Star Trek games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of the article series on
Star Trek
TV series
Original Series · 80 episodes
Animated Series · 22 episodes
Next Generation · 178 episodes
Deep Space Nine · 176 episodes
Voyager · 172 episodes
Enterprise · 98 episodes
Films
The Motion Picture · II: Wrath of Khan
III: Search for Spock
IV: Voyage Home · V: Final Frontier
VI: Undiscovered Country
Generations · First Contact
Insurrection · Nemesis · Star Trek
Major nations & races
UFP · Human · Vulcan · Romulan · Q
Klingon · Cardassian · Bajoran · Borg
Ferengi · Dominion · Mirror Universe
Spin-off fiction
Phase II · Novels · Comics · SFU · CCG
Games · Fan productions · Experience
Further reading
Canon · Characters · Starfleet · Wars
Chronology ·Timeline · Ships by class
Planets classification · Physics · Law
Cultural influence
Society · Trekkies · Trekdom · Motto
Star Trek Portal

The enduring popularity of the Star Trek science fiction franchise has led to numerous games in many different formats, beginning in 1967 with a board game based on the original series.

Contents

[edit] Board games

[edit] Card games

[edit] Role-playing games

Official game titles include the following:

[edit] Starship simulator games

Starship simulator games create the experience of commanding and operating a starship, and usually allow the player to handle a variety of functions, and to allocate resources such as ship power and systems. This category includes both computer games and non-computer board games, since the Star Fleet Battles game series provides an impressive starship simulation, and is wholly a tabletop board wargame. It is interesting that in several separate genres, Star Trek games of this type have led to new unique levels of depth and complexity, which were not previously very common.

In the genre of wargames, Star Fleet Battles is actually quite unique, in that each ship is not simply the product of its offensive and defensive numerical strengths. Instead, players are able to manage each ship individually, and deploy and manage a whole set of weapons and resources, and allocate power, through the use of an innovative tick sheet system, which manages power use for each ship, and also tracks which weapons and systems are in use. For this reason, game documentation is quite large, as it is required to cover a whole range of systems and their interactions.

The earliest computer games in this category had a major initial effect on the genre of space simulators. One of the earliest games in this category was Super Star Trek, an early text-based, DOS-based game, which shaped many later space games. This game is an impressive product, which manages to create a starship experience using only text-based commands and graphics. Another is the Star Trek (text game), which originated in 1971 and was ported to many different systems.

In later years, actually very few games were produced within this genre. More games were produced in the adventure games genre, with relatively few in the starship genre. The first recent one was Starfleet Academy, which incorporated many Star Trek elements, but was criticized for depicting starship operation as more akin to fighter planes than capital ships. A sequel, Klingon Academy, was actually quite different, and was one of the first games to depict starship operation with an appropriate amount of complexity.

In recent years there have been several additions to this genre. The Starfleet Command series of games was based on the tabletop game Starfleet Battles, and comprised Starfleet Command, Starfleet Command 2: Empires at War, and Starfleet Command III. This series gave a more naval flavor to this type of game. Bridge Commander was another addition to this genre, reflecting the more deliberative, command aspects of this experience. It appears that Star Trek Online, which is an MMORPG and is currently under development, will fit into this category, since starship operation will reportedly be one of the key aspects of this game.

[edit] Pinball games

Three pinball games have been based on the Star Trek series:

[edit] Video games

[edit] Arcade

Year Title Platform
1982 Star Trek - Strategic Operations Simulator Arcade
200? Star Trek: Voyager - The Arcade Game Arcade

[edit] Computer

The history of the Star Trek personal computer game franchise began as early as 1971, with a Star Trek text-only computer game written in BASIC. Many PC titles have since been published, and the franchise was one of the first based on a TV program to break into the young PC gamer market in the 1990s.

