The Q weapons as seen during their civil war. It's implied the weapons themselves (not the Q using them) were causing a series of supernovas in our dimension.
These have to be by far the most powerful weapons in all of Star Trek. They caused supernovas in normal space, when fired *in the Q continuum*, as a side effect. They weren't even targetting anything in normal space, that was purely a side effect of the weapon being fired. Considering they could injure or outright kill Q, that's...pretty powerful.
Not sure if you can call these even weapons. Being used by Q, its essentially just another form of time/space/matter manipulation, in this case to hurt or kill other Q.
@@heiniknallkopp9688 They kinda were though, because humans could pick them up and use them, and some Q indicated that the humans would be capable of injuring or killing them with them. Sure, you can argue that the appearance of the weapons was "a form you are comfortable with", but they were definitely a weapon that could be picked up and used by a non-Q
They actually said the supernovae were "crossfire" One could presume it was the "artillery" we saw in the continuum that was disrupting stars. That would make them as powerful as Soran's torpedo from Generations. They may in fact be completely harmless to biological beings. Who knows!
I would like to mention 2 more: Genesis Device : kills all life on a planet Amargosa/Soran Torpedo : Trilithium warhead that destroys a sun and its surrounding star system
Genesis whilst not designed as a weapon unfortunately became one, plus whilst it was meant to make a world habitable the only time we saw it in action was when Reliant went up in smoke and created the planet with it, which destroyed itself within a matter of months. That makes me wonder did the planet only collapse because there was no planet to begin with or would that have happened regardless, if they shot it at some moon for example would that then cause the moon to decay rapidly within two months?
@@brodriguez11000 oh yeah but it does still raise a question about what environmental factors might have played as we’ve only ever seen a single Genesis device so it does make you wonder if under different circumstances it might have been different or even the same
@@huntjl88 It in fact was used as a weapon by Khan, he specifically set it off to kill Kirk, with his assumption that Enterprise could not escape in its crippled state, might have been a self destruct type of weapon, but it was in fact used as a weapon
The trans-phasic torpedo, the doomsday machine in TOS, the planet killing weapon from species 8472, the Xindi weapon, and the temporal weapon of the Krenim time ship are some examples.
I fully expected to see the Krenim time ship in this list, and maybe even those temporal torpedoes the Krenim had. Forgot all about the transphasic torpedos as well. Borg cubes didn't stand a chance against them.
I think he should do another video and categorize the weapons from hand held weapons, to ship mounted weapons and bio-weapons , to Weapons of Mass Destructions like the Doomsday machine and the 8472 planet destroying weapons and maybe include a list for specialized devices that weren't intended to be used as weapons but easily can be.
That eventually backfired to erasing its invention in the first place, if memory serves, thanks to Voyager. That did not stop STO from making it a major antagonist via ignoring what deleted it from reality.
@@dadefrost2059 It does? I thought it showed the inventor, not, inventing it because the pretty girl he was crushing on decided to say yes to his lunch invitation. So he puts down his electronic tablet, and the implication is that he very gets around to finishing his time manipulation invention, which was on the tablet.
Yes I agree I was thinking the same thing. Also what about icheb Voyager .he is the bio weapon and reason the entire Borg lost cohesion because they infected the queen
No, the Genesis device is not categorized as a weapon. I can smash someone's head with my phone but my phone will not normally be categorized as a weapon although it will be "the murder weapon" if I killed someone with it.
@@foofoo3344 In the hands of any military of any trek race Genesis is a weapon on the scale of the Death Star. It is a planet killer, and a civilization ender. It takes your enemies home world and turns everything on it into an idyllic park like setting perfect for colonization. It may well be the most effective weapon in all of science fiction. No radioactive wasteland, no reducing planets to asteroid belts. Just fly in one cloaked ship to launch the genesis torpedo. Then send in the colony ships to hold a victory picnic.
@@allenfogarty2384 But it's not a weapon. It's a tool that was meant to help people. Just like a wrench, it was never meant to used as a killing weapon. If I used my wrench to kill you, then my wrench becomes the murder weapon but that doesn't mean the classification of all wrenches around the world becomes "weapon". So yeah, you can use Genesis to kill but it was never made to be a weapon. Hence, the Genesis Device is classified as a tool.
@@mrworld2112 Same as the romulan ship weapon in tos season 1 that could destroy outposts and starships in 1 hit ...only way to survive was get along distance away
@@WarpigGaming. You know, now that you mention it, everything *looked* more dangerous in TNG or DSN, but everything *was* more dangerous in TOS! I also think the Xindi weapon from Enterprise that cut Florida in half probably should have made the list, but maybe the channel's content creators have a soft spot for anything that's willing to absolutely wreck Florida.
Two more “dangerous” weapons Cardassian wit. One cutting remark might not leave physical evidence, but it leaves significant psychological damage. Ezri Dax’s stare, when combined with her smile, produces results similar to a phaser on high stun.
Not really destroying it, just digitizing it for storage inside its massive data banks. Same thing happened to the Federation border station and Lt. Illia.
This was a solid list. When explaining some of the more deadly/insidious weapons from the star trek universe to a Starwars friend, I used pretty much off of these examples. He was shocked at the Vidian organ harvester haha
Voyager's "Tricobalt Device" always got me, they were made out to be the federation equivalent of a WMD and yet after the first couple of episodes they just seemed to disappear.
The part that always got me about them is why they were there in the first place. “The Voyager Conspiracy” asked some *very* relevant questions about just why these were even in the ship’s complement that just kind of got swept under the rug as part of Seven’s paranoid delusion. But nearly all of her questions (like this one) kind of needed an actual explanation and not just dismissal.
@@Bonzothefifth While they don't state exactly why Voyager was equipped with tricobalt devices, they do have several scenes that give us plenty of explanation. First, the Intrepid class was a testbed for tons of new systems. Bioneural gelpacks, a geometrically variable warp field, a new form of ablative hull armor, and of course the tricobalt devices. This tech is all implied to be a response to Borg incursions. Think of Voyager as the civilian version of the Defiant. It's quick, smart, and punches way above its weight. The Federation learned that super ships with thousands of civilians were not going to be the ships of the future. Sleek, dangerous vessels with more limited crew complements were the way to mitigate damage from the Borg. As far as them being the "federation equivalent of a WMD", I wholeheartedly disagree. There really isn't such a thing as a WMD as far as the world of Star Trek is concerned. We have seen that even just one or two warships are capable of completely and utterly devastating the surface and atmosphere of a planet in just a couple minutes. And that is just with conventional phasers and torpedoes. The only reason to have a stronger weapon than a torpedo, is to fight other warships or enemies, like the borg. There really isn't a need for a WMD since even a little Miranda class ship could annihilate a planet.
