The Star Trek Fan Community’s Worst Theories

A Star Trek-themed spoiler warning.

Spoiler Warning: There are spoilers ahead for practically the entire Star Trek franchise, including recent seasons of Picard, Strange New Worlds, and Starfleet Academy.

I like to engage in a bit of theory-crafting here on the website! If you’re a regular reader, you might’ve followed along with my weekly Discovery and Picard theories while those shows were on the air. Or perhaps you clicked on one of my viral theories speculating about Unknown Species 10-C, Q, or Vadic. Or maybe you’re brand-new to Trekking with Dennis… in which case, welcome! But my point is that I like Star Trek fan theories, I write a lot of Star Trek fan theories, and I get a *lot* of things utterly wrong.

I give that caveat for one important reason: this piece, in which I’m going to demolish some fan theories that I’ve found doing the rounds in the online Trekkie community, is meant to be tongue-in-cheek! I’m trying to have a bit of fun with the Star Trek franchise in this landmark sixtieth anniversary year, and picking apart some fan theories I’ve come across on social media seemed like it could be a way to do that. But I’m not taking this too seriously, and you only need look at my own fan theories to see how bad some of them were.

Cropped promo poster for The Search for SquarePants (in a Star Trek style).
Brace yourself. Things are about to get… silly.

More than ever, I encourage you to keep in mind that this is entirely *subjective, not objective*, and that we’re dealing with non-canonical fan theories which are likely never to be confirmed nor even referenced on screen. This is just for fun, it’s supposed to be a light-hearted exploration of some of the Trekkie community’s “wilder” and more “out there” ideas, and it’s just one person’s take on things, at the end of the day. So please try to keep all of that in mind as we go through these theories!

I visited a few different Star Trek social media pages and channels, collecting twenty-five theories that I thought sounded… well, to be blunt, I thought they sounded kinda silly. Some of these seem to have been written almost as parody, but others did seem to have elicited debate, and clearly have believers. But in any case, all of these made interesting (or weird) points, and I thought breaking them down could be a bit of fun as we continue our year-long celebration of the franchise’s sixtieth anniversary.

Screenshot from Star Trek: Generations (PC game) showing the Enterprise-D firing phasers.
The Enterprise-D. Bonus points if you know where this image comes from!

These theories cover all kinds of topics, and span the breadth of Star Trek’s history, from The Original Series all the way through to some of the most recent episodes of Starfleet Academy. Some fans have been, shall we say, especially *creative* with their ideas! Which is fantastic. I adore the Star Trek fan community and how passionate folks can be. As I’ve said many times here on the website: crafting a theory is a great excuse to spend a bit more time in Star Trek’s wonderful galaxy, and even though I may disagree vehemently with a theory, I love that Trekkies all over the world are so invested in this franchise.

We’re going to get into the theories now, so consider this your final content warning. This is your last chance to jump ship if you need to avoid spoilers or if you don’t want to come across some potentially controversial Star Trek opinions! The theories below are in no particular order.

Theory #1:
Dr McCoy knows that he’s a character in a TV show.

Still frame from Star Trek: The Original Series Journey to Babel showing Dr McCoy.
Leonard “Bones” McCoy.

In The Original Series, there were a handful of moments that seemed to break the fourth wall – i.e. where characters within Star Trek seemed to acknowledge the audience, or that what was unfolding on screen might not be real. Dr McCoy was a key part of one of the most (in)famous fourth wall breaks in The Original Series: the closing scene of the Season 2 episode Journey to Babel. In this scene, Dr McCoy remarks that he “finally got the last word,” after shushing Kirk and Spock – seemingly referencing other episode endings in which Kirk, Spock, or another character would say the closing line or remark on what had transpired. Furthermore, McCoy seems to say this while looking *almost* straight into the camera.

Without getting too nitpicky, I think we can debunk this one by explaining that McCoy was simply commenting on Kirk and Spock’s tendency to talk over him in-universe, rather than anything more meta! And the choice of camera angle, rather than hinting at McCoy somehow being self-aware, was merely a close-up. The Original Series did close-up shots like that all the time, and McCoy’s gaze is slightly off to one side, not straight down the lens. There’s nothing in canon to suggest that Dr McCoy is somehow self-aware of his status as a character, and anything that hints otherwise can be written off as a quirk of the show’s production or writing.

Theory #2:
The show T.J. Hooker depicts Kirk’s adventures on a holodeck.

Poster/box art for T.J. Hooker.
It’s Captain Kirk!

T.J. Hooker stars William Shatner in the lead role, and if you don’t know it, it’s a police procedural show from the ’80s. Besides Shatner’s role, Leonard Nimoy had a small role in one episode (and directed another), and James Darren (DS9′s Vic Fontaine) was a regular character. The series was in production alongside three Star Trek films – The Wrath of Khan, The Search for Spock, and The Voyage Home. But… that’s it. There are no overt references to Star Trek in T.J. Hooker, nor to T.J. Hooker anywhere in Star Trek – at least, not that I can recall.

If fans want to watch the show and make this inference… I mean, there’s nothing stopping you anymore. A few years ago, I might’ve said that the holodeck is a 24th Century creation, but Strange New Worlds has blown that theory out of the water. Holodecks clearly did exist at the time of The Wrath of Khan, and to be honest, I could see Kirk choosing to play make-believe as a cop in the ’80s. Obviously this isn’t and never will be canon… but don’t let that stop you!

Theory #3:
Borg “transwarp” is actually the mycelial network (from Discovery).

Still frame from Star Trek: Picard S1 showing the Artifact at transwarp.
A Borg Cube exiting a transwarp aperture into normal space.

I think we have enough context to fully debunk this one, right? Discovery’s mycelial network and Borg transwarp behave completely differently to one another, with the USS Discovery able to “jump” instantaneously to points across the galaxy, whereas Borg vessels enter a transwarp network and are accelerated to vast speeds. Borg transwarp is way quicker than warp speed and clearly allows for much faster transport than anything 24th or 25th Century Starfleet is capable of. But it lacks the instantaneous movement or the “jumping” effect of Discovery’s mycelial network. So I think that alone rules it out.

One thing that Star Trek’s writers usually do well is keep the intricacies of different technologies pretty vague. We know that dilithium crystals moderate the antimatter reaction in a warp core… but what that technobabble actually means, or how it all truly works, is a mystery. And you could argue that Borg transwarp is even more mysterious; just because no Borg character ever said the words “mycelial network” doesn’t mean they don’t have access to that technology. I will concede that it stands to reason that, if the mycelial network is a known phenomenon in the Star Trek galaxy, the Borg would be aware of it. But that doesn’t mean it’s how their transwarp network operates, and there are enough differences between how they appear on screen as to render this one null and void for me.

Theory #4:
Transporters beam out everyone’s bodily waste.

Star Trek art of a giant poo on a transporter pad.
Yuck.

Uh, sure… *that’s* what the Federation uses transporters for. Rather than going to the toilet, no one in the future is potty trained, and instead, transporters automatically empty everyone’s bladders and bowels every time they start to fill up. That’s why you never see a toilet aboard a starship, and why only the most oblique references are made to “waste extraction.”

But… this is just plain *silly*, isn’t it? “Waste extraction” was only ever mentioned in DS9, and only on a few occasions. There are few direct depictions of toilets in Star Trek, but there are references to them. Kirk sits on a toilet (clothed) in The Final Frontier, and Boimler says he dropped his tricorder in the toilet in Lower Decks. If we count non-canon sources, like starship blueprints, toilet facilities can be seen on a few different 23rd and 24th Century vessels, too. There are types of toilet today that don’t use water or a flushing system, and it’s conceivable that, in the future, refinements or brand-new designs could have been invented. Considering the energy cost, the number of transporters required, and the constant need to be in transporter range… I can’t see this being realistic. A fun, jokey idea? Sure. But something to take seriously? No!

Theory #5:
The USS Riker (from Starfleet Academy) is crewed entirely by Will Riker’s descendants.

