturbing early entries in the series. By setting such a grim tone so early, Voyager paved the way for many of its creepiest episodes that would follow.













