• marcos@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This is one of my greatest disappointments on all of Star Trek. Why did they have to make a leader for the Borg? And turn them into a cult that hunts down non-believers?

    • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I agree completely. A collective run by everyone’s brain being cybernetically networked was an interesting, unique idea. A culture run by an amoral dictator is boring and painfully unoriginal.

      • Windex007@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This is what actually made the Borg terrifying.

        There was nobody to talk to or negotiate with. There was no mind to change. There wasn’t even a leader to assassinate in hopes to alter policy.

        They were less of an enemy and more of an immutable force, like gravity or magnetism.

        • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          YES. They were truly alien, not just another culture with unusual traditions and weird noses. Communication was easy, but simply didn’t matter.

          Giving them a leader with understandable emotions and motivations took that away.

        • Infynis@midwest.social
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          1 year ago

          I think that’s why they got changed though. As cool as they were without a leader, having a major enemy that can’t be negotiated with at all, doesn’t really work for a show where humanity’s diplomacy is supposed to be their most important trait

          • VindictiveJudge@startrek.website
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            1 year ago

            I don’t think that’s too big of a concern, to be honest. You can’t negotiate with a spacial rift and the show handles that kind of thing fine. I think they were having problems with First Contact’s script and decided to solve it with a named antagonist rather than just hordes of Borg.

          • howsetheraven@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Nah, it’s just shit writers who can’t do anything besides low-hanging fruit that has been done before time and again. You could make a very compelling story with the Borg ad a constant threat and they have to convince other factions to help. That’s just one example and Star Trek show writers already did it.

            • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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              1 year ago

              The wolves in the Revelation Space series are a great example of a compelling enemy that can’t be negotiated with.

          • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            That’s one of the things that made them interesting, though. They were the exception that proved the rule.

            They could have told virtually the same story (I’m thinking of First Contact) by having the queen lead a breakaway faction of Borg. She would still have all the memories from The Best Of Both Worlds. In fact, those events could have been what inspired her to lead her own group and pursue Picard.

    • VindictiveJudge@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      She wasn’t too bad in First Contact. The movie implied that she was simply an avatar for the Collective, not too different from Locutus. Later writers didn’t get that and VOY turned her into an individual within the Collective who controlled all of it, somehow. Then her depiction just kept getting further and further from her depiction in First Contact, mostly keeping superficial things.

      Section 31 went through a very similar shift, where DS9 implies that Sloan and S31 are rogue agents and Sloan is talking out of his ass in regards to any real authority and taking an, at best, extremely liberal interpretation of the Starfleet Charter, then later works making them an official part of Starfleet.

      • marcos@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The movie implied that she was simply an avatar for the Collective

        She says that. And then she dies and the Borg are defeated.

        On the other hand, on VOY, she says the same, and then proceeds to create a Fascist organization clearly against the goals of the drones. But at least when she dies, the Collective creates a new queen.

        About Section 31, my understanding is that it was once official. And then it was disbanded with prejudice, but the high powers don’t really want it gone, so S31 has authority even on DS9 and LWD times.

        • VindictiveJudge@startrek.website
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          1 year ago

          Been a while since I watched First Contact, but I thought they did more than just kill the Queen. Could be wrong, though.

          On Section 31, that’s the current story, but DS9 had their existence so secret that it’s implausible in combination with how open they are in DSC. It’d be like the US disbanding the marine corps and then trying to pretend they never had one. ENT’s bit where they quoted the charter also has them pretty clearly deliberately misinterpreting what Article 14, Section 31 actually says.

          Harris: “Re-read the charter: Article 14, Section 31. There are a few lines that make allowances for bending the rules during times of extraordinary threat.”

          Archer: “What threat?”

          Harris: “Take your pick. Earth’s got a lot of enemies.”

          That sounds like it’s intended to be meant to cover the wacky reality destroying shenanigans that Starfleet crews tend to get mixed up in. Breaking time travel laws to retrieve whales from the past so that Earth doesn’t get wiped off the map, for instance would be covered under art. XIV, §31. Or interfering with the internal politics of the Q Continuum because they’re blowing up random stars. Or landing a strike team on a pre-warp planet because they’re messing around with Omega Particles. Messing with Romulan internal politics because they hate us doesn’t qualify because the Romulans aren’t about to wipe anyone out. Romulans are an ordinary threat, not an extraordinary one. That’s just Tuesday in the Federation. Harris’ quote also doesn’t imply that the charter actually calls for the creation of an entire branch of Starfleet to handle such threats.