Interplay, Simon and Schuster, Microprose and Activision released most of the best-known Star Trek games between 2000 and 2003. Titles like Star Trek: Armada, Star Trek: Elite Force and Star Trek: Bridge Commander were all published during this period, as were over half of all the other major Star Trek PC games. The absence of new titles after 2003 was due in large measure to a split and subsequent lawsuit between Activision and Viacom which ended in 2004.

With the departure of Activision in 2003, the franchise under the tenure of Paramount effectively came to a close. Since the end of 2005, CBS has assumed most franchise management, including games and other products. Even with no new licensed titles released during 2003-2006, the older games like Armada and Elite Force still have an avid fan base which keeps the small community going. Development of the new Star Trek: Online title is currently underway, with release expected in 2008.

Bethesda Softworks recently assumed the role of publishing Star Trek franchise games.

Year Title Platform
1971 Star Trek (text game) multiple
1972 Star Trek (script game) PDP-10
1970s Begin: A Tactical Starship Simulation MS-DOS
1989 Star Trek: The Next Generation: The Transinium Challenge MS-DOS
1989 Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (computer game) MS-DOS
1992 Star Trek: 25th Anniversary MS-DOS, Macintosh
1993 Star Trek: Judgment Rites MS-DOS, Macintosh
1995 Star Trek: The Next Generation - A Final Unity MS-DOS, Macintosh
1995 Star Trek: Klingon Windows
1996 Star Trek: Borg Windows, Macintosh
1996 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Harbinger MS-DOS, Macintosh
1997 Star Trek: Generations Windows
1998 Star Trek: The Game Show Windows, Macintosh
1998 Star Trek: Starship Creator Windows, Macintosh
1999 Star Trek: Birth of the Federation Windows
1999 Star Trek: Secret of Vulcan Fury cancelled
1999 Star Trek: Starfleet Command Windows
1999 Star Trek: Hidden Evil Windows
2000 Star Trek: Armada Windows
2000 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: The Fallen Windows, Macintosh
2000 Star Trek: Klingon Academy Windows, Macintosh
2000 Star Trek: New Worlds Windows
2001 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Dominion Wars Windows
2001 Star Trek: Armada II Windows
2001 Star Trek: Away Team Windows
2001 Star Trek: Borg Assimilator cancelled
2001 Star Trek Starfleet Command II: Empires at War Windows
2001 Star Trek Starfleet Command: Orion Pirates Windows
2002 Star Trek: Starfleet Command III Windows
2002 Star Trek: Bridge Commander Windows
2003 Star Trek: Elite Force II Windows, Macintosh
2006 Star Trek Legacy Windows
2008 Star Trek Online Windows

[edit] Console

Year Title Platform
1979 Star Trek: Phaser Strike Microvision
1982 Star Trek: The Motion Picture Vectrex
1991 Star Trek: 25th Anniversary Game Boy, NES
1993 Star Trek: The Next Generation - Future's Past SNES
1993 Star Trek: The Next Generation Game Boy, NES, SNES
1994 Star Trek: The Next Generation - Echoes from the Past Game Gear, Genesis
1994 Star Trek Generations: Beyond the Nexus Game Boy, Game Gear
1995 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Crossroads of Time Genesis, SNES
2000 Star Trek: Invasion PlayStation
2004 Star Trek: Shattered Universe PS2, Xbox
2006 Star Trek: Tactical Assault PSP, DS
2006 Star Trek: Encounters PS2

[edit] Cross-platform

Year Title Platform
1995 Star Trek: Starfleet Academy 32X, SNES, Windows
1998 Star Trek: Klingon Honour Guard Windows, Macintosh, PS2
2000 Star Trek: Voyager Elite Force PS2, Windows, Macintosh
2006 Star Trek: Legacy Xbox 360, Windows

[edit] Handheld electronic games

Numerous stand-alone electronic handheld and tabletop games have been produced by manufacturers like Bandai, Coleco, Konami, and others. Pair Match, manufactured by Bandai in 1984, appeared in several Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes.

[edit] References

In other languages