Q is a fictional character, as well as the name of a race, in ''
Star Trek
''Star Trek'' is an American science fiction media franchise created by Gene Roddenberry, which began with the eponymous 1960s television series and quickly became a worldwide pop-culture phenomenon. The franchise has expanded into vari ...
'' appearing in the ''
Next Generation
Next Generation or Next-Generation may refer to:
Publications and literature
* ''Next Generation'' (magazine), video game magazine that was made by the now defunct Imagine Media publishing company
* Next Generation poets (2004), list of young ...
'', ''
Deep Space Nine
''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'' (abbreviated as ''DS9'') is an American science fiction television series created by Rick Berman and Michael Piller. The fourth series in the '' Star Trek'' media franchise, it originally aired in syndication fr ...
'', ''
Voyager
Voyager may refer to:
Computing and communications
* LG Voyager, a mobile phone model manufactured by LG Electronics
* NCR Voyager, a computer platform produced by NCR Corporation
* Voyager (computer worm), a computer worm affecting Oracle ...
'', ''
Lower Decks
''Star Trek: Lower Decks'' is an American adult-oriented animated television series created by Mike McMahan for the streaming service CBS All Access (later rebranded as Paramount+). It is the ninth ''Star Trek'' series and was launched in 2020 ...
'', and ''
Picard'' series and in related media. The most familiar Q is portrayed by
John de Lancie. He is an extra-dimensional being of unknown origin who possesses immeasurable power over time, space, the laws of physics, and reality itself, being capable of altering it to his whim. Despite his vast knowledge and experience spanning untold eons (and much to the exasperation of the object
of his obsession), he is not above practical jokes for his own personal amusement, for a
Machiavellian
Machiavellianism or Machiavellian may refer to:
Politics
*Machiavellianism (politics), the supposed political philosophy of Niccolò Machiavelli
*Political realism
Psychology
*Machiavellianism (psychology), a personality trait centered on cold an ...
or manipulative purpose, or to prove a point. He is said to be almost completely
omnipotent and he is continually evasive regarding his true motivations.
The name "Q" applies to the names of the individuals portrayed (all male and female characters refer to each other as "Q"); it also applies to the name of their race and to the "Q Continuum" itself – an
alternate dimension accessible to only the Q and their "invited" guests. The true nature of the realm is said to be beyond the comprehension of "lesser beings" such as humans, therefore it is shown to humans only in ways they can understand; e.g., a run-down gas station in the 'middle of nowhere'.
Beginning with the pilot episode "
Encounter at Farpoint" of ''
The Next Generation
Next Generation or Next-Generation may refer to:
Publications and literature
* ''Next Generation'' (magazine), video game magazine that was made by the now defunct Imagine Media publishing company
* Next Generation poets (2004), list of young ...
'', Q became a recurring character, with pronounced comedic and dramatic chemistry with
Jean-Luc Picard
Jean-Luc Picard is a fictional character in the ''Star Trek'' franchise, most often seen as the captain of the Federation starship . Played by Patrick Stewart, Picard has appeared in the television series '' Star Trek: The Next Generation'' (''T ...
. He serves as a major antagonist throughout ''The Next Generation'', playing a pivotal role in both the first and final episodes. Q is initially presented as a cosmic force judging humanity to see if it is becoming a threat to the universe, but as the series progresses, his role morphs more into one of a teacher to Picard and the human race generally – albeit often in seemingly destructive or disruptive ways, subject to his own amusement. Other times, notably during "
Deja Q" and ''Voyager'', Q appears to the crew seeking assistance.
Gene Roddenberry
Eugene Wesley Roddenberry Sr. (August 19, 1921 – October 24, 1991) was an American television screenwriter, producer, and creator of ''Star Trek: The Original Series'', its sequel spin-off series ''Star Trek: The Animated Series,'' and ''Sta ...
chose the letter "
Q" in honor of his friend Janet Quarton.
Appearances in ''Star Trek'' media
List of appearances
Many ''Star Trek'' television episodes and novels have featured Q and often have titles that play on the letter "Q".
