I know what it is... it just looks more like a microchip... Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
The Queen Borg... ''The problem with humans is that they think so three-dimensionally.'' Cheep, coming from a borg Queen travelling in a giant 3-d cuboid... Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
So true. So true. I never bought that line anyway. I thought it was a cheap plot gimmick that gave the writers an "out" so that they didn't have to invest the brain power in trying to explain the HUGE plot hole that existed between the series Borg and the movie Borg. ~String
Hitch Hikers it is not. Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: First Contact. It's a Borg cube ship. ~String
A great Star Trek movie could be made out of a final conflict between the federation and the Borg. It's greatness would lie in it being truly final, with the Borg homeworld destroyed. They have made such great enemies that I can't really see this happening. But done well, it could be a helluva movie. Prior to that, it would be interesting to see the backstory of the Borg. Were they just typical Star Trek humanoids who ventured too far into cybernetic implants to replace failing organs? Did there come a tipping point where there was a war between the last remaining Borg world citizens who had no implants, and those who had gone far beyond just replacing failing organs, and had begun enhancing their natural abilities to become superhuman both in physical strength, and in their collective thinking abilities? Or were the Borg created as super soldiers to protect the Borg homeworld, only to turn on it, and assimilate all of its inhabitants, then turn outwards to the galaxy at large?
The borg got wiped out by an alternate admiral janeway with her neurological nanotech virus. But i'd be cool to see the origins.. Either way.. RESISTANCE IS FUTILE.
Except when they attack Earth. Several times. 'Resistance is futile sometimes, sometimes not - sometimes we get our asses kicked by plucky female captains.' It would have been cool if the Borg actually won the first attack and assimilated Earth. Then the rest of the series could have been about the Borg and their wacky adventures.
No. The Borg weren't completely destroyed. In the last episode, all she did is destroy a significant portion of the Borg (you'll remember that a Borg sphere was able to resist the pathogen and take Voyager through a transwarp conduit back to the Alpha Quadrant). Oh... [queue the nerd jokes] it was a "neurolitic pathogen" that nearly wiped out the Borg. BAM! ~String