(Cropped) still frame from Star Trek: Starfleet Academy S1 showing a Federation fleet.
One of these ships (probably the one on the far left) is the USS Riker.

The USS Riker has (at time of writing) appeared in one episode of Starfleet Academy – a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it cameo in Vox in Excelso. Someone online suggested that the Riker’s entire crew are the descendants of TNG’s Will Riker – famous, somewhat, for his womanising ways and romantic liaisons with a variety of different characters across the show’s seven-season run. Riker would later settle down with Deanna Troi, as we saw in Picard, and had two children – only one of whom survived to the dawn of the 25th Century.

But could Riker’s many flings and one-night stands across The Next Generation have led to more… offspring? This theory says so! And while I think it’s a cute joke within the fandom at the expense of how Riker was sometimes written, I don’t think it has an ounce of actual merit. Firstly, we don’t even know for sure that the USS Riker is named for *William* Riker and not some hypothetical other character. Riker’s father, Kyle, also worked for the Federation, the transporter clone known as Thomas may have survived the Dominion War, and Riker’s daughter may also have gone on to achieve something significant, just to give three examples of characters we know to exist. So… this cameo was cute, and appreciated by this old TNG fan. But the idea of a ship crewed entirely by the descendants of Riker’s various liaisons? Silly!

Theory #6:
Discord (from My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic) is actually Q.

Still frame from My Little Pony: FiM S6 showing Discord.
Discord.

We could’ve done an entire article on *just* theories involving crossovers with other franchises, I guess! But this one really does make me smile, because it’s just so silly. I concede that Q and Discord have some pretty obvious similarities: their personalities, their penchant for trickery, and the fact that they’re both ancient beings who form a bond with a mortal protagonist. But c’mon, guys… these are two completely different franchises with very little in common, totally different target audiences, and which are owned by two competing corporations.

John de Lancie portrays both characters, which is where this idea seems to have originated, but that’s really as far as it can go. The same voice actor has found himself somewhat typecast into playing a role which may have been directly inspired by his earlier character. That’s it. Q can’t exist in a franchise where… Q doesn’t exist. It’s a fun head-canon, I guess, if you’re a fan of both universes. But there’s no way it can be anything more than that.

Theory #7:
Benny Russell is real, and Gene Roddenberry stole Star Trek from him.

Still frame from Star Trek: DS9 showing Sisko seeing Benny Russell.
Sisko sees a reflection of Benny Russell.

There are a few variants of this theory. Some posit that, in-universe, the episode Far Beyond the Stars suggests that Star Trek as a whole exists as a fictional creation. I don’t agree with that at all (it’s always seemed logical, to me, that Benny Russell is a vision from the Prophets and nothing more), but I don’t, like, viscerally *object* to fans subscribing to that idea or exploring it. But I have seen fans propose – I *hope* entirely in jest – that there was a real Benny Russell once upon a time, and Gene Roddenberry either got the idea for Star Trek from him… or stole it.

If this is a total joke, which I believe it is, then… I mean, sure. Humour is subjective, and just because I don’t personally find it all that funny… I’m not the joke police. I can’t imagine any Star Trek fan taking this idea seriously, though, because it implies that not only did Gene Roddenberry steal these stories and this world-building, but then the DS9 writers – who must’ve known or been in on it – created a fictionalised version of Benny Russell as a character in their show… for… reasons? As a “confession?” A fun joke, maybe, but not something to take seriously.

Theory #8:
Saavik and/or Tuvok are transgender (because of Vulcan naming customs).

Saavik and Tuvok (from Star Trek) on a rainbow background.
Saavik and Tuvok.

In The Original Series, every named Vulcan we met had a name beginning with S if they were male or T if they were female. But then, in The Wrath of Khan, we met Saavik – the first female Vulcan whose name begins with an S. Cue the fan theories! In short, this theory posits that, because of Vulcan naming conventions that were established in TOS, Saavik and Tuvok “must” be transgender. Saavik would be a trans woman and Tuvok a trans man.

Setting aside the silly premise for a moment, let’s think about this. There are some transgender folks who keep their birth name after transitioning, but it’s more common in the trans community to choose a name more befitting of one’s true gender. For Saavik and Tuvok to keep their deadnames wouldn’t make a lot of sense. Then there’s the fact that there’s absolutely no trans storytelling for either character… at all. In a way, you might say that’s great – that the Federation just accepts everyone and doesn’t make a big deal of it. But for a writer to introduce a character who is intended to be trans and then make no effort to tell a single trans or trans-adjacent story with them? And for fans to have to infer, years after the stories were first told, that these characters are meant to be trans? We’re hitting “Harry Potter” levels of fake inclusivity. If you find something relatable in Tuvok or Saavik as a trans person, I don’t wanna take that away from you. But it’s not how I read either character, and there are other explanations for their names.

Theory #9:
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier didn’t happen; it’s all just Kirk’s bad dream.

Three posters for Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.
Did it really happen?

Have you ever taken a creative writing class? One of the first things the teacher warns you about is the importance of avoiding tired narrative clichés… like “but it was all just a dream.” And to me, that’s how this fan theory comes across. I get that not everyone likes The Final Frontier; I personally rank it as one of the lesser Star Trek films, too. But just because it isn’t popular… that doesn’t mean its events can be scrubbed from canon altogether. Not to mention that the film does genuinely have redeeming features and moments of characterisation (like Kirk, Spock, and McCoy camping) that I wouldn’t want to lose.

This theory hinges on Kirk’s starring role, and the fact that some of his worst fears seem to come true. Sybok’s presence (and Spock never having mentioned him) seems to threaten their special bond. His ship is stolen from him. Members of his own crew turn against him. And there are discrepancies, like the number of decks the Enterprise-A seems to have, or the “Galaxy-class” feel to the ship (caused by recycling sets from The Next Generation). But to me, this one feels like wishful thinking at best… or clutching at the tiniest of straws at worst.

Theory #10:
Nick Locarno and Tom Paris are the same person.

Promo photo for Star Trek: Voyager showing Tom Paris.
Tom Paris… or should that be Nick Locarno?

I think it’s safe to say that Lower Decks has debunked this one (though I still need to get caught up on that show!) But before Locarno made a return to Star Trek, fans speculated that “Nick Locarno” was actually a pseudonym adopted by Tom Paris prior to enrolling in Starfleet Academy. The theory went that Paris wanted to keep his connection to his father (who is a senior officer) a secret – either to be judged on his own merits, or for some other reason.

There are similarities between Locarno and Paris, besides the obvious point that both characters were played by Robert Duncan McNeill. They’re both able pilots, they both have a cocky or arrogant streak, and both have an ambivalent relationship with the Federation and its rules. On the production side of things, it’s long been rumoured that Voyager’s creators wanted to use Nick Locarno, but were concerned about having to pay royalties to the writer of The Next Generation episode in which he originated, so a new, very similar character was created. A photo of McNeill in his role as Locarno can be briefly seen in Voyager, representing a younger Tom Paris in his father’s office. So there’s merit to this in theory… but Lower Decks has completely debunked it by now. And if it were true, I’d have expected Paris to have said so, or for it to have been noted by Janeway early on in the series. The “Locarno” persona might’ve worked for a while, but the scandal would surely have blown his cover, and his identity would be common knowledge by the time of Voyager – at least among senior officers.

Theory #11:
Section 31 isn’t a real Federation organisation – it’s a criminal syndicate pretending to be one.

Still frame from Star Trek: Section 31 showing four main characters.
Section 31: Federation black-ops division or crime syndicate?

The way Section 31 has been depicted in Star Trek has fluctuated a lot. There’s been the clandestine, shadowy agency we encountered in DS9 and later in Enterprise. Then there’s the out-in-the-open branch of Starfleet Intelligence from Discovery. And finally, the “rag-tag gang of misfits” from the TV movie. But one thing that has remained consistent in Section 31 is that the people involved are all Federation die-hards doing things they believe to be in the Federation’s best interests… even as they answer to no one and wield almost unfathomable power.

