I can't finish this book. Picard just willingly re-Locuted himself for a stupid plan and my brain exploded. Please someone tell me how it ends so I can move on to other Star Trek books, kthx.
I can't finish this book. Picard just willingly re-Locuted himself for a stupid plan and my brain exploded. Please someone tell me how it ends so I can move on to other Star Trek books, kthx.The stupid plan works.
I can't finish this book. Picard just willingly re-Locuted himself for a stupid plan and my brain exploded. Please someone tell me how it ends so I can move on to other Star Trek books, kthx.The stupid plan works.
Thank you. This is my first ever foray into post Nemesis fiction. All 3 Destiny novels are on their way to me as well as PAD's novel. I had that one spoiled for me, but I do not care because I approve of the plotline. But, man Resistance was rough.
Edit: For the benefit of the OP, there are SPOILERS below for the rest of the TNG relaunch.
If I'm wrong about this, please correct me, but was this plan in Resistance of injecting the Queen with testosterone (or whatever the heck it was), not supposed to result in the end of the Queen forever? Wasn't that why the Borg adopted Janeway as their Queen in Before Dishonor? Yet she's back again in Destiny (and I don't recall about Greater Than the Sum). I'm sure if this was the case some sort of explanation would have been given. It's been a while so maybe I'm way off base. I've just read so many Borg stories recently it had been getting hard to keep all the details straight.
It seems someone at the drawing board was absolutely determined to tell the ultimate Borg story and (while this may not be the case), it came across to me that Before Dishonor was originally supposed to be that story, what with many major characters from several series, the fate of Janeway, and let's not forget the planet-eating, and Resistance was to be a part of the preparation for that. But it seems that it was felt that this was insufficient so Destiny was thought up and Greater Than the Sum (while an individual story in its own right) was now a bit of a lead in to that story. I don't mean this to be disrespectful to any of these novels or their authors as I did enjoy them all. It just seems like the coherence between the stories could have been a bit better.
Well, I read it over a year ago.I can't finish this book. Picard just willingly re-Locuted himself for a stupid plan and my brain exploded. Please someone tell me how it ends so I can move on to other Star Trek books, kthx.The stupid plan works.
Did we read the same book?
If I'm wrong about this, please correct me, but was this plan in Resistance of injecting the Queen with testosterone (or whatever the heck it was), not supposed to result in the end of the Queen forever?
Wasn't that why the Borg adopted Janeway as their Queen in Before Dishonor?
Yet she's back again in Destiny (and I don't recall about Greater Than the Sum). I'm sure if this was the case some sort of explanation would have been given.
It seems someone at the drawing board was absolutely determined to tell the ultimate Borg story and (while this may not be the case), it came across to me that Before Dishonor was originally supposed to be that story, what with many major characters from several series, the fate of Janeway, and let's not forget the planet-eating, and Resistance was to be a part of the preparation for that. But it seems that it was felt that this was insufficient so Destiny was thought up and Greater Than the Sum (while an individual story in its own right) was now a bit of a lead in to that story.
Well, I read it over a year ago.Did we read the same book?![]()
No sweat. This old brain just failed to retain the specifics of the book's third act. I just remembered they went aboard the cube and ultimately disabled it.Well, I read it over a year ago.Did we read the same book?![]()
Oh. We've just been having so many interpretative differences, I assumed this was going to be another. Sorry if I came off harsh.
No sweat. This old brain just failed to retain the specifics of the book's third act. I just remembered they went aboard the cube and ultimately disabled it.Well, I read it over a year ago.![]()
Oh. We've just been having so many interpretative differences, I assumed this was going to be another. Sorry if I came off harsh.
Plus, my short blunt answer was funnier.
Yeah, I didn't quite grasp how they got there in the first place. If the transwarp hub was destroyed in "Endgame," and the only ship to get through it prior was the Queen's Ship, which was destroyed, then where did these guys come from? Is that something from VOY: Homecoming that I missed?The particular isolated Borg supercube seen in RES/BD, which was cut off from the rest of the Collective by the destruction of the transwarp hub in "Endgame," therefore needed to create its own Queen in order to function effectively.
