12 Star Trek Female Villains Ranked, Worst To Best

12 Star Trek Female Villains Ranked, Worst To Best

While the canon of iconic Star Trek antagonists can often feel like an exclusive boy’s club, many of the franchise’s best villains have been complex female characters. For nearly 60 years, many of the best known villains in Star Trek movies and TV shows have been male, from Khan Noonien Singh (Ricardo Montalban) to Shinzon (Tom Hardy). Looking back, it feels quite regressive, and speaks to a wider issue with how women were written in early Star Trek.

For example, the notorious Star Trek: The Original Series finale “Turnabout Intruder” features Dr. Janice Lester (Sandra Smith), who was presented as a hysterical woman scorned, rather than a multi-layered and complex villain. However, even in those early days, there were one or two memorable female villains that could hold their own against Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner). While Star Trek‘s movie villains have been predominantly male, the TV shows of the 1990s and 2020s introduced some truly iconic recurring female villains to the franchise.

12 Star Trek Female Villains Ranked, Worst To Best

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Star Trek has featured plenty of intimidating alien races over the years, from the highly secretive Romulans to the terrifying space zombies the Borg.

12

Alixus (Gail Strickland)

Star Trek: DS9, Season 2, Episode 15, “Paradise”

The impact of Alixus (Gail Strickland) is relatively minor. However, Alixus is an incredibly compelling Star Trek: Deep Space Nine villain who deserves to sit alongside some franchise greats. In DS9 season 2, episode 15, “Paradise”, Commander Benjamin Sisko (Avery Brooks) and Chief Miles O’Brien (Colm Meaney) are stranded on a planet that has abandoned technology in favor of a more simple life. Alixus is the leader of this traditionalist community, but Sisko and O’Brien soon unearth the darkness at its core. Alixus was a Federation scientist who had theorized that a return to nature would be better for humanity in the long run.

To prove her point, she sabotaged the colony ship, the SS Santa Maria, forcing it to crash-land on a remote planet. Alixus installed a duonetic field generator that prevented all technology from operating, forcing the colonists to live by her new vision. To prove her thesis, she resorted to cruel punishments and stood by and let her colonists die from easily curable ailments. Gail Strickland plays Alixys with such nuance, transforming “Paradise” from a filler episode into an underrated Star Trek: Deep Space Nine classic. Her electric scenes with Sisko foreshadow the DS9 captain’s later conflicts with other zealots.

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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, also known as DS9, is the fourth series in the long-running Sci-Fi franchise, Star Trek. DS9 was created by Rick Berman and Michael Piller, and stars Avery Brooks, René Auberjonois, Terry Farrell, and Cirroc Lofton. This particular series follows a group of individuals in a space station near a planet called Bajor.

11

Seska (Martha Hackett)

Star Trek: Voyager, Seasons 1 to 3

Star Trek: Voyager‘s Seska (Martha Hackett) was a fantastic idea for a character, but very poorly executed. Introduced as one of the secondary Maquis crew members of the Valjean, it quickly became clear that Seska was hiding something. Not only did Seska want Commander Chakotay (Robert Beltran) to lead a mutiny against Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew), she was also a Cardassian spy in disguise. These two elements combined ended up confusing Seska’s character in Voyager, as an outnumbered Cardassian would surely have set their sights on an alliance with Janeway, not the Maquis.

Eventually, Seska left the USS Voyager, to make an alliance with the Kazon in an attempt to capture the ship. The motivations for Seska’s plan to capture Voyager were seemingly rooted in her disappointment at being scorned by her former lover, Chakotay. Disappointingly, one of Star Trek: Voyager‘s most interesting villains was reduced to the level of Captain Kirk’s evil ex-girlfriend, Janice Lester. The most successful plot by Seska was only discovered after she’d died, when a holodeck simulation of a Maquis mutiny turned into a deadly trap in Voyager season 3, episode 25, “Worst Case Scenario”.

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Star Trek: Voyager

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The fifth entry in the Star Trek franchise, Star Trek: Voyager, is a sci-fi series that sees the crew of the USS Voyager on a long journey back to their home after finding themselves stranded at the far ends of the Milky Way Galaxy. Led by Captain Kathryn Janeway, the series follows the crew as they embark through truly uncharted areas of space, with new species, friends, foes, and mysteries to solve as they wrestle with the politics of a crew in a situation they’ve never faced before. 

