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  • dkratascodkratasco Member Posts: 585 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    Borg Queen could has been used as interpreter or face to communicate with other races, similar how Locutus was used in that matter.
  • zipagatzipagat Member Posts: 1,204 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    angrytarg wrote: »
    Not only the queen, the drones itself have been reimagined into being vampire-zombies. The practice of assimilating individuals of a species was portrayed very differently in TNG as well. There were no "assimilation bites" with "infected" people lying and walking around. The assimiliation of Picard was shown to be a lengthy, out of the ordinary process. The Borg itself were shown to breed and only interested in technology.

    The first Borg drone was able to "adapt" to melee attacks as well. It was able to counter the ensign's grab with superior strength and speed. This is a behaviour we never see again, instead drones became slow, sluggish zombies. Even VOY told us (via seven) how advanced and awesome every single drone is, yet all they ever did was to walk slowly and "bite" people. Remember what happened when they shot the first Borg drone in "Q, who"? A second drone beamed in, completed the task and salvaged key components from the downed drone and initiating (what I think) a kind of self-destruction mechanism afterwards before returning to the cube. I guess the habit of "leaving no technology behind" was abandoned as well.

    I always thought of the original Borg as a homeless entity as well. The hive was scattered throughout the universe. On expansion, I always figured a cube would just start constructing another one in deep space, like mitosis, and then continue onward.

    Very true, the first Borg that the Ent D encounters doesn't give and S***s about the crew and just carries on doing whatever it was doing to the computers in Engineering while Picard talked at it. It only acknowledged the crew when that security officer tried to stop it. Then when Worf shot it another took its place finished the job and salvaged the other drone.

    Q also describes them as interested in their technology not the crew.
  • angrytargangrytarg Member Posts: 11,001 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    dkratasco wrote: »
    Borg Queen could has been used as interpreter or face to communicate with other races, similar how Locutus was used in that matter.

    The existance of the queen, however, completely nullifies the existence of locutus in the first place.
    lFC4bt2.gif
    ^ Memory Alpha.org is not canon. It's a open wiki with arbitrary rules. Only what can be cited from an episode is. ^
    "No. Men do not roar. Women roar. Then they hurl heavy objects... and claw at you." -Worf, son of Mogh
    "A filthy, mangy beast, but in its bony breast beat the heart of a warrior" - "faithful" (...) "but ever-ready to follow the call of the wild." - Martok, about a Targ
    "That pig smelled horrid. A sweet-sour, extremely pungent odor. I showered and showered, and it took me a week to get rid of it!" - Robert Justman, appreciating Emmy-Lou
  • angrytargangrytarg Member Posts: 11,001 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    valoreah wrote: »
    In what way?

    Locutus was meant to be a spokesman to negotiate the surrender of Earth. However, this whole arc was nonsense when they already have a queen (that also looks human) to do that.
    lFC4bt2.gif
    ^ Memory Alpha.org is not canon. It's a open wiki with arbitrary rules. Only what can be cited from an episode is. ^
    "No. Men do not roar. Women roar. Then they hurl heavy objects... and claw at you." -Worf, son of Mogh
    "A filthy, mangy beast, but in its bony breast beat the heart of a warrior" - "faithful" (...) "but ever-ready to follow the call of the wild." - Martok, about a Targ
    "That pig smelled horrid. A sweet-sour, extremely pungent odor. I showered and showered, and it took me a week to get rid of it!" - Robert Justman, appreciating Emmy-Lou
  • timelord79timelord79 Member Posts: 1,852 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    angrytarg wrote: »
    Locutus was meant to be a spokesman to negotiate the surrender of Earth. However, this whole arc was nonsense when they already have a queen (that also looks human) to do that.

    The reasoning wasn't to have a special drone that was able to talk to humans as a single Borg. Any drone could have done that.

    It was to show humanity how much improvement there would be by assimilation.
    Locutus was advertisement in a way.
    it backfired of course and had the exact opposite effect.

