Much of Star Trek's actual continuity never happened in Star Trek's actual continuity.Trek Lit isn't canon, that never happened in Star Trek's actual continuity.
Much of Star Trek's actual continuity never happened in Star Trek's actual continuity.Trek Lit isn't canon, that never happened in Star Trek's actual continuity.
I don't think that's the point they're talking about.Trek Lit isn't canon, that never happened in Star Trek's actual continuity.
And I ignore all of that too, fanon is the worst offender, at least trek lit is liscensed content and not just pulled out of people's butts. "Spock was the first vulcan in starfleet". Ugh, no he wasn't.Much of Star Trek's actual continuity never happened in Star Trek's actual continuity.
Trek Lit isn't canon, that never happened in Star Trek's actual continuity.
Honestly, if the Borg had maintained those idyllic dreamstates when drones weren't on duty, and not fought against them, Borg society could be a kind of utopia.It's possible the Borg did exist for thousands of years but didn't start rapidly expanding until a couple hundred years ago.
In my imagination their origin has always been some kind of out of control lifestyle improvement, like they were selling technological implants to improve your health, strength, etc that were controlled by an AI and the AI got out of control.
Canadian's Eh?
It maybe that the Borg did exist for 1000's of years, but they didn't start as the overpowering juggernaut that they were in Tng.. Maybe they started small, Started up on 1 planet, but didn't have any type of space ships, or only Slower than light.. since it seems they don't "Invent" stuff only "Assemilate" so maybe they go out into the universe but takes hundreds of years to get around.. find FTL capable speices, assimilate them, then they find another, then another.. then find 1 species that totally obliterates them back to the stone age, then they rise up again, accumalating knowledge and technology to the point not many can stand up to them. and the assimalate all they come across..
So maybe during the time of the Vauduar, that they maybe maintained a couple of systems, but were easily beaten back at that time..
Star Trek: First Contact said:DATA: Your efforts to break the encryption code will not be successful. Nor will your attempt to assimilate me into your collective.
BORG QUEEN (OC): Brave words. I've heard them before from thousands of species across thousands of worlds ...since long before you were created. But now they are all Borg.
(source: chakoteya.net)
The Borg being this terrifying force of evil, but when you're assimilated you find a Unimatrix Zero-ish paradise where any drones anywhere can communicate with any anywhere else and everyone's happy, would be one hell of a twist.Honestly, if the Borg had maintained those idyllic dreamstates when drones weren't on duty, and not fought against them, Borg society could be a kind of utopia.
The Borg Queen's statement to Data seems to indicate a long history of conquest:
As far as the Borg go, I'm more than happy with the idea that they were originally just a species/culture whose technology got away from them. It seem more fitting for the Trek universe.
I like their take on it, a big human screw up.The Destiny trilogy from Pocket Books gives its own interesting take on Borg origins.
But the humans were the catalyst, bloody, arrogant MACOSNo, we weren't.
The first drones may have been human, but that doesn't mean it's humans' fault that the Borg came into existence.
If any race deserves blame in this, it's the Caeliar, since it was one of them who actually "created" the Borg collective.
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