Hussar
Legend
Given that everything else, including most of this episode, is fine I'm inclined to think it's not my TV.
It isn’t just you. I’m sick to death of Star Trek being shot in dark rooms.
Given that everything else, including most of this episode, is fine I'm inclined to think it's not my TV.
There are a lot of tasks that need doing to keep a ship running long term that can be ignored if you only need it to work for a few hours - you don't need to worry about routine maintenance or shift changes. You might worry about damage control, but if there is nobody available to do it you just have to hope for the best and try not to get damaged.Don't these ships need like 1000 people to crew them? I know they did that in Star Trek III too, but it was made clear that the ship was barely functional and couldn't fight without a crew.
From the delta quadrant,1. Borg cube in Jupiter where did it come from?
Borg queens were introduced in Star Trek: First Contact (the film), and have been seen in Voyager, and previous seasons of Picard. EDIT: It is not clear to what extent the various borg queens are the same individual - several bodies have been destroyed, but how much continuity of mindstate there is between them is an open question. Except that the one in the previous season of Picard was definitely separate because she was from an alternate timeline (and became decidedly less Borg-like).2. Borg queen is she in another show/series.
They were severely damaged by Janeway in the Voyager finale. How severely was not clear (in or out of universe) until now.3. Borg were genocided?
Riker actually said something like, "They hid a transwarp conduit in Jupiter."From the delta quadrant, presumably by transwarp conduit.
Good point, I forgot that bit. Edited.Riker actually said something like, "They hid a transwarp conduit in Jupiter."
To me the organic assimilation was more of a mental “override switch”, but the subtleness of it meant it didn’t have any permanency. Likely the next step would have been adding more integrations into the drones to “seal the deal”.
- Borg stuff insta-healing physically and everybody being fine was a little too much like magic for me.
Well there was physical change which we could see, though. And that just reversed instantly. I get that that was just visual shorthand, but it does feel a bit too much like magic for me.To me the organic assimilation was more of a mental “override switch”, but the subtleness of it meant it didn’t have any permanency.
This is the same franchise where crew have turned into salamanders or animalistic hybrids, so ... it's Star Trek, it's not nearly as hard a sci-fi series as some think.Well there was physical change which we could see, though. And that just reversed instantly. I get that that was just visual shorthand, but it does feel a bit too much like magic for me.
Yeah, it is entirely unrealistic for it to happen that fast, but hat said - IIRC, there are probably 1-3 TNG episodes where someone is undergoing some visual physical changes (like aging or turning into an alien) and it gets undone with nothing more than an injection of the antidote. No surgery required and you can watch the reversal live.Well there was physical change which we could see, though. And that just reversed instantly. I get that that was just visual shorthand, but it does feel a bit too much like magic for me.