I can see a world in which a criminal syndicate would side with Starfleet to help prevent, say, the Federation’s total conquest by the Dominion. Or in which Starfleet would make deals with shady crime lords to acquire some kind of biological weapon when faced with an existential crisis. And I can even see a world where a clever criminal would *claim* to be from a government agency or black-ops division as a tactic. But do any of those things apply to Section 31? I would argue no. The closest Section 31 has come to that kind of presentation came in the TV movie, but even then, it was clear that Starfleet was involved – albeit that the mission was still off-the-record. So this idea is simply debunked by what we’ve seen on screen – as fun as it might seem.

Theory #12:
Jean-Luc Picard is Wesley Crusher’s biological father (and he treats him the way he does out of a sense of guilt or obligation).

Still frame from Star Trek: TNG S1, showing Picard, Dr Crusher, and Wesley.
Picard with Wesley on the bridge of the Enterprise-D.

Sometimes you come across a theory – even one that’s been doing the rounds for years – and you just feel… gobsmacked. I simply don’t read Picard and Wesley’s relationship in this way, and any paternal feelings Picard has for the younger Crusher is pretty clearly explained within the context of the show as stemming from his close friendships with Jack and Beverly. Picard does come to appreciate Wesley’s talents, even giving him a role on the bridge of his ship… but not out of any kind of obligation or guilt – it’s in recognition of Wesley’s skills.

I will admit that Picard’s third season complicated my rebuttal somewhat, as we learned that Picard and Dr Crusher did have a child together, and that Dr Crusher kept this a secret. If she did it once, could she have done it years earlier? It could have been an interesting plotline in The Next Generation or even in Picard, if it had been handled well, but despite having some merit in theory, nothing in the show itself leads us to that conclusion. And such a complex story would require a very sensitive and well-written episode or arc, and I’m not sure it would’ve been handled well or been well-received by a large portion of the fanbase. So this one… it can be your head-canon, if you like, but it goes no further in my opinion!

Theory #13:
The Progenitors evolved into the Founders.

Still frame from Star Trek TNG showing an ancient alien/Progenitor.
A Progenitor in The Next Generation.

I don’t know if this theory came about because the same actress (Salome Jens) played both the ancient alien hologram in The Chase and the Female Changeling on DS9, but I suspect that has something to do with it! In any case, this theory posits that the “Progenitors,” as Discovery would later dub them, didn’t go extinct or disappear from the galaxy, but instead evolved to become the Founders of the Dominion. And on the surface, it doesn’t seem totally impossible. The Founders claim to have once been fully solid. And the Founders are capable of genetically engineering entire races. But if the Founders *were* descendants of the ancient aliens who seeded the entire galaxy with life… you’d think they might’ve mentioned it.

For me, that’s where this theory falls down. Something so monumental to who the Founders are – and most Founders seem to be almost ageless – would surely be preserved knowledge, handed down through the millions of years of their existence. Yet the Founders not only don’t bring this up, but they’re distrustful of any non-shapeshifters to the point of paranoia – not something you’d expect to see in the grandparents of the galaxy’s races. I don’t really like the way the Progenitors’ storyline went or what it says about the Star Trek galaxy, and perhaps that’s my own bias showing through when I rule out this theory. But I do believe that something so important would be known to the Founders, and it would be something they’d have at least tried to communicate in their various dealings with “solids.” Not to mention that, for a race that would need to be billions of years old… it’s weird that their technology got to a 24th Century level and apparently stayed there.

Theory #14:
Every film and episode that premiered after First Contact takes place in an alternate reality, due to the changes made to the timeline.

Still frame from Star Trek: First Contact showing the launch of the Phoenix.
The launch of the Phoenix.

Time travel is a pain in the arse, isn’t it? Time-loops, paradoxes… all of that. It’s very difficult to write a compelling time travel story and pull it off flawlessly – even more so in a long-running franchise with a timeline that has to be basically consistent from one episode to the next. This theory posits that the changes Picard and co. made in the 21st Century were so serious that the Star Trek franchise can essentially be divided into two alternate realities: pre- and post-First Contact stories.

I don’t know how to word this without using terms like “destiny” or “fate,” but I think the way we’re meant to read the events of First Contact is that the interventions by the Borg and Enterprise-E were always “meant” to happen; i.e. they happen in every timeline. That’s why there was no Department of Temporal Investigations inquiry, and no ramifications for Picard for meddling in the timeline. We could also ask why First Contact should be the divide – why not other time travel stories, like The City on the Edge of Forever, Assignment: Earth, Past Tense, or even Endgame. All of these made major changes to the timeline that, by the same logic this theory uses, could create an alternate reality.

Theory #15:
Discovery Seasons 3-5 didn’t happen – and what we saw are Pike’s imaginings during his convalescence on Talos IV.

Still frame from Star Trek: Discovery showing Saru, Tilly, and Burnham.
Tilly, Saru, and Burnham in the 32nd Century.

I don’t see how you could subscribe to this theory without also writing off Starfleet Academy, Section 31, and probably Strange New Worlds, too, as they’re all connected. But setting that aside… this theory reminds me more than a little of the Star Wars so-called “theory” that one or more of the sequel trilogy films is “about to be removed from canon!!1!” In short, it feels like a bit of a cope from folks who don’t like Discovery, the 32nd Century setting, and in particular, the Burn.

My personal view, by the way, is that – somehow – a future Star Trek production should find a way to gently push Discovery’s 32nd Century out of the prime timeline, partially because of how depressing the Burn is as a future destination, but also because of how it turns any potential future film or TV show into a de facto prequel to Discovery. But that isn’t the issue here: this theory posits that nothing we saw on screen in Discovery’s 32nd Century actually happened to begin with. That simply isn’t true; Discovery, Strange New Worlds, Section 31, and Starfleet Academy all coexist in the prime timeline. You can choose to disregard different parts of Star Trek from your personal head-canon; fans have been doing that for decades. Or you can choose not to tune in to any new shows set in that era. That’s totally okay. But this theory can be nothing more than head-canon, and a heavy hit of copium for folks who hate where Discovery went.

Theory #16:
Dr Zimmerman used the Professor Moriarty hologram when creating the EMH.

Still frame from Star Trek: Voyager showing Dr Zimmerman.
Dr Lewis Zimmerman.

In the episode Elementary, Dear Data, we saw the creation of a sentient, self-aware hologram: Professor Moriarty, Sherlock Holmes’ nemesis. Moriarty would later be re-activated and trapped in a holographic world, before apparently being transferred to Section 31’s Daystrom Station by the early 25th Century. As one of the first truly sentient holograms, it’s not impossible to think Starfleet would’ve wanted to study Moriarty, figuring out how a simple miscommunication with the Enterprise-D’s computer could lead to such an entity coming to exist.

This theory goes a lot further, though, suggesting that Dr Zimmerman – the creator of the EMH programme – used Moriarty in some way, either as a “template” or just to further his own research. And while nothing on-screen explicitly contradicts this idea, it’s just not something I think makes a ton of sense. Zimmerman is presented as egotistical and selfish, so the idea that he’d rely on someone else’s work instead of developing his own holograms doesn’t make a lot of sense. And it’s strongly implied in DS9 and Voyager that the EMH Mark I (i.e. the Doctor) had a long and difficult creation process, with some of Zimmerman’s more basic holograms coming first. So while the idea of Starfleet researching Moriarty makes sense, I don’t think Zimmerman being involved really does.

Theory #17:
Enterprise’s mysterious “Humanoid Figure” is Archer from the future, and he’s trying to sabotage his own earlier missions. For some reason.

Still frame from Star Trek: Enterprise showing Archer and the Humanoid Figure.
Archer meeting… himself?

This theory has the benefit of having been discussed by some of the original writers of Enterprise – with a suggestion that this was even a seriously-considered plot point for what would’ve been Season 5. But as we said above: time travel, time-loops, and paradoxes are really difficult to get right, and the idea of an older, jaded Archer somehow deciding that he wants to sabotage his own earlier mission and his own life… such a story would be difficult to write in a way that made sense, and it would be a challenge to pull it off successfully.