    It made the crew of the Enterprise fight harder and unconventional, cause the borg made it personal.
    11750640_1051211588222593_450219911807924697_n.jpg
  • lianthelialianthelia Member Posts: 7,865 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    Like some MMO's, people find ways to exploit the system to their advantage, and create monster dps builds.

    This leads to boredom for them, and they ask for more challenge.

    Yet there are many who do not have such builds, and a huge increase to difficulty can hurt their fun.

    More difficulty selection can give both sides what they want, but can also create a divide between player's, as those who only do the hardest challenges become known as elitist's.

    You can always create more challenge for yourself, by forgoing the uber dps build, and pick a more basic build, or even poor man's build.

    Set the bar too high in terms of difficulty, and you will find yourself making a cookie cutter build, if you haven't already done so.

    Then make elite tough, if people don't like it then they don't have to play it...they still have standard. Right now elite is a joke and can be done easily...
    Can't have a honest conversation because of a white knight with power
  • ussinterceptussintercept Member Posts: 627 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    angrytarg wrote: »
    Locutus was meant to be a spokesman to negotiate the surrender of Earth. However, this whole arc was nonsense when they already have a queen (that also looks human) to do that.

    Not true. Its quite possible there was no Queen close enough, or even concerned enough to involve herself with the Earth Affair.

    The Locutus Incident happened very early on in the Borg/Federation Conflict and as such the Borg may have simply decided the issue warranted some out of the ordinary behavior. But nothing that required the direct attention of the Borg Queen.

    The truth is the Borg have changed radically from when we first meet them in TNG and what they have become notorious for in VOY. When people think of the Borg they immediately think back to the Delta Quadrant Borg. And its quite obvious when you look at Cryptics interpretation of them.

    While I enjoyed TNG, it was after all the first series I watched as a kid and made me into the ST Fan that I am today. They didnt do the Borg justice and the only time you see the Borg as a big scary bad guy is during the first encounter and Wolf 359. Outside of that TNG did very little with the Borg that would warrant the sort of amazement that people have for them.

    At one point the Enterprise Crew freed a Borg Drone of the Collective and then let him go back to them. Later on in the series you find out that that Drones individualism 'infected' the Collective rather then being re-absorbed. And Lore, Datas Brother, is able to use this sudden weakness in the Borg to gain control over a small army of Drones.

    Its quite obvious going back and watching the TNG series that not even the original creators of the Borg knew what they wanted to do with them or how powerful they should be. It was the subsequent First Contact movie and Voyager episodes that really fleshed out the Borg Collective and gave them some depth worth paying attention to. While I dont agree with Voyager dealing such a major blow to the Borg in its Series Finale. It is canon now and I can only assume that it put enough of a dent in the Borg to provide the Federation the opportunity to get a leading edge on the Borg.

    Its also quite possible the Borg are fractured and numerous Queens with different opinions of where to take the Borg next has weakened the Borg.
  • angrytargangrytarg Member Posts: 11,001 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    timelord79 wrote: »
    The reasoning wasn't to have a special drone that was able to talk to humans as a single Borg. Any drone could have done that.

    It was to show humanity how much improvement there would be by assimilation.
    Locutus was advertisement in a way.
    it backfired of course and had the exact opposite effect.

    It made the crew of the Enterprise fight harder and unconventional, cause the borg made it personal.
    valoreah wrote: »
    This. Let's also remember that the BoBW was very early on in the evolution of the Borg on Star Trek. They were never intended to be on more than one episode as I recall, so they hadn't totally fleshed them out.

    To facilitate our introduction into your societies, it has been decided that a human voice will speak for us in all communications. You have been chosen to be that voice.

    That's the sole reason for Locutus to exist. That's the meaning of his very name.

    True, TNG showed different Borg, but that's the point. The Borg in TNG were not a villian to fight, they were a figure for the unknown danger that lurks beyond the final frontier. They incarnated the technospectical concept of Star Trek, a race of beings that fused with their technology and lost all of their humanity. And they were a force not beaten by force or technology. That's their intention which is, in my opinion, way more menacing than every boring zombie apocalypse you can come up with.

