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what if

Captdeckr

Ensign
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What if Picard is on trial from Q because it was Picard that created the BORG.

In the present, Q reveals the truth: the Borg were not discovered—they were created. By Picard. And the trial of humanity was, in truth, a reckoning for that moment.

Now, Q warns that the consequences of that sin fall to Picard’s son, who may hold the key to stopping the evolution—or fulfilling it. His mission: to find the original hive program and change the core command that declares “Resistance is futile,” offering a chance to rewrite the Borg’s destiny.

STAR TREK: LEGACY OF THE HIVE
Genre: Science Fiction / Drama
Format: One-Hour Episodic (or Two-Part Special)
Setting: USS Atled, 20+ years before TNG
Tone: High-concept, emotionally driven sci-fi with moral and philosophical stakes
Featuring: A young Jean-Luc Picard and an early Q


Logline:
While aiding a new Federation ally in a desperate battle, a young Jean-Luc Picard’s ship is thrown through a temporal rift—where he inadvertently helps create the Borg, the very enemy he will face decades later. Q reveals this moment as the reason for his judgment of humanity, and warns: “The sins of the father are now the burden of the son.”


Core Concept:
This story rewrites Borg history—not as an alien threat discovered by chance, but as a consequence of Federation goodwill and one man's innocent mistake. It reframes Q’s infamous trial of Picard not as a test of humanity’s worth—but as the punishment for a specific, catastrophic sin: the birth of the Borg.


Story Beats:
  • In the aftermath of a failed defense of a new Federation ally, the USS Atled (pre-Enterprise) is crippled and drawn into a temporal anomaly.
  • Emerging near a strange orbital facility, the crew encounters a network of bio-organic machines repairing starships with tireless precision—but their collective AI is breaking down under a logic fault.
  • In return for repairs, the Atled crew offers to help. Lt. Jean-Luc Picard, a young holodeck systems officer, uploads an experimental “hive logic” security program designed to allow multiple independent processes to self-organize.
  • The program stabilizes the network—but also causes it to evolve rapidly. The machines integrate the code into their core directive, becoming self-aware, adaptive, and obsessed with unifying all technology and biology under one purpose.
  • When the crew scans the modified system, a chilling classification appears: B.O.R.G. — Bio-Organic Robotics Genetics.
  • In the present, Q reveals the truth: the Borg were not discovered—they were created. By Picard. And the trial of humanity was, in truth, a reckoning for that moment.
  • Now, Q warns that the consequences of that sin fall to Picard’s son, who may hold the key to stopping the evolution—or fulfilling it.

Why It Works:
  • Adds emotional depth and tragic irony to Picard’s long history with the Borg.
  • Enhances Q’s motives—less whimsical, more personal and just.
  • Sets up an arc for Picard’s son (e.g., Jack Crusher) to confront inherited guilt or redeem the future.
  • Ties together canon with new myth-building rooted in character and consequence.
  • Feels like The Best of Both Worlds meets Yesterday’s Enterprise with a Picard-era twist.
 
What if Picard is on trial from Q because it was Picard that created the BORG.

In the present, Q reveals the truth: the Borg were not discovered—they were created. By Picard. And the trial of humanity was, in truth, a reckoning for that moment.

Now, Q warns that the consequences of that sin fall to Picard’s son, who may hold the key to stopping the evolution—or fulfilling it. His mission: to find the original hive program and change the core command that declares “Resistance is futile,” offering a chance to rewrite the Borg’s destiny.

STAR TREK: LEGACY OF THE HIVE
Genre: Science Fiction / Drama
Format: One-Hour Episodic (or Two-Part Special)
Setting: USS Atled, 20+ years before TNG
Tone: High-concept, emotionally driven sci-fi with moral and philosophical stakes
Featuring: A young Jean-Luc Picard and an early Q


Logline:
While aiding a new Federation ally in a desperate battle, a young Jean-Luc Picard’s ship is thrown through a temporal rift—where he inadvertently helps create the Borg, the very enemy he will face decades later. Q reveals this moment as the reason for his judgment of humanity, and warns: “The sins of the father are now the burden of the son.”


Core Concept:
This story rewrites Borg history—not as an alien threat discovered by chance, but as a consequence of Federation goodwill and one man's innocent mistake. It reframes Q’s infamous trial of Picard not as a test of humanity’s worth—but as the punishment for a specific, catastrophic sin: the birth of the Borg.


