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Most Disliked Delta Quadrant Aliens

Was trying to figure out what was my most disliked Delta Quardant aliens but not sure. I would need to go to the Delta Quadrant page at Memory Alpha and look at the list of DQ aliens and see. I'll get back to this eventually.
 
For me
1. Kazon. They look like 80s rejects
2. Vidians. They really will steal your kidney, or heart, or anything.

That's about it.
 
I have to say, the Sikarians were not well executed at all. The idea was interesting... a species that basically uses stories as currency. But as a villain or threat? They were hardly even a nuisance.
 
Who are they?
The Sikarians were the ones that refused to share their tech. with Voyager that would have gotten them 40,000 light years closer to home. It was early in the first season. Tuvok, Torres, Seska and Carey conspired to trade for it without Janeway's knowledge or consent. After their smarmy leader had told Janeway they didn't trade tech. with other races.
 
I have to say, the Sikarians were not well executed at all. The idea was interesting... a species that basically uses stories as currency. But as a villain or threat? They were hardly even a nuisance.
They didn't use stories as currency...they just really enjoyed stories and wanted some new ones. The "villain" aspect was that they wouldn't share something that could possibly get them closer to the AQ
 
They didn't technically use stories as currency, no. But they were basically going to do that when they offered the technology for their stories.

The Sikarians, either way, came out winning. The technology didn't work for the ship, and they got a whole new database of stories.

One thing did always puzzle me about them... the Sikarians got as far as 40,000 light years with that tech. How long did it take them to go that far and establish those platforms? And how have the Borg not found them out by now?
 
They didn't technically use stories as currency, no. But they were basically going to do that when they offered the technology for their stories.

The Sikarians, either way, came out winning. The technology didn't work for the ship, and they got a whole new database of stories.

One thing did always puzzle me about them... the Sikarians got as far as 40,000 light years with that tech. How long did it take them to go that far and establish those platforms? And how have the Borg not found them out by now?

The Borg didn't want to listen to their stories. Even Borg have limits.
 
The Borg seem to have a minimal presence in the in the region beyond the Nekrit expanse(from their perspective) apparently they don't have much of a presence in the region Voyager spent her first three years in the DQ.
 
For me the Kazon are the most irritating. My biggest gripe is that they should have only had a small sphere of influence, but as Voyager headed home the Kazon still showed up even after many light years of travel.

The Tak Tak rank second, flailing around dramatically with strict protocols. I wonder what would happen if one of their ships encountered the Jarada. those protocol obsessed insects from the TNG episode 'The Big Goodbye'. Either they would immediately get along great, or there would be an epic war that nobody would ever understand.
 
The Borg seem to have a minimal presence in the in the region beyond the Nekrit expanse(from their perspective) apparently they don't have much of a presence in the region Voyager spent her first three years in the DQ.

What I mean is the Sikarians had to have gotten to that far planet and others like it by ship first before installing those platforms. Those planets are in Borg space. No assimilation?
 
What I mean is the Sikarians had to have gotten to that far planet and others like it by ship first before installing those platforms. Those planets are in Borg space. No assimilation?
The Sikarian transporter is a single-side device, like a regular transporter. It can send people away without a receiver, or to a reciever.

The only way Voyager using it makes any sense on its own is if it can self transport, the way Data's microtransporter beams Picard away in Nemesis. The only reason stealing the tech fails is because the transporter requires contact or proximity with the homeworld's particular crystalline composition. That may indicate the transporter tech can also retrieve people 40,000 ly away, unless we are to assume the other worlds are 40,000 ly away because those are the only other ones with the unusual composition.
 
The Sikarian transporter is a single-side device, like a regular transporter. It can send people away without a receiver, or to a reciever.

The only way Voyager using it makes any sense on its own is if it can self transport, the way Data's microtransporter beams Picard away in Nemesis. The only reason stealing the tech fails is because the transporter requires contact or proximity with the homeworld's particular crystalline composition. That may indicate the transporter tech can also retrieve people 40,000 ly away, unless we are to assume the other worlds are 40,000 ly away because those are the only other ones with the unusual composition.

Yes, it works under the principle of folding space, and it was tied to the unique element on Sikaris' core.

But when that woman takes Ensign Kim to Alastria, even though we don't see the platform on the ground like the one on Sikaris due to that big rock in the foreground of that angle when they beam to Alastria, if I remember correctly, they clearly step downward from something.

How else could they get back to Sikaris, since the element to their technology is unique to Sikaris?

That tells me their ships must have gone to Alastria and those other outer worlds first in order to have the ability for people to get there. And they evaded getting assimilated. Somehow...
 
The Borg seem to have a minimal presence in the in the region beyond the Nekrit expanse(from their perspective) apparently they don't have much of a presence in the region Voyager spent her first three years in the DQ.
Yes, the first hint they get of increasing Borg presence is when they find the planet of de-assimilated Borg in the episode Unity, and the dormant cube floating in space nearby. Little did they know that they were flying into the heart of Borg territory - and no one on the planet thought to tell them what was ahead.
 
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