* ''
Star Trek: The Next Generation'':
** "
Encounter at Farpoint"
** "
Hide and Q"
** "
Q Who"
** "
Deja Q"
** "
Qpid"
** "
True Q
"True Q" is the 132nd episode of the American syndicated science fiction television series '' Star Trek: The Next Generation'', the sixth episode of the sixth season. It aired on November 1, 1992.
Set in the 24th century, the series follows th ...
"
** "
Tapestry"
** "
All Good Things..."
* ''
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'' (abbreviated as ''DS9'') is an American science fiction television series created by Rick Berman and Michael Piller. The fourth series in the ''Star Trek'' media franchise, it originally aired in syndication from ...
'':
** "
Q-Less"
* ''
Star Trek: Voyager'':
** "
Death Wish
Death Wish or Deathwish may refer to:
Common meanings
*Suicidal ideation, term for thoughts about killing oneself
*Death drive, term in Freudian psychiatry
Arts and entertainment Radio
*"Death Wish", a 1957 episode of the radio series ''X Minus ...
"
** "
The Q and the Grey"
** "
Q2"
* ''
Star Trek: Lower Decks
''Star Trek: Lower Decks'' is an American adult-oriented animated television series created by Mike McMahan for the streaming service CBS All Access (later rebranded as Paramount+). It is the ninth ''Star Trek'' series and was launched in 2020 ...
'':
** "
Veritas"
* ''
Star Trek: Picard'':
** "
The Star Gazer"
** "
Penance
Penance is any act or a set of actions done out of Repentance (theology), repentance for Christian views on sin, sins committed, as well as an alternate name for the Catholic Church, Catholic, Lutheran, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox s ...
"
** "
Assimilation
Assimilation may refer to:
Culture
*Cultural assimilation, the process whereby a minority group gradually adapts to the customs and attitudes of the prevailing culture and customs
**Language shift, also known as language assimilation, the progre ...
"
** "
Watcher"
** "
Fly Me to the Moon"
** "
Two of One"
** "
Mercy"
** "
Farewell
Farewell or fare well is a parting phrase. The terms may also refer to:
Places
* Farewell, Missouri, a community in the United States
* Farewell and Chorley, a location in the United Kingdom near Lichfield, site of the former Farewell Priory
Fil ...
"
*
Novels
A novel is a relatively long work of narrative fiction, typically written in prose and published as a book. The present English word for a long work of prose fiction derives from the for "new", "news", or "short story of something new", itself ...
, (
audiobook versions read by
John de Lancie):
** ''
Q-in-Law''
1
** ''
Q-Squared''
1
** ''
I, Q'' (written by de Lancie)
1
** ''
The Q Continuum (''includes'' Q-Zone, Q-Space, Q-Strike)''
** ''
String Theory
In physics, string theory is a theoretical framework in which the point-like particles of particle physics are replaced by one-dimensional objects called strings. String theory describes how these strings propagate through space and interac ...
''
** ''
Star Trek: Borg''
** ''
Planet X''
** ''The Eternal Tide''
*Audio Presentations (starring
John de Lancie and
Leonard Nimoy):
** "
Spock
Spock is a Character (arts), fictional character in the ''Star Trek'' media franchise. He first appeared in the Star Trek: The Original Series, original ''Star Trek'' series serving aboard the starship USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), USS ''Enterprise ...
vs. Q"
** "
Spock
Spock is a Character (arts), fictional character in the ''Star Trek'' media franchise. He first appeared in the Star Trek: The Original Series, original ''Star Trek'' series serving aboard the starship USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), USS ''Enterprise ...
vs. Q: The Sequel"
*
Video games:
** ''
Star Trek: Borg''
** ''Star Trek: The Game Show'' (features Q as "host" of a trivia contest)
** ''
Star Trek: Online''
** ''
Star Trek Timelines''
1Note: Audiobook version available.