What about the Tox Uthat, which kills a star? Dr. Tolian Soran was also able to replicate the results of this weapon with his research into trilithium weapons. Every planet in the system gets destroyed. Edit: a similar effect on a much smaller scale was employed twice on screen by Klingons. Commander Kurn and Worf created a solar flare that destroyed the Birds of Prey loyal to Duras that were pursuing Kurn's ship. Later, Worf (and friends) utilized this same tactic during the Dominion War to make a larger flare that destroyed an entire Dominion-Cardassian Shipyard. As a comparison, the flares are like small battlefield-level tactical nukes compared with the Hydrogen bomb-like level of the Tox Uthat/Soran Trilithium weapon.
Any phaser is a deadly weapon. The tiny ones from early TNG were small enough to conceal in your palm yet had all the settings from mild stun to vaporise.
You are missing the Xindi weapon. Even the scout version wiped out millions on Earth. The full sized version was supposed to be like the Trek version of the Death Star.
What about the Omega molecule, the quantum torpedo and the Genesis device that can terraform entire planets? Or the Dreadnought missile from Voyager? Or the weapons the Q used during their civil war? These weapons seem much more powerful than a hand faser.
Omega was an energy source, not a weapon. It was never used as a weapon. The subspace damage was due to scientists trying to harness the energy potential, not detonating it on purpose unlike nuclear energy & weapons.
The Dreadnought is nothing but a strategical interstellar Missile. We saw in Voyager i thing two examples of this kind of weapons. While it probably does a substantial amount of damage, its nothing to call home about compared to other stuff we saw across all the series.
@@RichO1701e That's like saying Napalm is not a weapon but an energy source.. It's also like saying that Plutonium is not a weapon but an energy source...... You do realize that every gun and weapon that has ever existed is in fact an energy source, whether it be mechanical energy, chemical energy or radiological energy.. Literally every weapon in existence is an energy source.
I’d consider including the ship’s weapon of Species 8472. With one ship, the weapon is sufficient to take on other ships. When combined with other ships (of their own kind), they collectively become a miniature “Death Star”-able to destroy planet size targets. It’s not destroyed as fast as the Death Star, but still.
How about TOS "The Doomsday Machine?" A planet destroying weapon which was making its way to the most densely populated part of our galaxy until Kirk uses the Constellation as a weapon to destroy it.
Left Out : The Doomsday Machine ,Self Replicating Mines the Species 8472 BioShips the Genesis Device and V’ Ger ( though the last one was a huge living machine )
Neither the Genesis Device or V' Ger were specifically designed and built as weapon systems intended for combat or to kill. Plenty of devices in our real world could be used to kill if used outside design parameters.
@@Krahazik I’m aware of that , but any advanced technology can be MISUSED, as David Marcus said “ We are dealing with something that could be perverted into a dreadful weapon “ So , your point is moot.
@@stardude2006 His point is not moot, this list is for specific built purpose weapons and what mostly appears to be hand held weapons, not repurposed non weapons which were thus weaponized. Come on, bro that's like saying your car is more deadly weapon than a rifle even though a car is not a weapon just because some lunatics can kill more with a car before stopped than with a rifle. Seems your point is the one that's moot.
That badass phaser rifle in "Where no man has gone before" Star Trek TOS deserves a mention. It only appeared the one time in TOS. BTW one of the best episodes made.
TNG had a drone on an abandoned planet. It would improve after each battle. Giving the crew and the Enterprise almost fatal end. In the original series was a probe that was as powerful as the Enterprise. Vege memory serves me. Dreadnought from Voyager.
In one of the ToS novels featuring "Number 1", also known as Una it's hyposthesised that the Tantalus field shifts it's victims to an alternative universe. This hypothesis came after the original Enterprise crew under Pike came across an extra-universal invader that used a similiar device with the same effect.
I myself, would include in my inventory, some of what you just described; the rifle that shoots through walls and all ecsecories, the BORG nanotechnologies, and the scanner/gun/harvester -(as it allows you to adapt organs collected for reuse in virtually any host you need it to).
Did anyone else get the feeling that the Sword of Kahless was also cursed? Both Kor and Worf started to lose their mind while holding it and it went fully unaddressed
4. It's stated in several Data/Lore episodes, including specifically by Soong himself that Data is actively programmed not to lie. That doesn't mean he can't choose to, but he would have to have a very powerful motivation to do so as we see in the early episode where he contacts and wants to assist/rescue a young female on a dying planet. He avoids outright betrayal, but he commits insubordination and hides it as long as possible. It was definitely outside the norms for a decorated bridge officer and senior staff member.
Borg nanoprobes also saved needing after he was killed on an away mission. The doctor needed more psych programing. Neelix's near death experience left him troubled. It's like finding out there's no Heaven.
2) The Doomsday Machine from ToS 2a) The Genesis Device 1) The Tox Ulthat, or however you spell it. That thing causes supernovae! At least I think so. 1a) Whatever that device was that the Founder posing as Bashir was gonna use to make Bajor's sun go supernova.
Several additional ones pop into my mind: Genesis Device Quantum Torpedos (the ones that exist in a different time, therefore rendering shields ineffective) Breen Energy weapons Tricobalt device
Although the Omega molecule was never weaponised, imagine the horrors it could cause if it were. Entire swathes of space cut off from the wider galaxy in a single instant... that's among the more terrifying things I've seen in sci-fi.
Yes, this. The Omega molecule, a substance so destructive and merciless that the Federation nope'd out of so hard that they made it their strictest and most overriding goal to ensure that nobody would ever work with it, let alone weaponize it. Sure, there's some pretty nasty devices going around that can wipe out planets or even solar systems, but what else is there which can cause permanent destruction on a scale of light years with only a single molecule of the stuff?
The Borg "nanoprobes" are vastly underestimated in potential as powerful weapons. Nanotechnology at all levels, both in real theory and science fiction, has been akin to how the atomic bomb has been seen before the atomic bomb. Seven of Nine has been seen customizing her "nanoprobes" in their nature and programming on the fly, so by default, it is assumed all Borg CAN do that. Let me simplify. Nanomachines are machines the size of microbes and smaller, many built from the atom up. The nature of microbes is often ignored. All living things are not only the cells in our bodies but often as much a mass (often more) of microbes. The micro-biome is still being explored. Now imagine nanomachines that can assimilate the life form and all of its symbiotic microbes. They will assimilate the data from former infections that the immune system now rejects and the retroviruses that are absorbed as part of the body. That leads to the assimilated being releasing airborne assimilating "nanoprobes" to infect (assimilate) others. All microbes, from body cells to the micro-biome to even infections - current, resisted, attempted, etc - can be not only assimilated but mimicked. The key word is "adapt" in Borg nature. They do bioform but at first, the very first thing they do, is adapt. That is very important. They adapt to nature, become stronger, then use that strength to conquer said nature.
