Both symmetric and asymmetric fission exist in nature. I don't think it's true that the Q value always favors one over the other, nor is it true that the Q value is always the decisive factor. And even so, note that the Q value is going to be influenced by shell effects, so you can't just reason based on expectations from the liquid drop model.
A better way to think about all of this is the following. We can parametrize the shape of a nucleus using a couple of parameters, call them ##a_2## and ##a_3##. The ##a_2## parameter measures elliptical stretching, while ##a_3## measures asymmetric deformation into a pear shape. A sphere has ##a_2=0## and ##a_3=0##. A uranium nucleus in its ground state might have ##a_3=0## (it's symmetric) and ##a_2=0.2## (a slight prolate deformation like an American football).
Using techniques such as
Strutinsky smearing, you can calculate a potential energy ##U## that is a function ##U(a_2,a_3)## of the deformation. You can visualize this as a surface. In its ground state, the nucleus sits in a metastable minimum of this function. On the average, the behavior of this function is that of the liquid drop model, but for a particular nucleus it incorporates shell corrections. (That's what the Strutinsky smearing does for you.) Because of the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, the nucleus in its ground state can't just sit at a single well-defined point in this landscape, with a well-defined shape. There are zero-point fluctuations in the shape. Large, low-probability fluctuations will carry the nucleus into classically forbidden areas. By tunneling, it can break out into the region where the deformation is so large that it will break up. The route that it takes will essentially be the one that minimizes the height and width of the potential barrier, so that the WKB tunneling probability is maximized. If this route heads out to nonzero values of ##a_3##, then there is spontaneous symmetry breaking, and you get asymmetric fission. Otherwise, you get symmetric fission.
The Q value will certainly be *correlated* with the WKB tunneling probability, but it's not a perfect correlation.
This paper gives a good overview:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v409/n6822/full/409785a0.html
To see some real calculated potential energy surfaces, you can go here:
https://t2.lanl.gov/nis/data/astro/molnix96/peseps2gamma-fis.html . The parameter ##\epsilon_2## they use is basically the same as the ##a_2## I was referring to in the generic description above. Their ##\gamma## isn't equivalent to ##a_3## but describes a different type of asymmetry. I believe the surface actually shows the PE at each point that is minimized with respect to a parameter like ##a_3##, but that parameter's actual value is hidden on these plots. The Nature paper goes into a lot more detailed description of asymmetric and symmetric fission, but it doesn't actually show potential energy surfaces.