That is very (deliberately?) ambiguous about the 'real borg', and it still leaves room for something Locutus-y.
There MAY have been another one. But I think that's the main "it's not the borg" post. It's ambiguous about the Delta Quadrant "real Borg" to be sure, but I think it's a safe bet they're not in this story. But that says nothing about Locutus. Could easily be him.That is very (deliberately?) ambiguous about the 'real borg', and it still leaves room for something Locutus-y.
And the first one he'll assimilate is Shaw and turn Shaw into what he hates mostJack is the new Borg King named Locutus who is trying to start a new collective.
And the first one he'll assimilate is Shaw and turn Shaw into what he hates most![]()
Locutus is not going to be retconned as an ancient entity.
Oh yeah, I don't exactly buy it either. I've thought through it a lot. Every potential adversary we know of from Trek lore has some upside but some problem. And usually the problem boils down to "how do you explain this in just 2 hours in a way that isn't messy?"Locutus is not going to be retconned as an ancient entity.
While flipping through TNG episodes on the treadmill an hour ago, I came across "Sarek". This occured to me too.So ... was that the reason Q sent the Enterprise to meet the Borg? So that the Borg would become curious about the Federation and could later discover whatever Starfleet mistook as Irumodic Syndrome in Picard? Something that the Borg were so interested in that they wanted to make Picard the Borg King? Maybe the Borg enhanced that something with their nanoprobes, but it only became active with Jack. The telepathic abilities could be a Vulcan thing, so maybe Sarek left a bit auf Bendii Syndrome in Picard? I know the mind meld happened after "Q Who", but to Q it would be all the same.
The question is, what would the Borg want with Jack's telepathic abilities? They surely have assimilated telepathic beings before, if not entire telepathic races. Is there even more to Jack's abilities than we have already seen?
Another thing I can't stop thinking about ... how did Shaw know about what happened - or should I say not happened - in the Devron System? If this wasn't the last season and if this last season hadn't gotten universal praise from those who have already seen it, I'd say nothing we're seeing this season is real. Holodeck or dream or whatever ... but I guess that's hopefully out of the question.
Maybe they all mixed together to make something new and terrible
It's Masaka isn't it.Except Troi said she sensed something ancient and terrible.
Except Troi said she sensed something ancient and terrible.
That would be brilliant. Big reveal and a song to wrap it all up nicely.Captain Shaw
It's Worf's erectionS.
That would be brilliant. Big reveal and a song to wrap it all up nicely.
Oh my god I was wrong.
It was Shaw all along.
You finally made a Mugato out of me.
Of course, Ro Laren would not be working alone, another possible co-conspirator could be Captain Shaw. Shaw has shown prejudice against ex Borg as a result of Wolf 359… perhaps he also has a hidden prejudice against Founders/Changelings as a result of the massive losses in the Dominion War in battles such as that depicted in Sacrifice of Angels.
There could be a conspiracy within Starfleet to enact revenge on the Changelings and whatever has become of the Dominion, with Founders being hunted down and framed for the attack on the Starfleet Recruitment center. The Changelings could also be framed for the upcoming attack on Frontier Day. Picard and the TNG crew could also be being framed as Changelings too, part of Captain Shaw’s revenge for Wolf 359 against who he still sees as being Locutus. Shaw may have something bad in store for Seven of Nine too.
His comment about the "real Borg still being out there" still lingers for me
Fixed that for you.
Yes. And the opinion is no less tedious from repetition.Remember when I pointed out that Terry's line about "Forget that crap on the Stargazer, the Real Borg are out there" was an insult towards the Jurati nonsense of Season 2... yeah.
According to Dave Cullen, it's not the Borg as seen in Star Trek Armada;
However, I still theorize that the Borg fit into this final piece of the puzzle. It just works so well.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.