To me the Hirogen could have been similar to the Cardassians if they had been used more frequently.
The Vaadwaur didn't seem that interesting to me, except perhaps for the fact that we learn from the ep that they used to control a vast area of the DQ. For this reason perhaps they could have returned. (Do you have info about why the producers decided not to do so? Was this an option in the first place at all?)
It is interesting to see how many people think the Borg were overused. Sorry but I can't agree there. I wish we had had three times as many Borg episodes. They are usually highly fascinating and as main antagonists on VOY, I would have found it more "logical" to use them in several other episodes.
Oh I would also have liked to have seen the Hirogen more, I was actually thinking about them when I wrote my response.
But then I started thinking "Where to take them next?" (the Hirogen). They make cool antagonists to the Voyager crew but you can only tell so many stories in which Hirogen hunt Voyager and its people.
Stories about the gradual change of their culture as they try to reunite to restore their civilization and perhaps become more tolerant of non Hirogen, not treating all as prey any more?
Well the thing about the Borg is is not that it is not logical for them to show up as Voyager was set in the Delta Quadrant after all which is their home quadrant, but that I found a lot of the stories after "Scorpion" and "Drone" very weak and deconstructing the mystery of the Borg Collective more and more.
I liked "First Contact" when it first came into the theaters and it is the most fun TNG movie even if some of the main characters are written rather out of character compared to TNG, but over the years I have come to realize some of its flaws.
1. Why would the Borg want to prevent the rise of the Federation? The Federation is not a real threat to them as otherwise they would have send hundreds or thousands of cubes and not just one.
More importantly the Borg wants to assimilate it for the resources and technologies it can provide. If the Federation never arose these would not exist either.
2. I hate the Borg Queen. In FC I saw her/it as sort of the embodiment of the Collective, a "face" given to the Collective Consciousness of the Borg.
But in Voyager she became more and more the leader of the Borg and less of a "face" or "voice". She was now a queen leading a swarm of drones and actually was interested in individuals and held grudges.
What made the Borg so alien is that they were beyond such concepts, all they are interested in is what your civilization as a whole could offer and not particular individuals they want. Picard was chosen as their "ambassador" to make clear to the Federation what the Borg wanted, had another captain been available with intimate knowledge of Starfleet's command structure, tactical capabilities, and strategies the Borg would probably just as well have settled for him/her/it.
I think that even during BOBW Locutus made clear that in the big scheme of things it really was irrelevant as it had already served its purpose.
So I honestly could have done without the Borg Queen and giving the Collective a face now that I look back on them. Someone on another forum once suggested the following idea for First Contact instead when Data and Picard talk to the Borg.
Rather than the Queen, one Borg drone starts to talk to them and as Picard/Data pass them by or another approaches it takes over the conversation without interruption, and so on and so on.
Now that would have been weird and memorable.
Had Voyager's Borg episodes been more like "Q who", "Best of both worlds", and "Scorpion" in which the Borg remained alien and barely understood, let alone not continuously weakened down for the sake of weaker stories I would have held them higher on VOY.
Note 1. I once had a fan fic idea for a Voyager story set in an alternative timeline in which "Dark Frontier" and subsequent Borg episodes did not exist that when the Voyager crew/Seven encounters the Borg Collective again that the Borg consider Seven to be "corrupted beyond recovery" and that she is to be "deactivated" or "retired". The result would be that Seven realizes that she can never go back to the Borg again and that she should instead try to pursue the ideal of reaching perfection as an individual, accepting her human part in it.
Note 2. All this talk about Hirogen and the Borg made me think of another fan fic idea I had a while back. It would be a story about a young Hirogen hunter who seeks to attain the rank of Alpha by hunting a very dangerous prey; the crew of a Borg scout vessel/sphere.
I do think I have been kind of influences by Aliens vs Predator in which young Predators are only given the rank or status of full hunter by hunting a xenomorph.
Oh well.
especially given that the Vaadwaur had some early, past experiences with the Borg, which could have been revived themselves, in some form, which could have enhanced the arc of the plot.
A fan fic idea of mine in order to explain why the Borg did not seem so widespread in the Vaadwaur's era would have been because the Borg had only "recently" returned (recently when you look at their extended history).
The Borg Collective would still be tens of thousands of years old as mentioned on TNG, but there have been multiple "incarnations" of itself.
The incarnations before the current one that poses such a great threat to current civilizations had in the past encountered civilizations or "things" more powerful than themselves at the time or had drawn the attention of these while they went around assimilating civilizations and species.
These powerful forces would wage war on the Collective, or do something else that destroyed the majority of the Borg incarnation at the time, but always leave some remnants behind so that the Collective could recover, a few ships, a colony, a few drones, or even just nano probes.
And afterwards it would not be unheard of that the new Borg Collective springing from these would end up destroying or assimilating their previous superior enemies.
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