The Borg
History Social
Structure Anomolous Culutres
Technology Assimilation
Editors Comments
-ROGUES GALLERY OF BORG CHARACTERS-
-GLOSSARY OF BORG SHIPS W/PICTURES-
-LINKS TO OTHER BORG SITES-
Description: Augmented Humanoid,
Bipedal
Size: Medium
Skin Pigment: Any (Pale)
Hair: None evident
Series: TNG : "?", VOY: "?", ST:FC
Planet of Origin: Unknown
Quadrant: Delta |
 |
|
Dependent on biomechanical implants that grant them greater physical strength.
They would die if these are removed. Most have a cybernetic arm which
can be used as a tool or phaser, and a laser-sight eyepiece over their
right eye. Borg children are born without mechanical implants, however
these are soon added to them, making them dependent on them. |
|
Federation Anthropologists have theorized that the Borg started at the
latest during Earth's 20th Century. Based on the fact that they are
led by a Queen it can be presumed that it started because of one woman.
The pre-Borg era on their homeworld must have seen the invention of mechanical
implants that were designed to held people with handicaps. These
devices would be thinks that could replace a severed limb, but unlike a
prosthetic limb, they would have close to the same characteristics of a
normal limb (i.e. the ability to control it like it was that person's natural
arm or leg). |
 |
Presumably a woman with severe cranial and back damage
received replacements for those areas with these new implants, and sent
the lady on her way. Some time later this woman may have found that
she could manipulate computers without a keyboard, mouse or touch screen,
but with he thoughts and a transceiver. After this discovery she
may have found a way to take over her planet, redesign all the implants
so that they all had a transceivers in them. This allowed her to
take over all the members of her race that had implants, and force them
to as she wished. After she had completely taken over her planet
and assimilated the population, then she must either have desired to control
more, or the resources of the planet were in short supply. She did
two things that assured her immortality. The first was to replace
most of her body with cybernetic components. The other was to clone
herself. These clones were identical in every way the this woman,
and were also known as the Borg Queen, but under the control of the original
Queen. |
| These clones were then given a compliment of Drones, their
own ship, and orders to search the galaxy for other species and planets,
and assimilate the best features of them. In this way the Borg were
able to control more space with out the need to move every Borg with the
Queen. The cloned Queens on the ships extended the reach of the homeworld
Queen to an infinite area.
The first encounter that the Federation had with them was when the being
known as Q sent the Enterprise-D in to the Delta Quadrant. Warned
by Guinan that the Borg will now come to the Alpha Quadrant, the Federation
began preparing for the next encounter. They didn't have long to
wait, the Borg entered the Alpha Quadrant, assimilated Captain Picard and
then destroyed the Starfleet armada at Wolf 359. The cube was finally
destroyed, but at great loss to the Federation. |
|
| The next encounter with the Borg happened when the Enterprise
rescued an injured Borg (3 of 5 a.k.a. Hugh) after his ship crashed.
It was found that they had lost contact with the Collective. The
possibility exists that the drones had gained some individuality and then
revolted.
The last encounter with the Federation was when the Borg sent a cube
to Earth. This ship was destroyed but a smaller internal ship went back
in time. [ST: FC] Currently under study by Temporal Investigations. |
BORG SOCIAL STRUCTURE
 |
Very little is actually known about the inner workings of the Borg
social structure except to say that it closely resembles a hive in organization
and operation. Assimilated Borg are designated drones and, as the
name suggests, spend their lives working for and defending the rest of
the collective. No more than automatons the drones work endlessly to serve
the Borg Queen. Virtually nothing is known about the role of the
Queen. Unlike social hives the Borg Queen's primary purpose is not thought
to be breeding but rather as a central reference point around which the
collective will and purpose of the hive revolves. It remains undetermined
what function this role would play in the collective consciousness of the
hive, whether it is necessitated by the sheer number of Borg and the vast
distances that separate them or if it has evolved under some other forces.
Capt. Picard first encountered the Queen during his assimilation as Locutus
though he was not to remember the episode until the Battle of First Contact
several years later. More puzzling still is the fact that the cube on which
Locutus met the Queen (shortly before the Battle of Wolf 359) was destroyed
along with all Borg aboard, yet years later the Queen returned as she had
been. It is unclear at this point whether the Queen encountered aboard
the first cube was the same physical entity or merely a representation
of the collective center of the hive. It is possible that several manifestations
of the Queen exist. This could operate by either projecting the presence
of the Queen who in fact is centrally located in Borg homespace or by the
physical existence of different representations of the Queen, all of which
would maintain a unique link to both the collective and the True Queen. |
ANOMALOUS
BORG CULTURES
|
There are three known anomalous Borg cultures. The first was established
on Stardate 45854.2 when the Borg drone known as Third of Five, or Hugh,
was returned to the collective with his recently acquired sense of individuality
intact. The result of his return to the Collective proved disruptive.
