Speaking of distance and Voyager by the end of season 6 it's stated they reached the border of the BQ? Had they crossed from the DQ into the BQ by Season 7 I seem to remember that was implied.
There's that one line during their first appearance(hunters?) Where the huge Hirogen man is looking down at Seven.I can't remember if I ever posted this before about the Hirogen. I don't think they ever showed a female Hirogen. So I'm thinking a very patriarchal society.
I think Voyager did a good job sometimes of showing consequences later on, for prior decisions. Like "Hope & Fear" showing the consequences of Janeways decision to help the Borg. And this one.Inspired by this thread, I watched the first half of "Flesh And Blood" last night. It's such an odd angle into that story, the way it twists it to paint the Hirogen as being in the wrong for getting themselves killed by the holodeck technology that Voyager gave them. I am ready to slap Janeway with a lawsuit for negligence -- you know the holograms regularly achieve sentience and try to kill people! That happens literally all the time! I kept imagining the civil court that would throw the book at Janeway and award the Hirogen a huge cash settlement.
Also reminds me of a favorite exchange from DS9:
WORF, reminiscing about the old days on the Enterprise: "We were like warriors from the ancient sagas. There was nothing we could not do."
O'BRIEN: "Except keep the holodecks running right."
Where are teh Hirogen women. At home warming the eggs I guess?
That is a fact, in hindsight the Viidians probably should have been more used than the Kazon, or no Kazon at all, and villains like the Hirogen and the Vaadwaur (and Turei perhaps) should probably have had more episodes.
Not sure what more could be really done with the Malon, I think "Night" and "Juggernaut" is really the extend of their use. It wasn't the Malon society at large who were antagonistic towards Voyager, just a particular group of them.
Which antagonists do you feel should have been more used? I really try to remember all the other ones that were introduced in Voyager that were memorable.
Well Species 8472 perhaps, but they got humanized in "In the Flesh" rather than letting them remain some hostile Lovecraft esque monsters. Plus it would probably lead to more "de powering" like what happened to the Borg.
I also felt they dropped The Swarm unfortunately. They were a cool, tough, and mysterious species.
I think more could've been done with the Voth too.
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