Unimatrix Zero, The Swarm and Friendship One. Those are ones that come to my mind, but again, that is a matter of personal opinion.
If Unimatrix Zero had been a TNG episode and it had been about them getting roped into some scheme of Hugh and his renegade Borg, I doubt anyone would've cared.
Again, I find that debatable, and your earlier point regarding Decent is not supportive of that suggestions.
Like I have been saying, it is a good starting point, and could have continued if the production team had bothered to use it.The whole "Lost Ship" premise was never that interesting in the first place. It's a starter plot/excuse plot. It's just what starts the show, but then they drop it in favor of something else.Quite right. It should have been better plotted out, because it set out with a premise that made it different from TOS, TNG, DS9. That premise should have been better thought out to make it more successful.
That the audience got PO'ed whenever any aliens showed up more than once was another problem.
Again, not from what I have read. Personally, I rather liked the Hirogen.
It'd be like if DS9 made a big deal out of some Gamma Quadrant region being full of nothing but Jem'Hadar and then when they go into it there's no Jem'Hadar.
I'm not sure I follow, and I don't think you are seeing my point.
My point is, that you can have the Founders be a threat without having them kill anyone.
Every single Trek example says otherwise.
The point of VOY was to be different. Also, the Talosians never killed anyone, yet they were considered a threat in TOS.
Yes, they had cannon fodder to sacrifice to the Alliance. VOY had nothing to sacrifice that would've satisfied the audience.
Yet, Gold Shirts bought it all the time in the name of the plot. Also, if VOY premise had been used differently, you could have set up worlds that they had visited as safe havens, only to be razed by the Borg. Again, wasted potential.
Exactly, cannon fodder.
See above, but VOY sacrificed several shuttles, and Gold Shirts to demonstrate the situation was serious. I don't need whole worlds razed to know something is a threat.
Because TOS is a different type of format for a show, with only a basic through-line, not an end point or destination.But still, no one complains about TOS.
Sure, he had his limitations of power, but that doesn't mean he was powerless. Just that he had to produce results or the studio would find someone who could do the job.If that were true, then the Network wouldn't have been able to keep forcing stuff on the shows he didn't want to do.
Or, like everyone who has a boss, ever.
BTS info details that Berman had a great deal of control of production, story and design choices.
A change of premise would have helped, but that could have been done some time in the seven years they had.Cause they were inherently in the plot they went with. More time and a change of premises would've fixed that.
Well, I see no reason to be rude, just because we disagree.You're far more polite over this than others I've encountered.Finally, for those who think I'm being argumentative for arguement's sake, I have no problem if fans like VOY or find enjoyment from it.
I think the ensemble cast was too large as well. They should've only had Janeway, Chakotay (not Beltran), Tuvok, Paris and the Doctor as the Centrals.And characters are usually the thing I enjoy regardless of the quality of production![]()
Kim (someone other than Wang), Kes, Neelix and Torres would be the Secondaries.
Makes more room for other recurring characters too, if the main cast is smaller.
I think the characters were underdeveloped and underused, for the most part, and that it creates little to no stakes for me to care about.
A smaller cast may have helped, as well as different casting. Having smaller, reoccurring roles, as well as events that matter, in character growth and change, would help as well.
To be very specific, not every episode has to matter, but characters should grow and change, not feel like the same stereotypes as they were in the beginning.