Unable to operate cope with the concept of self-awareness the Borg cube
was derelict in space and soon encountered the Soong type android Lore.
The encounter with Lore eventually led the Borg to settle on a planet where
they attempted to modify themselves in Lore's image. The Enterprise-D discovered
this culture and after the dismantling of Lore allowed the surviving Borg
to continue to explore their new identities on their own. |
| The second Borg anomaly exists in the Delta Quadrant as
the self-identified Borg Cooperative. The Cooperative consists of members
of various races who were at one time or another assimilated by the Collective.
After an electrostatic discharge disabled their cube several Borg found
themselves separated from the Collective. Cannibalizing various pieces
of their cube several of the survivors beamed to a nearby Class-M planet
and began a new life. After separation from the Collective they discovered
that their Borg implants and altered appearances began to revert to their
normal state. Unfortunately the elation at being separated from Borg
was soon overtaken by age old divisions of race and new fears of unknown
species. The USS Voyager NCC-7012, lost in the Delta Quadrant, encountered
this culture. In an effort to restore order to the planet and preserve
the life they had made for themselves a group of former Borg used a small
neural generator to re-establish the neural link that unites Borg. The
former Borg then proceeded to use Commander Chakotay to return power to
the abandoned cube and establish a planet-wide neural link, thereby reuniting
everyone who had been a former Borg. In appreciation for the help that
they obtained, unwillingly, from Voyager the newly named Cooperative destroyed
the cube and isolated themselves to develop on their own. |
|
The third is the unique individual Borg known as 7 of 9. She
is an assimilated Human, rescued from the collective by the Starship Voyager.
Currently serving onboard Voyager. |
BORG
TECHNOLOGY
 |
Borg technology is highly advanced, as evidenced by their ability to
assimilate other species with relative ease (see below) and their use of
high concept engineering beyond current Federation understanding.
The Borg are known to use transwarp drive in their vessels which are typically
cube shaped and which, to date, have conformed to exact measurements. The
Borg cube is largely ungeneralized in design, reflecting the collective
state of the hive itself. Each cube contains powerful weapons technology
far beyond current understanding as well as carrying smaller Borg vessels
such as the sphere encountered at the Battle of First Contact. Remarkably
the Borg are able to repair their vessels without the need for spacedocks.
The collective established by the linked Borg is used to focus a cube's
power directly into repairs and even major damage by phasers and torpedoes
can be repaired without much delay. Possibly even more impressive
is the fact, supposed though not tested, that the a Borg cube can continue
to function while up to 90 percent of its structure is destroyed or otherwise
inoperable. |
| The use of the collective also allows for the Borg to react
more swiftly than conventional starships. Literally the collective thinks
and acts as one with its ship. The benefits of this extend to the level
of individual Borg drones as well where the neural field generated by the
collective allows both major and minor wounds to drones biological and
technological components to heal with great rapidity. |
|
The sole purpose of the Borg Collective is to find and assimilate all other
species. The drive to assimilate exists for several reasons on several
levels. First and foremost assimilation is the means by which Borg gain
all knowledge of other races and cultures. By assimilating an individual
Borg absorb all the knowledge and experiences of the individual into the
collective thereby adding to their own knowledge and expertise. Secondly,
assimilation is the primary means of reproduction and advance for Borg.
New drones are created by assimilation solely. There is evidence of Borg
infants, though it is undetermined at this time as to whether or not assimilated
Borg are capable of reproduction or if the infants are non-Borg who begin
a modified assimilation at an early age. Thirdly all Borg technology is
the result of assimilation of advanced species. |
There are at least two similar but distinct
methods of assimilation. The most commonly used method begins on the microscopic
level. Injection tubules carried by all Borg drones pierce the subcutaneous
layers and inject nano-probes into the subjects bloodstream. The nano-probes
are programmed to attack the subjects blood cells and re-program, assimilate,
them according to their own Borg template. Thousands of such probes can
be injected in seconds making the initial stages of assimilation nearly
immediate. Thus begun assimilation continues throughout the subjects body.