I'm missing the Species 8472 Particle Beam/Phaser/Disruptor (or whatever it is called). One 8472 ship can easily destroy a Borg cube, and combining multiple ships can quite easily destroy even a planet.
After looking at the examples mentioned in the video and those serious mentions in the comments I find two others not mentioned. They are the following. The Echo Papa 607 advanced weapon system with its drones developed by the arms merchants of Minos that was showcased in TNG: "The Arsenal of Freedom". The Iconian gateway or trans-dimensional gateway that was showcased in both TNG: "Contagion" and DS9: "To the Death".
@@RichO1701e You're right however it was used as a weapon as explained in Contagion. The ability to transport an entire military force as if walking from one room into the next made it a weapon even if wasn't it's intended purpose. Plenty of examples exist of items having an intended purpose yet they're turned into weapons. As an example take something benign as a rope. It's purpose isn't to be used as a weapon yet you can use it as a weapon in the form of a hangman's noose or even a garrot. Same principle.
The TR-116 Rifle! I knew I wasn't hallucinating this episode! But I'd only ever seen it once and I couldn't remember what Trek series it was from. Thank you! I just won a $100 bet :D
The sword of Kahless also plays 3 major roles in STO, and a major one in the first Armada game. In Armada, it's used to rally the Klingons together to face off with the Borg...these events erased from the timeline by the end of the game when the invasion is ended via time travel. In STO, the first is when Kahless' clone obtains it when the Fey'kri show up early in the Klingon episodes, the second is when said clone nearly slays one of the Iconians in a fight, and the third is when it's recovered from the Iconian who took it as a trophy and is revealed to have a map to the Hur'q homeworld which allows the Gamma story to reach a conclusion that isn't rampaging Hur'q swarms devouring the galaxy
I feel like spacebound weaponry was totally ignored for this list. Think of the great entries that got missed: the Breen ion cannons, the Krenim time ship, Rom's self-replicating minefield, Voyager's infinife torpedo launcher.
@@trayolphia5756 That "actual" name is tertiary canon from a limited-license video game. Not part of the show. Not part of any other licensed works. They're called "Species 8472" in all the official sources.
100%. I'm sick of seeing "but what about Genesis device or Omega"... 1) Genesis wasn't a weapon, wasn't designed by Carol Marcus to be a weapon 2) Omega was an energy source, never used as a weapon
There's so many more to choose... like all the ones Harry Mudd demonstrated in that first season episode of Discovery. The powerful acid the Romulans used in Picard. Riker's trombone might be the scariest of all...
Planet Killer's antiproton beam would top the list. Although it didn't necessarily one-shot Enterprise or Constellation, it was slicing apart huge sections of planets the size of Earth. This implies a different (higher) setting for planets vs starships. It's an antimatter beam destroying whatever matter it hits. It would win.....unless you consider Lazarus and Lazarus from "The Alternative Factor". If they ever meet in normal space-time, the entire universe is wiped out.
for number 10 you messed up. the thing that drove worf and the da ja master (or what ever he is called) to try and kill each other was a bioweapon which was the last line of defense in protecting the batleth from being stolen by klingons (or maybe was used back in the day to keep the klingons from rising up against the invaders). so it wasn't the cultural significance which drove them to fight each other.
Somebody else might have said this one. But you miss the transphasic torpedo. Use the one that Admiral Janeway help the crew of Voyager create when she traveled back in time. It could destroy a borg Cube with one shot.
Guile (aka the Corbomite Maneuver, aka bluffing) is the post powerful weapon ever used in Star Trek. Great way to win a battle without any casualties on either side. Doesn't make for exciting battle scenes though.
What about the Soliton Wave? I know it was supposed to be a propulsion system (sure thing Starfleet, and the Defiant is a "heavy escort ship" not a warship) but the Wave could be used to destroy a planet from hundreds of lightyears away.
Because of the Year of Hell storyand the USS Defiant, you should add Starships, even if they are usually vessels of exploration, they are armed and ramming them into things can do great damage
Your list was rubbish. Didn't include even ONE of the most deadly weapons. Half of yours were just single person weapons. Not at all deadly. What about the planet killer device in Enterprise? What about the red matter planet killer in Star Trek reboot movie? Didn't Vger have the means to kill a planet? What about the atmosphere lighting planet killing bomb in Enterprise? What about the genocide plague in Enterprise? What about the time ship that reshaped an entire GALAXY in Voyager? What about the Romulan planet killing thing in Enterprise? Or the time that race's weapons totally wiped out their whole planet in Enterprise? I could go on, but any weapon that is not at least planetary in its scope shouldn't be on this list.
*"Warp Bubble Gun"* (Teoretical Possible, done in the TTRPG) Creating a Warp Bubble you send outwards via inverted Incubation Fields. Rips all Organic Life (Carbon Based) into a Subspace Field where it dissolves or get spewn out when the Field collapses (which would be "behind" the Ship in the Void of Space). Even Metaphasic Shields do not work (only when modified for that), Deflectors neither as after "Shot" the Fields Rotation Frequency changes rapidly by it dissolving. As long as you have not the Core Frequency of the Reactor it origins from and all other Specification, only a Q (!) *may* (!) survive. Even if knowing that, it needs normally too long to adapt - even for someone like Borg or Data. The Second Use of that Weapon would be the Modification to tear open Subspace Rifts or Warping Space in itself so you create Black Holes, tempering with Time itself or create Dimension Gates. But, aside the "Creating Black Holes" you risk to simply "Destroy Reality" on every Use. *But, Isn't this a blatant Violation of the Ban on Subspace Weaponry?* Yes, 100%. But, it seems (Non-Canon following) the Danger of the Dominion Thread combined with a secret Member of Section 31 send out to get a Foot into DTI/TIC can get away with a lot of awful Things that are needed by the Federation to become able to found DTI/TIC and thus manipulate Section 31 to send an Agent on this Mission. It is really horrible what you can do to others with the proper Knowledge, a Deflector Shield and some Tinkering plus enough Energy....
