Broadcast "What You Leave Behind" was first shown on June 2, 1999, in
broadcast syndication. It is the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth episodes of the seventh and final season and received
Nielsen ratings of 5.4 percent on the first broadcast. It is the highest-rated episode of the season.
Critical reception Keith DeCandido reviewed the episode for
Tor.com and, while praising the resolution to the Dominion War, said that it failed as the finale to
Deep Space Nine, stating that the end of the war and the end of the TV series are not synonymous. He expressed disappointment in the series' failure to resolve Sisko's primary goal of getting Bajor into the Federation. DeCandido compared the episode to other
Star Trek series finales, writing, "
TNG revisited
the trial of humanity by the Q from its first episode,
Voyager got
our heroes home from the Delta Quadrant, and
Enterprise ended
with Earth helping form the Coalition of Planets that would eventually mutate into the Federation. But
DS9 blew the landing by treating the show like
Star Trek: The Dominion War." He rated the episode 6 out of 10. Zack Handlen of
The A.V. Club referred to it as an imperfect series finale. He said that of the "handful of deaths in 'What You Leave Behind', ... Damar's is the only one that really stings." Reflecting on how everyone went their separate ways, Handlen wrote, "That's what this finale is about to me. Not the end of the war, or the death of some bad guys, but the reminder that there are so many stories that go on without us." Jamahl Epsicokhan of
Jammer's Reviews summarized the episode as a "poignant and satisfying end to the final arc and the series". Like Handlen, he was "somewhat disappointed" by Damar's death, as it came in "an action scene and with very little fanfare". As a key element of the story arc, Epsicokhan stated "it's almost as if there simply wasn't time to deal with the death of the man who would've been the leader of a new Cardassia. The notion seemingly is: He's dead; on with the story." He ultimately said that the episode made for a nice ending, writing that the "closing scene is more one of 'life goes on'", and gave the episode 3.5 out of 4 stars. Both Epsicokhan and
Den of Geek's Gem Wheeler favorably noted the comparisons between the final shot of the episode and the events of "
The Visitor", with Wheeler writing that the latter episode gains in emotional impact after watching the series finale. Many reviewers criticized the
Pah-wraith storyline and its resolution. DeCandido had been heavily critical of the direction of
Dukat's character following "
Sacrifice of Angels", writing "There's an argument to be made that the world would've been a better place if ["Sacrifice of Angels"] was Dukat's last appearance", as well as the Pah-wraiths following their introduction in "
The Assignment", writing that the evil counterparts of the
wormhole aliens were "so
lazy", "something out of a bad 70s adventure show", and "one of the most wrongheaded plot devices in
DS9's history"; with exception to "
Covenant", where he had written that "The fact that this is [...] the only Pah-wraith episode that doesn't have alien possession, glowing eyes, and people firing ray-beams out of their fingers is not a coincidence [as to why he liked the episode]", he had repeatedly said how much he despised "the entire concept of the Pah-wraiths". He saw the final confrontation between Sisko and Dukat as "a stupid side plot involving fire caves, glowy eyes, magic books, and a simply endless amount of shouting", leading to a "totally absurd confrontation" which reduced the "alienness of the Prophets [and] the depth of the rivalry between Sisko and Dukat [to] yelling at each other and then tumbling into a fire", labeling it as "cheap-ass melodrama". In 2016,
The Hollywood Reporter ranked the two-episode finale as the ninth best episode of the series overall. In 2016,
Empire ranked this the 30th best out of the top 50 episodes of all the 700 plus
Star Trek television episodes. In 2020,
ScreenRant said it was the second best series finale of all
Star Trek series, and noted an IMDb rating of 9.0 out 10.
Awards The episode won the 2000 Best Television Episode
SyFy Genre Award. == Home media ==