

Crusade
6.777%6.6
Es el año 2257, han pasado 5 años desde la creación de la Alianza y La Guerra contra las Sombras ha quedado atrás pero algunos de los oscuros Aliados todavía están libres por el Universo y poseen su tecnología. Unos de ellos son los Drakh, quienes han intentado destruir la tierra y a pesar de su fallida acción han expandido un virus que en 5 años destruirá todo ser viviente del Planeta.
Ahora la Tierra está en Cuarentena y un grupo altamente cualificado busca por el espacio una cura. Para ello este variado grupo viajará en la Excalibur, un nuevo y único modelo de destructor creado por la Alianza.
Ahora la Tierra está en Cuarentena y un grupo altamente cualificado busca por el espacio una cura. Para ello este variado grupo viajará en la Excalibur, un nuevo y único modelo de destructor creado por la Alianza.
Where to Watch Crusade
Crusade Ratings & Reviews
- flavo4321 de noviembre de 2025Crusade, the spin-off from Babylon 5, has always left me with mixed feelings. After several seasons of B5 that kept growing stronger and more ambitious, I think I was subconsciously ready for a genuine ending, not a new beginning. Crusade arrives almost too quickly, asking you to invest in a fresh crew and a new quest while the emotional dust from the Shadow War and B5’s finale is still settling. The concept—a desperate mission to save Earth from a lethal plague—is solid, but the execution feels uneven. The computer graphics, which once felt groundbreaking, were already starting to look stale, and that undercuts some of the show’s intended scope. It’s easy to imagine that if they’d waited another couple of years, with better effects and a bit more distance from B5, audiences might have been more ready to embrace it fully. As it stands, Crusade feels like an intriguing but premature epilogue.
- Richard18 de octubre de 2025It was the Babylon 5 spin-off that never got a fair shot. Set in 2267, five years after the Shadow War, Earth is infected by a Drakh nanovirus. The destroyer Excalibur is sent to scour the galaxy for a cure. The setup was solid, J. Michael Straczynski’s world building, a new crew and a ticking clock. But the network meddled. Episodes were aired out of order, scripts were rewritten and the tone got muddled. Still, it had moments. Gary Cole as Captain Gideon brought quiet authority and Peter Woodward’s Galen was pure techno mage mystery. The Amiga-powered graphics were still kicking, LightWave 3D doing its thing, even if the budget was tighter. Too bad they went the way they did, 13 episodes, no closure and a show that deserved better.




