I'm surprised the humble photon torpedo didn't make the cut, but I think its ubiquity probably made it a bit too mundane for this list. Still, it's easy to forget how powerful they are. One is enough to deliver a killing blow to just about any ship sans its shields and, if I'm not mistaken, just a few of them took out 30% of a Borg cube during the Enterprises' first encounter. Until they adapted, anyway...
Jadzia is trained as a starfleet scientist and a host. She's better at controlling input from her hosts. Ezri is a counselor who hasn't been trained as a host. Counselors usually save lives. Troi had the same problem. She would have been just as appalled at killing others.
I admit to feeling a bit sorry for the Jem'Hadar myself. Bred to be aggressive and forced into servitude by the control of White. They had little choice in the matter, although some did try to get off the White and thereby end their enslavement, but it didn't really end well for them.
nice video. if u make a sequel, you should mention the bioweapon that was manufactured by Section 39 to wipe out the Dominion. Odo, curing the leader of the Dominion is the only thing that ended the Dominion War in a peaceful manner and it saved the Alpha Quadrant.
Quantum torpedoes should get a mention. In First Contact just 4 of them was enough to destroy a Borg cube (being fired into a gaping cavity in its hull giving the torpedoes optimal impact).
Missing stuff:
- Tricobalt Weapons
- The Metreon cascade (VOY)
- The Planet Killer (TOS)
- Tox Uthat
- Krenim TimeShift Weapon
I think this is more of a “most deadly handheld weapons” list
You forgot the total matter-energy conversion beam on the slaver tool from TAS
@@BirthquakeRecords Wath about the Q rifels? exploding stars as a side effect is powerfull ^^
-Holographic Thompson submachine gun.
Agony Phaser Rifle, anyone?
The Q weapons as seen during their civil war. It's implied the weapons themselves (not the Q using them) were causing a series of supernovas in our dimension.
These have to be by far the most powerful weapons in all of Star Trek. They caused supernovas in normal space, when fired *in the Q continuum*, as a side effect. They weren't even targetting anything in normal space, that was purely a side effect of the weapon being fired. Considering they could injure or outright kill Q, that's...pretty powerful.
Not sure if you can call these even weapons. Being used by Q, its essentially just another form of time/space/matter manipulation, in this case to hurt or kill other Q.
@@heiniknallkopp9688 They kinda were though, because humans could pick them up and use them, and some Q indicated that the humans would be capable of injuring or killing them with them. Sure, you can argue that the appearance of the weapons was "a form you are comfortable with", but they were definitely a weapon that could be picked up and used by a non-Q
They actually said the supernovae were "crossfire"
One could presume it was the "artillery" we saw in the continuum that was disrupting stars. That would make them as powerful as Soran's torpedo from Generations. They may in fact be completely harmless to biological beings. Who knows!
@@sarahscott5305 Did Q warn Jenway not to get hit in the episode, because if these wapones could make him bleed, imagen wath they would do to her?
I would like to mention 2 more:
Genesis Device : kills all life on a planet
Amargosa/Soran Torpedo : Trilithium warhead that destroys a sun and its surrounding star system
Genesis Device was not a weapon. Although it could have been used as one it wasn't.
Genesis whilst not designed as a weapon unfortunately became one, plus whilst it was meant to make a world habitable the only time we saw it in action was when Reliant went up in smoke and created the planet with it, which destroyed itself within a matter of months.
That makes me wonder did the planet only collapse because there was no planet to begin with or would that have happened regardless, if they shot it at some moon for example would that then cause the moon to decay rapidly within two months?
@@dca-Letsplay : I believe one of the books addresses this by the matter being used was unstable.
@@brodriguez11000 oh yeah but it does still raise a question about what environmental factors might have played as we’ve only ever seen a single Genesis device so it does make you wonder if under different circumstances it might have been different or even the same
@@huntjl88 It in fact was used as a weapon by Khan, he specifically set it off to kill Kirk, with his assumption that Enterprise could not escape in its crippled state, might have been a self destruct type of weapon, but it was in fact used as a weapon
The trans-phasic torpedo, the doomsday machine in TOS, the planet killing weapon from species 8472, the Xindi weapon, and the temporal weapon of the Krenim time ship are some examples.
I misread the first line as, "trans-phobic torpedo." Something about that didn't seem very star trek.
I fully expected to see the Krenim time ship in this list, and maybe even those temporal torpedoes the Krenim had.
Forgot all about the transphasic torpedos as well. Borg cubes didn't stand a chance against them.
Don't forget the Tox Ulthat or however you spell it. That thing causes supernovae!
I think he should do another video and categorize the weapons from hand held weapons, to ship mounted weapons and bio-weapons , to Weapons of Mass Destructions like the Doomsday machine and the 8472 planet destroying weapons and maybe include a list for specialized devices that weren't intended to be used as weapons but easily can be.
@@Infraclear "trans-phobic torpedo" would work in Discovery lol
Jadzia Dax's smile is the most powerful
Seven of nines skin tight bodysuit might rival it
@@GonzoDonzo Seven looks better now
Bonk! Go to horny jail.
Steven Joy, logical. Flawlessly logical. All Vulcan salutes you. 🖖
out of the 3 only 7 of 9 managed more than 1 kid, sad.
The deadliest weapon in all of Star Trek is obviously Sisko himself
*The Sisko
The Prophets sayeth "Don't f**k with The Sisko."
Legend says that wink The Emissary gave on the _Defiant_ bridge still DISARMS the Dominion.
Legit truth! He nearly bored me to death while brooding, then a heart attack with his sudden outbursts.
The Krenin Time ship - it doesn't just kill, it erases it's victims from history so they never even existed.
That eventually backfired to erasing its invention in the first place, if memory serves, thanks to Voyager.
That did not stop STO from making it a major antagonist via ignoring what deleted it from reality.
@@That80sGuy1972 final scene of year of hell part 2 shows the creator inventing it again.
@@dadefrost2059 Thanks. I missed that part.
@@dadefrost2059 It does? I thought it showed the inventor, not, inventing it because the pretty girl he was crushing on decided to say yes to his lunch invitation. So he puts down his electronic tablet, and the implication is that he very gets around to finishing his time manipulation invention, which was on the tablet.
@@Shakespeare1612 i assumed he went to lunch with the pretty girl and then went back to work..
This should be titled 10 Most Powerful Handheld/Personnel Weapons.
well the mines are hardly hand held...