I’ve always interpreted the “Humanoid Figure” as simply being one of the leaders of a faction from the Temporal Cold War/Temporal Wars, though to be honest, I try not to think too hard about this element of Enterprise. Time travel stories just aren’t my favourites in Star Trek, and a significant portion of Enterprise was taken up by these kinds of plotlines. If the “Humanoid Figure” was meant to be Archer – which he wasn’t, at least not originally, as no identity was built into the character at first – it raises too many questions, and would realistically have needed a multi-episode arc. Given what we know of Archer’s future – his captaincy of the NX-01 and his later role in the founding and leadership of the Federation – this villainous turn (and his apparent acquiring of time travel tech) doesn’t make sense, and I struggle to see how a story could be written to take Archer from the textbook definition of a Starfleet captain to a man who tries (and fails) to sabotage… himself.

Theory #18:
We (the audience) are living in the timeline that ultimately becomes the Mirror Universe.

Still frame from Star Trek: Discovery S3 showing Terrans on the bridge.
Soldiers of the Terran Empire.

Do you ever read something and just think to yourself, “god, you were *so close* to understanding the point… but then you blew it?” The Mirror Universe is *intended* to be uncomfortably close to reality – any sci-fi dystopia is! That’s the point of the genre, and Star Trek’s Mirror Universe is meant to be a mirror (get it?) of our current society’s darkest impulses, moral failings, and inclination towards autocracy. That’s the entire point! It’s Star Trek showing us a dark reflection of ourselves to make us pause and think.

If you see elements of the Mirror Universe in today’s world, that isn’t because we’re in some dark timeline that Star Trek predicted… it’s because the stories were deliberately written that way to show us some of our own failings and societal problems. The point isn’t to fall into depression and pessimism, to say that we’re on a dark path and there’s nothing we can do but wait for the Terran Empire to emerge. We’re meant to look at these stories and say, “let’s do something about that. Let’s make changes for the better.” The Mirror Universe, with its pantomime-level overacting and one-dimensional baddies, has never been my cup of tea, and as a metaphor I think it’s almost too basic and too unserious. But in a way, that’s part of how it works: it’s storytelling by fable. The point was never that we’re locked into a dark path to the “bad outcome,” the point is that we have these dark impulses, but we can overcome them. Bad things can happen, and bad leaders can rise to power – but we can stop them.

Theory #19:
The Genesis Device and replicators are the same technology.

Still from Star Trek III showing the Genesis Planet.
The Genesis Planet.

This one made me smile. In a way, I like the idea of Starfleet looking at the Genesis Project and saying, “yeah, let’s not use it to terraform planets, let’s use it to make bowls of tomato soup.” It’s just kind of small-scale and silly. And it’s true that, out here in the real world, technological innovation often comes from unexpected places. An attempt to create a high-strength adhesive famously led to the weak glue used for post-it notes, for instance!

Star Trek works best when its technologies are deliberately kept vague. That allows for maximum wiggle-room when telling a story, and it also allows for head-canon like this to exist. I guess you could say that, based on what we know of both the Genesis Device and replicators, they both use subatomic particles to change one form of matter into another. But does that mean that one was developed from the other, or that Starfleet shut down Project Genesis only to use the same technology in a totally different way? I don’t see it.

Theory #20:
The entire Soong family are clones – which is why they all look the same.

Composite image of various Soong characters from Star Trek.
A family portrait…

This theory exists for one reason and one reason alone: every member of the Soong family that we’ve met is played by the same actor! Brent Spiner took on the role of Data’s creator in The Next Generation, and this was later expanded in Enterprise and Picard to include new ancestors and descendants of the Soong family. They all look the same because they’re all Brent Spiner. But could there be more to it than that?

Adam Soong, the earliest-known Soong ancestor, was interested in genetic engineering, so could he have cloned himself in the mid-21st Century, sometime after the events of Picard’s second season? I mean, it’s not *impossible*, I suppose. But we know in the prime timeline that genetic engineering has been outlawed, so the practice can’t have continued through the generations all the way to Altan Soong in the late 24th Century, surely.

Theory #21:
Worf has an incorrect (or incomplete) idea of what it means to be a Klingon, because he only learned about his culture from Federation books.

Promo photo for Star Yrek: Picard S3 showing Worf.
Worf.

Worf is a Klingon… but he was raised from a young age by humans. That’s a core part of his character background, and having lived away from his homeworld and his people, Worf can feel torn between his loyalties to Starfleet and to the Klingons. But does Worf truly know what being a Klingon means, having only learned about his culture from books? Some fans seem to think he doesn’t, arguing that it explains why Worf seems to lack the famous Klingon sense of humour, being very dour and serious almost all of the time. Others have even suggested that Worf might have a form of “Klingon autism.”

There is the kernel of an interesting idea here, and I think it could’ve been fun to put Worf into a Klingon story as a “fish out of water,” or better, as someone who *thinks* they know everything… until they’re confronted by people who’ve been immersed in that culture from day one. But Star Trek never went down that route, and there are other examples of stoic Klingons who share some of Worf’s traits. It’s an interesting theory, in some ways, but we’ve spent so much time with Worf over the years, and he’s had so many encounters with a huge number of Klingons, that if this theory were even close to true… we’d have seen something more concrete.

Theory #22:
Romulans are the “true” Vulcans, and Vulcans are the ones who left.

Still frame from Star Trek: Strange New Worlds showing a Romulan commander.
A 23rd Century Romulan.

This just flat-out isn’t true. It’s established multiple times in Star Trek that the Romulans were the ones who left their homeworld behind after rejecting the Vulcans’ moves to embrace logic and purge their emotions. Now, if this theory had said that Romulan culture is the original Vulcan culture, I guess we could have more of a conversation, because there’s a way to read the Romulan-Vulcan split that would say the Romulans preserved a pre-Surak, pre-logic culture that the Vulcans may have possessed. But that’s never been confirmed on screen.

What I think would be a way more interesting theory is this: the Vulcans have *always* known the Romulans’ true identity, but chose not to share that with Earth and humanity, perhaps out of a sense of shame or fear. I think there’s a great case to be made that the Vulcans either kept track of the Romulans or else were able to scan their bio-signs, analyse their language, or something after re-encountering them. It’s always seemed likely to me that Vulcan leadership, at least, was aware of their shared history – even if individuals like Spock may not have been. But this idea that the Vulcans are the offshoot… it just doesn’t line up with what we’ve seen on screen in many different stories.

Theory #23:
There is no “Q Continuum;” there’s only one Q, and after billions of years of isolation and loneliness, he’s developed some kind of multiple personality disorder.

Still frame from Star Trek Picard S2 showing Q.
Q in Star Trek: Picard.

Again, we have a theory that directly contradicts things we’ve seen on screen. As far back as The Next Generation, Q was confirmed to be just one member of a species, and we even met other Q in the show. I guess this theory would also propose that all of those individuals were the same Q, but that doesn’t make a lot of sense, does it? Nor does the idea of a Q civil war, as seen in Voyager, or one member of the Continuum committing suicide. If we’d only met Q a few times, and never seen other members of his race, I’d at least have to concede that this one was plausible. But having met dozens of other Q and literally visited the Continuum itself… I think there’s more than enough evidence to dump this one in the “debunked” pile.

There are mysteries associated with Q, though – not least what became of the familiar John de Lancie character after his apparent “death” in Picard’s second season. I just don’t see this as being a plausible theory, or even something mysterious at all. The Q Continuum exists, other Q exist, and trying to overwrite that would mean dozens of stories would be adversely affected. It’s an interesting thought, for sure, but one that just feels thoroughly debunked by what we see on screen.

Theory #24:
The species that abandoned Armus were the Founders.

Still frame from Star Trek: TNG S1 showing Armus.
Armus.

