In this scenario its always the amount of blinds that makes the difference. Sometimes you can argue how big the rest of the field is, but at 35 BBs i dont believe its a good idea to risk an all in flip here. If you were somewhere under 15BBs i think you could easily push it and not worry here, but with 35 blinds you have plenty of time to find yourself in another situation where you are 50 50 or at the very worst 60 40. Chances are you'll actually find yourself in a 4-1 or 5-1 favorite if you take the time and actually want to get it in preflop, but with this amount of blinds you dont need to risk your stack preflop at all. Take your time and if you are a good poker player you'll be able to find your situations and weaknesses within the others play and easily gain some chips. Find some all in situations against some smaller stacks and look to gain chips through them via a 60 40 flip or a 50 50 flip. Then if you find yourself in a situation where you are around 15BBs or less get it in preflop. Personally towards the end of tournaments ive easily survived with 5BBs left when blinds are very big and everyone is sitting with 15-30 BBs max, but thats generally really late in the tournament and usually only online. If its live it makes a bit of a difference because generally there will be a bigger divide and a larger lead so somewhere between 10-15 Blinds make a better move. But anyways yeah i wouldnt move so early with the Qs anymore, Furthermore i'll throw this out there. If you can, with big pairs preflop (ie 10s - Ks) Get a big raise in preflop, try not to risk more than 30% your stack and see if you can them to the flop that way, you can generally easily assess the situation and see if you are still ahead after the flop, that way you dont risk them hitting an AK or AQ w 5 cards but only 3. This usually works better for me. Good luck in future tournaments.