@@gottfriedwegemuller3223 Well you could pick them up if you somehow found a way to make them not explode as soon as they appear... 😛
@Tautha De Danan Tricobalt weapons weren't in the list...
What about the Genesis device?
Yes I agree I was thinking the same thing. Also what about icheb Voyager .he is the bio weapon and reason the entire Borg lost cohesion because they infected the queen
For Hate’s sake, I spit my last breath at thee
No, the Genesis device is not categorized as a weapon. I can smash someone's head with my phone but my phone will not normally be categorized as a weapon although it will be "the murder weapon" if I killed someone with it.
@@foofoo3344 In the hands of any military of any trek race Genesis is a weapon on the scale of the Death Star. It is a planet killer, and a civilization ender. It takes your enemies home world and turns everything on it into an idyllic park like setting perfect for colonization. It may well be the most effective weapon in all of science fiction. No radioactive wasteland, no reducing planets to asteroid belts. Just fly in one cloaked ship to launch the genesis torpedo. Then send in the colony ships to hold a victory picnic.
@@allenfogarty2384 But it's not a weapon. It's a tool that was meant to help people. Just like a wrench, it was never meant to used as a killing weapon. If I used my wrench to kill you, then my wrench becomes the murder weapon but that doesn't mean the classification of all wrenches around the world becomes "weapon". So yeah, you can use Genesis to kill but it was never made to be a weapon. Hence, the Genesis Device is classified as a tool.
Are we not considering the planet-eating Doomsday Machine to be a weapon?
I do. That should have been at or near the top of list. The weapon could slice up planets, much more powerful than anything on this list.
@@mrworld2112 Same as the romulan ship weapon in tos season 1 that could destroy outposts and starships in 1 hit ...only way to survive was get along distance away
I Agree
My thoughts exactly! Anything that can slice a planet into rubble is a devastating weapon! Pure anti proton beam, even sounds lethal!!
@@WarpigGaming. You know, now that you mention it, everything *looked* more dangerous in TNG or DSN, but everything *was* more dangerous in TOS!
I also think the Xindi weapon from Enterprise that cut Florida in half probably should have made the list, but maybe the channel's content creators have a soft spot for anything that's willing to absolutely wreck Florida.
Even though it didn't exist in universe, the photonic cannon was lethal 🤣
Lol Yeah! And Kirk's Corbamite!
Gotta love the I-MOD (Infinity modulator)
Well... Apparently even photonic entities have their larger then life fantasies of all powerful weapons
Love this comment!
Two more “dangerous” weapons
Cardassian wit. One cutting remark might not leave physical evidence, but it leaves significant psychological damage.
Ezri Dax’s stare, when combined with her smile, produces results similar to a phaser on high stun.
The energy blasts from Vger should be on here. Could one shot a Klingon battlecruiser out of existence.
Not really destroying it, just digitizing it for storage inside its massive data banks. Same thing happened to the Federation border station and Lt. Illia.
@@STSWB5SG1FAN I did not realise that - that makes it even more horrific
You missed the most powerful weapon: a tricorder and The Guardian of Forever.
This was a solid list. When explaining some of the more deadly/insidious weapons from the star trek universe to a Starwars friend, I used pretty much off of these examples. He was shocked at the Vidian organ harvester haha
Did he not believe you when you said the Kelvin universe films aren't Star Wars? I wouldn't.
Voyager's "Tricobalt Device" always got me, they were made out to be the federation equivalent of a WMD and yet after the first couple of episodes they just seemed to disappear.
Maybe because people don't wanna use them like we dont wanna use nukes
On Voyager I think they used all to destroy the Caretakers array. It was something that couldn't just be replicated.
The part that always got me about them is why they were there in the first place. “The Voyager Conspiracy” asked some *very* relevant questions about just why these were even in the ship’s complement that just kind of got swept under the rug as part of Seven’s paranoid delusion. But nearly all of her questions (like this one) kind of needed an actual explanation and not just dismissal.
@@Bonzothefifth While they don't state exactly why Voyager was equipped with tricobalt devices, they do have several scenes that give us plenty of explanation.
First, the Intrepid class was a testbed for tons of new systems. Bioneural gelpacks, a geometrically variable warp field, a new form of ablative hull armor, and of course the tricobalt devices. This tech is all implied to be a response to Borg incursions. Think of Voyager as the civilian version of the Defiant. It's quick, smart, and punches way above its weight. The Federation learned that super ships with thousands of civilians were not going to be the ships of the future. Sleek, dangerous vessels with more limited crew complements were the way to mitigate damage from the Borg.
As far as them being the "federation equivalent of a WMD", I wholeheartedly disagree.
There really isn't such a thing as a WMD as far as the world of Star Trek is concerned. We have seen that even just one or two warships are capable of completely and utterly devastating the surface and atmosphere of a planet in just a couple minutes.
And that is just with conventional phasers and torpedoes. The only reason to have a stronger weapon than a torpedo, is to fight other warships or enemies, like the borg. There really isn't a need for a WMD since even a little Miranda class ship could annihilate a planet.
Must've been the one thing they ACTUALLY had a limited supply of 😂
What about the Tox Uthat, which kills a star? Dr. Tolian Soran was also able to replicate the results of this weapon with his research into trilithium weapons. Every planet in the system gets destroyed.
Edit: a similar effect on a much smaller scale was employed twice on screen by Klingons. Commander Kurn and Worf created a solar flare that destroyed the Birds of Prey loyal to Duras that were pursuing Kurn's ship. Later, Worf (and friends) utilized this same tactic during the Dominion War to make a larger flare that destroyed an entire Dominion-Cardassian Shipyard.
As a comparison, the flares are like small battlefield-level tactical nukes compared with the Hydrogen bomb-like level of the Tox Uthat/Soran Trilithium weapon.
Yeah I kinda thought that would be #1
Any phaser is a deadly weapon. The tiny ones from early TNG were small enough to conceal in your palm yet had all the settings from mild stun to vaporise.
I believe the list is meant to be of the more uncommon weapons out there.
Wait, Mk 1 Phasers don't exist anymore?
You are missing the Xindi weapon. Even the scout version wiped out millions on Earth. The full sized version was supposed to be like the Trek version of the Death Star.
Also how about the transphasic torpedoes Voyager used on the Borg! One to two of those took OUT an entire cube effortlessly!!!
What about the Omega molecule, the quantum torpedo and the Genesis device that can terraform entire planets? Or the Dreadnought missile from Voyager? Or the weapons the Q used during their civil war? These weapons seem much more powerful than a hand faser.
