Like I said, with the Cybermen they have "Leader" types whom the others get orders from in practically every episode. Cyber-Kings, Cyber-Queens and even super-Cyber-Emperors. WHY is it that they can do this and still be an assimilating threat while the Borg can't do a similar thing without it being a letdown? There are differences, I admit: Each Cyberman is capable of speech and action while separated from the others, and it's more their mission of assimilating all life that makes them a "Collective" than just not talking and being ant-like. But surely that's can't be all. The concepts are too similar.
Totally irrelevant. It's a completely different show with ONE very similar element. Just because it works for Doctor Who does NOT (N-O-T) mean it will work for Star Trek. Just because something works in Star Wars doesn't mean it would work in Babylon 5. Just because something works in The Lord of the Rings doesn't mean it would work in Record of Lodoss War. Fiction does
not work like that.
So until there's a hard answer, this is mere double standard.
Oh come on!
Double standard?? Seriously? Think about this for a minute, dude.
A double standard is when one criticizes person A for doing something, yet lets person B off the hook for doing the exact same thing. It's not a double standard because
I never watched Doctor Who. (I think I've maybe seen one episode, but I don't remember anything about it, it was so long ago.) I'm not "letting them off the hook" for having cyborg civilizations with kings and queens by not complaining about it. I'm not complaining about it because I never
saw it. For all I know, the "cyborg royalty" aspect was really well done, or it could have been horrid. I neither know nor care.
Very little if any of the criticism that I have either seen leveled against Voyager or have leveled against it myself can fairly be attributed to a double standard.
The Borg threat of assimilation isn't a personal threat, it's a general threat. And what they did to Picard is limited to the TNG cast and not anyone else who encounters them.
Uhh... So, assimilation - which can happen to any individual, at any time, and represented something that could be a threat to just one person at a time (unlike in "Q Who", where they basically only threatened the ship as a whole),
that threat "isn't personal." AT THE SAME TIME, the collective assimilating Picard is SO personal that its fallout is limited
only to the TNG crew (Sisko and the other survivors of Wolf 359 would disagree, by the way). Right.
You're right, they were more like ants than zombies.
Individual drones? Yes, very much so. Techno-zombie-ants.
The Borg as a whole, however - the
threat as a whole, the
civilization as a whole, the
collective as a whole - are far more interesting than actual ants or zombies could ever be, with or without a queen.
I've gone over, in several threads spanning several months, how the audience hated the Vidiians, Hirogen, Krenim and the 8472. The Fandom/Hatedom had become exceedingly difficult to please by VOY, which is easy for anyone to admit.
There was some Trek burnout in general, I'll admit (it's not like DS9 had great ratings either). But if the show as a whole had been better, it would have been well received. I've never seen any evidence to suggest that this mysterious "Hatedom" you talk about so much even EXISTED, let alone that they somehow were SO vocal and influential with their vitriol that it affected the decisions the writers made about whether or not to re-use a given villain. And those four Voyager races we both referenced ARE cool. I wasn't always happy with how they were used (and I thought having the Think Tank be like "Oh, yeah, we cured the phage, no big deal" was a silly way to close out the Vidiian story), but they were all good villain races. 8472 was ruined BY the writers in their later appearances. No excuses. They had a great villain, then they botched it. Bad writing does just HAPPEN sometimes, and not just in Trek, but in general.
But yes, having the villains be able to interact with the VOY crew more than just some disembodied voice is required for a better portrayal of a villain. And "Scorpion" only works because it had another enemy to play the Borg off of. And even then they needed Seven for the story to work, so again the adversary required a personal level.
Here I must backstep a bit, because I misinterpreted what you meant by "personal" earlier to imply some kind of direct connection between protagonist and antagonist (like a vendetta, or some such). Not sure
how I got that idea, but whatever... If that HAD been what you meant, I would stick by what I said, but it's not, so you're essentially right. ALL conflicts have some measure of "personal involvement", even if it's as simple as "Hey, we really don't want you to blow up our ship, cause then we'll die". But I maintain that a single, identifiable, "He/she is the BAD GUY! Kill him/her and we win!" kind of presence is not strictly necessary.
With that, I'm going to not post any more in this thread about this topic, because we really
should move it over. Though, we ended up with two "Voyager Borg" threads, one from me and one from Withers...lol I'm not partial to which one gets used (though no one has posted in either one yet), but one of them should probably be deleted. Unless I'm completely missing something, I can't delete my own thread.