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6 Most Selfish Characters In Star Trek: The Next Generation

Highlights

  • Lore’s superiority complex drove him to evil deeds, creating a sibling rivalry with Data in TNG.
  • Wesley Crusher’s teenage angst made him a self-absorbed character eager to join Starfleet.
  • William Riker’s macho persona led to selfish actions, like worrying more about paternity than Troi’s well-being.



A selfish character in any story isn’t necessarily a villain. It can be a character that has yet to go through their whole story arc, for example, or perhaps someone who is making an honest mistake about their priorities. The world of Star Trek is full of nuanced characters who can be described as self-absorbed, egotistical, or selfish, and some of them have sympathetic motives while others do not.

Star Trek: The Next Generation had a selection of regular, recurring, and one-off characters with selfish motives. Whether it’s a superiority complex or teenage angst, TNG has its share of inconsiderate people in every story.


1 Lore

The Opposite Of Data

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  • Played By: Brett Spiner


Data was selfless and modest, and Lore was the exact opposite in almost every way. He knew he was superior to humans when it came to strength and intelligence, and instead of using his power for good, he was driven by his superiority complex to do evil instead.

Soong was compelled by the colonists in the Omicron Theta colony to deactivate Lore when he started to turn against them, but not before the android had contacted the Crystalline Entity to make a deal for his eventual reactivation and release. This led to a sibling rivalry between Lore and Data that formed a multi-episode TNG storyline starting in Season 1 with “Datalore.”

Lore appeared in several TNG episodes as a villain, with very few positive qualities other than his superior abilities. He was the fourth android built by Dr. Noonien Soong but the first one with a fully functional positronic brain, which unfortunately wasn’t enough to give him a more sophisticated personality.


2 Wesley Crusher

Too Much Naval Gazing, Even For A Teenager

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  • Played By: Wil Wheaton

Granted, Wesley was a teenager and going through some things during his time on the Enterprise. It can’t be easy to lose a father at such a young age and endure constant smothering from the well-meaning but overbearing surviving parent. It’s also apparent the character was created to satisfy a certain age demographic, and the YA market is too lucrative to ignore.

Wesley was an incredibly gifted and intelligent child, and the viewer knows that because other characters are constantly talking about it. His interactions with other crewmembers on the ship were always colored by his emotional outbursts or frustrated pouting, which might pass for a realistic teenager as far as some writers are concerned.


After a few years of crying about not getting into Starfleet, or getting in and then leaving, at least he finally ended up where he belonged. In modern Trek, Wesley is all grown up, graduated as a Traveler, and is considerably less self-obsessed.

3 William Riker

And Not Just In His Personal Life

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  • Played By: Jonathan Frakes

The writers were trying to make him the macho man of the ship, but too many times they leaned in too hard into the stereotypes and he just seemed really selfish. In the episode “The Child,” for example, when he discovers Counselor Troi has been impregnated by an alien life force, jealousy drives him to be more concerned about who the father is instead of her health or well-being.


Riker could also be fairly petty when he wanted to be, growing his beard just to spite his bald captain after a period of forced shore-leave, because oh-the-humanity of a vacation. As far as his messy personal life, Riker decided he loved Troi only when she accepted Worf’s marriage proposal, making it seem like he was driven more by selfishness than love.

4 Lwaxana Troi

It’s Not About Deanna, It’s About Her

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  • Played By: Majel Barrett

If Deanna’s not dealing with her wishy-washy boyfriend, then it’s her headstrong mother Lwaxana that’s on her case instead. Played by Majel Barrett, who also appears in The Original Series as Christine Chapel and in the pilot as Number One, Lwaxana only seems to care about her flamboyant public appearances and whether or not her daughter is getting married.


Any episode of Lwaxana Troi is going to have a lot of drama, and embarrassing her daughter at every opportunity is just the start. She has the worst qualities of a helicopter parent who’s somehow also neglecting her child’s emotional needs, which is the worst kind of selfishness.

5 Q

An Omnipotent Jerk

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  • Played By: John de Lancie

How can anyone with godlike powers not be a total jerk? That might be the question that Star Trek writers were asking when they created the Q Continuum, a race of all-powerful but sarcastic and snide beings. Q appears early in TNG and forms an attachment to Picard immediately, mostly because the captain of the Enterprise NCC-1701-D is less likely to just punch him in the face.


Q’s real problem is that he’s bored, and to entertain himself, he seeks out the Enterprise and its crew as either an existential threat or a mild annoyance. Initially, he’s deeply selfish, tampering with the lives of the ship for little more than entertainment, but his character does have an interesting arc spanning a few seasons.

6 The Borg Queen

A Collective That Doesn’t Like Sharing

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  • Played By: Alice Krige, Susanna Thompson, Annie Wersching, Jane Edwina Seymour, Garth Kemp (voice actor)

Picard introduced the compelling idea that the Borg could be friendly, even benevolent, depending on the goals and disposition of the Queen. The ruler of the collective in the TNG timeline, however, is a selfish one, which seems contradictory to the ruler of the Collective, which is why it leads to her downfall.


The Borg Queen has taken on several incarnations through the years, and although she was introduced in TNG, she’s appeared in several other shows and a movie, Star Trek: First Contact. Each time she claims to be acting on behalf of the Collective, but her actions indicate otherwise. Her obsession with Picard is personal, and she seems to be capable of risking a lot to possess him in one way or another.



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