Ahead of 2021’sStar TrekDay,Star Trek: Picardsurprised fans with an announcement: veteranStar Trekactor Annie Wersching, who started her career playing Liana onStar Trek: Enterprise, was joining the cast as a Borg Queen. With the announcement, the actress technically (which is the best kind of correct) becomes the fourth person to take on the role of the Collective’s seductive matriarch/monarch.

The Borg Queen’s first appearance in 1996’sStar Trek: First Contactintroduced the world to one of the greatest villainesses in sci-fi history. The character was described as “a fully-alive disembodied torso lowered by mechanical armatures into a waiting and shapely female body,” who is “planning the assimilation of the human race,” byStar Trekauthor Andy Mangels inStar Trek: Villains. After Seven of Nine briefly became a Borg Queen inPicard’s first season, there are now technicallyfourQueens total.

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InPicard’s season opener, a new Borg Queen arrives with a surprising message for Sir Patrick Stewart’s Admiral Jean-Luc Picard: instead of assimilation, she, who is the many, wants peace. Well, she wants peace once she drains the Stargazer of power. Introducing anew Queen also means introducing a new look, and it’s unlike anything a Queen has donned before. She’s wearing an all-black dress, chainlink helmet reminiscent of a Borg Cube version of Elizabethan armor, and tentacle-like weapons set to stun. But how does the new Borg Queen fit into the larger picture?

Who is the Borg Queen?

When the Borg Collective became one of Starfleet’s biggest menaces inStar Trek: The Next Generation, they only exhibited a collective Hive mind. Like all drone insects, the Borg eventually needed a Queen to guide them in their elusive goal to assimilate the human race. InFirst Contact, Brannon Braga and Ronald D. Moore created a Borg Queen to bring order to the Borg Collective and be that guide.

Unlike Borg drones, the Queen has a unique personality and sense of individuality. She controls the Hive mind and usually “speaks” for the Collective. In her words, “I am the beginning. The end. The one who is many. I am the Borg.”

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According to theStar Trekwebsite, it’s unclear if more than one Queen exists simultaneously or if a new Queen is created when the old one dies. Either way, a new Queen may have all her predecessors' and counterparts' qualities and memories, possibly throughout time. The screeners sent to critics forPicard’s second season provided some cool facts about the Queen, so keep watching!

Star Trek: First Contact’s Alice Krige

Alice Krige originated the Borg Queen’s role inFirst Contact, giving the audience someone to hate. Krige’s Queen leads the Borg in an attempt to alter Earth’s history, but the Enterprise intervenes, putting a stop to the Collective’s plan and killing the Queen.

Despite her death, Krige’s performance has had an enormous impact on the character, with every monarch opting for the signature hanging torso and skin-tight leather suit. According to Krige, the crew “gasped” seeing her in the costume for the first time. Fans all know the scene and costume well, too: when the Borg Queen emerges from her lair and re-assembles into a predominantly artificial body — the arms, legs, and torso appear to be entirely synthetic, while the head and shoulders seem to be organic, but with substantial cybernetic implants.

Susanna Thompson

Krige reprised the role to face off against a future Admiral Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) in theStar Trek: Voyagerfinale, “Endgame,” an episode that led her to call “the producers"about the Queen identifying as “Omnisexual.” The Queen diesagainafter Janeway introduces a neurolytic pathogen into the Hive. Krige returned forStar Trek: The ExperiencerideBorg Invasion 4DandStar Trek: Lower Decks.

Star Trek: Voyager’s Susanna Thompson

Susanna Thompson is aStar Trekregular, playing twoTNGcharacters, Lenara Kahn inStar Trek: Deep Space Nineand the enigmatic Borg Queen onVoyager. Although Enterprise destroyed the Borg Queen’s organic components inFirst Contact, the Collective soon replaced the monarch with another, almost identical successor, played by Thompson.

Thompson’s Queen meetsVoyagerin the Delta Quadrant seeking to return Seven of Nine to the Collective in “Dark Frontier,” and again when a subconscious realm infecting Borg drones with their previous individuality threatens the Collective. In a 1998 interview, theVoyageractress described Krige’s Queen as “a more sexual, human sort of emotion,” compared to Thompson’s Queen, “less sexual but very much into mind tricks.”

Hail to the Queen

If Krige’s Queen died in “Endgame,” shouldn’t Thompson have voiced the QueeninLower Decks?

Hail to the Queen

InPicardSeason 1,Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan)briefly becomes a Borg Queen. The once-assimilated daughter of Magnus and Erin Hansen, who collected the earliest Federation data on the Borg, must attach herself to the device inside the Queen’s liar and say, “We are the Borg,” to save Borg and xBs on the Artifact.

Related:Star Trek: Picard Wraps Filming on Its Third and Final Season

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When Seven takes control of the Cube and becomes a Queen, she controls every remaining Borg in stasis. Now in charge of the Cube, she can help the xBs fight the Romulans who are trying to kill them, but when the Romulans get the upper hand and flush out the remaining Borg, Seven screams out, “No!” It’s clear Queen Seven feels each drone’s suffering. Although she feared she would give in to the temptation of power once she completed her duties, she disconnects from the device of her own free will.

There is also a version of the Borg Queen Seven of Nine inStar Trek Online, voiced by Ryan.

Star Trek: Picard’s Annie Wersching

Wersching’s Borg Queen is an exciting addition toPicardthis season.Co-showrunner Akiva Goldsman told Polygonhe found inspiration in how the Borg Queen’s existence is “quite binary.” He added, “She’s either connected to all or totally disconnected.”

He also said the Borg Queen would be paired with Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill). “Although there are clearly feelings and encounters that are driven by feelings with Seven and the Borg Queen, and Picard in the Borg Queen — we know those stories,” Goldsman added. “We’ve told those stories. We could retell them with a sort of darker, more graphic grammar because we’re streaming. But otherwise, it’s the same story.”