Television
Q debuted in "
Encounter at Farpoint", where he puts Captain Picard and the ''Enterprise'' crew on trial, arguing that humanity is a dangerous race and should be destroyed. When they later save the life of a kidnapped alien, Q agrees to defer judgment, though he hints that it will not be the last time the crew sees him.
In "
Hide and Q", he forces the ''Enterprise'' crew to participate in a war game against monsters he summoned, then makes a wager with Picard. He grants Commander
William Riker the powers of a Q, then promises that if Riker rejects the powers, then Q will leave them alone. Riker uses the powers to save his friends and starts to lose himself to them, but ultimately manages to reject them. Q attempts to go back on his word, but the Q Continuum forcibly recalls him.
In "
Q Who", he offers to divest himself of his powers and guide humanity through uncharted regions and prepare it for unknown threats. Picard argues that Q's services are unneeded (and unwanted), and Q rebuts him by teleporting the
USS ''Enterprise'' to a distant system for their first encounter with the
Borg. Unable to resist the Borg, Picard must ask Q to save the ship. Q returns the ''Enterprise'' home and tells Picard that other men would rather have died than ask for help. This episode also reveals Q has a past history and hostile relationship with
Guinan.
In "
Deja Q", Q is punished by the Q Continuum by being made mortal; his committing of an uncharacteristically selfless act (sacrificing his life so that a race attacking him will not destroy the ''Enterprise'') garners the return of his powers. In the same episode, Q says that Picard is "the closest thing in this universe that I have to a friend."
The Q are mentioned in "
Devil's Due". A woman named Ardra claims to be the Devil to subjugate a planet, displaying abilities similar to the Q. The crew speculate that she may be a member of the Q Continuum or even Q himself in a disguise before Picard points out Q would not be interested in a planet's economics. Ardra is exposed as a con artist using technology to simulate her powers.
In "
Qpid", Q attempts to repay Picard for saving him in "Deja Q" by helping him with his relationship with his ex-girlfriend Vash. He transports everyone to
Sherwood Forest and casts himself as the
Sheriff of Nottingham, Picard as
Robin Hood, the crew as the
Merry Men, and Vash as
Maid Marian, then challenges them to rescue her. Q and Vash find themselves kindred spirits, and she ultimately decides to go with him and explore the universe together.
In "
True Q
"True Q" is the 132nd episode of the American syndicated science fiction television series '' Star Trek: The Next Generation'', the sixth episode of the sixth season. It aired on November 1, 1992.
Set in the 24th century, the series follows th ...
", Q reveals that a new crew member named Amanda Rogers is actually the daughter of two rogue members of the Q Continuum, then orders her to choose between remaining human and never using her powers, or coming with him to join the Continuum. After using her powers to save a planet, Amanda decides to join the Continuum.
Toward the end of ''The Next Generation'', Q is less antagonistic toward Picard. In "
Tapestry", Q apparently saves Picard and helps him better understand himself, giving Picard a chance to avoid the accident that gave him an artificial heart only for Picard to choose dying as himself over living the tedious life he would have lived without the inspiration of his near-death experience (although whether Q actually appeared in this episode or was merely a
hallucination Picard experienced during surgery is deliberately left ambiguous).
In "
All Good Things", Q reveals that the trial of humanity is not over and displaces Picard through different time periods where a temporal anomaly threatens the existence of humanity. After Picard resolves the situation, Q admits to having helped him find the solution and to having saved him from death. Q departs, stating that the trial of humanity is never over.
In the ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine'' episode "
Q-Less", Vash decided to end her partnership with Q. Q follows her to the Deep Space Nine station and attempts to win her back. Q is blamed for a series of power failures, but denies it. Q taunts Commander
Benjamin Sisko, only to get punched in the face, shocking him since Picard never did that. The power failures were actually caused by an alien life form disguised as a crystal that Vash was carrying. Q gives Vash his blessing to leave him.
In the ''Star Trek: Voyager'' episode "
Death Wish
Death Wish or Deathwish may refer to:
Common meanings
*Suicidal ideation, term for thoughts about killing oneself
*Death drive, term in Freudian psychiatry
Arts and entertainment Radio
*"Death Wish", a 1957 episode of the radio series ''X Minus ...
