Sen—The next edition of a fan-made Star Trek series easily warped past its $100,000 ($65,365) goal—with more than a week to go.

As of Feb. 9, Star Trek Continues had raised over $141,000 (£92,500) on the crowdfunding site Kickstarter with 7 days remaining. The series aims to finish the final two years of the "five-year mission" made famous in the original Star Trek series, which ran between 1966 and 1969.

"We've made three episodes—and we're in production on the next two!" the production company, Far From Home LLC, wrote on the Kickstarter page. "With the $100,000 we've raised, we can now make two original, all-new episodes! The money goes to hard costs related to the development, filming, and post-production of these stories."

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Star Trek fans have been bereft of a professionally made television series for a decade, since Star Trek: Enterprise concluded its run in 2005. Hollywood has partially filled the breach with a "reboot" of Star Trek's original series that saw films released in 2009 and 2013.

Fortunately for fans, however, they are free to make their own series based on Star Trek as long as they do not turn a profit. CBS has allowed mutiple iterations of the series to move forward under this agreement, which has kicked off web series and feature film developments, among other projects.

There are multiple "stretch goals" available if the series hits further funding milestones. The next one, at $150,000 (£98,016), would allow for upgraded engineering. Beyond that, there are milestones allowing to "visit" a planet and even to add more episodes to the production.

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With three episodes aired, the series is now attempting to move production forward through a series of "Kirkstarters" to raise awareness and funding. A previous fundraising campaign in 2013 also saw the production exceed its $100,000 fundraising goal.

Notable cast members in the series include former Mythbusters host Grant Imahara and Chris Doohan, the son of the original "Scotty" in Star Trek (James Doohan). The series has also featured contributions from Star Trek alumni such as Marina Sirtis ("Troi" in Star Trek: The Next Generation).

Accolades for the series include a 2014 award for "Best Web Series" by the Geekie Awards, an annual awards show that bills itself as "Hollywood meets a comic convention."