Other than being unerringly tuned to survival. There is not really much known of the Thing's other motives and inclinations. It's portrayals including the novel are all in a tight threatening environment, with inteligent (for the most part) and capable members of an alien (to it) species. Who when challenged gets very devoted to winning at all costs. If it were not in a "hostile" situation we do not know how fast it would spread or what it would do. The SW galaxy is remarkably non xenophobic compared modern humanity, even in the GE era. So i tmay not feel so threatened and may increase it's numbers for very strategic reasons. Also what would it do after the "conquest phase" on a seriously populated planet? Does it get lonely? Do the "Assimilated" start to regain their more "Thing acceptable" behaviors if they revert to their initial form? Which the infected tend to do if they are left unthreatened long enough.Oni Koneko Damien wrote:Hell, I could easily see the infected posing as Republic relief forces and only dropping the facade when it's too late to fight back.
The Thing is an incredibly scary piece of work.
We simply do not know much about the species' behavior beyond the "Infectious" and "Hardcore" traits that has been shown/printed. In the novel the 'Thing' seems very, very knowlegable and has a bit of Lovecraftian monster flavored disdain for the humans around it. That said, it did not behave in a particularly "Snidely Whiplash" fashion. The creature also in it's various host forms does eat food. So it does not need to infect to gain sustennance. It infects to increase it's control it's environment and improve it's odds of survival. Very basic drives in a sentient being. The assimilation is it's most effective tool, unless it has access to a galaxy full of awesome weapons and incredibly fast spacecraft....