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The Q claim to have always existed, with no explanation as to how they first came into existence. ({{VOY|The Q and the Grey}})
 
The Q claim to have always existed, with no explanation as to how they first came into existence. ({{VOY|The Q and the Grey}})
   
Based on descriptions by numerous Q, including the Q later known as [[Quinn]], as well as [[Amanda Rogers]] (the child of two Q in [[Human]] form), the Q Continuum is a highly ordered society, but is also the result of eons of [[evolution]]ary stagnation. Because of their immortality, everything possible has been done, and their omniscience has become boring; members of the Q race no longer felt the need to even speak to each other, because everything has been said. As a result, Quinn, a respected philosopher in the Continuum, stated that he wished to die – because he had no further purpose in life. The Continuum, however, denied him this act because, it was claimed, extraordinary chaos would result from such an act – his influence among the Q was expected to make this act have unpredictable social consequences, which was, actually, exactly what Quinn believed to be necessary to end stagnation in the Continuum.
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Based on descriptions by numerous Q, including the Q later known as [[Quinn]], as well as [[Amanda Rogers]] (the child of two Q in [[Human]] form), the Q Continuum is a highly ordered society, but is also the result of eons of [[evolution]]ary stagnation.
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In the beginnings of what Quinn called a "new era", the Q engaged in constant dialogues of discovery and other universal issues. However since that new era began, the Q never faced the unknown again. Everything possible has been done, and their omniscience has become boring; members of the Q race no longer felt the need to even speak to each other, because everything has been said. As a result, Quinn, a respected philosopher in the Continuum, stated that he wished to die – because he had no further purpose in life. The Continuum, however, denied him this act because, it was claimed, extraordinary chaos would result from such an act – his influence among the Q was expected to make this act have unpredictable social consequences, which was, actually, exactly what Quinn believed to be necessary to end stagnation in the Continuum.
   
 
Quinn was imprisoned on a rogue [[comet]] for eternity to prevent him from ending his own life, until he was accidentally released by the crew of the {{USS|Voyager}} in [[2372]]. In a courtroom hearing to determine his right to [[political asylum]], Quinn described the Continuum as a lazy, old roadhouse along a deserted desert highway – he argued that the road could take them to anywhere in the universe, but the Q had already been everywhere. In addition, everything both old and new had already been discussed, and so the roadhouse was silent – there was nothing left to say. Therefore, Quinn argued that being forced to remain alive was a continued burden to him, a burden that he did not want to continue to bear. Q argued that the death of a Q would create chaos in the Continuum. ''Voyager'' [[captain]] [[Kathryn Janeway]] ruled in Quinn's favor, granting him asylum. A day later, Quinn committed [[suicide]]. ({{VOY|Death Wish}})
 
Quinn was imprisoned on a rogue [[comet]] for eternity to prevent him from ending his own life, until he was accidentally released by the crew of the {{USS|Voyager}} in [[2372]]. In a courtroom hearing to determine his right to [[political asylum]], Quinn described the Continuum as a lazy, old roadhouse along a deserted desert highway – he argued that the road could take them to anywhere in the universe, but the Q had already been everywhere. In addition, everything both old and new had already been discussed, and so the roadhouse was silent – there was nothing left to say. Therefore, Quinn argued that being forced to remain alive was a continued burden to him, a burden that he did not want to continue to bear. Q argued that the death of a Q would create chaos in the Continuum. ''Voyager'' [[captain]] [[Kathryn Janeway]] ruled in Quinn's favor, granting him asylum. A day later, Quinn committed [[suicide]]. ({{VOY|Death Wish}})

Revision as of 08:45, 18 June 2014

Q Continuum as an empty road

The Continuum, as is perceivable by Humans

Q Continuum ranch house

A symbolic representation of the Q existence

Q junior trial

Qs in judicial robes

Aldebaran serpent

Q appears as an Aldebaran serpent

For the CCG expansion with a similar name, please see CCG: Q-Continuum.

The Q Continuum is an extradimensional plane of existence inhabited by a race of beings known as the Q. The term can also refer to the Q society itself.

As a race, the Q are immortal, but not absolutely omniscient or omnipotent, just possessing the ability of instantaneous matter-energy transformation and teleportation, as well as the ability of time travel. Their apparent abilities include moving entire asteroid belts and stars, creating alternate timelines, and affecting universal states of nature such as the gravitational constant. In fact, the only time a Q is seen as unable to do something is during a period where their powers are reduced or revoked by the Continuum. (TNG: "Deja Q", "Tapestry", "All Good Things...")