    Not true. Its quite possible there was no Queen close enough, or even concerned enough to involve herself with the Earth Affair.

    (...)

    What you describe directly contradicts the very concept of a hive mind. The introduction of the Borg in TNG directly contradicts their portrayal in VOY - basically, you have two entirely seperate entities that share the same name. And to me, the original creation is what came first. True, these are not the Borg they created for their action flick (which I like nevertheless), but there are still people remembering the original concept which was a tad more complex than green zombies and a draculette.

    EDIT:
    valoreah wrote: »
    That isn't what was said in First Contact. Picard specifically mentions the Borg Queen as being aboard the Borg ship that had assimilated him. We also see this via a very brief flashback.

    That's a retcon, though. I won't fight the "canonity" of it since I cannot fight that, it's what they have rewritten previous events to be, yet I personally don't accept retcons, ever, as they are the ultimate surrender for any writer.
    lFC4bt2.gif
    ^ Memory Alpha.org is not canon. It's a open wiki with arbitrary rules. Only what can be cited from an episode is. ^
    "No. Men do not roar. Women roar. Then they hurl heavy objects... and claw at you." -Worf, son of Mogh
    "A filthy, mangy beast, but in its bony breast beat the heart of a warrior" - "faithful" (...) "but ever-ready to follow the call of the wild." - Martok, about a Targ
    "That pig smelled horrid. A sweet-sour, extremely pungent odor. I showered and showered, and it took me a week to get rid of it!" - Robert Justman, appreciating Emmy-Lou
  • darkjeffdarkjeff Member Posts: 2,590 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    That's true - a good leader surrounds himself and makes use of expertise, providing organization and direction. Your tactical, science, medical, and assorted departments should be better at their respective specializations than you.

    Picard captained the flagship during what was an ostensibly peaceful period to be a diplomat, and represent the Federation. With the Khitomer Accords, there were ongoing negotiations with the Klingons, and in 2364 (Season 1 of TNG) they hadn't heard from the Romulans in years. This was a time of development and diplomacy. Picard was obviously a competent enough tactician and strategist to captain the flagship, but that was not his specialization. Riker was the younger officer dispatched on away teams, a field commander given objectives.

    Contrast this with Kirk, a starship captain during the Klingon-Federation Cold War, and the start of renewed hostilities with the Romulans.
  • feiqafeiqa Member Posts: 2,410 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    dark4blood wrote: »
    ^I think this has alot to deal with and inferiority complex with new tech vs. old tech. Much like the quote "don't bring a knife to a gun fight", Picard probably didn't think in that realm of why don't we just equip everyone with old projectile weaponry and kill all the Borg that way.

    The greatest strategist in the world, usually are the ones that can adapt very quickly to unexpected battle situations with little resources, Picard was good but not great at Strategy. Riker was better, and so was Kirk; Picard was just really great at leading.

    If I may paraphrase from another game. "We may be overlooking older, proven technologies in an effort to provide you with the state of art. Normally I wouldn't give much credence to the idea, but when an AI criticizes you for loving high-tech, it gives one pause to consider."

    Originally Posted by pwlaughingtrendy
    Network engineers are not ship designers.
    Nor should they be. Their ships would look weird.
  • shaanithegreenshaanithegreen Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    cbrjwrr wrote: »
    ...that the Borg just aren't a threat now?


    At Wolf 359, 39 Starships were lost and 11,000 people died, and the Cube ignored every attack apart from one via the Borg's own hive mind - the most catastrophic defeat in Federation history.

    By the battle of Sector 001, a Federation Fleet could actually bring down a normal Cube, with not quite as many ships lost.

