USS QUINTESSENTIAL: NCC-10101
CAPTAIN Q
 
                       
 
Position/Rank: Commanding Officer, Captain
Race: The Q
Place of Birth: The Q Continuum
Birthdate: Unknown
Ethnicity: Unknown
Gender: Female

THE Q CONTINUUM

The Q Continuum is made up of a race of beings that consider themselves omniscient. These beings seem to be able to control vast energies and reshape space and time. They also seem to be able to travel in time and to create alternative realities. Members of the Continuum are thought to be immortal.

Very little is known of the Q. We know that they were once different, possibly mortal, but at some point in time, more than 10,000 years ago, they changed into the beings we have encontered. It seems that every member of the Continuum is called Q, and though the Q who appeared on the USS Enterprise-D (henceforth called Q#1 for clarity) took on the form of a human male, it is clear that the Q are not humanoids. The first contact with the Q was aboard the USS Enterprise-D, on her maiden voyage to Farpoint Station. There, Q#1 put the crew on trial for the "crimes of humanity". Though the crew under Jean Luc Picard was able to solve Q#1's puzzle, Q#1 has been a constant nuissance to the crew of the Enterprise. Though most of the sightings of Q#1 were aboard the USS Enterprise-D, Q#1 did make an "appearance" on Starbase Deep Space Nine, though he only appeared there once - according to Benjamin Sisko, the station's commander, Q#1 simply was not amused by him. Q#1 also appeared on the USS Voyager along with Quinn, a Q who wanted to be given the right to be mortal so that he could take his own life as he could no longer stand immortality.

Q#1 has been a constant pain for Starfleet, and though he has caused some good, he also introduced the Federation to the Borg Collective. Not all Q are mischievous like Q#1, in fact there are some in the Continuum that have to travel the universe just to fix all the problems that Q#1 creates. At one point, the Continuum even took away Q#1's powers and made him mortal. There have been speculations that the being encountered by the crew of the original USS Enterprise which called himself Trelane might have been a member of the Continuum, but to this date, no one has either been able to confirm or deny this conclusively.

Up until now, the Q have been quite uninterested in any of the major powers in the galaxy with the exception of the Federation. Though Starfleet's charter is to seek out new life forms, and the Continuum definitely qualifies as such - we do have one request to make of them. Please, just leave us alone.

Q is a character of depth and intrigue, he is a powerful entity with godlike powers that is being acted by John DeLancie. Not even the Borg could challenge the Enterprise crew like Q. The first encounter between Q and the Enterprise was in 2364, when Q accused humans as being a savage race.
From then, he appeared in 7 more episodes: "Hide and Q", "Q who?", "Deja Q", "Qpid", "Tapestry", "True Q" and "All good things" (part I & II). He commanded the stage whenever he materialized to annoy Picard, and made some of the richest dialogues on television, like these few lines from "All good things":

Picard: The last time that I stood here was seven years ago...
Q: Seven years... how little do you mortals understand time. Must you be so linear, Jean Luc?
Picard: You accused me of being the representative of a... a barbarous species.
Q: I believe my exact words were, "a dangerous, savage child race".
Picard: We demonstrated to you that mankind had become peaceful and benevolent. You agreed, and you let us go on our way. Now, why am I standing here again?
Q: Oh, you'd like me to connect the dots for you--lead you from A to B to C, so that your puny mind could comprehend. How boring.

THE Q

An immensely powerful extra-dimensional entity

While possessing near-godlike powers, Q also exhibits a child-like petulance and sense of playfulness. The Enterprise -D made first contact with Q in 2364, when Q detained the ship, enacting a courtroom drama in which Q accused the ship's crew of being "grieviously savage." ("Encounter at Farpoint, Parts I and II" [TNG].

On his second visit to the Enterprise -D, Q offered William Riker a gift of Q-like supernatural powers, although it was not clear if this was a further attempt to study the human species, or merely another exercise in provoking humans to respond for his amusement. ("Hide and Q" [TNG])