This theory obviously comes from Armus and the Founders both existing in a liquid state, and I can see why it might seem plausible on the surface. But there are two pretty big issues which, in my view, render it null and void. Firstly, Armus lives in the Alpha (or Beta) Quadrant, whereas the Founders and Dominion are native to the Gamma Quadrant. Without access to the Wormhole (which the Founders canonically did not know about until they met the Federation), that’s a decades- or centuries-long journey.

Secondly, and perhaps most importantly, if the point of creating and abandoning Armus was for the Founders to shed their “skin of evil,” and to leave all of their negative traits and qualities behind… it didn’t exactly work, did it? The Founders are paranoid, hateful, and view themselves as superior to most other forms of life. So… how is Armus alone the sum total of all of their negative qualities? Between that and the distances involved, I have to say that I don’t find this one to be plausible. The fact that both the Founders and Armus are liquid doesn’t do enough to outweigh that.

Theory #25:
Apparent discrepancies between The Original Series and the rest of Star Trek are because TOS is a holonovel being viewed from the 24th Century.

Promo image of Kirk, Spock, and McCoy from Star Trek.
Kirk, Spock, and Dr McCoy.

I admire the lengths some fans are willing to go to in order to smooth out inconsistencies in Star Trek’s canon. A similar theory states that These Are The Voyages didn’t happen as shown, because it was an exaggerated or misremembered holo-programme. But in this case… I mean, firstly there’s just no evidence at all that a single part of TOS is a holo-programme. Then there are episodes like Trials and Tribble-ations, which very clearly show that TOS and the 24th Century share a setting. And while there can be inconsistencies within Star Trek’s canon, I’m not even convinced at this point that the line should be drawn between TOS and the rest of the franchise. Why not between, say, Voyager’s finale and everything that came after?

This will sound unsatisfying, especially for folks who love to theorise – and I get that, believe me. But the plain and simple fact is that these discrepancies and inconsistencies exist because Star Trek is a long-running franchise, and these are stories. Sometimes, a new story seems to overwrite or retcon something, or makes a change that’s inconsistent with what came before. While I have argued in the past that internal consistency is important, I’m also not a stickler for the tiniest minutiae of canon, and I believe there’s enough wiggle-room in Star Trek for all of the various parts of its universe to coexist in a single setting.

So that’s it… for now!

Still frame from Star Trek IV showing the sun on the Bounty viewscreen.
We’re flying too close to the sun…

I hope this has been fun. Twenty-five theories was a lot, but at the same time… I feel there’s more to this idea. So if your favourite bad theory didn’t make the cut, stay tuned. I may revisit this concept in the future, if I can find more fan theories to pick on.

As I said at the beginning, this was meant to be a bit of fun, and not something to get too wound up or upset over. While I don’t personally subscribe to any of these theories – for reasons I’ve tried to explain – I found all of them to be interesting, and I don’t want to dent anyone’s passion for Star Trek. I’m a theory-crafter myself, so I respect and appreciate other folks putting their theories out there to be discussed.

HD still frame from the documentary What We Left Behind showing a close-up of DS9.
It’s DS9!

I’ve got a few more ideas for articles and columns as Star Trek’s huge sixtieth anniversary year rolls on. How many TV shows and franchises can say they’ve made it this far, eh? Not many, that’s for sure! It’s a testament to how amazing this franchise is that so many years later, people like us are still discussing and debating every aspect of Star Trek, and still enjoy getting lost in this fantastic setting.

So please stick around throughout 2026 for more pieces celebrating all things Star Trek! Next month, I daresay I’ll be writing a review of Starfleet Academy’s first season. And I’m still hopeful we’ll see Strange New Worlds before the year is out. And there are other theories, discussions, and episode re-watches to get into, too.

Thanks for tuning in this time… and Live Long and Prosper, friends!


The Star Trek franchise – including most films and TV series discussed above – can be streamed now on Paramount+ in countries and territories where the platform is available. Many are also available on DVD and/or Blu-ray. The Star Trek franchise is the copyright of Skydance-Paramount. This article contains the thoughts and opinions of one person only and is not intended to cause any offence.

Star Trek: The Borg Teasing Theory

Spoiler Warning: Beware of spoilers for the following Star Trek productions: The Next Generation Seasons 1-3, Voyager Seasons 4-7, First Contact, Enterprise Season 2, Prodigy Season 1, and Picard Seasons 1-3.

Let’s talk about everyone’s favourite Star Trek villain: the Borg Collective!

Okay, maybe that’s a tiny bit of an exaggeration! But the Borg are certainly up there as one of the Star Trek franchise’s most iconic and frightening villainous factions, and there’s no shortage of theories and speculation in the Star Trek fan community about how the Borg operate and what their methods and overall goals are. I thought we could touch on one aspect of that today.

I briefly outlined what I’m calling the “Borg Teasing Theory” in a post here on the website a couple of days ago. That piece was all about some of my personal head canon explanations of unseen, unexplained, contradictory, or vague things from across the Star Trek franchise – but I thought this particular theory warranted its own full article! Click or tap here to check out the rest of my head canon, if you’re interested in my take on the likes of warp factors and cloaking devices.

The Borg are coming!

So what’s the tl;dr of this theory? In brief: the two major Borg attacks on Earth during The Next Generation era – as depicted in The Best of Both Worlds and First Contact – weren’t 100% serious attempts to assimilate the entire planet or the Federation. They were, in a word, teases. The Borg Collective hoped to push Starfleet and humanity to develop new weapons, shields, scanners, and medical technology in the years after their incursions – which they would then be able to assimilate when they launched a full-scale invasion at some point in the future. In short: the attacks were not attempts at total conquest and were not intended to fully succeed at assimilating Earth.

We’ll get into detail in just a second, but before we go any further, I have a couple of important caveats. Firstly, all of this is the entirely subjective take of just one old Trekkie. If you hate this theory, think I’ve got it completely wrong, or feel I’ve misunderstood some key part of Star Trek that would invalidate it… that’s okay. None of this is canon or likely to ever be confirmed on screen anyway! Secondly, I’m not claiming to be the sole inventor of this theory. Other Trekkies may very well have come up with similar ideas independently, and I’m not taking credit for anyone else’s work or theories.

A Borg drone.

Finally, a word about fan theories. I like writing and I like Star Trek, so writing about Star Trek is a fun way for me to spend a little more time in this world. But no fan theory – not even one that seems totally plausible – is worth getting upset or worked up over. As I said a moment ago, none of this is canon and may very well be totally debunked in the future. Given the status of the Borg Collective after Picard Season 3 (and Paramount’s shaky finances), we may never get another Borg story anyway. But this is supposed to be a fun exploration of a theory I’ve had kicking around in my mind for decades, not something to take too seriously.

Phew, that was a lot! But with the caveats out of the way, it’s time to jump into the theory!

Let’s start by explaining what this “tease” is. As I outlined briefly above, I believe that the Borg were not fully serious or committed in their two attacks on Earth. My evidence for this is simple: on both occasions, the Borg sent only one single ship to Earth. A Borg cube can contain, depending on which episode we use as a source, up to 100,000 drones. Given the size of Starfleet, the number of ships at the Federation’s disposal, and even just the population of Earth itself (which could be somewhere in the region of 9-10 billion in the 24th Century) one ship and 100,000 drones doesn’t seem like a large enough invasion force.

A Borg cube hovering over Earth…

Assuming the Borg cube from either Wolf-359 or the Battle of Sector 001 managed to defeat Starfleet’s armada and Earth’s planetary defences, and was able to successfully transport down all of its drones, the logistics of assimilating such a large population don’t track. If Earth’s population is 10 billion and there are 100,000 Borg, that’s a ratio of 100,000-to-one – meaning each Borg drone would need to have a hand in the assimilation of 100,000 humans. With only a single ship, any ground invasion would be vulnerable to Starfleet regrouping and returning; the destruction of the cube would cut off Borg forces on the ground.