", Q pursues a rogue member of the Continuum, later named Quinn, who has been inadvertently released from his asteroid prison by the crew of that ship, and who seeks asylum on ''Voyager''. He demands that Q make him human, as he does not wish to be a member of the Continuum any more, but Q refuses, because Quinn intends to commit suicide if he becomes human. The two parties agree to allow
Captain Janeway to mediate their dispute, and after Janeway eventually finds in favor of Quinn, he is made human and then commits suicide. Its subsequently revealed that Q chose to assist Quinn's suicide.
Later, in the ''Voyager'' episode "
The Q and the Grey", Q reappears on the ''Voyager'', asking Janeway to bear his child. He eventually reveals that the uncertainty and instability caused by Quinn's suicide divided the Continuum, causing a civil war between Quinn's followers (of which Q is a part) and the rest of the Continuum. Q believes that the birth of a new member of the Continuum could revitalize the Q by giving them something new to focus on after millennia of stagnation and boredom. Janeway refuses, and after she and her crew bring about a ceasefire in the Continuum, Q eventually mates with a female Q (
Suzie Plakson
Suzie Plakson is an American actress.
Early life and education
Born Susan Plaksin in Buffalo, New York, she was raised in Kingston, Pennsylvania and attended Northwestern University.
Career
Plakson began her career on the stage, and playe ...
) with whom he had been involved (referred to in ''Star Trek'' novels as 'Lady Q'), producing a son. Their progeny is born conscious and with all the power of any other Q, although lacking adult maturity. Q makes Janeway his godmother.
In the episode "
Q2", he appears on ''Voyager'' with his immature, rebellious son, who appears as a human teenager (played by John de Lancie's real-life son
Keegan de Lancie
John Keegan de Lancie (born October 31, 1984) is an American former actor, the son of actor John de Lancie and Marnie Mosiman. He is known for playing " Q Junior", the son of his father's recurring Star Trek character Q in the 2001 '' Star Tre ...
, and referred to in the novels as "Little Q" or "q"). Q asks Janeway to mentor his son, and the two adults agree that the boy will remain on ''Voyager'', without his powers, and either learn how to be a responsible, accountable, and productive inhabitant of the cosmos, or spend eternity as an
amoeba. Eventually, the young Q comes around, but the Continuum is not entirely convinced, so in negotiation with Q, they come to an agreement. Q must eternally guard, observe, and accompany the boy to ensure his proper behavior. Q thanks Janeway for her help by showing her a shortcut to Earth that will shave three years off ''Voyagers journey. When she asks why he does not just send them directly to Earth, he says it would set a bad example for his son to do all the work for them.
In the ''
Star Trek: Lower Decks
''Star Trek: Lower Decks'' is an American adult-oriented animated television series created by Mike McMahan for the streaming service CBS All Access (later rebranded as Paramount+). It is the ninth ''Star Trek'' series and was launched in 2020 ...
'' episode "Veritas", Q appears in a flashback, challenging the senior crew of the USS ''Cerritos'' to an inexplicable 'game' to prove humanity's worth, dressing them up as chess pieces facing a football field filled with anthropomorphic cards and soccer balls. Later in the episode, he appears again to challenge the ensigns to a duel, but he is unceremoniously blown off by Ensign Mariner, who tells him to "go bother Picard." Q follows them anyway, complaining that Picard is always quoting Shakespeare and
making wine.
Q returns in
season 2 of ''
Star Trek: Picard''. In the episode "The Star Gazer", the ship ''Stargazer'' is attacked and nearly assimilated by a Borg Queen, forcing Picard to activate the ship's self-destruct mechanism. Just as the ship explodes, Picard abruptly wakes up in a different version of his home. Q appears, initially looking like his younger self before turning himself into an old man to match Picard's age. Q says the trial of humanity is not over, so he's altered history to show Picard "the end of the road not taken."
