When does Chicago Fire season 14 epiosde 2 drop? Release timing for all regions, how to watch, and more
When and Where to Watch
The second episode of Chicago Fire Season 14, titled “Primary Search,” is set to air on Wednesday, October 8, 2025, on NBC. The episode continues the emotional fallout and intense drama that began in the premiere.
Here’s the release timing by region:
Region | Release Date | Release Time |
---|---|---|
USA (Pacific Time) | October 8, 2025 | 6:00 p.m. |
USA (Eastern Time) | October 8, 2025 | 9:00 p.m. |
United Kingdom (BST) |
October 9, 2025 | 2:00 a.m. |
Central Europe (CET) | October 9, 2025 | 3:00 a.m. |
Eastern Europe (EET) | October 9, 2025 | 3:00 a.m. |
India (IST) | October 9, 2025 | 6:30 a.m. |
Japan (JST) |
October 9, 2025 | 10:00 a.m. |
Australia (AEST) | October 9, 2025 | 11:00 a.m. |
New Zealand (NZST) | October 9, 2025 | 1:00 p.m. |
If you miss the live broadcast, “Primary Search” will be available to

What Happened So Far
Season 14’s premiere kicked off with emotional highs and lows for Firehouse 51. After thinking she was pregnant, Stella Kidd discovered her test was a false positive, forcing her and
Meanwhile, Sal Vasquez (Brandon Larracuente) made his debut, quickly clashing with Kidd after his reckless behavior during a rescue. Despite her warnings, Chief Pascal refused to discipline Vasquez, suggesting deeper tensions ahead. Elsewhere,

What to Expect in Episode 2
NBC’s synopsis teases:
“Vasquez fights to prove himself at 51; Violet and Novak pursue a troubling mystery; Herrmann is on a quest to keep Molly’s profitable.”
Fans can expect a strong mix of action, emotion, and character development as Vasquez works to earn his place among the 51 crew, Violet and Novak uncover something suspicious on the job, and Herrmann’s new role leads to unexpected financial pressure.
With shifting dynamics, personal challenges, and the team’s loyalty tested, “Primary Search” promises to keep Chicago Fire’s trademark balance of adrenaline and heart.
Star Trek Perfected a Sci-Fi Trope Terminator Never Mastered

In the story “The Fragile Beauty of Loyalty,” written by Vivek J. Tiwary and drawn by Hugo Petrus and appearing in
Time Travel Is A Key Part of Science Fiction Lore
Star Trek Has Been Leaning Into Time Travel From Its Inception
Stories of time travel have been a part of the science fiction landscape since the genre’s inception. HG Well’s 1895 masterpiece
The Star Trek franchise has been using time travel since its beginnings in 1966. An early first season episode, “The Naked Time,” would be the first of many Star Trek
These criticisms reached their peak with Star Trek: Enterprise, which premiered in 2001. A “Temporal Cold War” was introduced in the pilot episode. Enterprise’s creative team kept the specifics of the War vague, largely because the writers never fully developed it to begin with. The Temporal Cold War was shoe-horned in at the expense of other stories.
However, despite these criticisms, time travel remains a key part of Star Trek. JJ Abrams’ 2009 film used time travel as a device to establish a parallel timeline. This was a clever use of the trope, and helped ensure canon was not broken during the process of the reboot. It also freed Abrams to introduce new elements too.
Time travel has factored into the current batch of Star Trek television shows. Discovery employed time travel at the end of its second season, sending the ship nearly a thousand years into the future. Much like Abrams’ movie, time travel freed
The Terminator Franchise Uses Time Travel in a Dark Way
The First Terminator Films Featured Some Unforgettable Time Travel Twists
The Terminator franchise has also used time travel. In fact, the idea of time travel is even more central to The Terminator than it is to
Cameron and Hurd use time travel as a plot device in the first Terminator movie. A killer robot is sent back to 1984 to prevent the birth of a human, John Connor, who will lead a revolution against a murderous AI. The human resistance sends one of their own, Kyle Reese, back to stop the robot.
The Terminator ended with a twist: the human agent sent back to 1984 ends up fathering John Connor, the very person whose existence he was sent to ensure. This clever twist not only gave the film some unexpected emotional layers, but also set up a sequel, one that would be bigger and better.
1991’s Terminator 2: Judgement Day took the time travel twists a step further. The killer robot from the first movie returned, but this time as a good guy. Captured and reprogrammed by the human resistance, it was sent back to protect John Connor from another, even deadlier robot.
Both Star Trek and The Terminator Have Made Great Use of Time Travel
Both Franchises Haved Told Clever and Emotional Stories Using Time Travel
Telling a good time travel story can be tricky, but the creative personnel behind both the Star Trek and Terminator franchises have used it to brilliant effect on more than one occasion. The best time travel stories from each franchise use the trope as a means to tell compelling stories with deep emotional cores. The time travel aspect is almost secondary.
The curveballs the early Terminator movies threw at fans were smart. Having Kyle Reese father John Connor was a great twist that few saw coming. It created a predestination paradox, a concept important to the time travel genre, but it also made the story more “human.” T2 also had its share of surprises.
Star Trek Showed The Terminator How to Do a Good Time Travel Story
Star Trek Set Porthos Up to be a Franchise MVP
The Star Trek and Terminator franchises have little in common. Star Trek shows a peaceful, optimistic future, whereas The Terminator is driven by a bleak, post-apocalyptic worldview. Time travel is front and center in The Terminator franchise, but only secondary in Star Trek. It would stand to reason that The Terminator would tell better time travel stories.
In just a few short pages, “The Fragile Beauty of Loyalty” sees Star Trek employ time travel to brilliant effect, and improve upon the formula The Terminator created. The story duplicates the emotional impact of the first two Terminator movies, but takes them a step further. Star Trek has shown Terminator how to do a time travel story.