Despite jokes I’ve made before about Earth being undefended, it’s still the headquarters of the Federation, with Starfleet Academy and Starfleet HQ on the planet, too. There are going to be thousands of armed Starfleet security personnel, Federation HQ guards, Section 31 operatives, and others on the planet. Even if resistance was scattered at first, and the Borg were able to shut down Starfleet communications, resistance on Earth would be ferocious. To jump over to a different franchise for a point of comparison: look at the Reaper war in the Mass Effect series. The Reaper invasion of Earth was hampered at every turn by resistance fighters from all walks of life, led by the remnants of the Alliance military. There’s no reason to think a Borg attack on Earth wouldn’t lead to a similar resistance movement springing up, with armed civilians led by Starfleet personnel.

Even under extreme pressure, Starfleet tactical personnel would mount a significant resistance to any Borg invasion of Earth.

With the Borg preoccupied with a war of attrition on the ground, their sole vessel in space would be vulnerable. The cube might’ve been able to beat off Starfleet’s initial armada, but that was a hastily thrown together gaggle of whatever ships were on hand when the Federation realised what was coming. Ships were brought out of mothballs and unqualified officers were tapped to take command. With Starfleet being better-prepared and having time to regroup – while also calling on allies like the Klingons – round two against the cube would go a lot better!

So even if the initial attack was successful and the Borg managed to defeat a defence force and land drones on Earth, it would be a matter of time – days or perhaps a couple of weeks – before Starfleet would be back with a much larger fleet. The Borg cube may have beaten the Federation’s hastily-arranged defence ships, but the full might of Starfleet, combined with Klingons and other allies and backed up by tactical data gained from the earlier battle, would – in my opinion – have a strong chance of destroying the Borg’s only vessel in the system. After that, it’s just a case of landing as many troops with modulated phasers (and Klingon bat’leths) and mopping up the remaining drones.

Klingons wielding bat’leths could cut through a Borg army!

To me, this is the most likely outcome for both the Battle of Wolf-359 and the Battle of Sector 001. And the Borg, having studied humanity and the Alpha Quadrant, are undoubtedly aware of this. One ship, even maxed out with as many drones as possible, simply can’t assimilate Earth on its own – let alone expand the fight to the rest of the Federation and its allies.

But why do I think the Borg Collective has the resources to launch a bigger attack? Simple: take a look at the Collective in its Delta Quadrant home in Voyager. The Borg’s Unicomplex alone contained more than a trillion drones, with the entire Collective perhaps comprising quadrillions of Borg. There may be tens or hundreds of thousands of Borg cubes – not to mention other Borg outposts, space structures, and assimilated planets. The sheer scale of the Borg Collective is what makes it so powerful, so frightening, and such a dangerous opponent. So why would the Borg choose to attack Earth in such a small-scale way?

The destruction of the Borg cube in First Contact. Did the Borg plan for this outcome?

Given how powerful a single cube could be, a fleet of perhaps a dozen would make light work of anything Starfleet and its allies could muster. And with two million drones instead of just 100,000, the Borg’s ground offensive would be much quicker and would be more easily able to overcome any resistance. The assimilation of Earth could proceed much more smoothly – with only a minimal amount of extra investment from the Collective. For a faction with 10,000 ships, using twelve on this one task is barely a drop in the ocean. We’ve seen the Borg assimilate other Delta Quadrant races, like Arturis’ species from the episode Hope and Fear, using “overwhelming force.” One single cube is not, I would argue, the kind of overwhelming force needed to conquer Earth and the Federation.

So to be clear: this part of the theory states that the Borg have the means to easily overpower and outgun the Federation and its allies and achieve the task of assimilating Earth. They have no reason not to go all-in and fully commit to this invasion; they aren’t worried about loss of life, there’s no Borg economy to be damaged by building extra ships, and if their target is to fully conquer Earth and the Federation, they could do so with ease. But they don’t do that. Instead, on two separate occasions they’ve sent a single cube. Why?

The Enterprise-D battling a Borg vessel.

To answer that, we first have to consider what the Borg are and how they operate. The Borg are a hive mind, operating as one. They have assimilated – according to their own sources – at least 10,000 species across the thousands of centuries that they’ve existed. But because they’re one hive mind, they lack creativity. They lack inventiveness – and with that, we can infer that they don’t have the ability to create brand-new technologies any more.

The hive mind is adaptable, and having been introduced to something – say, a particular phaser modulation – the Borg can adapt. Adaptations are rolled out at transwarp speeds across the entire Collective, meaning that any Borg encountering that specific phaser modulation in future will be protected. But adapting to something isn’t the same as inventing – and this lack of creativity and inventiveness could be a problem for the Collective.

After being exposed to a new technology or weapon, the Borg can adapt.

So how does the Collective acquire new technology, then? If they don’t develop things themselves they must get them from somewhere, right? I mean, the Borg are more technologically advanced than the Federation and that didn’t happen by accident! The answer is simple: the Borg acquire everything from information to technology through assimilation.

This was their weakness when confronted with Species 8472. They couldn’t assimilate a single member of the species or one of their ships, so they were left blind and helpless. And this, I would posit, is the fundamental reason why they “tease” certain species – like humanity. We probably aren’t a unique case; I believe this is a tactic that the Borg will have deployed on countless other occasions against similarly creative and adaptable species. But it’s a tactic that the Collective knows can work to its advantage.

The Borg were unable to assimilate any member of Species 8472 or their technology – rendering them blind and ineffective against their attacks.

The objective is simple: by making a relatively small demonstration of their power, the Borg incite fear in their targets. This fear leads to huge investments in weapons, shields, starships, and the like… all of which the Borg want. On one hand, the Borg want to see if their target can find a weakness in the Collective and its technology so they can prevent anyone else from exploiting it in the future – basically rolling out a Collective-wide “patch” to fix any weaknesses or vulnerabilities that the target species may have identified. And on the other hand, the Borg want any species they target to have achieved their full potential – giving the Collective the best, newest technologies that the target could create. This is how the Borg – at least in my opinion – are able to acquire new technologies.

And this is what they’re doing to Earth, humanity, and the Federation at large. By launching these attacks, the Borg are pushing the Federation and Starfleet to develop new technologies, whether that’s weapons, ships, medical supplies, transporters, shields… the list goes on. Perhaps the second incursion was intended to see how far Starfleet’s new inventions had come, or maybe it was just a second “tease” to force Starfleet to keep working and keep inventing. Either way… it worked.

A Borg drone being killed by a phaser blast.

Why would the Borg target Earth, though? It’s not like they need Earth specifically for its location or resources, and Earth isn’t even close to the Borg’s native territory. The Borg are mostly in the far-off Delta Quadrant, though they may have colonies or outposts somewhat nearer to the Federation, such as on the El-Aurian homeworld. So the question remains: why Earth? When there are so many other planets and species in between the Borg’s home territory and the Federation, why jump halfway across the galaxy for an invasion?

We already know that the Borg don’t assimilate everyone they come across. In fact, the Borg can be downright picky – opting to ignore the Kazon, for instance, as they were deemed “unworthy” of being assimilated as they’d somehow detract from the Borg concept of perfection. It stands to reason that some species may be of more interest to the Borg – even those in a faraway part of the galaxy. I think the El-Aurians are a prime example: their homeworld, while nowhere near Earth, seems not to have been on the very borders of Borg space, either. Yet the El-Aurians were targeted – perhaps for their telepathic powers, or perhaps because the Borg considered them a threat. This is a species, lest we forget, that has tangled with the Q Continuum and forced them to the negotiating table. The same basic reasoning may apply to humanity.

The Borg deliberately targeted the El-Aurians (Guinan’s people), even though they may not have been anywhere near Borg space.

Humanity has to be one of the most resilient and creative species that the Borg have ever encountered. Humans were able to track a Borg vessel and develop technologies to keep themselves hidden from the Collective while studying them – this is what Seven of Nine’s parents, the Hansens, did in the 2340s. This may have been the Borg’s first encounter with a human… and their curiosity was piqued!