    By STO, even an average player ship has the ability to comfortably 1 vs 1 a Cube

    We're five years after Future Janeway's time in Endgame, where a single transphasic torpedo could destroy the Borg cube from either of those battles in a single hit.
  • darkjeffdarkjeff Member Posts: 2,590 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    I thought they failed to get anything useful out of Future Janeway, since she was a trojan horse.
  • venkouvenkou Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    valoreah wrote: »
    That isn't what was said in First Contact. Picard specifically mentions the Borg Queen as being aboard the Borg ship that had assimilated him. We also see this via a very brief flashback.
    If you listen to the conversation between the Borg Queen and Picard, you will have noticed this...
    Borg Queen: What's wrong, Locutus? Isn't this familiar? Organic minds are such fragile things. How could you forget me so quickly? We were very close, you and I. You can still hear our song.

    Captain Jean-Luc Picard: Yes, I... I remember you. You were there all the time. But... that ship... and all the Borg on it were destroyed...

    Borg Queen: You think in such three-dimensional terms. How small you've become.
    She was not physically on the ship. As with Seven of Nine's experiences with the Borg, the Queen can enter the mind of any drone. She does not have to make any physical contact.

    Borg Queen entered the mind of Locutus from a great distance.

    Watch "Star Trek: Voyager" episode "Unimatrix Zero" to see how the Borg Queen works.

    Now, here is a philosophical question that has never been explained...

    Once a selected queen in chosen, does the mind of the individual get erased? Other words, the original conscious of the chosen host is suppressed, and then a program loads up the Queen's consciousness?

    Therefore, unless you wipe out the main program, the one that contains the Queen's conscious, the Borg could indefinably rebuild the collective.
  • cbrjwrrcbrjwrr Member Posts: 2,782 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    A drone has no mind except the Collective.
  • azurianstarazurianstar Member Posts: 6,985 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    I have no idea why Cryptic don't reinstate the original STFs, surely they didn't delete the code? If they have the assets then use them, but then again I see very little sense in many of the decisions this company makes, I feel there is an underlying pressure on them from above to only increase the turnover of players, they don't seem to understand that it's the turnover of cash that is more important, ie quality over quantity.

    Ah well, I've not posted in a while, I log in and always waste my time in kerrat then log out and watch ST instead, perhaps that says something.

    Actually, the original STFs are still around, we just can't normally access them. Some players still have the orginal missions (though they don't play much anymore) and played them. And actually had fun. So all they have to do is flip the switch and get rid of the queue buttons in Gamma Orionis.



    But the thing is, Cryptic won't. Like you said, the game is for the lower denominator now, and STO is just a queued theme park ride. It's long since been an MMO. :(
  • mirrorchaosmirrorchaos Member Posts: 9,844 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    Actually, the original STFs are still around, we just can't normally access them. Some players still have the orginal missions (though they don't play much anymore) and played them. And actually had fun. So all they have to do is flip the switch and get rid of the queue buttons in Gamma Orionis.



    But the thing is, Cryptic won't. Like you said, the game is for the lower denominator now, and STO is just a queued theme park ride. It's long since been an MMO. :(

    any chance i can act like a spoilt brat stamping my feet up and down, crying to get the old stfs back? :P:D.

    but yeah the old stfs sorted the wheat from the chaff, you had to have a good team. you dont see that these days. good old days.
    T6 Miranda Hero Ship FTW.
    Been around since Dec 2010 on STO and bought LTS in Apr 2013 for STO.
  • azurianstarazurianstar Member Posts: 6,985 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    any chance i can act like a spoilt brat stamping my feet up and down, crying to get the old stfs back? :P:D.