10

Asencia, The Vindicator (Jameela Jamil)

Star Trek: Prodigy Season 1

Janeway’s ship was once again infiltrated by an enemy alien in Star Trek: Prodigy season 1. Masquerading as a Trill ensign, Asencia helped track the USS Protostar, in the hopes of activating its deadly Living Construct weapon and destroying Starfleet. Asencia’s true identity was discovered after Janeway and the USS Dauntless rescued the Diviner (John Noble). Hoping that the two Vau N’AKat could work together, Asencia was shocked when the Diviner chose his daughter Gwyndala (Ella Purnell) over their plan to destroy Starfleet. In the Prodigy season 1 finale, Asencia successfully activated the Living Construct and returned to her own time.

Asencia’s story will presumably continue in Star Trek: Prodigy season 2, as Admiral Janeway heads into the alternate future to rescue Captain Chakotay and his crew from the Vau N’Akat. It’s therefore hard to rank Asencia higher until her story plays out in full. However, judging by the ruthlessness and cunning that Asencia displayed in Prodigy season 1, it’s clear that Janeway and the crew of the USS Voyager-A will have their work cut out for them.

Star Trek Prodigy TV series poster

Star Trek: Prodigy

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Star Trek: Prodigy is the first TV series in the Star Trek franchise marketed toward children, and one of the few animated series in the franchise. The story follows a group of young aliens who find a stolen Starfleet ship and use it to escape from the Tars Lamora prison colony where they are all held captive. Working together with the help of a holographic Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew), the new crew of the USS Protostar must find their way back to the Alpha Quadrant to warn the Federation of the deadly threat that is pursuing them.

9

Female Romulan Commander (Joanne Linville)

Star Trek: The Original Series, Season 3, Episode 4, “The Enterprise Incident”

In Star Trek: The Original Series, season 2, episode 4, “The Enterprise Incident”, Captain Kirk is tasked with stealing a Romulan cloaking device. Part of the plan requires Lt. Commander Spock (Leonard Nimoy) to seduce an unnamed Female Romulan Commander (Joanna Linville), who is attracted to the Vulcan. However, unlike Seska in Star Trek: Voyager, the Female Romulan Commander’s ambitions lie far beyond romantic interests. She believes that capturing the USS Enterprise for the Romulan Star Empire will be a boon for her career progression, and wants Spock to serve alongside her.

Having seemingly turned on Kirk and even killed him in a fight, Spock keeps the Female Romulan Commander interested while Kirk infiltrates the ship. However, the Commander saw through the ruse and beamed aboard the Enterprise to try and take it by force, or have it destroyed. The plan to steal the USS Enterprise is foiled, and the Female Romulan Commander is left embarrassed by falling for Kirk and Spock’s fight and losing the cloaking device to the Federation. Interestingly, Spock doesn’t throw the Female Romulan Commander into the brig, and instead takes her to standard quarters, implying his seduction wasn’t all pretend.

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Star Trek: The Original Series

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Star Trek: The Original Series follows the exploits of the crew of the USS Enterprise. On a five-year mission to explore uncharted space, Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner) must trust his crew – Spock (Leonard Nimoy), Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy (Forest DeKelley), Montgomery “Scotty” Scott (James Doohan), Uhura (Nichelle Nichols), Chekov (Walter Koenig) and Sulu (George Takei) – with his life. Facing previously undiscovered life forms and civilizations and representing humanity among the stars on behalf of Starfleet and the United Federation of Planets, the Enterprise regularly comes up against impossible odds and diplomatic dilemmas.

8

Lursa and B’Etor Duras (Barbara March and Gwynyth Walsh)

Star Trek: TNG, DS9 And Star Trek Generations

The House of Duras were sworn enemies of Worf, Son of Mogh (Michael Dorn) in Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. After Worf killed the House’s patriarch in TNG season 4, episode 7, “Reunion”, Duras’ sisters Lursa (Barbara March) and B’Etor (Gwynyth Walsh) were left seeking vengeance. The House of Duras tried to instigate a Klingon Civil War, and even provided a Bajoran terrorist with the explosives needed to destroy the wormhole in DS9 season 1. Following the aborted Klingon Civil War, the Duras sisters effectively became guns for hire, placing them in the orbit of Dr. Tolian Soren (Malcolm McDowell) in Star Trek Generations.

Star Trek Generations was a disappointing end for the Duras Sisters, as they never really got a final confrontation with Worf. Sidelined as Soran’s muscle, the sisters and their Klingon crew did manage to destroy the USS Enterprise-D, but their own ship was destroyed soon after. Weirdly, Generations never lingered on what a big deal this would have been for Worf, given how the House of Duras had been behind many of his issues with the Klingon Empire. This dissatisfying ending means that the Duras Sisters can’t make it into the top tier of female Star Trek villains.