Then, not long after the assimilation of the Hansens, the Borg received a strange message. Originating two centuries ago in a far-flung part of the galaxy, it told the tale of a time-traveling sphere, a planet of spacefaring people, and a climactic battle. The Borg who survived the Battle of Sector 001 had crash-landed on Earth in the past, only to be awakened by humanity in the 22nd Century. Captain Archer and his crew were able to stop them – but not before they sent a message to the Collective in the Delta Quadrant. Between the message from the past and the assimilation of the Hansens, the Borg must’ve realised how significant Earth and humanity could be for the Collective.

A small group of Borg were able to signal the Collective in the 22nd Century.

After receiving this “blast from the past” transmission, assimilating the Hansens, or both, the Borg had humanity and Earth in their sights. But rather than launch a full-scale invasion in 2350 – years before the Enterprise-D’s encounter with a cube – the Borg took a more subtle approach. Firstly, they may not have been entirely certain of Earth’s location, instead sending ships to scout the Alpha and Beta Quadrants for signs of humanity and the Federation. Then, rather than attack straight away, the Collective bided its time, launching small-scale attacks on outlying colonies along the Neutral Zone to see what would happen.

By attacking both Federation and Romulan outposts (as seen in the Season 1 finale of The Next Generation), the Borg may have hoped to trigger a conflict between the two powers – before swooping in later to attack both of them. Or, perhaps more likely, this was the Borg’s first attempt to assimilate humans en masse to see if they were worth bothering with – and picking outlying colonies makes a lot more sense than rushing to Earth straight away. The Romulans may have been collateral damage, in that case.

The Borg destroyed multiple human colonies before attacking Earth.

In any case, the Borg determined that humanity was a worthwhile target – something that was only further confirmed by their encounter with the Enterprise-D a few months later. As an aside: Q may very well have saved humanity by his intervention in Q Who! I have a longer piece on this subject – which you can find by clicking or tapping here – but here’s the short version: the Borg knew about humanity and Earth years before Starfleet knew about them. By hurling the Enterprise-D into the path of a Borg vessel, Q gave Picard and the Federation valuable insight into the Collective, forewarning them of the attacks to come.

With the Borg determined to assimilate humanity, decisions had to be made about how to do so. The hive mind, operating as one, makes such decisions at light-speed, and after confirming humanity was a suitable target for assimilation, the Borg decided to “tease” the Federation, pushing them to design new weapons, shields, starships, medical devices, and so on… all so that the Collective could assimilate it later, adding to their perfection. This is how the Borg operate, and it’s why they chose to launch small-scale attacks against Earth instead of simply arriving en masse with overwhelming force.

Original concept art of the Borg.
Image Credit: Frogland Archive/Forgotten Trek

From the Borg’s perspective, this approach is a win-win. Either their attack succeeds in full, with humanity and Earth being assimilated over a period of weeks or months, giving the Borg control of the planet and a staging-post for a larger-scale invasion of the Federation. Or it “fails” to achieve that objective, but in doing so provides the Collective with incredibly valuable tactical data on Starfleet, Earth’s defences, and so on, while also pushing the Federation to develop new technologies. The Borg want these technologies – either to “patch” vulnerabilities and weaknesses they may not be aware of or to add to their perfection.

There are real-world parallels. The Second World War led to the creation of modern-day computer technology, rocketry, and atomic power. The First World War led to huge advancements in flight, artillery, and motor vehicles. These are just a couple of examples from our own history of how war and devastation can lead to technological change. The Borg, I would argue, seek to artificially inflate the pace of technological advancement by baring their teeth and showing their target a tiny fraction of their power. In desperation, Starfleet and the Federation began working at pace to develop everything from phasers to starships – all ripe for assimilation by the Collective.

The first Borg drone ever seen in Star Trek.

So that’s the theory.

The Borg were not fully invested in assimilating Earth either in 2367 or 2373 – their only two direct attacks on Earth. These incursions had a different goal: pushing humanity and the Federation to develop new technologies that the Borg could assimilate later, when the time was right. By revealing themselves and showing Starfleet a glimpse of their power, the Borg believed their new target would, in effect, work for them, designing and building new weapons, ships, and other devices that the Collective no longer had the creativity to invent for itself.

To me, this theory made sense even as far back as when I watched First Contact in the cinema in 1996! Developments in Voyager, Enterprise, and more recently in Picard, too, have only added to this theory, expanding it and deepening my belief that the Borg really weren’t serious about conquering Earth. To them, the attacks served a different purpose. It took almost everything Starfleet had to beat the Borg, but given the sheer size and scale of the Collective, we know they had the resources to commit more ships and more drones to an attempted invasion of Earth. There has to be some reason why they didn’t send two or three cubes instead of just one – and to me at least, this idea makes the most sense and squares that circle.

Romulans and Borg as seen in the Lower Decks opening titles.

I hope this has been interesting! I doubt that this theory will ever be confirmed – and it may even be actively debunked one day, if we ever get another Borg story. Some of you might think that the Borg’s time travel in First Contact (or some other plot point from a Borg episode) already negates or invalidates this theory… and that’s okay! As I said at the beginning, this is just a fan theory or head canon, and it’s all subjective at the end of the day. I share this theory with the Star Trek fan community in that spirit.

Speaking of Borg stories… will we see another one in Star Trek anytime soon? After Picard did three separate Borg or Borg-adjacent stories in its three seasons, and with the Collective having appeared in Prodigy and Lower Decks in recent years… I think it might be a while before the Collective makes another appearance. I certainly think it should be a while; I can’t be the only one who feels a little burned out on the faction, especially after their omnipresence in Picard. If and when the Borg return, I hope it’s in a big way. I’ve been kicking around the idea of a “Borg invasion” series for a while – and that could be a really interesting way for Star Trek to go one day in the future. If a fourth Kelvin timeline film ever gets off the ground, I don’t think it’s impossible to think we could see the Borg there, too.

But unless and until any of that happens… this is my theory! I hope you enjoyed this write-up and found it interesting.


The Star Trek franchise – including most episodes and films cited above – can be streamed now on Paramount+ in countries and territories where the service is available. The Star Trek franchise is the copyright of Paramount Global. Header font/text courtesy of textstudio.com. This article contains the thoughts and opinions of one person only and is not intended to cause any offence.

Star Trek theory: Q the saviour

Spoiler Warning: There are spoilers ahead for the trailers and teasers for Star Trek: Picard Season 2. Spoilers are also present for the following Star Trek productions: The Next Generation, First Contact, Voyager, and Enterprise.

Today we’re going to take a look at Q, the immortal trickster who has tangled with Captains Picard, Sisko, and Janeway – and who will soon be returning to the Star Trek franchise! Q is an unusual character in many ways. He seems to have practically unlimited knowledge of the galaxy, and may have been alive for billions of years. Yet he has an impish, almost childish sense of humour that sees him tease and mess with Starfleet – and many other people too.

I wouldn’t call Q a “villain” in any of his appearances to date. In fact, I would argue very strongly that Q sees himself as a friend, an ally, and a guide to Captains Picard and Janeway in particular, having offered his services more than once. He’s certainly selfish – forcing Starfleet officers to undergo tests and trials of his own devising – but there’s usually more to his games than meets the eye.

Q in his judge’s robe.

On several occasions – going all the way back to his first appearance – Q has presented Starfleet with puzzles to solve. These puzzles can be dangerous, and more than once Q has gotten people killed. But even so, I wouldn’t characterise him as a typical “villain” for Captain Picard or Captain Janeway to “defeat.”

The puzzles Q has presented – especially to Captain Picard – have actually proven to be deeply satisfying, and arguably helped Picard and Starfleet grow. Recognising that life can take very different forms – as Q helped Picard to see in Encounter at Farpoint – is one such puzzle he presented. He also taught Picard how to view time in a non-linear fashion – understanding that events in the future could have a causal link to events in the past in All Good Things.

All Good Things saw Q present Picard with another puzzle to solve.

