Prime Directive
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Prime Directive
Summary
Prime Directive is a fictional rule[1]. It draws 295 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_rule category, ranking #1 of 1).[2]
Key Facts
- Prime Directive's instance of is recorded as fictional rule[3].
- Prime Directive's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0ckkt[4].
- Prime Directive's main subject is recorded as first contact[5].
- Prime Directive's main subject is recorded as intervention[6].
- Prime Directive's from narrative universe is recorded as Star Trek universe[7].
- Prime Directive's political ideology is recorded as non-interventionism[8].
- Prime Directive's described by source is recorded as Star Trek Fact Files[9].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as First Contact[10].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as The Red King[11].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Articles of the Federation[12].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Rogue[13].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Fire on High[14].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as This Gray Spirit[15].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Taking Wing[16].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Once Burned[17].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Into the Void[18].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Martyr[19].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Red Sector[20].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Rising Son[21].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Over a Torrent Sea[22].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Synthesis[23].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Unworthy[24].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Precipice[25].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as The Two-Front War[26].
- Prime Directive's present in work is recorded as Twilight[27].
Why It Matters
Prime Directive draws 295 Wikipedia views per month (fictional_rule category, ranking #1 of 1).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]