In the next episode, "Penance", Q acts unusually agitated while claiming this dark, totalitarian future is all Picard's fault, even striking Picard when he complains. This prompts Picard to wonder if Q is unwell. Q admits to saving Picard and his crew from the explosion of the ''Stargazer'' and making sure they all remembered the original timeline to give them a chance to change it back. After Q departs, Picard meets his crew and they work with a captured Borg Queen, who can detect temporal anomalies and says this future was caused by a change in
Los Angeles in the year 2024.
In the next episode, "Assimilation", Q briefly appears to taunt Picard about how everything was lost because of his fears before disappearing.
In the next episode, "Watcher", Q appears in Los Angeles in 2024, observing a woman working on a planned spaceflight to
Europa
Europa may refer to:
Places
* Europe
* Europa (Roman province), a province within the Diocese of Thrace
* Europa (Seville Metro), Seville, Spain; a station on the Seville Metro
* Europa City, Paris, France; a planned development
* Europa Cliff ...
. He is then surprised to find his powers do not work.
In the next episode, "Fly Me to the Moon", the woman is revealed to be Jean-Luc Picard's ancestor, Renee Picard. Undaunted by the loss of his powers, Q poses as Renee's psychiatrist and tries to convince her to cancel her spaceflight to Europa. When Picard and his crew find out about this, they speculate that this is the change that causes the dark future. Q also meets Dr. Adam Soong and provides him a temporary cure for his daughter Kore's life-threatening illness. Desperate for a permanent cure, Soong agrees to assist Q.
In the next episode, "Two of One", Q instructs Soong to stop Renee from going on her spaceflight, which he attempts by trying to hit her with his car. However, Picard pushes her out of the way and is hit instead and hospitalized by his injuries.
Q is mentioned in the next episode, "Monsters". After recovering, Picard asks Guinan to summon Q to their location so he can question him, remembering Q's unusual behavior in their previous encounter. Guinan reveals that the Q Continuum and her race, the El-Aurians, went to war in the past before making a peace treaty. However, her ritual to summon Q fails.
In the next episode, "Mercy", after Picard and Guinan have been arrested by an FBI agent, Q visits Guinan disguised as an agent, revealing that he is dying and that this whole scenario was just an attempt to give his life meaning. He leaves after saying humans are always stuck in the past, giving Picard inspiration to pry into the agent's past to persuade him to let them go. Q later visits Kore and gives her the permanent cure even though Soong did not fulfill his end of the bargain, allowing her to leave her home and escape her controlling father. The Borg Queen reveals the change that caused the dark future: In the original timeline, Renee found an alien life form on Europa, paving the way for the formation of the Federation. If Renee's flight is prevented, Dr. Adam Soong will eventually rise in power and become ruler of the world.
In "Farewell," after the original timeline is restored, Picard leaves the skeleton key behind a loose brick in the wall for his younger self to find, then encounters Q in his home. Q notes that Picard had the chance to potentially save his mother and change his own future, but instead he chose to accept himself as he is and absolve himself of his guilt. Because Picard has chosen himself, perhaps now he will finally believe himself worthy of being chosen by someone else, and may even give himself the chance to be loved. Q repeats his earlier statement that this was about forgiveness: Picard's own forgiveness of himself. Q reminds Picard that all of the deaths caused by Q's alteration of the timeline have been fixed, apart from Tallinn and Elnor. However, Tallinn was always destined to die in every timeline, but thanks to Picard's intervention, Tallinn had been able to meet Renée in this one. Picard asks why Q had taken such an interest in him for over thirty years, and Q explains that he is dying alone and doesn't want that for Picard. As such, he had set it up so Picard could travel back in time and become unshackled from his past ("As I leave, I leave you free.") For once, Q had not been acting for some grander design, but simply because he cared about Picard and genuinely wanted to help his friend.
