WI Star Trek VII is a major box office bomb?

What if Star Trek VII: Generations was a major box office bomb in November 1994, what will happen to the future of the Star Trek franchise, then Star Trek XI would be Star Trek VIII in May 2009.
 

Hyperion

Banned
If I recall correctly, Generations was made after Deep Space Nine had been going for a year or two, but came out prior to Voyager starting.

If Generations flops big at the box office, I wonder if perhaps Voyager could be delayed, or if the networks might make changes to DS9 or Voyager.
 
The uniforms for Star Trek: First Contact (the movie which never existed in this reality), the ships Akira-class, Steamrunner-class, Saber-class and Borg Sphere, along with the First Contact rifles still exists in this reality, although they are created for Deep Space Nine and Voyager. The Sovereign class starship Enterprise-E still exists in this reality and makes an only appearance in the Voyager episode: "Timeless."

Then in 1996 in this reality, Rick Berman is hit by a car and dies in the hospital shortly after, leaving the Star Trek franchise to helped by Clint Eastwood and James Cameron.

Two years later, during Star Trek: Voyager's 100 episode: "Timeless," the Enterprise-E makes an appearance with the special guest appearances of Patrick Stewart as Captain Jean-Luc Picard (an All Good Things future version) and LeVar Burton as Commander Geordi La Forge, while the Enterprise-E is attempting to stop the Delta Flyer in the future.

Star Trek: Enterprise was never created in this reality, so Scott Bakula stars as Colonel Tigh in Battlestar Galactica.

J.J. Abrams' Star Trek still released in May 8, 2009 as Star Trek: Enterprise and was the first movie since the flop, Star Trek: Generations to be released, except in this reality, Miguel Ferrer stars as the Romulan captain Nero, and Academy Award winner Kim Basinger stars as Amanda Grayson, Spock's mother.
 

MacCaulay

Banned
I know that we're all big believers that things could've turned out differently. But lets be honest: putting Bill Shatner, Patrick Stewart, and Malcolm McDowell in one movie pretty much trumps probability and gaurantees that people will see it. Enough said.
 
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