          Before DSC gave them badges, the logical conclusion was that S31 in the prime timeline was an illegal conspiracy among Starfleet officers, not an official organization in any way. Even Into Darkness’ portrayal could potentially be interpreted as a S31 conspirator in that timeline getting high enough ranked to move lots of resources on the sly, though I’ll admit that’s stretching things.

          • marcos@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Oh, it has been a while since I watched it too. I could easily be wrong.

            On S31, there is more than a century between those. It’s like the US disbanding some intelligence agency by the time of their civil war, and people today not knowing about it. It’s not the worst case of document loses on those series.

      • SSTF@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Section 31. I’m one of those few people who actually wants more S31 stuff, but only if it’s done correctly.

        Way too many followups treat it like Starfleet’s CIA (Starfleet Intelligence already exists…) instead of a conspiracy that consists of individuals acting out of various degrees of ideological resolve, and to varying amounts. I imagine most people who are “in” S31 are more like Bashir. They are called upon to look the other way, or do something without being told much about it. Otherwise they have day jobs. I’m sure various Starfleet command level officers are in on some aspect of S31, but that doesn’t make their ships full time S31 ships. Only a very few people further the S31 cause full time, and they are totally off the books. S31 is supposed to be a shady group that parasitically uses Starfleet assets.

        I idea of Section 31 black badges is so preposterously mind blowing.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Isn’t it canon that reintegrating Hugh caused individuality to spread through the Collective, which could only be solved by creating one individual to control them?

      • RojoSanIchiban@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Nope, but that would have been a much better take.

        In First Contact, Picard has flashbacks and mentions that the Queen was there the entire time while he was Locutus. Gross retcon.

        Hugh and the individual Borg led by Lore were just a small subset, maybe a single cube. I can’t remember if that was stated directly in Descent or not, but it was implied to be a relatively small group affected.

    • EmergMemeHologram@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      The concept of a Borg queen basically destroys the entire concept of the Borg for me.

      They were supposed to be a hive mind, but with a queen they’re just slaves and the Borg are no more interesting than the Mongol empire.

      The queen is a single point of failure, her existence as an individual weakens the hive and makes it less elegant/perfect (a single distributed individual consciousness is such a cool idea).

      Plus the queen was an idiot, getting constantly outwitted by ploys they should have been anticipated 10000x over with a trillion minds working at once.

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        i was genuinely confused when i learned about the borg queen, it makes no fucking sense on any level and feels like something that was edited in post

      • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I agree with your take.

        I was never a Trekkie, but my gf has been since she was a kid, so she’s been sharing the setting with me.

        I really, really liked the borg threat, but the Queen cheapens it for me significantly. Not so much that she exists, but that she’s literally the Nexus of the whole thing.

        My suspicion/prediction was that the borg would be undone by some sort of biotechnical exploit, likely either some sort of “virus” that would be assimilated and spread through the system, nullifying/destroying them or their abilities…or some kind of trojan horse, similar to the virus but something that would take federation and romulan cooperation to build something that was very desirable to the collective but with a built in vulnerability that would leave them open to a specific attack (maybe something like capturing a Borg and altering them in a way that used the Borg “learning” against them, by countering the advantages of things they assimilate and then learning at the same pace as the Borg, but in learning how to halt their progress)…or maybe some sort of star trek version of a DDOS where they were able to somehow overwhelm the Borg with things to assimilate, but that were “dumb machinery”…with a huge glut of these assimilations of mundane subjects, maybe it’d have the effect of reducing the average of the collective, making it more beatable. Basically adding lots of dead weight to “bring down the curve”.

        Or, of course, there was always the possibility of time warp or Q related nonsense, but IMHO that would have been even worse than what we got with the Queen. As popular as Q is, I never liked that addition to the setting.

        • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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          1 year ago

          I was never a Trekkie

          You’re in a Star Trek meme forum having a serious discussion about how the franchise was handled. You’re a Trekkie now.

      • Infynis@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        The queen is a single point of failure

        This is actually not true. The Borg have multiple queens

    • hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The idea wasn’t spineless, it just was an idea that lacked any legs. Couldn’t really gain any traction with viewers.

  • armus@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    You’re fooling yourself! We’re living in a dictatorship! A self perpetuating autocracy in which the working class Borg-

  • EdibleFriend@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Apparently originally it was supposed to be a computer? I think the studio said that was just stupid and it needed to be a person?

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I don’t know which I hated more. Hugh or the Borg Queen. Probably the Borg Queen because they kept going with that stupid idea.

  • Etterra@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I do like the fan theory, although the official canon disproves it but still, that the Borg Queen (or perhaps just her more individualistic nature) was actually a reaction to humanity being such a pain in the ass.