Gathering outside, Q prepares to use the last of his power to send Picard and his friends back to their own timeline, an action that will kill Q in his weakened state. When Rios chooses to stay in 2024, Q tells Picard that he now has an unexpected surplus of energy, which he will use to give Picard a final surprise gift. Stating that Q doesn't have to die alone, Picard hugs him, and an emotional Q promises to "See you out there." He then snaps his fingers one last time, sending Picard, Raffi and Seven back to 2401 moments before the ''Stargazer's'' destruction, allowing Picard the chance to change his future. Shortly thereafter, the group discovers Q's final gift: Q has resurrected Elnor and returned him to the ''Excelsior''.
The Q were also mentioned in
the fourth season
''The Fourth Season'' is the fourth album by the Australian progressive metal band Vanishing Point.
Track listing
# "Embodiment" - 4:06
# "The Tyranny Of Distance" - 5:25
# "Surrender" - 4:09
# "Hope Among The Heartless" - 5:13
# "Gaia - Th ...
of ''
Star Trek: Discovery'' as the possible creators of the Dark Matter Anomaly threatening the Alpha Quadrant, but were dismissed as being such by the Federation due to neither Q or his fellow Q being heard from since the late 26th century.
Novels
The similarity between Q and Trelane, the alien encountered in the ''Star Trek'' episode "
The Squire of Gothos", inspired writer
Peter David to establish in his 1994 novel ''
Q-Squared'' that Trelane is a member of the Continuum, and that Q is his godfather (with it being all-but-explicitly stated that Q is actually Trelane's biological father, although the truth of this is kept an official secret).
Q's past is expanded on in the trilogy ''
The Q Continuum'', which has Q and Picard travel through Q's past, witnessing Q's first encounter with the being that inspired his interest in testing other races. This being, known as 0, is similar to Q in power and abilities (although an injury of some sort prevents 0 travelling faster than light under his own power, even if he can still teleport short distances), but whereas Q has been shown to be more of a "merry prankster" throughout
''Star Trek'' canon, 0 is malevolent in his desires, using 'tests' as just an excuse to torture other races by changing the rules of his games so that the subjects will inevitably lose. Q ends up bringing him into the Milky Way galaxy through the
Guardian of Forever, and 0 assembles other seemingly omnipotent beings from the original ''Star Trek'', including Gorgan (the entity who turned children against their parents in "
And the Children Shall Lead
"And the Children Shall Lead" is the fourth episode of the third season of the American science fiction television series ''Star Trek''. Written by Edward J. Lakso and directed by Marvin Chomsky, it was first broadcast on October 11, 1968.
In ...
"), The One (the being who impersonated
God in ''
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier'') and (*) (the entity from "
Day of the Dove", which thrived on violent conflict). However, although intrigued at 0's words about testing lesser races, Q loses his taste for 0's methods when 0's group provoke the Tkon Empire- an advanced civilisation millennia in the past- into decades of civil war and then blows up their sun just as they were about to exchange their dying old sun for a younger, fresher one, having completed their Great Endeavour despite the war. 0's group was later defeated in a battle with the Q Continuum, though the
dinosaurs
Dinosaurs are a diverse group of reptiles of the clade Dinosauria. They first appeared during the Triassic period, between 243 and 233.23 million years ago (mya), although the exact origin and timing of the evolution of dinosaurs is t ...
were left extinct as a result when Q diverted an asteroid from one of the combatants so that it would strike Earth instead. With Q having abstained from most of the conflict, he was thus put in charge of watching over Earth and its inhabitants as a possible rehabilitation project, while (*) and Gorgan escaped, The One was trapped at the heart of the galaxy having been reduced to just his head, and 0 was banished to just outside our galaxy and the galactic barrier erected to keep him out; as Picard observes, with 0's crippled state preventing him travelling faster than light, 0 was essentially reduced to a shipwrecked survivor cut off from the nearest inhabitable land and millennia away from anywhere else. 0 later returned from his banishment beyond the galaxy and sought revenge on Q, having manipulated a dying scientist to complete an artificial wormhole experiment, but was defeated when Picard was able to convince one of 0's old enemies to join forces with Q so that their combined powers could stop his former mentor.