Omega was an energy source, not a weapon. It was never used as a weapon. The subspace damage was due to scientists trying to harness the energy potential, not detonating it on purpose unlike nuclear energy & weapons.
The Dreadnought is nothing but a strategical interstellar Missile. We saw in Voyager i thing two examples of this kind of weapons. While it probably does a substantial amount of damage, its nothing to call home about compared to other stuff we saw across all the series.
@@RichO1701e That's like saying Napalm is not a weapon but an energy source.. It's also like saying that Plutonium is not a weapon but an energy source...... You do realize that every gun and weapon that has ever existed is in fact an energy source, whether it be mechanical energy, chemical energy or radiological energy.. Literally every weapon in existence is an energy source.
I’d consider including the ship’s weapon of Species 8472. With one ship, the weapon is sufficient to take on other ships. When combined with other ships (of their own kind), they collectively become a miniature “Death Star”-able to destroy planet size targets. It’s not destroyed as fast as the Death Star, but still.
That was my first thought .. that weapon easily handled a borg cube.
Yea. They were really powerfull. I still have 8472 as my pin.
You should've seen their own "Planet Killers".
How about TOS "The Doomsday Machine?" A planet destroying weapon which was making its way to the most densely populated part of our galaxy until Kirk uses the Constellation as a weapon to destroy it.
I have a feeling that shipbound weapons were totally forgotten about. We could have included so many.
Left Out : The Doomsday Machine ,Self Replicating Mines the Species 8472 BioShips the Genesis Device and V’ Ger ( though the last one was a huge living machine )
Neither the Genesis Device or V' Ger were specifically designed and built as weapon systems intended for combat or to kill. Plenty of devices in our real world could be used to kill if used outside design parameters.
@@Krahazik I’m aware of that , but any advanced technology can be MISUSED, as David Marcus said “ We are dealing with something that could be perverted into a dreadful weapon “
So , your point is moot.
@@stardude2006 His point is not moot, this list is for specific built purpose weapons and what mostly appears to be hand held weapons, not repurposed non weapons which were thus weaponized. Come on, bro that's like saying your car is more deadly weapon than a rifle even though a car is not a weapon just because some lunatics can kill more with a car before stopped than with a rifle. Seems your point is the one that's moot.
@@Knight_Kin You are obviously not well-versed in the lore of Star Trek REAL Star Trek, Don’t embarrass yourself.
TR-116 was developed to counter Borg adaptation abilities to energy based weapons. Sorry guys.
I'm pretty sure there was a previous weapon before that that was adapted for the borg. Just a 24th century type 3 rifle I believe.
Could’ve sworn he said that. Yes, he said Dominion, but I’m sure he went on to say it was first conceived of as a way to defeat Borg shields.
You forgot..... the Photonic Cannon. (Stands proud like the Doctor ECH)
Rofl! And Kirk's Corbamite! It is both a substance, and a device which detroys its attacker! Like Kirk's charm can be.
That badass phaser rifle in "Where no man has gone before" Star Trek TOS deserves a mention. It only appeared the one time in TOS. BTW one of the best episodes made.
TNG had a drone on an abandoned planet. It would improve after each battle. Giving the crew and the Enterprise almost fatal end. In the original series was a probe that was as powerful as the Enterprise. Vege memory serves me. Dreadnought from Voyager.
that's the Echo Papa 607.
The thought of the disruptor freaks me out. The way they describe what it does to you.
In one of the ToS novels featuring "Number 1", also known as Una it's hyposthesised that the Tantalus field shifts it's victims to an alternative universe. This hypothesis came after the original Enterprise crew under Pike came across an extra-universal invader that used a similiar device with the same effect.
Should’ve included Red Matter. It was so powerful that it created the JJ universe.
powerful enough to almost kill an entire franchise
@@CheesyKnobby But instead it revived it...
@@CheesyKnobby Not really I wasn't a fan personally but they certainly brought the franchise attention.
I myself, would include in my inventory, some of what you just described; the rifle that shoots through walls and all ecsecories, the BORG nanotechnologies, and the scanner/gun/harvester -(as it allows you to adapt organs collected for reuse in virtually any host you need it to).
Worf was eventually given command of his own starship. He is the current Captain of the USS Enterprise F.
True, but look at what had to happen for that.
Shooting a clock with a phaser...it’s one way to kill time
Lol
Nothing beats time travel as a devastating weapon tho
Did anyone else get the feeling that the Sword of Kahless was also cursed? Both Kor and Worf started to lose their mind while holding it and it went fully unaddressed
I always thought they should have used that to start a new klingon war led by worf possessed by some fragment of kahless
Indeed it was obviously cursed.
Not cursed, its just a sword.
The klingons are just brainwashed from a early age that its a mythical weapon made from hair...
I'm pretty sure the Federation needs to sign a treaty before Sisko can throw a right hook
Q here; can confirm.
Picard tries to reason with Q and is dogged by him for seven seasons. Sisko punches Q in the face; Q never returns to DS9.
Yo you forgot the total matter/energy conversion beam on the slaver tool from TAS
The sword of Kahless was about the only bat'leth I ever thought looked like it was work a damn!!! Far superior design
4. It's stated in several Data/Lore episodes, including specifically by Soong himself that Data is actively programmed not to lie. That doesn't mean he can't choose to, but he would have to have a very powerful motivation to do so as we see in the early episode where he contacts and wants to assist/rescue a young female on a dying planet. He avoids outright betrayal, but he commits insubordination and hides it as long as possible. It was definitely outside the norms for a decorated bridge officer and senior staff member.
Why did Data even have to lie in number 6? He is allowed to use lethal force in order to escape or preserve his own existence.
Your videos are always so exciting and interesting. Thank you for all of your awesome top 10 list.
*seems that the Risian Horga'hn was pretty effective as a means of distraction when called for*
Maybe, but it was J'Ma H'rong* that killed Curzon Dax!
*I can't spell, but you know what I mean.
Borg nanoprobes also saved needing after he was killed on an away mission. The doctor needed more psych programing. Neelix's near death experience left him troubled. It's like finding out there's no Heaven.
Dax, holding that TR-116 rifle: "This weapon is set to OVER 9000!"
Lt Uhura’s body is a lethal deadly weapon too! Don’t forget the episode Catspaw, plus a few episodes of Khan, a few episodes with Yeoman Rand.
2)
The Doomsday Machine from ToS
2a)
The Genesis Device
1)
The Tox Ulthat, or however you spell it. That thing causes supernovae! At least I think so.
1a)
Whatever that device was that the Founder posing as Bashir was gonna use to make Bajor's sun go supernova.
