I think army ants was sort of the original notion.
Really? Sounds like a retcon after the Borg Queen, which is when I thought the Borg stopped being interesting.
I think army ants was sort of the original notion.
Think back to what Q says in "Q Who":Really? Sounds like a retcon after the Borg Queen, which is when I thought the Borg stopped being interesting.
Think back to what Q says in "Q Who":
Q: The Borg are the ultimate user [...] They're not interested in political conquest, wealth, or power as you know it. They're simply interested in your ship, its technology. They've identified it as something they can consume.
They're not individuals. They had no leader as we think such a thing. You kill a bunch of them and they don't care. The consume anything they want. Sounds pretty ant-like to me.
I wonder how would the Borg deal with powerful god-like or energy beings? Would they simple give up and by-pass those entities, or would the Borg start a long term assault hoping to figure out how they can assimilate them?
It's more the idea of anything being behind the army ants that I didn't like. I still prefer to think of them more as a virus, but I see what you mean!
Really? Sounds like a retcon after the Borg Queen, which is when I thought the Borg stopped being interesting.
Even at their first appearance, weren't the Borg described as a hive mind?
I even think their original concept was insect.
Army ants... Or locusts A swarm of locusts consumes everything in its path.
The borg were originally supposed to be an insectoid species, the parasytes from season one's Conspiracy were supposed to be part of the borg, it's not a coincidence that a mysterious enemy started destroying federation and romulan outposts one episode after the parasyte send its message.Really? Sounds like a retcon after the Borg Queen, which is when I thought the Borg stopped being interesting.
Every Hive has a Queen.![]()
I wonder how would the Borg deal with powerful god-like or energy beings? Would they simple give up and by-pass those entities, or would the Borg start a long term assault hoping to figure out how they can assimilate them?
But also this must be a recent innovation for the Borg becasue in "Q Who?" Q mentions that they aren't interested in biology, they are only interest in technology.
As far as the "biological distinctiveness" goes: I think they can push the nanobots inside a drone's body to adapt said drone to different situations, i.e. not needing air for a while, even though the biological components would still need to be sustained some way or another.
I don't know about ants, but Queen bees do in fact control their colonies through the scents she puts out, keeping all the little worker bees united and orderly. They all live to serve her every whim, cater to her every need, and when she needs something done, that is communicated to them through mysterious chemicals that she produces, and they smell.
That's my assumption as well. Seeing as 'static' equipment failed during the crossing of the nebula, it would stem to reason that the nano's were protecting her, up until a certain extent.Maybe that's how Seven survived that radioactive gas cloud in "One".![]()
I always thought it was bizarre that the Borg Queen dies in First Contact then returns in Voyager (and dies again in the last episode).
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