No, it was the quality of the ep, not the concept.
Dude, it was the concept itself that was disgusting to the audience, nothing more nothing less.
No, the problem was with Voyager specifically defeating the Borg on their own, easily, with conventional means.
They never "defeated" the Borg the same way the 8472 did, blasting apart Cubes like they were nothing. That only happened in "Endgame" thanks to future technology. In "Dark Frontier" they broke into the Unimatrix, but it's not like they did any real damage. And in "Unimatrix Zero" they survived a fight with a Cube, they didn't destroy it they just survived (with little to no damage, granted, but it's not like they did any harm to the Cube).
The real issue was that the stories treated the Borg as just some enemy and not some huge threat, but VOY had nothing to work with to make big threats anyways since it was always just them on their own. And the one time they did do a "Big Threat" story with the Borg it just opened another can of worms (the 8472).
No they didn't.
Yeah, they did. They thought they were some unbeatable Uberfoe.
No they hadn't.
Yeah, they had. They just had no problem with the ENT-D surviving Borg encounters but hated that anyone else could do it too.
What
What is this... I don't even...![]()
The Trek writers in VOY needed to give interviews where they repeatedly drilled it into the audience's head what Q said in "Q Who?": That the Borg were just ONE of many powerful races in the Galaxy and that the DQ is probably full of them and they're nothing super-special nor are they invincible so the audience should stop expecting them to be. Deflate their overblown visions of the Borg as some ultimate enemy.
No, most people loved "Scorpion." And still do.
It's the start of the Borg decay, as far as the fandom is concerned.
Ok, so... you really don't have any idea how the Borg's adaptation is supposed to work, then. And even if the idea that a Borg ship blowing up in a star means that other Borg are then protected against the effects of flying into stars (it DOESN'T mean that, for several reasons, but if it did), that certainly wouldn't then protect them from "all natural phenomena."
Drama-wise, storytelling-wise, the Borg' adaptive power means that they can't even use CONCEPTS against them twice. If one "Hack into the Collective" story is done, then all future possible "Hack into the Collective" stories are now nonviable. No matter what differences there'd be. If one "use natural phenomena" story is done, then all future possible natural phenomena stories are now nonviable no matter what different kind of phenomena they'd use.
Which they did.
No, they never did. Part of the problem was that the TNG fans expected the Borg to always be able to adapt to anything, no exceptions.
With praise, enthusiasm, and an overwhelming sense of "Ok, now THIS is what I was hoping for with this show!"
No, with "This sucks, VOY created some new bad guys and decided to show off how tough they are by emasculating the Borg. This show is even more worthless than ever."
BRAND NEW WEAPONS. As in NOT phasers and photon torpedoes. Or, at the very least, some mention of major alterations to their normal weapons. That's the very definition of "not their regular weapons".
If a brand new weapon becomes a standardly-used weapon, then it becomes the new standard and thus a normal weapon. Unless for some reason they can't use it more than once, which is just dumb.
WHAT newly invented weapons? The only brand-new weapon they ever used was the blast generated by the main deflector dish, and that failed specifically because Picard has been assimilated.
New phaser frequencies, new shield modifications. Both failed when it came time.
Right, because a fleet of Starfleet ships, all hand-picked to fight off a Borg ship and consisting of many combat classes, fighting a running battle and taking heavy losses against a single Borg cube across multiple sectors and just barely managing to defeat it with significant help from Picard's link to the Borg as it was on Earth's doorstep, is TOTALLY the same thing as Voyager treating the Borg like they were just any old enemy that they can comfortably take on whenever they need to.
Each one of those ships had weapons that stayed effective for that entire battle, instead of becoming useless after one or two shots. That's all I was trying to say. The Borg's adaptive abilities were totally negated in that fight and no one cared.