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Star Trek: The Next Generation

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Star Trek: The Next Generation is the third installment in the sci-fi franchise and follows the adventures of Captain Jean-Luc Picard and the crew members of the USS Enterprise. Set around one hundred years after the original series, Picard and his crew travel through the galaxy in largely self-contained episodes exploring the crew dynamics and their own political discourse. The series also had several overarching plots that would develop over the course of the isolated episodes, with four films released in tandem with the series to further some of these story elements.

7

Sela (Denise Crosby)

Star Trek: The Next Generation, “Redemption” and “Unification”

Sela was the Romulan daughter of Tasha Yar (Denise Crosby), who spent years working for the intelligence services. Sela’s first notable operations against the Federation were brainwashing Lt. Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) to assassinate Klingon governor Vagh (Edward Wiley) in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “The Mind’s Eye”. Sela tried again to destabilize relations between the Klingon Empire and the Federation when she supported the Duras Sisters’ attempt to take control of the Klingon Empire. Sela’s plans were foiled by Captain Picard and a Starfleet armada that prevented Romulan reinforcements from entering Klingon space.

Sela became the mastermind behind an attempted Romulan invasion of Vulcan, by manipulating Ambassador Spock’s reunification mission. Using a holographic duplicate of Spock, Sela hoped to convince the Federation that an incoming fleet of Vulcan ships contained a Romulan peace envoy, and not an invasion force. Picard, Data, and Spock foiled Sela’s plan, and she was incapacitated with a Vulcan nerve pinch, never to be heard from again. It was an ignominious end for Star Trek: The Next Generation‘s best Romulan villain.

Star trek the next generation spock romulan commander

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Spock wanted Vulcan and Romulan unification in TNG’s era, which may be born from what happened in TOS’ “The Enterprise Incident.”

6

Valeris (Kim Cattrall)

Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

Lt. Valeris (Kim Cattrall) is a great Star Trek villain because there’s a genuine emotional impact on the crew of the USS Enterprise-A. It may have been better if Saavik betrayed Spock in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, but the weight of Valeris’ betrayal is still impactful. Valeris’ cold Vulcan logic dictated that peace with the Klingons was illogical, which is why she joined the Khitomer Conspiracy. Spock’s protégé helped to frame Captain Kirk and Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley) for political assassination, and deliberately hindered the investigation.

Valeris’ coldness makes her quite a compelling Star Trek villain, as she genuinely believes her many crimes are based on logic. It’s a fascinating insight into how interpretations of logic can differ from Vulcan to Vulcan, as proved by Spock and Valeris’ clash in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. Interrogated by Kirk and forced to endure a controversial mind meld with Spock, Valeris finally revealed the identities of the conspirators, and was taken to the Khitomer Conference to publicly unmask the conspiracy.

5

Vadic (Amanda Plummer)

Star Trek: Picard Season 3

Vadic was one of the most unpredictable foes ever faced by Admiral Jean-Luc Picard. A Changeling tasked with delivering Jack Crusher (Ed Speleers) to the Borg Queen (Alice Krige), Vadic took some big swings to achieve her goals in Star Trek: Picard season 3. Vadic’s awesome ship, the Shrike, almost destroyed the USS Titan-A and its crew during their multiple skirmishes in the course of Picard season 3. Vadic even found time to kidnap Counselor Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) in an attempt to secure the assistance of Captain William T Riker (Jonathan Frakes).

It’s a testament to Amanda Plummer’s unique portrayal of a Star Trek villain that it wasn’t immediately clear that Vadic was a Changeling. The scenes in “Dominion” in which Vadic described the brutal treatment of Changeling prisoners during the Dominion War were beautifully performed by Plummer, adding depth to Star Trek: Picard season 3’s villain. It even elicited a degree of sympathy, but Vadic soon lost that when she began executing members of the USS Titan-A’s crew. Eventually, she was blown out into space by Jack Crasher, where, ironically, her Changeling body solidified then exploded into pieces.

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Star Trek: Picard

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After starring in Star Trek: The Next Generation for seven seasons and various other Star Trek projects, Patrick Stewart is back as Jean-Luc Picard. Star Trek: Picard focuses on a retired Picard who is living on his family vineyard as he struggles to cope with the death of Data and the destruction of Romulus. But before too long, Picard is pulled back into the action. The series also brings back fan-favorite characters from the Star Trek franchise, such as Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton), Worf (Michael Dorn), and William Riker (Jonathan Frakes).

