Anwar, you asked me to go blow-by-blow on your big post that was a response to my big post, but I'm not going to, because you've just been repeating the same things over and over. And if I constructed another huge response post, I would just be repeating myself. In my three big posts in this thread, I have fully laid out what I'm trying to get across, in terms that were probably MORE precise and long-winded than was necessary. You didn't address the vast majority of what I said, so I'm not going to bother writing another novella about those same points. Re-read my posts if you want my insights, it's all there. I will only write up new stuff in response to your latest posts.
Note that this doesn't mean I won't write a huge post. I'm incapable of doing otherwise.
Note that this doesn't mean I won't write a huge post. I'm incapable of doing otherwise.

What RyuRoots said was "Gamma aliens of the week". That's an important distinction, since it refers to the "problem of the week" storytelling format that was used by all of TOS, the vast majority of TNG, and most of the first two seasons of DS9. This premise does NOT include room for a drawn-out, protracted, large-scale interstellar war told in a serialized, story-arc fashion. The Dominion War arc constituted a change in tone compared to the parameters around which the series was originally created. The fact that the Dominion happens to be from the Gamma Quadrant does not make the Dominion War a "Gamma alien of the week" story. No reason Voyager couldn't have made a similar change at some point.DS9 DID do only Bajoran political/religious stuff (everything to do with the Prophets and the Emissary was Bajoran religious stuff. It was just that the Emissary just happened to be Sisko that all Sisko stories are by definition Emissary stories), Cardassian stuff, and Gamma Aliens. It's just that those premises were broad enough that they allowed for stories like the Dominion to happen.
Wait, wait... wait. Wait. So you seriously think that the presence of the WORDS "without support" is the deal breaker here? That because those words were included in, um... Where were they written, exactly? On a VOY writer's bible? On the walls at Paramount? Inside Rick Berman's mind? Whatever, anyway... You seriously believe that the presence of those words in the basic premise hamstrung the Voyager writing team for seven years and made it LITERALLY impossible to tell more complex stories or create more interesting bad guys? I'm sorry, fiction writing does not work that way. Nor does television production. The premise is not a rigid rule that must be obeyed to the letter at all times on promise of death. It is flexible. Or it should be, at least. If it's not, then that's no good. That's not a premise in that case, it's a straightjacket. "Ship far from home" is not a straightjacket. In fact, Voyager's basic premise is the MOST broad of any of the Trek series. They are alone, in a region of space that has never been explored by the Federation. That means they can almost do whatever they want (the writers, that is) when it comes to what they encounter! They are not constrained by the parameters of "known space" as any other Trek show is. If anything, they had MORE creative freedom.VOY's premise wasn't as broad, it was "A starship without support travels home", making alliances means they no long lack support, damages done to the ship couldn't be repaired thus permanently stranding them in the DQ which is why they avoided those stories, and since they lacked support they could never challenge or evade the Borg in "outside the box" type thinking.
"Ship trapped far from the Federation" and "Ship trapped in unknown space with no support" are basically the same thing. The important part of that premise is not the lack of support, it's the "trapped" part, and the "far from home" part. "No support" is an implied part of the deal, meaning no Federation support. To assume that the Voyager writers were sitting around saying to themselves "Remember! NO SUPPORT! They can't get help, they can't make allies! That's the premise!" is silly. Not to mention the fact that they DID sometimes get help, they DID make allies and receive "support", several times; "Dreadnought", "Basics, Part 2", "Scorpion" sort of, and "The Void" all come to mind. And I feel like I'm forgetting something important... what could it be... oh right! How does regular, reliable messages back and forth to/from the Federation - including the ability to allow the crew to send personal letters to family members back home - after season 4 fit into this "TOTALLY CUT OFF NO SUPPORT IT'S THE PREMISE" idea? By season 7, they could sustain these sessions long enough to conduct a TRIAL concerning the Doc's status as an author.Now, if the premise had been "Starship Voyager is trapped far beyond the Federation" with NOTHING being said about the lack of support or going home, then it's a whole other story since with the "lack of support" gone it means they can build alliances and stuff and stick around one area of space instead of always being on the move.
Not all Borg ships are created equal, granted. But (again, MIDDLE GROUND, do you understand this concept?) it's one thing to say "They are fighting weaker Borg ships than the cubes seen in TNG, so they can actually win" and quite another to go "Borg? Oh. Target their engines and weapons." *zap zap* "Alright, cool, let's be on our way." The latter is what Voyager did, more than once.VOY going after Borg ships to help Seven isn't the same thing since it was made clear not all Borg ships are equal to Cubes and Spheres, and there are really weaker Spheres.
What about the times the Ent-D or Ent-E fought a Borg ship (alone, mind you; no "they had the whole Federation to back them up" excuse), suffered casualties, but didn't blow up? Whether or not the Enterprise won the battle?Who ever said that if a Federation starship fights the Borg, and the Borg are shown fighting at full power, then the Fed ship will GO DOWN IN FLAMES INSTANTLY NO CHANCE OMFG? What about the other times when background Voyager crew members died, permanently? Obviously they had to be careful about killing extras, since they only have 150 people and cannot obtain replacement crew, but people DID still die here and there. What's the difference between people dying against various other threats vs. dying against the Borg?As for the Krenim being more menacing, they weren't uber-powerful like the Borg and were permitted to do damage to the ship and kill people, plus the writers knew it was only temporary and would all get reset. No Borg attack on VOY could ever result in less than total annihilation and thus had to end in the Borg's own destruction.
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