Borg Queen
character from Star Trek
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Borg Queen
Summary
Borg Queen is a literary character[1]. She draws 48 Wikipedia views per month (literary_character category, ranking #198 of 421).[2]
Key Facts
- Borg Queen is recorded as female[3].
- Borg Queen's instance of is recorded as literary character[4].
- Borg Queen's instance of is recorded as film character[5].
- Borg Queen's instance of is recorded as television character[6].
- Borg Queen's instance of is recorded as cyborg in a work of fiction[7].
- Borg Queen's part of is recorded as Borg[8].
- Borg Queen's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/08cxb01[9].
- Borg Queen's from narrative universe is recorded as Star Trek universe[10].
- Borg Queen's represents is recorded as Borg hive mind[11].
- Borg Queen's described by source is recorded as Star Trek Fact Files[12].
- Borg Queen's described by source is recorded as Star Trek: The Art of John Eaves[13].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Star Trek: First Contact[14].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Immortal Coil[15].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as A Singular Destiny[16].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Endgame[17].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as The Farther Shore[18].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Mere Mortals[19].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Before Dishonor[20].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Greater than the Sum[21].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Full Circle[22].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as First Contact[23].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Synthesis[24].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as Resistance[25].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as The Autobiography of Jean-Luc Picard[26].
- Borg Queen's present in work is recorded as The Impossible Box[27].
Why It Matters
Borg Queen draws 48 Wikipedia views per month (literary_character category, ranking #198 of 421).[2] She has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]