No mention of Red Matter being used to create a black hole in the center of planets?
Red matter is a bad joke.
@@asvarien it's cannon though
Marcus, Marcus, Marcus....Dude you left out 2 of the most powerful weapons in all Starfleet history!! The Doomday machine and the Genesis Device!!
5:44 We ALL know that Data pulled the trigger... I mean.. come on.. it's not like it's hidden in plain site.. lolol
Several additional ones pop into my mind:
Genesis Device
Quantum Torpedos (the ones that exist in a different time, therefore rendering shields ineffective)
Breen Energy weapons
Tricobalt device
Well collected mate! I need to watch my entire Gene Roddenberry Star Trek again. So much treasures.
Although the Omega molecule was never weaponised, imagine the horrors it could cause if it were. Entire swathes of space cut off from the wider galaxy in a single instant... that's among the more terrifying things I've seen in sci-fi.
Yes, this. The Omega molecule, a substance so destructive and merciless that the Federation nope'd out of so hard that they made it their strictest and most overriding goal to ensure that nobody would ever work with it, let alone weaponize it. Sure, there's some pretty nasty devices going around that can wipe out planets or even solar systems, but what else is there which can cause permanent destruction on a scale of light years with only a single molecule of the stuff?
The Borg "nanoprobes" are vastly underestimated in potential as powerful weapons. Nanotechnology at all levels, both in real theory and science fiction, has been akin to how the atomic bomb has been seen before the atomic bomb.
Seven of Nine has been seen customizing her "nanoprobes" in their nature and programming on the fly, so by default, it is assumed all Borg CAN do that.
Let me simplify. Nanomachines are machines the size of microbes and smaller, many built from the atom up. The nature of microbes is often ignored. All living things are not only the cells in our bodies but often as much a mass (often more) of microbes. The micro-biome is still being explored. Now imagine nanomachines that can assimilate the life form and all of its symbiotic microbes. They will assimilate the data from former infections that the immune system now rejects and the retroviruses that are absorbed as part of the body. That leads to the assimilated being releasing airborne assimilating "nanoprobes" to infect (assimilate) others. All microbes, from body cells to the micro-biome to even infections - current, resisted, attempted, etc - can be not only assimilated but mimicked. The key word is "adapt" in Borg nature. They do bioform but at first, the very first thing they do, is adapt. That is very important. They adapt to nature, become stronger, then use that strength to conquer said nature.
I'm missing the Species 8472 Particle Beam/Phaser/Disruptor (or whatever it is called).
One 8472 ship can easily destroy a Borg cube, and combining multiple ships can quite easily destroy even a planet.
After looking at the examples mentioned in the video and those serious mentions in the comments I find two others not mentioned. They are the following.
The Echo Papa 607 advanced weapon system with its drones developed by the arms merchants of Minos that was showcased in TNG: "The Arsenal of Freedom".
The Iconian gateway or trans-dimensional gateway that was showcased in both TNG: "Contagion" and DS9: "To the Death".
By definition, the Iconian Gateway was a transportation device, not a weapon.
@@RichO1701e You're right however it was used as a weapon as explained in Contagion. The ability to transport an entire military force as if walking from one room into the next made it a weapon even if wasn't it's intended purpose. Plenty of examples exist of items having an intended purpose yet they're turned into weapons. As an example take something benign as a rope. It's purpose isn't to be used as a weapon yet you can use it as a weapon in the form of a hangman's noose or even a garrot. Same principle.
What about Breen energy weapon that disabled and destroyed Starfleet ships extremely quickly?
Honorable mentions: Gowron's "crazy eyes", Sisko's backhand, Patrick Stuart's Shakespearian background, and Star Trek Discovery's plot armor.
I like that analogy, the Borg are the vampires of Star Trek. Never thought of it that way before but it certainly makes sense in a way.
Organ harvester technically not a weapon plus i hoped the IMOD from elite force would make an appearance, awesome finally blasting the Borg to bits
The TR-116 Rifle! I knew I wasn't hallucinating this episode! But I'd only ever seen it once and I couldn't remember what Trek series it was from. Thank you! I just won a $100 bet :D
Field of Fire is still one of my favorite DS9 episodes! Never forget that episode! :P
The sword of Kahless also plays 3 major roles in STO, and a major one in the first Armada game.
In Armada, it's used to rally the Klingons together to face off with the Borg...these events erased from the timeline by the end of the game when the invasion is ended via time travel.
In STO, the first is when Kahless' clone obtains it when the Fey'kri show up early in the Klingon episodes, the second is when said clone nearly slays one of the Iconians in a fight, and the third is when it's recovered from the Iconian who took it as a trophy and is revealed to have a map to the Hur'q homeworld which allows the Gamma story to reach a conclusion that isn't rampaging Hur'q swarms devouring the galaxy
and then there was also the Tox utat or however you spell that, which was capable of destroying entire stars
I feel like spacebound weaponry was totally ignored for this list. Think of the great entries that got missed: the Breen ion cannons, the Krenim time ship, Rom's self-replicating minefield, Voyager's infinife torpedo launcher.
Should change title to Most powerful hand held weapons. I was expecting to starship mounted weapons.
What about Transphasic Torpedoes? 1 Torpedo could destroy an entire Borg Cube??
No mention of the dreaded giant ice-cream cone, the doomsday machine?
I always thought it looked like an anti-Horn of Plenty.
Did we really just ignore Red Matter & Species 8579?!
I wanted to write red matter, too.
8579? Do you mean 8472?
@@jimmygoodrich6528 Y’know, not the first time I’ve done that. 8579 just flows better to me I guess lol
@@Jlex16 could just use their ACTUAL name, rather than their borg designation
Undine (un-deen)
@@trayolphia5756 That "actual" name is tertiary canon from a limited-license video game. Not part of the show. Not part of any other licensed works. They're called "Species 8472" in all the official sources.
The "Vulcan Isolationist Movement" was a rouse.. the woman was a Romulan plant.
I've always wondered why when dealing with the borg that Starfleet never whipped out swords, shotguns and good old fashioned cannonballs???
This comment section completely missed the point that this is a list of handheld weapons only.
100%. I'm sick of seeing "but what about Genesis device or Omega"...
1) Genesis wasn't a weapon, wasn't designed by Carol Marcus to be a weapon
2) Omega was an energy source, never used as a weapon
There's so many more to choose... like all the ones Harry Mudd demonstrated in that first season episode of Discovery. The powerful acid the Romulans used in Picard. Riker's trombone might be the scariest of all...
