I know that TPTB had to push the Wraith as the main antagonist, but I think they missed an opportunity to shift gears to a real challenge.  
I pictured the Wraith as this force of nature whose reason for being was to consume without pity. But, like the Borg, they had to have "character" to be a viable enemy, thus watering them down.
What they should have done was make the Genii the enemy. Think of it. A society that was a dark mirror of the Atlantis Expedition. They both had the same goal. To get rid of the Wraith. But the Genii were a little more unscrupulous in their methods. It would have put the AE in a moral fix: Do the ends justify the means? Plus, it wouldn't have been bad to see more snarling Colm Meany and Robert Davi. Anyone else agree?
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			I pictured the Wraith as this force of nature whose reason for being was to consume without pity. But, like the Borg, they had to have "character" to be a viable enemy, thus watering them down.
What they should have done was make the Genii the enemy. Think of it. A society that was a dark mirror of the Atlantis Expedition. They both had the same goal. To get rid of the Wraith. But the Genii were a little more unscrupulous in their methods. It would have put the AE in a moral fix: Do the ends justify the means? Plus, it wouldn't have been bad to see more snarling Colm Meany and Robert Davi. Anyone else agree?
				



That's the head slapper here. What we're doing here is playing "what if", and we can't help but wonder how the show might have been, if the humans of Pegasus-the Geni specifically,  hadn't been so severely crippled due to the smashing of worlds that showed signs of advancement by the Wraith. 