The probes, working together, form a large connected network that effectively
lays the groundwork for connection to the collective as well as bio-technological
interface with Borg cybernetic implants and attachments.
 |
After this initial stage assimilation continues with the alteration
of other areas. This may include the addition of modified extremities,
optical and aural implants, and Borg adaptive energy technologies. All
assimilated Borg are provided with a neural implant that is not removable
once installed. This implant is the primary connection between any drone
and the rest of the collective. It relays all orders to the drone, maintains
a record of those orders, and coordinates all the drones activities. |
|
The second method of assimilation is very similar to the
first but differs in several important aspects. The primary example of
this variation of assimilating technique is Locutus of Borg. The assimilation
of Locutus differed from ordinary Borg assimilation in that both its physical
approach and impact were far less radical than an ordinary assimilation.
In the case of Locutus attention was paid to keep physical alteration to
a minimum. Where as in a normal drone the addition of optical or aural
implants and extremity modification would begin with the removal of the
original organs in Locutus care was taken to preserve as much of the original
biology as possible. Thus the addition of Borg extremities did not result
in the loss of original components. Nor, seemingly, was the Borg neural
implant introduced, or possibly a modified version was used as it was later
removed from the recovered Jean-Luc Picard. Beyond speculation there is
no known reason for the differing methods of assimilation.
| However, Capt. Picard is on record as stating that Locutus was designed
to bridge the gap between humanity and Borg. If this is the case it would
of course be desirable to modify the assimilation process in such a manner
as to preserve as much of the original human condition, physical and mental,
as possible while still incorporating it into the collective. It can be
argued that such an assimilation ultimately adds more to the collective
by preserving what is lost by the assimilation of the rest of the subjects
race. |
 |
Of course speculation such as this must remain speculation,
but encouraging signs of its truth would be found in the discovery that
the Borg follow this revised assimilation with at least one member of every
(or a significant number of) species they encounter. In all cases of assimilation
or near assimilation that have resulted in a subject being recovered and
restored to his or her original state there have been lingering effects.
Aside from the obvious psychological and physical damage it appears that
restored subjects maintain a sub-conscious link with the collective. This
was evident in the Battle of First Contact when Captain Picard used the
remnants of his link to gain an advantage on the Borg by allowing himself
to hear their plans. Likewise in the case of Commander Chakotay, the Cooperative
used residual traces of his link to the collective to forcibly manipulate
his actions. It is unknown to what extent this latent connection can be
used by either the subject or Borg, or even whether the lingering effects
are permanent or temporary. |
EDITORS
COMMENTS:
Most people feel that the Borg are unstoppable, but they are far from
perfect. And as invulnerable as they seem they do have two weaknesses.
The first and most obvious for those who have seen First Contact is
to kill their Queen. That method is not always easy when you have the entire
Hive protecting her. Without the Queen the Borg drones in her control
would die. As seen in the dramatic ending to First Contact even the
drones that were standing on the walkway above engineering started to die
when the Queen did even though they didn't come in contact with the coolant
leak.
Potential problems with this theory is examples of Hugh and Picard.
Hugh's ship did not have a Queen on board, thus the Borg must have devices
that allow them to sustain an individual collective without a Queen for
short periods of time. The reason Hugh didn't die right after he
woke up is because he didn't have to go through the immediate withdrawal
of losing the Collective, therefore it didn't effect him the same way.
Picard didn't die because he had started to disconnect himself from the
Collective before it was blown up. It did effect him violently [TNG-Best
of Both Worlds II] but, it wasn't enough to kill him.
The second method to kill the Borg is solid/matter weapons, in other
words a non-energy weapon. This is supported in First Contact where
Picard killed the Borg drones on the Holodeck with a "Tommy" Gun.
Worf was able to cut off the arm of a Borg while in 0-G on the Saucer.
This should not have been possible if they had been able to adjust.
Further evidence that the Borg are vulnerable to this type of weapon there
is the fact that Picard ordered his people to fight in hand-to-hand combat
after the Borg had permanently adjusted to all phaser frequencies.
The Borg roam the galaxy in large Cube shaped vessels, turning all that
they capture into fellow Borg by assimilating them. Few have succeeding
in resisting this, but Data was able to in the movie First Contact. Jean-Luc
Picard, captain of the Enterprise in TNG, was once assimilated by the Borg,
becoming Locutus. Most Borg have no concept of individuality, and
are linked to the Borg Collective.
Some info provided
by Starbase Sigma
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