When you say "Riker's Trombone"...
The LASER Cannon from The Cage/The Menagerie, Genesis Device, Romulan weapon used in Balance of Terror, The Doomsday Machine
Planet Killer's antiproton beam would top the list. Although it didn't necessarily one-shot Enterprise or Constellation, it was slicing apart huge sections of planets the size of Earth. This implies a different (higher) setting for planets vs starships. It's an antimatter beam destroying whatever matter it hits. It would win.....unless you consider Lazarus and Lazarus from "The Alternative Factor". If they ever meet in normal space-time, the entire universe is wiped out.
for number 10 you messed up. the thing that drove worf and the da ja master (or what ever he is called) to try and kill each other was a bioweapon which was the last line of defense in protecting the batleth from being stolen by klingons (or maybe was used back in the day to keep the klingons from rising up against the invaders). so it wasn't the cultural significance which drove them to fight each other.
Somebody else might have said this one. But you miss the transphasic torpedo. Use the one that Admiral Janeway help the crew of Voyager create when she traveled back in time. It could destroy a borg Cube with one shot.
Guile (aka the Corbomite Maneuver, aka bluffing) is the post powerful weapon ever used in Star Trek. Great way to win a battle without any casualties on either side. Doesn't make for exciting battle scenes though.
What about the Soliton Wave? I know it was supposed to be a propulsion system (sure thing Starfleet, and the Defiant is a "heavy escort ship" not a warship) but the Wave could be used to destroy a planet from hundreds of lightyears away.
Man I would really like to see a weapon like the TR116 in a video game for use. It would be so bad ass.
Because of the Year of Hell storyand the USS Defiant, you should add Starships, even if they are usually vessels of exploration, they are armed and ramming them into things can do great damage
All these cool weapons and the Colt Single Action Army that they found next to Data's head is still cooler .
Your list was rubbish. Didn't include even ONE of the most deadly weapons. Half of yours were just single person weapons. Not at all deadly. What about the planet killer device in Enterprise? What about the red matter planet killer in Star Trek reboot movie? Didn't Vger have the means to kill a planet? What about the atmosphere lighting planet killing bomb in Enterprise? What about the genocide plague in Enterprise? What about the time ship that reshaped an entire GALAXY in Voyager? What about the Romulan planet killing thing in Enterprise? Or the time that race's weapons totally wiped out their whole planet in Enterprise? I could go on, but any weapon that is not at least planetary in its scope shouldn't be on this list.
What about V-Ger, the Omega particle in Voyager or the Doomsday Machine and Nomad in TOS?
I liked the klingon machine gun that jadzia replicated in one of the novels.
*"Warp Bubble Gun"* (Teoretical Possible, done in the TTRPG)
Creating a Warp Bubble you send outwards via inverted Incubation Fields.
Rips all Organic Life (Carbon Based) into a Subspace Field where it dissolves or get spewn out when the Field collapses (which would be "behind" the Ship in the Void of Space).
Even Metaphasic Shields do not work (only when modified for that), Deflectors neither as after "Shot" the Fields Rotation Frequency changes rapidly by it dissolving. As long as you have not the Core Frequency of the Reactor it origins from and all other Specification, only a Q (!) *may* (!) survive. Even if knowing that, it needs normally too long to adapt - even for someone like Borg or Data.
The Second Use of that Weapon would be the Modification to tear open Subspace Rifts or Warping Space in itself so you create Black Holes, tempering with Time itself or create Dimension Gates.
But, aside the "Creating Black Holes" you risk to simply "Destroy Reality" on every Use.
*But, Isn't this a blatant Violation of the Ban on Subspace Weaponry?* Yes, 100%.
But, it seems (Non-Canon following) the Danger of the Dominion Thread combined with a secret Member of Section 31 send out to get a Foot into DTI/TIC can get away with a lot of awful Things that are needed by the Federation to become able to found DTI/TIC and thus manipulate Section 31 to send an Agent on this Mission. It is really horrible what you can do to others with the proper Knowledge, a Deflector Shield and some Tinkering plus enough Energy....
you didn't include Kronoton torpedoes? I think they deserve that place of honor.
Why? Its just a regular torpedo that uses a temporal effect to circumvent shields.
How about the Q weapons from "The Q and the Grey"? A single shot could cause a supernova.
You REALLY need a pop filter for your mic, mate! A beautiful list though, definitely one of your best.
I'm surprised the humble photon torpedo didn't make the cut, but I think its ubiquity probably made it a bit too mundane for this list. Still, it's easy to forget how powerful they are. One is enough to deliver a killing blow to just about any ship sans its shields and, if I'm not mistaken, just a few of them took out 30% of a Borg cube during the Enterprises' first encounter. Until they adapted, anyway...
I think they are talking about the; lesser known, or most uncommon weopons.
Thanks for sharing, THEY are interesting and Like most things made to kill others they are not so painless.
Worf's Prune Juice Farts. Silent but deadly.
The Genesis device, Warhead, Red Matter bomb and I’m sure there are others 🤷🏻♂️
Ezri was such a bleeding heart, Jadzia wouldn't have been horrified by Sisko using those mines against the Jem'Hadar.
Jadzia is trained as a starfleet scientist and a host. She's better at controlling input from her hosts. Ezri is a counselor who hasn't been trained as a host. Counselors usually save lives. Troi had the same problem. She would have been just as appalled at killing others.
@@drmayeda1930 deep
I admit to feeling a bit sorry for the Jem'Hadar myself. Bred to be aggressive and forced into servitude by the control of White. They had little choice in the matter, although some did try to get off the White and thereby end their enslavement, but it didn't really end well for them.
@@drmayeda1930 still Ezri was way more useful than Troi
Assuming this is only hand-held devices? If so, it's a very good list!
nice video. if u make a sequel, you should mention the bioweapon that was manufactured by Section 39 to wipe out the Dominion. Odo, curing the leader of the Dominion is the only thing that ended the Dominion War in a peaceful manner and it saved the Alpha Quadrant.
Section 39 more dangerous than Section 31?
Sword of Kahless:
The original Darksaber.
You forgot the planet killer in "The Doomsday Machine." Or, for that matter, ANY planet killing weapon.
The Plasma Torpedo is one of the greatest weapons ever made. I should know because, it's employed in my Military.
Tricobalt warheads and the genesis device should have been on here.
Quantum torpedoes should get a mention. In First Contact just 4 of them was enough to destroy a Borg cube (being fired into a gaping cavity in its hull giving the torpedoes optimal impact).
I love your videos