    Tried that, didn't work. :P

    I guess they don't want us to "suffer" like in the old days. :rolleyes:
  • daan2006daan2006 Member Posts: 5,346 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    but yeah the old stfs sorted the wheat from the chaff, you had to have a good team. you dont see that these days. good old days.

    it more than likely end up on the FCT thread
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
    swimwear off risa not fixed
    system Lord Baal is dead
    macronius wrote: »
    This! Their ability to outdo their own failures is quite impressive. If only this power could be harnessed for good.
  • mirrorchaosmirrorchaos Member Posts: 9,844 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    Tried that, didn't work. :P

    I guess they don't want us to "suffer" like in the old days. :rolleyes:

    too bad :P.
    daan2006 wrote: »
    it more than likely end up on the FCT thread

    too many nostalgic players dont like the change that is there, its more then likely because to create a thread about debate just for a debate isnt exactly a reason to keep it open, especially one about a stick and a certain dead mammal. but i digress, lets not get into that closed can of worms that bluegeek shut down yesterday. its got no place on this thread just yet.
    T6 Miranda Hero Ship FTW.
    Been around since Dec 2010 on STO and bought LTS in Apr 2013 for STO.
  • zipagatzipagat Member Posts: 1,204 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    Its also more than likely that Starfleet would of quarantined Janeway's future tech some place quiet upon Voyagers return since they would likely be concerned with TRIBBLE with the time line any more.
  • mirrorchaosmirrorchaos Member Posts: 9,844 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    its more likely that technology would of instantly went to the r&d labs for study for replication, those torpedoes that destroy cubes in 1 or 2 hits, its worth having a few on each starfleet ship incase of a borg encounter at some point.

    as for the queen assimilating the armour tech, it was during the assimilation of the pathogen, her connection with all the drones would of been clogged up and with the elimination of the drones with that information it would of never gotten out to the rest of the collective. so a great deal of what the borg know would have been lost.
    T6 Miranda Hero Ship FTW.
    Been around since Dec 2010 on STO and bought LTS in Apr 2013 for STO.
  • oldravenman3025oldravenman3025 Member Posts: 1,892 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    cbrjwrr wrote: »
    ...that the Borg just aren't a threat now?


    At Wolf 359, 39 Starships were lost and 11,000 people died, and the Cube ignored every attack apart from one via the Borg's own hive mind - the most catastrophic defeat in Federation history.

    By the battle of Sector 001, a Federation Fleet could actually bring down a normal Cube, with not quite as many ships lost.

    By STO, even an average player ship has the ability to comfortably 1 vs 1 a Cube, and most of us on here could solo a Tactical Cube, with varying amounts of ease. And it isn't just the big stuff, even a remake of Archer's NX-01 could take on a Sphere and win now.


    The Borg started off as one of the most dangerous opponents the Alpha Quadrant had seen, and now a team of 5 ships can destroy a Transwarp Gate Assembly, a Tac Cube, 2 normal Cubes and lots of Spheres in about a minute and a half.

    A mere 90 seconds or even less!




    In 43 years, the Borg have gone from only needing one Cube to assimilate the AQ, to needing a small fleet of their own to stop a single AQ ship. That's progress, and pretty soon we will need a new ultimate threat, because the Borg just aren't suitable now...





    In the Battle of Sector 001, Starfleet was getting their asses handed to them. Losses were comparable to Wolf 359. The only difference was a battle of attrition rather than an all-out massacre. The fleet threw more ships at the cube, fought a running battle all the way from the Typhon Sector, and used swarm tactics rather than the classic two-on-two formations used at Wolf 359.


    The result was heavy damage to the outer hull of the cube. Better than Wolf 359, but of no comfort to the several billion on Earth (of which the cube had reached, after punching through Starfleet's defenses).


    If it weren't for Picard's timely arrival and connection to the Collective, Starfleet would have probably lost Earth.



    As for ground actions, the Borg of "First Contact" were far deadlier and menacing than they were in "The Next Generation", especially with their new "drive-thru assimilation" for that busy drone on the go. :P



    Personally, I simply chalk the changes from "The Next Generation" to "First Contact" as the Borg adapting and improving their capabilities.



    I will agree, however, that "Voyager" marginalized the Borg into mustache twirling villains and complete tards



    As for STO, allowances have to be made for gameplay. However, the Borg are more an annoyance, with their ability spam and invisi-torps, than a tough opponent for those prepared. I would like to see some instances where the Borg are a REAL challenge to take on.
  • deaftravis05deaftravis05 Member Posts: 4,885 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    sometimes we heavy dspers in SWAT likes to um... kirk it...

