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Are the Borg just a ripoff?!?

Ulvirfaust

Cadet
Newbie
I heard recently from a friend of mine that the idea of the Borg was a total ripoff of an old Space Ghost episode. He said he'd heard that someone who created the Borg admit that they couldn't think of what to do with the story so they were watching TV and a Space Ghost episode called "The Spacecube" was on and that gave them all the ideas. Has anyone else heard something like this?
 
You'd have better luck saying the Borg were a ripoff of the Cybermen from Doctor Who. Maybe the Terminators from Terminator (1984) or the Sentinels from X-Men (1961).
 
The Borg were originally conceived as insectoids, and only became white-faced cyborgs in wetsuits when the makeup was estimated to be too expensive for the day.
 
And if I remember correctly the Borg were supposed to open S2 but the writers strike impacted on those plans.
 
There's so much stuff out there at this point it's hard to come up with anything that isn't at least a little similar to something somebody did at some point in all of history.
 
You'd have better luck saying the Borg were a ripoff of the Cybermen from Doctor Who. Maybe the Terminators from Terminator (1984) or the Sentinels from X-Men (1961).

Ah, but have any of those ever demonstrated the ability to assimilate others?

Apart from Alex, the T-5000 from Terminator Genisys of course. But that came much later than the Borg, so if there's any ripoff there, it's Alex!
 
I loved the Devilship episode of the newer Space Ghost series.

The Vegan Tyranny were supposed to be something similar to the Borg.
 
After seeing the responses I decided to do some actual research. I found the episode in question and it's actually called "Spacecube Of Doom" from 1981. One of the replies above links to the episode. While there's no direct resemblance of the aliens to the Borg, the cubist nature of ships and the taking over of minds to make more slaves for the aliens seems, at least to me, a slight correlation. It's just a rumor a friend of mine heard and he goes to a lot of ST conventions and stuff, I generally think he's pretty knowledgeable. I suppose, if it were true, others would have heard this before.
 
But that idea falls down because the Borg were originally conceived as not caring about lives at all, they simply consumed technology.
 
I found this info a few months ago when I was researching the origin of the phrase "resistance is futile." It's such a common saying now that I was wondering if its first use was in Star Trek or something else.

The Daleks used the phrase "resistance is useless" in the 1964 serial The Dalek Invasion of Earth. It 1966 it was spoken by the cybernetically enhanced Cybermen in The Tenth Planet, and in 1968 by the Master of the Land of Fiction in The Mind Robber.
http://www.mmorpg.com/mobile/forums.cfm?ismb=1&threadId=92274

Not sure about Space Ghost, but I wouldn't doubt that Doctor Who had some influence on the depiction of the Borg. At the same time, the Borg are not that similar to the Cybermen or the Daleks. The Daleks just want to kill because of some genocidal rage, and the Cybermen do assimilate people like the Borg but not in the same manner. The Cybermen don't seem to care much for assimilating technology. On top of that, it's not like the concept of assimilation in sci-fi was that original to begin with. Early Americans certainly did their fare share of assimilating other cultures into their way of life (and they were definitely not the first), so we can't really assume the Borg are a rip-off of the Cybermen on that basis alone.

Maybe the Borg are a combination of various sci-fi ideas that have been promulgated throughout the years. I wouldn't call them a "rip-off" though considering they are still very different from these other characters/species from what we've seen. A lot of fiction builds on ideas that other people have had - this is relatively common when it comes to artistic expression.
 
The Borg are space zombies. They're mindless, drone-like, creatures with no real expression or emotion, they resemble dead bodies and coming into significant contact with one causes you to become one of them.
 
You'd have better luck saying the Borg were a ripoff of the Cybermen from Doctor Who. Maybe the Terminators from Terminator (1984) or the Sentinels from X-Men (1961).

Ah, but have any of those ever demonstrated the ability to assimilate others?

Apart from Alex, the T-5000 from Terminator Genisys of course. But that came much later than the Borg, so if there's any ripoff there, it's Alex!

The Cybermen force captured humans into conversion chambers to increase their numbers throughout many of their stories in the series!
JB
 
I heard that the main enemy for the second season of TNG after The Ferengi failed to impress were to have been an insect race of creatures! Doubt they would have been called The Borg though! But their appearance and costs put an end to that idea! Not sure if I'm a hundred per cent right or not but I have seen in a dictionary that the Ferengi is a name that the native Indians in the US used to give to the white man settlers! Although it's spelt more Ferenghi I think...
JB
 
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