Didn't really like that either. I do not like the idea that the drones are androgynous. I know it's based on Q's line way back in "Q Who?", to wit, "Not a he, not a she." But I never saw the Borg as actually not having gender, just that gender was irrelevant. What would be the point of them removing all traces of gender from the DNA of every single life-form they encounter and assimilate? It just becomes irrelevant in the new drone's life, that's all. So to say that a "feminizing" compound was required to create a queen was based on a flawed premise, IMO. I realize it's based on the insect paradigm, but insects aren't born as gendered life-forms to begin with before having it removed.As a population of androgynous, incubated drones, these Borg needed to use the "royal jelly" formulation depicted in RES to "feminize" a drone so it could become a Queen.
Clearly and succinctly explained, thank you.The Einstein Borg in GTTS are an offshoot of those assimilated by the "evolved" supercube of BD. The Janeway Queen implanted them with enough of the Royal Protocol (the Queen software) that they could operate semi-autonomously, without needing a Queen.
But these were, again, the last remnants of the isolated population of Borg that was threatening Starfleet through much of 2380. The Borg from Destiny were the main population of Borg from the Delta Quadrant, a separate group with their own Queen.
Yeah, I didn't quite grasp how they got there in the first place. If the transwarp hub was destroyed in "Endgame," and the only ship to get through it prior was the Queen's Ship, which was destroyed, then where did these guys come from? Is that something from VOY: Homecoming that I missed?The particular isolated Borg supercube seen in RES/BD, which was cut off from the rest of the Collective by the destruction of the transwarp hub in "Endgame," therefore needed to create its own Queen in order to function effectively.
Didn't really like that either. I do not like the idea that the drones are androgynous. I know it's based on Q's line way back in "Q Who?", to wit, "Not a he, not a she." But I never saw the Borg as actually not having gender, just that gender was irrelevant. What would be the point of them removing all traces of gender from the DNA of every single life-form they encounter and assimilate? It just becomes irrelevant in the new drone's life, that's all. So to say that a "feminizing" compound was required to create a queen was based on a flawed premise, IMO. I realize it's based on the insect paradigm, but insects aren't born as gendered life-forms to begin with before having it removed.As a population of androgynous, incubated drones, these Borg needed to use the "royal jelly" formulation depicted in RES to "feminize" a drone so it could become a Queen.
Didn't really like that either. I do not like the idea that the drones are androgynous. I know it's based on Q's line way back in "Q Who?", to wit, "Not a he, not a she." But I never saw the Borg as actually not having gender, just that gender was irrelevant. What would be the point of them removing all traces of gender from the DNA of every single life-form they encounter and assimilate? It just becomes irrelevant in the new drone's life, that's all. So to say that a "feminizing" compound was required to create a queen was based on a flawed premise, IMO. I realize it's based on the insect paradigm, but insects aren't born as gendered life-forms to begin with before having it removed.As a population of androgynous, incubated drones, these Borg needed to use the "royal jelly" formulation depicted in RES to "feminize" a drone so it could become a Queen.
I believe that was addressed through GttS, and someone feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, with the explanation being that it wasn't so much that the Borg removed the gender from their assimilated drones but that they took genetic material from those they'd assimilated and then created their own separate drones from that - which then came to explain that the Borg we saw on TNG were these androgynous, Collective-created drones, but many of them were destroyed during the conflict with Species 8472, which is why the assimilated drones, became so numerous, giving the make-up differences between the TNG Borg from what we saw in First Contact and Voyager an in-universe explanation.
Or is it just that all the Borg stuff has begun to run together in my mind?
Something occurs just now: if the Borg required a female to enact the Royal Protocol, and had the capacity to grow their own drones, why not grow them all female such that all could become potential queens instead of having to rely on having an assimilated drone of the correct sex on hand? Granted, the circumstances that led to Resistance were extreme, but on the other hand, I don't see why the Borg wouldn't have this redundancy since I can't think of any reason why neuter drones would be preferable or less resource-intensive (don't we all start off female, such that neutering would be a deliberate program on the part of the Borg?)
Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
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