    Try doing Infected with just a tier 1 connie...

    pretty hard when they can 1 shot you, lol
  • admiralah1admiralah1 Member Posts: 3 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    The in-game lore established that the Borg were almost completely wiped out after Janeway's shenanigans in Voyager. The Borg we see today are not the Borg we saw in the Next Generation, just like the Rome of the late 3rd century CE was not the Rome of Julius Caesar.

    That said, I think it would be cool to update the Borg to make them a threat again. After a few years of being whooped on, they have adapted and start to hit back in powerful new ways.

    But of course, go play Hive Space, or any Borg ground STF and you will see that they can still pose a challenge. Just not the same level of challenge as they once did.
  • verlaine11verlaine11 Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    I asked on the recent Priority One livestream with Al Rivera

    "Is there going to be a nightmare mode for the Borg STFs as currently the space ones are so easy, ISE can be done in minutes, the Borg should not be such a walkover like they are now?"

    It was not answered at all - I asked the question twice in 10 minutes - , there was only 70 people online at the time so it was not swamped with questions
  • mirrorchaosmirrorchaos Member Posts: 9,844 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    admiralah1 wrote: »
    The in-game lore established that the Borg were almost completely wiped out after Janeway's shenanigans in Voyager. The Borg we see today are not the Borg we saw in the Next Generation, just like the Rome of the late 3rd century CE was not the Rome of Julius Caesar.

    That said, I think it would be cool to update the Borg to make them a threat again. After a few years of being whooped on, they have adapted and start to hit back in powerful new ways.

    But of course, go play Hive Space, or any Borg ground STF and you will see that they can still pose a challenge. Just not the same level of challenge as they once did.

    i havent heard that before, what happened was that the primary unimatrix was destroyed along with one major transwarp hub, trillions of drones killed (janeway as ever the reckless one), it was stated beforehand that the collective have around half a dozen of these hubs around the galaxy and having thousands if not more cubes and spheres floating around, with efforts to completely eradicate the virus which is likely, the borg just adapted to the loss and created a new queen, business as usual resumed.
    verlaine11 wrote: »
    I asked on the recent Priority One livestream with Al Rivera

    "Is there going to be a nightmare mode for the Borg STFs as currently the space ones are so easy, ISE can be done in minutes, the Borg should not be such a walkover like they are now?"

    It was not answered at all - I asked the question twice in 10 minutes - , there was only 70 people online at the time so it was not swamped with questions

    you would of never got an answer, if you had asked me that day i would say there isnt a chance in hell they would give up such imformation.
    T6 Miranda Hero Ship FTW.
    Been around since Dec 2010 on STO and bought LTS in Apr 2013 for STO.
  • mosquito214mosquito214 Member Posts: 138 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    The Borg probably could use a buff. Of course, they can already do that instant shield drain thing, which sucks, but...

    Well, take the mission "Assimilation" as an example. The Undine have always been pretty good at killing Borg, but the newly-revamped Undine ships completely wipe the floor with them. It's actually kind of pathetic, in a way.
  • daan2006daan2006 Member Posts: 5,346 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    valoreah wrote: »
    This makes absolutely zero sense. The Queen was still able to communicate with the rest of the Collective since she was able to guide ships toward Voyager, and the sphere was able to severely damage, if not destroy the armor.

    this ^^^ was wait for someone to say it :) when she said "You think in such three-dimensional terms" she is right and we do i think of the Queen more like a virus
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
    swimwear off risa not fixed
    system Lord Baal is dead
    macronius wrote: »
    This! Their ability to outdo their own failures is quite impressive. If only this power could be harnessed for good.
  • angrytargangrytarg Member Posts: 11,001 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    daan2006 wrote: »
    this ^^^ was wait for someone to say it :) when she said "You think in such three-dimensional terms" she is right and we do i think of the Queen more like a virus