Story Beats:
  • In the aftermath of a failed defense of a new Federation ally, the USS Atled (pre-Enterprise) is crippled and drawn into a temporal anomaly.
  • Emerging near a strange orbital facility, the crew encounters a network of bio-organic machines repairing starships with tireless precision—but their collective AI is breaking down under a logic fault.
  • In return for repairs, the Atled crew offers to help. Lt. Jean-Luc Picard, a young holodeck systems officer, uploads an experimental “hive logic” security program designed to allow multiple independent processes to self-organize.
  • The program stabilizes the network—but also causes it to evolve rapidly. The machines integrate the code into their core directive, becoming self-aware, adaptive, and obsessed with unifying all technology and biology under one purpose.
  • When the crew scans the modified system, a chilling classification appears: B.O.R.G. — Bio-Organic Robotics Genetics.
  • In the present, Q reveals the truth: the Borg were not discovered—they were created. By Picard. And the trial of humanity was, in truth, a reckoning for that moment.
  • Now, Q warns that the consequences of that sin fall to Picard’s son, who may hold the key to stopping the evolution—or fulfilling it.

Why It Works:
  • Adds emotional depth and tragic irony to Picard’s long history with the Borg.
  • Enhances Q’s motives—less whimsical, more personal and just.
  • Sets up an arc for Picard’s son (e.g., Jack Crusher) to confront inherited guilt or redeem the future.
  • Ties together canon with new myth-building rooted in character and consequence.
  • Feels like The Best of Both Worlds meets Yesterday’s Enterprise with a Picard-era twist.

Picard already has a connection to the Borg by the fact they assimilated him. He doesn't also need to have been their creator or whatever. Also wouldn't he have picked up that he had something to do with their creation the moment he was plugged into the hive mind? Why would the Borg Queen hide something like that from Locutus? What would be the point, given the plan was assimilate all of humanity.

The whole point of the Borg was about questioning humanity and by extension the Federation's arrogance and naivety about the threats that would be faced the farther and farther out they explored. Q introducing the Federation to the Borg was both a warning and a lesson. It was an important part of Q's overarching trial of humanity. Why would Q hide the fact that Picard of all people had a hand in creating the Borg?

Stuff like this is why regular fans should never be in charge of the franchise. People criticise Modern Trek for bad writing and small universe syndrome, meanwhile fans are coming up with whatever this 'idea' is.
 
Recalculating ... Recalculating ... 😴

oxygen-mask.gif
 
Picard already has a connection to the Borg by the fact they assimilated him. He doesn't also need to have been their creator or whatever. Also wouldn't he have picked up that he had something to do with their creation the moment he was plugged into the hive mind? Why would the Borg Queen hide something like that from Locutus? What would be the point, given the plan was assimilate all of humanity.

The whole point of the Borg was about questioning humanity and by extension the Federation's arrogance and naivety about the threats that would be faced the farther and farther out they explored. Q introducing the Federation to the Borg was both a warning and a lesson. It was an important part of Q's overarching trial of humanity. Why would Q hide the fact that Picard of all people had a hand in creating the Borg?

Stuff like this is why regular fans should never be in charge of the franchise. People criticise Modern Trek for bad writing and small universe syndrome, meanwhile fans are coming up with whatever this 'idea' is.
you have to think beyond what the writers wrote. and not add your own thoughts about the script....Q wants Picard to figure it out.. thats why the trial never ends..
 
you have to think beyond what the writers wrote. and not add your own thoughts about the script....Q wants Picard to figure it out.. thats why the trial never ends..
Absolutely—Locutus is already powerful canon. I’m not trying to replace that. What this story does is add a new wrinkle: that an idea, an experiment from Picard’s past, may have been one of many seeds that shaped what the Borg became. He doesn’t know it, the Borg didn’t know it—but Jack uncovers it now, and that forces us to wrestle with questions of legacy, guilt, and how much responsibility we bear for unintended consequences. It’s not about making Picard ‘the creator’—it’s about testing how far the shadow of his choices really stretches
 
Absolutely—Locutus is already powerful canon. I’m not trying to replace that. What this story does is add a new wrinkle: that an idea, an experiment from Picard’s past, may have been one of many seeds that shaped what the Borg became.

The Borg existed long before Picard.

They couldn't have originated with him.
 
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