- SG-1 is sent to warn Harry Maybourne that the Goa'uld System Lord Ares is coming to the planet where he was banished, and in the process they find what may be an Ancient time machine.
- Ba'al is winning the war against his fellow Goa'uld system lords and the losers are now searching out new worlds on which to take refuge. One of those worlds is the planet on which Harry Maybourne was exiled. SG-1 arrives to rescue him only to find that Harry is now the local king and seems to be living a very nice life. It turns out that Harry was sort of expecting them and the Goa'uld. He's found ancient carvings that seem to predict the future - leading Daniel to conclude that the Ancients did in fact master time travel. They explore the surrounding area and find a ship that may in fact contain the time machine in question.—garykmcd
- When the Tok'ra warn the SGC that the Goa'uld will arrive at the planet where Harry Maybourne is exiled, Sam, Daniel and Teal'c travel to bring him back. However they discover that Maybourne is the king of a primitive civilization. He explains that he found a temple with prophecies written on the walls by the Ancients and people have chosen him as their king. Further, he knew that the Goa'uld would come but the prophecies say that they will be saved by the SG-1.—Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Jack reluctantly leads a rescue mission to evacuate before a Goa'uld attack on the former Naquadah mining planet where traitor Harry Maybourne was left behind, only to find he's now its petty village king, Arkhan The First, also revered as prophet by the medieval culture. After he shows SG-1 that his future-telling stems from text on an Ancient monument, Daniel and Carter work out it's referring to a priceless time machine, also found nearby, but hard to bring in working order. System Lord Ares's prime (fleeing Ba'al) arrives with an oppressive Jaffa garrison and mistrusts the sycophantic king even before a foppish subject challenges them and Teal'c and Daniel are uncovered. The race is on for the Ancient technology and the primitive peoples' fate, tied to the king's, after Harry's confession is converted into a more realistic trust.—KGF Vissers
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