The novel ''The Buried Age'' which explores Picard's life between the destruction of the ''Stargazer'' and his appointment to the position of captain of the ''Enterprise''-D ends with a cameo appearance by Q as he meets an alien woman who recently met Picard before she chose to ascend to a higher plane of existence, her tales of Picard inspiring Q's own interest in humanity. This novel also establishes why Q chose his name, as he wanted something that would be simple for humans to remember, reasoning that, if he was ever asked why he was called 'Q', he could reply "Because U will always be behind me".
In the ''Voyager'' novel ''The Eternal Tide'', Q's son sacrifices himself to save the universe, inspired by the example of the resurrected Kathryn Janeway, prompting Q to declare himself her enemy. However, he swiftly gets over this hostility 'off-screen', and by the later novel ''A Pocket Full of Lies'', it is revealed that he acted to save the life of an alternate Janeway created during the events of "
Shattered
Shattered may refer to:
Books
* ''Shattered'' (Casey book), a 2010 non-fiction book: true-crime account of pregnant mother's murder
* ''Shattered'' (Francis novel), a 2000 novel by Dick Francis: glassblower seeks videotape following death of j ...
".
In the ''Star Trek'' comic series based on the alternate timeline established in the 2009 film ''
Star Trek
''Star Trek'' is an American science fiction media franchise created by Gene Roddenberry, which began with the eponymous 1960s television series and quickly became a worldwide pop-culture phenomenon. The franchise has expanded into vari ...
'', Q visits that reality to take the crew of the ''Enterprise'' into their future. This allows them to interact with characters from the original timeline in the new history created by Spock's trip to the past. It also helps Q deal with a threat to the Continuum in the form of the Pah-Wraiths, which have all but destroyed the
Bajoran Prophets in this timeline, the ''Enterprise'' crew retrieving a tablet containing the last Prophet and allowing it to merge with Q to defeat the Pah-Wraiths.
Computer games
The 1996 computer game ''
Star Trek: Borg'' was primarily made up of live action segments directed by James L. Conway and featured John de Lancie as Q.
Q also appears during holiday events in the massively multiplayer online game ''
Star Trek Online
''Star Trek Online'' is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Cryptic Studios based on the ''Star Trek'' franchise. The game is set in the 25th century, 30 years after the events of '' Star Trek: Nemesis''. ''Sta ...
'' including the creation of a Christmas village that player characters can be teleported to.
Q's phone number
In
Star Trek: Picard, S02E05 "
Fly Me to the Moon", Q sends Dr. Adam Soong his business card via his 3D printer. The number on it was (323) 634-5667. This is a functional phone number intended for the viewers to call. Typically, phone numbers use the "555" prefix in movies or TV episodes. That prefix is reserved by the U.S.
Federal Communications Commission for "dud" phone numbers that go nowhere. This is a small treat for diligent viewers; a small, out-of-universe Easter egg with a short message from John de Lancie's portrayal of Q. As of November 2022, this phone number is still active.
Reception
In 2009, Q was ranked as the 9th best character of all ''Star Trek'' by
IGN.
In 2016, ''
Time'' rated Q as the #10 best villain of the ''Star Trek'' franchise.
In 2017,
Space.com rated Q as one of the "15 of the Most Bizarre Alien Species" of the ''Star Trek'' franchise.
In 2018,
''The Wrap'' said that Q would be at the top of the list if he was included with ranking 39 main cast characters of the ''Star Trek'' franchise prior to ''
Star Trek: Discovery''.
In 2018,
CBR ranked Q the #1 best ''Star Trek'' recurring character.
References
External links
Qon
IMDb
Qa
StarTrek.com
{{Authority control
Fictional characters who can change size
Fictional characters who can duplicate themselves
Fictional characters who can teleport
Fictional higher-dimensional characters
Fictional characters with immortality
Fictional characters who can manipulate reality
Fictional judges
Fictional gods
Fictional pranksters
Fictional tricksters
Star Trek alien characters
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine characters
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Television characters introduced in 1987
de:Figuren im Star-Trek-Universum#Q