    But that still suggests that there is a leading force of some kind within the collective. And that directly contradicts the idea of having a hive mind. A hive mind means that there is no leader. It means that the Borg, in essence, is a single being. Drones aren't automatons following orders, every decision a drone makes is made by all the drones simultaneously, acting as a single being. A drone is an individual being (proven by hugh) but it is immedeatly absorbed into the hivemind which quells individual thoughts by being one single thought of trillions of beings. Locutus was an experiment, a single spokesperson with unique traits for the sake of leading the negotiations for the surrender of the Federation (yes, surrender. Of course, they state was "join us or be destroyed" but not "we assimilate by force" - the Borg seek technology, assimilation of beings was completely optional, as opposed to VOY Borg with their hunger for brains...) for the collective in a way that humans can follow, since the concept of a working hive mind is an alien one not easily grasped - which is what the writers of First Contact thought as well which is why they rewrote the Borg to be easier to understand by a broad audience to the point of ridiculousness.

    If any, I could accept an explanation like the creation of Locutus and the Hugh incident somehow created a being which could come out above the hive like Lore tried with the renegade Borg. It would be a faaaar fetch and I would cringe at it, but it would at least be some kind of semi plausible explanation - but that's not what they did. They retconned TNG Borg away, basically. And that hurts.
    lFC4bt2.gif
    ^ Memory Alpha.org is not canon. It's a open wiki with arbitrary rules. Only what can be cited from an episode is. ^
    "No. Men do not roar. Women roar. Then they hurl heavy objects... and claw at you." -Worf, son of Mogh
    "A filthy, mangy beast, but in its bony breast beat the heart of a warrior" - "faithful" (...) "but ever-ready to follow the call of the wild." - Martok, about a Targ
    "That pig smelled horrid. A sweet-sour, extremely pungent odor. I showered and showered, and it took me a week to get rid of it!" - Robert Justman, appreciating Emmy-Lou
  • mightybobcncmightybobcnc Member Posts: 3,354 Arc User
    edited July 2014
    cbrjwrr wrote: »
    ...that the Borg just aren't a threat now?


    At Wolf 359, 39 Starships were lost and 11,000 people died, and the Cube ignored every attack apart from one via the Borg's own hive mind - the most catastrophic defeat in Federation history.

    By the battle of Sector 001, a Federation Fleet could actually bring down a normal Cube, with not quite as many ships lost.

    By STO, even an average player ship has the ability to comfortably 1 vs 1 a Cube, and most of us on here could solo a Tactical Cube, with varying amounts of ease. And it isn't just the big stuff, even a remake of Archer's NX-01 could take on a Sphere and win now.


    The Borg started off as one of the most dangerous opponents the Alpha Quadrant had seen, and now a team of 5 ships can destroy a Transwarp Gate Assembly, a Tac Cube, 2 normal Cubes and lots of Spheres in about a minute and a half.

    A mere 90 seconds or even less!




    In 43 years, the Borg have gone from only needing one Cube to assimilate the AQ, to needing a small fleet of their own to stop a single AQ ship. That's progress, and pretty soon we will need a new ultimate threat, because the Borg just aren't suitable now...

    Heh, I was over at a friend's house last night and I fired up STO on my laptop while everyone else was getting ready to go out. He'd never seen STO before, and saw me and my fleet go into CSE and immediately started nerd raging that 5 dudes could take on not one but three cubes at once (split up into groups of two or even solo per cube) when Wolf 359 and Sector 001 were slaughter houses. I told him "Voyager blah blah Janeway blah blah 2409 better tech blah blah" but he was still really grumpy about it. :P

    Joined January 2009
    Finger wrote:
    Nitpicking is a time-honored tradition of science fiction. Asking your readers not to worry about the "little things" is like asking a dog not to sniff at people's crotches. If there's something that appears to violate natural laws, then you can expect someone's going to point it out. That's just the way things are.
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