Even the teasers and trailers for the upcoming second season of Star Trek: Picard may not be all they seem. Picard says he blames Q for disrupting or changing the timeline, but I think we’ll have to see that story play out before we can assign all the blame to Q. Even if Q is responsible, the question of motivation comes up. Is it really just a game; a trick to mess with Picard? Or is there something bigger going on?

That’s one of my big Picard Season 2 theories! But I’ll save the full write-up for another day. Today we’re not looking ahead to future Star Trek, we’re going to look back at past iterations of the franchise and try to answer a deceptively simple question: did Q save the Federation?

Q will soon be returning to Star Trek…

Star Trek has made a mess of the early history of Borg-Federation contact. The Raven, from Voyager’s fourth season, told us that the Borg assimilated humans and a Federation vessel in the 2350s. Regeneration, from Enterprise Season 2, showed the Borg battling against Captain Archer and his crew – and sending a message to the Delta Quadrant that would be received in the 24th Century. So the question of how the Borg first became aware of the Federation is an open one. Did they receive a message from across the galaxy? Did they first discover humanity when they assimilated Seven of Nine and her family?

Either of these explanations could account for the Borg’s interest in the Alpha and Beta Quadrants in the mid-late 24th Century. Season 1 of The Next Generation first teased the Borg’s appearance with the episode The Neutral Zone, in which both Federation and Romulan colonies had gone missing – “carried off” the surface of their planets, as Romulan commander Tebok put it. The Borg’s responsibility for these attacks would be confirmed in The Best Of Both Worlds – though the connection is easily missed, in my opinion, as it doesn’t take up much screen time.

The Borg were responsible for the destruction of several Federation colonies in the 2360s.

Regardless, one thing is certain: the Borg knew of the Federation’s existence well before the Federation knew of theirs. They had even begun to send scouting vessels relatively close to Federation space; system J-25, where the Enterprise-D first encountered a Borg Cube, was a mere two-and-a-half years away from Federation space at high warp, placing the Borg tens of thousands of light-years away from their Delta Quadrant home.

Were the Borg actively scouting for the Federation, or was it just a coincidence that one of their vessels was operating so far away from their own space? We may never know the answer to that, but someone almost certainly does: Q.

Q was responsible for this encounter.

In brief, here’s my theory: the Borg and the Federation were already on a collision course, but the Federation didn’t know it. Whether it was because of the First ContactRegeneration time travel loop, the assimilation of the USS Raven, the attacks along the Neutral Zone, or simply the Borg’s continued exploration of the Alpha and Beta Quadrants, they had humanity and the Federation firmly in their sights long before Starfleet was aware that there was a problem.

Recognising this, and seeing potential in humanity thanks to his earlier run-ins with Captain Picard and the crew of the Enterprise-D, Q chose to intervene. He knew that if the Federation became aware of the threat the Borg posed, their ingenuity would lead to better defences and they’d be able to protect themselves, so he chose to deliberately introduce them to the Borg for that reason.

A Borg Cube hovering ominously over Earth. The Borg came very close to assimilating humanity’s homeworld.

The events of The Next Generation Season 2 episode Q Who can be reinterpreted through this new lens. Rather than Q trying to frighten Picard for the sake of it or to prove his own superiority, he was – in his own twisted way – helping Picard and the Federation. The events of Q Who led the Federation to begin serious preparations for a Borg incursion, and without that tactical readiness it seems likely that the Borg would have been able to cruise to victory during the events of The Best of Both Worlds.

This fits with how Q operates. In stories like Encounter at Farpoint, Tapestry, and All Good Things, as well as Voyager’s The Q and the Grey, Q never explains everything he knows. Instead he obfuscates, talks around the issue, and forces Starfleet figure out what’s going on for themselves. Sometimes he pushes Picard or Janeway in a certain direction to get things moving, or even devises a puzzle or test of his own, like he did in Hide and Q. But what he never does is simply communicate – he doesn’t just sit down with Picard and tell him about Farpoint Station or the anti-time problem. He pushes Picard to figure those things out for himself.

Q appeared in Season 1 of Lower Decks.

And so it is with the Borg – according to this theory. Rather than contacting Picard and explaining what he knows about the Borg and their intention of targetting Earth, he sends the Enterprise-D to a location where he knows a Borg vessel will be and allows the crew to discover the threat for themselves. He does so knowing that the consequences will be Starfleet ramping up their defences in preparation of a Borg attack.

In All Good Things, Q told Picard that the Q Continuum saw potential in humanity – the potential to one day understand more about the universe than they ever thought possible. From Q’s point of view, perhaps he believed that seeing the Federation attacked and humanity assimilated would be a net loss to the galaxy because that potential would never be realised.

Q has his reasons for “testing” Picard and humanity – even if he chooses not to explain himself.

Q’s motivation for putting Picard and humanity “on trial” seems to be connected to this. In Encounter at Farpoint he accused humanity of being “a dangerous, savage, child race.” Yet even by the end of the episode, Q appeared to be impressed rather than disappointed that Picard and the crew could solve his puzzle. Rather than believing humanity to be dangerous and savage, as he asserted, Q almost certainly sees humanity as something more than that – and thus would feel humanity’s assimilation by the Borg would be a loss. His desire to avoid that fate could have motivated him in Q Who.

All of this could tie into Picard Season 2. Q may feel that Picard and the Federation are ungrateful for his “assistance” over the years, and he could cite the events of Q Who as one example of how his intervention saved the Federation from assimilation. While the latter part is up for debate, I definitely believe that Q feels underappreciated by Picard in particular, and sees his interactions with the former captain of the Enterprise-D as helpful rather than antagonistic.

Q looks annoyed with Picard in the trailer for Star Trek: Picard Season 2.

So let’s recap! The Borg became aware of the existence of the Federation by the mid-24th Century. The Federation had technology and resources that the Borg considered valuable, and they began targetting outlying Federation colonies, including those near to the Romulan Neutral Zone. All the while, the Federation remained ignorant of the Borg’s existence – considering them to be little more than rumour.

Foreseeing disaster and either the total assimilation of humanity or the devastation of the Federation such that humanity could not achieve its full potential, either the Q Continuum or Q independently decided to intervene. Instead of simply contacting the Federation to share his knowledge, Q transported the Enterprise-D to the star system J-25, where they encountered the Borg. This encounter led to the Federation developing anti-Borg strategies and defences that would ultimately save them from assimilation.

Unusually, Q has never taken credit for this. However, it’s at least possible that he considered Picard and the Federation as a whole to be ungrateful for his help, and this could tie in somehow to the events of Picard Season 2 where Q will be making a return to the Star Trek franchise.

Did Q save the Federation from assimilation?

What I like about this theory is that everything feels like it fits together. This theory connects the message sent in Regeneration and the early assimilation of Seven of Nine’s family to the events of The Neutral Zone, giving the Borg a reason to be operating so far outside of their territory. It also fits in perfectly with the way Q behaves – never sharing everything he knows and presenting dangerous and often deadly puzzles to Picard and Starfleet.

Whether it’s true or not is open to interpretation! I would say that Q Who wasn’t written with any of this in mind, and a straight watch of the episode strongly suggests that Q’s motivation is simply to frighten Picard and the crew of the Enterprise-D after his offer to join the crew was rejected. Q felt that Picard was arrogant in assuming that Starfleet could handle any threat the galaxy contained, and wanted to prove him wrong. While that explanation works in the context of the episode, it doesn’t preclude anything included in this theory from also being true; Q could still have been annoyed at Picard’s assertion that the Federation was prepared for anything while also intending to provide them with advance warning of the Borg.

So that’s it for this one! As with all fan theories, anything we see on screen in a future episode or film could render the whole thing invalid. But for now, I think it’s at least plausible that the events of Q Who represent Q trying – in his own unique and twisted way – to help Picard and the Federation. Q has always seen himself as a friend of Picard’s, and based on what we know of both Q and the history of Borg-Federation contact, it seems to me that everything arguably fits together!

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