Q later transported the Enterprise -D some 7,000 light years beyond Federation space to System J-25, where first contact was made with the powerful and dangerous Borg. In this episode we find that Q and Guinan have had a previous relationship. In the file titled 'Dance of Chameleon and Mirror' (which can be found in the Q Database, Stories section), we learn that Guinan was tormented by Q who told her her civilization was going to end, and that he could save it - but only of she gave herself to him for him do to anything he pleased to her. Using the powers of her race, Guinan saw that Q's statement was in fact true, but she declined his offer in favor of leaving her planet and trying to solve the problem herself, leaving her family on her homeworld. However, whilst she is out searching for evidence of anything that might destroy her civilization, the Borg invade her homeworld, assimilating a good number of its population and killing all the rest. After visiting her homeworld and seeing the devastation, Q appeared to her and tormented her for making the wrong choice. Here there was a division of realities, one in which Guinan did nothing (which is the one depicted in the TV series), and one in which Guinan used her powers to see that Q was going to lose his powers (see below), but would probably get them back again. Guinan twisted reality so that Q wouldn't get his powers back.("Q Who?" [TNG])

Q was banished from the Q Continuum and stripped of his powers in 2366 for having spread chaos through the universe. Q sought refuge in human form on board the Enterprise -D, claiming that Jean-Luc Picard was the nearest thing he had to a friend. Unfortunately, Q had made many enemies in this universe, and one of these, the Calamarain, attacked the Enterprise -D, attempting to exact revenge on Q. Quick action by Commander Data saved Q from the attacked. Truly surprised by Data's selfless action to save him, Q stole a shuttlecraft in an attempt to save the Enterprise -D crew from further hostile action. This altruistic act was enough to persuade the Continuum to return his powers. ("Deja Q" [TNG])

However, in the alternate universe in which Guinan made sure that he wouldn't get his powers back, Captain Picard beamed the shuttle back into the Enterprise. Q was then transported to Starbase 56, where he was supposed to help Federation scientists with his vast knowledge of the universe, in exchange for the Starbase keeping him safe from enemies that he'd made while he was omnipotent. However, he soon became very depressed and very hard to get along with. He attempted suicide several times unsuccessfully, but his next attempt (drinking a bottle of acidic etching solution) really did endanger his life. However, another member of the Continuum had been keeping an eye on Q, and without Q's knowledge, intervened to save him. The other Q also saved and instructed a female Vulcan named T'Laren to become Q's psychologist, whilst taking him away from Starbase 56, on which he'd made many enemies.

Q interrupted a symposium of the Federation Archaeology Council held aboard the Enterprise -D in 2367. He cast Picard, Vash, and members of the Enterprise -D crew into an elaborate fantasy based on the old Earth legends of Robin Hood. Q later vanished, taking Vash with him as his new partner in crime. ("QPid" [TNG]).

He returned to the Enterprise -D in 2369 to instruct and evaluate Amanda Rogers, whose biological parents were members of the Q Continuum who took human form. ("True-Q" [TNG]). After a period of time exploring the Gamma Quadrant, Vash left Q, and returned to the Alpha Quadrant aboard the Starfleet runabout U.S.S. Ganges through the Bajoran wormhole. Q followed Vash to station Deep Space 9 in an attempt to convince her to return, but she once again rebuffed him. He amused himself with the crew of the station, provoking Benjamin Sisko into a 19th-century-style fistfight, and was shocked when Sisko knocked him to the floor. ("Q-Less" [DS9]).

Later that year, Q once again visited Captain Picard, following a disasterous away mission on which Picard was ambushed by Lenarians. In what Q claimed was the afterlife, Q offered Picard the opportunity to see what his life would have been like had he not made some of the rash choices of his youth. In particular, Picard was given the opportunity to relive the three-day period leading up to his injury at the Bonestall Recreation Facility in 2327. Using the knowledge of what was to come, Picard was able to avoid the fight that cost him his heart. However, Picard discovered that it was partly the brashness of his youth that had made him the man that he was. ("Tapestry" [TNG]). Q was named by Gene Roddenberry for English Star Trek fan Janet Quarton. Q's first appearance was in "Encounter at Farpoint, Part I" (TNG). Many fans have speculated that Q may be related to Trelane.

Q CONTINUUM

Extradimensional domain in which Q and others of his kind exist. ("Encounter at Farpoint, Parts I and II" [TNG]). Q was breifly banished from the continuum in 2366, until another Q entered our existence, offering to restore his powers. ("Deja Q" [TNG]). Those in charge of the continuum commanded Q to instruct and evaluate Amanda Rogers to see if she could ignore her powers and live among humans. If she could not or if she refused to accompany Q back to the Continuum, she was to be destroyed. The Continuum felt a moral obligation not to allow members of their kind to live with inferior beings and still use their awesome powers. ("True-Q" [TNG]).

 

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