These are given by a Klingon woman named "Mara" - however, it seems the missions on the wiki are different from the ones in game. What are the requirements (levels, prereq quests, etc) to run these missions?
"At the end of the movie, I really care about what happens to the characters … but I’m pretty much missing Gene Roddenberry in J.J.’s interpretation … and at the end of the day, that’s just not OK for me." - Levar Burton
"[OrciTrek] doesn’t have the story heart that the best of my Star Trek had," - William Shatner
"It doesn’t have that element that made … Gene Roddenberry‘s ‘Star Trek,’ what it was." - George Takei
"The Gene Roddenberry years, when stories might play with questions of science, ideals or philosophy, have been replaced by stories reduced to loud and colorful action." - Roger Ebert
0
Comments
All you do is go to a zone and fly around scanning things until one triggers and moving you to the combat map. Then you just kill a bunch of whatever until you get what's required and warp out. Twice to get back to sector space. Mara's quest is just a wrapper quest to get dilithium. You can fly around shooting up the enemies of the empire until your fingers fall off.
Note: This might only be partially true because I did it once recently and remembered how boring it is from the last time I was playing regularly and haven't done it again.
It's boring on anything but a tweaked out tactical captain with an escort/raider in which case it's really fast and quick dil.
"At the end of the movie, I really care about what happens to the characters … but I’m pretty much missing Gene Roddenberry in J.J.’s interpretation … and at the end of the day, that’s just not OK for me." - Levar Burton
"[OrciTrek] doesn’t have the story heart that the best of my Star Trek had," - William Shatner
"It doesn’t have that element that made … Gene Roddenberry‘s ‘Star Trek,’ what it was." - George Takei
"The Gene Roddenberry years, when stories might play with questions of science, ideals or philosophy, have been replaced by stories reduced to loud and colorful action." - Roger Ebert