I just genuinely dislike such inexplicably, impossibly smart "genius kid" characters who also seem to possess inexplicably, impossibly vast amounts of knowledge and experience that simply cannot have been acquired in however many years they have been alive.
To be fair the show did try to address that a few times. The episode where he's given his first team, for example, showed him needing real advice from real professionals with real experience. But such episodes were rare. Mostly he was just a general-purpose wunderkind who could solve any problem. An acne ridden teenager who came up with very advanced technical solutions where much more experienced experts drew blanks. Not the most fun trope.
So my biggest issue with Wesley was what an elitist douchebag he could be. He would openly disparage non-Starfleet people, in a way that was at least unprofessional, and at worst outright insulting (like the shuttle pilot picking them up for that crash-on-a-deset-planet episode).
And at the same time, he sucked up to the people above him or who could help his career so unabashedly.
I think his normal chill vibe is way different than his host mode. Hosts have to bring a lot of weirdly excited energy to their platform and you have to be pretty charismatic to pull it off. Don’t like him too much as a host but as a dude he seems cool
I also liked his character up until the very end (no fault of his, just didn’t like the writing). Wish he had powered through in starfleet or at the very least became a regular scientist or something instead of space Jesus lol
Wesley was fine but that last episode is so bad not just because of the traveller stuff. It really felt like one of the early season 1/2 episodes that tried to say something but missed the mark by a wide margin and became problematic in and off itself. Pile on the fact that the Native American advisor for Voyager was a fraud and yeah, it all feels gross. Star Trek did Native Americans dirty.
Fair. Let me rephrase: I don't care for the persona that he projects when he's playing "Wil Wheaton." I find it extremely disingenuous, pandering, and over-the-top
Most of the other shows are just explanations of how to play a game. Tabletop felt like friends hanging out to play them. It's the same thing that makes a good D&D show. We want to be a part of something if it actually looks like they're friends hanging out and having fun.
If either you or @zagorath aren't aware of it, Dimension 20 is an amazing table top series that is absolutely a bunch of friends sitting around playing D&D. I've been hooked the last 6-8 months as we work through the series.
I think one of my favs would have been Fury of Dracula, with Grant Imahara. That highly asymmetric game design is fascinating to me, and add in Grant Imahara's presence? Yes please!
I also loved Dread, which is just such a fantastic and clever bit of game design, with a really strong sense of ludonarrative consonance.
I had always heard that he was the most popular character by volume of fan mail. It was just that the minority of people that hated him really hated him.
Sure, he saved the ship... he also almost destroyed the ship by inventing sentient self-replicating microscopic robots and then leaving the lid off the dish.
Everyone has their off days. If I had a nickel for every time I created an entirely new form of life that went off the rails... well, I'd be broke, but the important part is that we take the good, we take the bad, mix em up and then we have... um, the 80s, I think.
It must be hard being the least liked of the Crusher family, which is quite impressive considering his mother is the worst Starfleet doctor in existence.
I watched some episode of his YouTube series. His childish tantrum because the guest was winning was all I needed to know. The dude is emotionally immature and an asshole.