They were just a plot device antagonist Q was using to teach Picard a lesson in "Q Who?", any random super-power race would have worked out in that role with any kind of gimmick.
Except the Borg were planned in advance,
Q Who was intended to be their introductory episode. They needed a new villain because the Ferengi weren't working out, so Maurice Hurley came up with the idea of a hive-minded insect species plotting to take over the Federation from afar.
Conspiracy was the first of his planned trilogy,
The Neutral Zone was the second part (the missing Federation and Romulan colonies), but the third part of the story was scrapped because they couldn't afford the special effects to do an insect species. But Maurice Hurley still wanted to have a hive-minded villain, so he compromised by making them cybernetic and cut off any connection between them and the
Conspiracy insects.
The Borg weren't created as a plot device for
Q Who, Q Who was written specifically to introduce The Borg.
An actual individual the characters interact with is the selling point. What would the Dominion be like if we never had a talking Founder, a talking Vorta or a talking Jem'Hadar and just had everything about them just be shooting at the Ds9 cast while getting simple verbal messages?
The Dominion wasn't based around the concept of a collective consciousness, they were intended to be an anti-Federation. The Borg were intended to be a faceless force of nature, the Dominion were not.
"Faceless Force" only works once or twice, and since "Regeneration" WAS the second time they were truly used as a faceless force that's why it worked. It wouldn't go a third time.
And what mathematical formula did you use to derive that number?
I don't have a problem with giving the Borg a face, Locutus worked very well as the mouthpiece of the collective, and Seven developed into an interesting character. What I don't like, and what others don't like, is that the Queen was not used as a mouthpiece for the collective consciousness, she was clearly in charge of the Borg. That went against the thing which made the Borg so interesting, that they were a collection of billions of minds forming one will as opposed to one mind imposing its will upon the others.
And yet neither of them died. None of the secondary characters (or characters at all) that really mattered died until the end if they died at all.
Several secondary cast members died in seasons 2 and 3. Three of them died in the later half of season 4, and those deaths stemmed naturally from the situation they found themselves in.

That doesn't even make sense in reference to what I said. Are you just saying that at random intervals now?
The Maquis would just have their "I hate the Feds/Janeway" flimsy justification, and any reason for rebelling against Janeway that would be justified would just be based on contrived actions she took to piss them off in the first place, not "natural organic characterization".
Only if the writers on Voyager were crap. Are you saying that the writers on Voyager were crap?
You know what's contrived? A mob boss who suffers a serious panic attack because he feels sad when some ducks fly away. However, great writing made that into the basis of one of the best shows ever made. You know what else is contrived? An American President deciding to run for re-election after revealing to the public that he lied about his health in order to win the election because he had a conversation with his dead secretary. Great writing made that into one of the greatest television scenes of all time.
Great writing can make even the crappest concept work. And a mutiny based upon principled arguments isn't even a crap idea, it's a damn good one.
I never liked the characters very much so it fell flat for me, so I was extra disappointed with the lame plot resolution.
Well fine, but the general consensus among people who did like the show is that Daybreak provided a good resolution for the characters, most of the complaints are centred around plot resolution.
Amazing what talking with you can do to a person, hm?
Not really, I'm a fairly impressive guy. My impact upon other people is at least 2.5 times greater than the average person.
Yes, I'm smug, and I'm unbearable,
Good, now YOU'RE doing some needed "growing up".
I've felt that way about myself long before I came to this board. I've happily been smug and unbearable for 8 or 9 years.
And you'll just do something obnoxious and insulting again prompting me to post again to shut the smug out of here.
I didn't even post anything to make you come back' you said you were done,
Kestrel posted something in response to something else you had said and you came back. So don't blame me that you're still here, it's either your fault or
Kestrel's.
Here's a hint; it's not
Kestrel's fault.
So while BSG has a broad ensemble with different layers of importance, VOY has a static ensemble of seven mains and a sea of faceless redshirts. What BSG did can't be done here, I's afraid.
Due to the way that Voyager seems to have been cast you're probably right. They had two opportunities to kill off main characters; the end of season three when everyone other than Mulgrew's contract ran out, and the end of season 5 when Mulgrew's contract did run out. And they were planning on killing Kim off before that now infamous magazine article mistook Wang for someone attractive.
And what if they missed the first episode with Carey? They wouldn't know who he was in the later episode.
I missed the first episode with Lt Carey, and the second, and the third. The sight of him in
State of Flux did not cause me to descend into a confused, gibbering mess.
Yeah, I'd dispute that. I'd concede he wasn't a character until S4 despite appearing as early as S2 (and retconned into S1)...
He wasn't really retconned into season 1, Colm Meaney was around since
Encounter at Farpoint, he just hadn't been given a name yet. At that point in time Trek hadn't developed a reputation for using the same actor for multiple roles.