The Q claim to have always existed, with no explanation as to how they first came into existence. (VOY: "The Q and the Grey")

Based on descriptions by numerous Q, including the Q later known as Quinn, as well as Amanda Rogers (the child of two Q in Human form), the Q Continuum is a highly ordered society, but is also the result of eons of evolutionary stagnation.

In the beginnings of what Quinn called a "new era", the Q engaged in constant dialogues of discovery and other universal issues. However since that new era began, the Q never faced the unknown again. Everything possible has been done, and their omniscience has become boring; members of the Q race no longer felt the need to even speak to each other, because everything has been said. As a result, Quinn, a respected philosopher in the Continuum, stated that he wished to die – because he had no further purpose in life. The Continuum, however, denied him this act because, it was claimed, extraordinary chaos would result from such an act – his influence among the Q was expected to make this act have unpredictable social consequences, which was, actually, exactly what Quinn believed to be necessary to end stagnation in the Continuum.

Quinn was imprisoned on a rogue comet for eternity to prevent him from ending his own life, until he was accidentally released by the crew of the USS Voyager in 2372. In a courtroom hearing to determine his right to political asylum, Quinn described the Continuum as a lazy, old roadhouse along a deserted desert highway – he argued that the road could take them to anywhere in the universe, but the Q had already been everywhere. In addition, everything both old and new had already been discussed, and so the roadhouse was silent – there was nothing left to say. Therefore, Quinn argued that being forced to remain alive was a continued burden to him, a burden that he did not want to continue to bear. Q argued that the death of a Q would create chaos in the Continuum. Voyager captain Kathryn Janeway ruled in Quinn's favor, granting him asylum. A day later, Quinn committed suicide. (VOY: "Death Wish")

As a result of Quinn's action, the Continuum was plunged into a massively destructive civil war that set the "Freedom Faction" against the traditional Q. The two factions were able to construct weapons that could even compromise the immortality of a Q. When these weapons were fired in the Continuum, this resulted in massive damage to subspace, causing some stars in normal space to go supernova. Eventually it damaged subspace to such an extent that Q outside of the Continuum lost their powers and immortality.

Q had the idea of mating with Janeway to produce a being with the powers of a Q, and to put the morals of a Human to use in order to end the war. The crew of Voyager flew through a supernova into the Continuum with help from a female Q, who had lost her powers and could not return without Voyager's help. Voyager's crew quickly overpowered the Q by using Q weapons. A ceasefire was called. Q mated with the female Q instead of Janeway and the damage to subspace was restored, making the Q omnipotent and invincible again. (VOY: "The Q and the Grey")

Later on, the new Q became an intergalactic troublemaker. He started wars between innocent races, knocked planets out of orbit, detonated Omega molecules, and created havoc in every way he could. His mother disowned him, humiliated by his actions. Q, however, followed him, cleaning up all the damage.

Under advice from Janeway, Q implemented punishment on the boy. Q dumped him on Voyager, and with the help of the "Q government" took away his powers. Junior, as he was called by his father, had one week to become a good citizen, or he would be sentenced to eternity as an Oprelian amoeba. Junior did well for the first few days, until he stole the Delta Flyer II. After his friend Icheb was injured, however, he returned to Voyager. Janeway made him apologize to the ship he attacked, which was in fact Q, who masqueraded as a likely target to test his son's attitude.

When Judgment Day came, Junior was still found unworthy of being a Q, but was good enough to be a Human. After this sentence, Q threatened to leave the Continuum unless his son was allowed to stay. After further pleading, the Continuum agreed to grant the young Q's powers back to him on the condition that his father act as his guardian and supervisor in perpetuum, or at least until he could prove himself worthy. (VOY: "Q2")

Known members of the Continuum

Apocrypha

The history of the Q Continuum is explored in the Q Continuum series, which features flashbacks to Q's 'youth', including him being sentenced to safeguard Earth as punishment after his actions released a powerful entity known as '0' into the universe when Earth was damaged in the last stage of the war with 0. The conclusion of the trilogy sees 0 briefly return to this universe, achieving a level of power temporarily beyond even Q himself as his insanity from millennia of solitude allows him to warp reality at a fundamental level that Q would never be able to do without risking damage to himself.

In The Eternal Tide, it is revealed that the Q Continuum manifested as a creative force to 'oppose' the destructive potential of the Omega Continuum after it was disrupted and the decay of the universe accelerated. Voyager is later able to slow down the decay to a more tolerable level—shortening the universe's lifespan by a few million years rather than by trillions—as the only way to completely halt and undo the disruption would have erased the Q Continuum from existence as their creative force was no longer 'needed'. Eternal Tide also reveals that there are at least six rules that the Q must obey, with number six being "Don't bring the dead back to life" as the consequences of such an action can be problematic as not even the Q fully know what happens after death.

External link

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