4

The Intendant (Nana Visitor)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Various)

The Intendant, the Mirror Universe variant of Major Kira Nerys (Nana Visitor) is one of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine‘s most memorable villains. DS9 brought back the Mirror Universe in a big way, and the Intendant played a key role in each return visit. Kira’s dark opposite was effectively the Gul Dukat of the Mirror Universe’s Terok Nor, ruling the station with intimidation, manipulation, and violence. She was assisted in her tyrannical role of the station by Elim Garak (Andrew Robinson), who opposed some of the Intendant’s more holistic methods.

The Intendant eventually lost control over the Terran rebels, thanks to various Mirror Universe incursions by Kira and Captain Sisko. This led to her losing her position, and being imprisoned aboard Regent Worf’s flagship in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine season 7. Hoping to win favor with Worf, the Intendant orchestrated a plot to have the flagship fitted with a stolen cloaking device. However, the cloak was sabotaged, leaving the flagship open to attack from the Terran rebels, striking another blow against the Klingon-Cardassian Alliance, and giving the former Intendant a chance to escape with her life.

3

Kai Winn (Louise Fletcher)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Various)

Kai Winn (Louise Fletcher) was one of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine‘s most fascinating characters. First introduced in the DS9 season 1 finale, Vedek Winn was a religious zealot who objected to Sisko’s closeness to the Bajoran Prophets. This jealousy of Sisko eventually poisoned the calculating religious leader even further, pushing her to more and more extreme lengths to bring herself closer to her gods. Played by Oscar winning actress Louise Fletcher, Kai Winn’s descent into hell across seven seasons of DS9 was compulsive viewing.

While Kai Winn had a redemption of sorts in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine‘s finale, it was still rooted in the cowardice and pettiness of her character. When she realized that the Pah wraiths wanted Gul Dukat as their emissary and not her, she decided to put her faith back in Sisko. While that saved Bajor from destruction, it’s hard to ignore that Kai Winn’s motivations were once again rooted in Bajor’s higher beings ignoring her.

2

The Female Changeling (Salome Jens)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Various)

The Female Changeling (Salome Jens) was Star Trek: Deep Space Nine‘s most interesting female villain. The spokesperson for the Dominion Founders, she was a master manipulator, and a steely villain with little regard for the “solids”. The Female Changeling’s attempts to manipulate Constable Odo (René Auberjonois) were compelling viewing, and ultimately solidified the Constable’s loyalty to his friends aboard DS9. Seen as a god by the Vorta, the Female Changeling also appeared to delight in manipulating Weyoun (Jeffrey Combs) by playing him off against the Breen in the latter stages of DS9‘s Dominion War.

Salome Jens’ performance as the Female Changeling was utterly compelling, delivering her lines with an icy sense of superiority befitting a species that set themselves up as gods. When the Dominion War ended in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine finale, the Female Changeling was taken into custody for her multiple war crimes. However, despite Odo’s attempts to educate his people to move past the Female Changeling’s ideology, those like Vadic still wanted to destroy the Solids following the Dominion War.

1

The Borg Queen (Alice Krige)

Star Trek: First Contact, Voyager, Picard

Introduced in Star Trek: First Contact, the Borg Queen (Alice Krige) is the greatest female villain that the franchise has produced. Unlike her drones, Star Trek‘s Borg Queen had a personality, and used that to seduce others into joining the Collective. Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner) seemingly fell under the Borg Queen’s spell in First Contact, but was merely distracting her so he could avert the Collective’s plan to sabotage the Phoenix’s first warp flight. The Borg Queen’s consciousness was stored elsewhere, able to be downloaded into a new body, which is why other actress have played the role originated by Krige.

Every Actress To Play The Borg Queen

Star Trek TV Show/Movie

Alice Krige

Star Trek: First Contact/Voyager/Picard

Susanna Thompson

Star Trek: Voyager

Annie Wersching

Star Trek: Picard Season 2

Alison Pill

Star Trek: Picard Season 3

Jane Edwina Seymour

Star Trek: Picard Season 3

Each Borg Queen performer has brought something new to the character, the most notable being Annie Wersching and Alison Pill’s partnership in Star Trek: Picard season 2. Their co-dependent relationship revealed new information about the Borg Queen that humanized her somewhat. Through her connection to the Queen, Dr. Agnes Jurati (Alison Pill) discovered that the Borg long for connection, and the Queen is ultimately lonely. Rather than being a retcon, this was a callback to the Queen’s previous relationships with Data and Picard, confirming that they were the only matches for Star Trek‘s most enduring female villain.

Star Trek: First Contact is available to stream on Max.