Tachyon: The Fringe

"It is the 26th Century. Peace prevails in the Earth's solar system. Tachyon gates allow us to travel tremendous distances in mere seconds. This is the Golden Age of space exploration... But there is trouble on the fringe of civilized space: Large corporations, desperate for new resources, threaten to overtake distant colonies. The colonists, fearing for their independence, respond with violence... Life is anything but peaceful in the Fringe."

Tachyon: The Fringe is a Space Flight Simulator made by NovaLogic in the year 2000, developed by Randy Casey (the maker of F-22 Lightning II). It follows the story of a 26th-century expert pilot Ash Williams Jake Logan, who lived a great contractor's career in our Solar System, flying freelance and fighting other people's fights.

That was of course, until something goes horribly wrong. An emergency escort mission goes south as a hospital gets destroyed, and Jake ends up being the fall guy. He is subsequently exiled from Sol (with a very short trial) to a colonized region of space called the Fringe. Eventually, Jake gets a new life together, and the player controlling him has to pick a side, which is either the Galactic Spanning Corporation, or the Bora Mining Guilds, who are in a war of territorial claims. One does it all for the sake of money, the other does it to protect their territorial rights.

Tachyon is unique, not like the other games by NovaLogic, because it takes place in space, does not have a sequel, and is the only game that does not have to do with anything by the United States Military. Not to mention a definitive storyline.

There is a remake of this game in progress, based on the Free Space 2 Open Source Project.

Tachyon: The Fringe contains examples of the following tropes:
"Courageous's captain: "We can't hold the Courageous together, she's gonna break up! Don't let us die for nothing!" (cue Earthshattering Kaboom) Bora: "The Courageous is gone...keep pressing the attack. WE MUST NOT FAIL!""
 * Absent Aliens
 * All Your Base Are Belong to Us: Pretty much the whole point of the GalSpan-Bora conflict in the Fringe.
 * Two examples to be more specific...
 * Withdraw From or Taking Away Independence. GalSpan initiates the takeover. One pilot said that "The Independence Base is now the legal property of the Galactic Spanning Corporation. You will surrender your ships immediately."
 * Animal Theme Naming: A lot of independent ship designs use the names of predatory fish (e.g. Mako, Piranha).
 * Arms and Armor Theme Naming: Bora fighters are named for weapons (e.g. Cutlass, Battleaxe).
 * Asteroid Thicket: Present in several sectors, some of which have lost cargo hidden in an asteroid. You can get a small reward for returning it, although it's usually not worth the time spent looking for it.
 * Attack Its Weak Point: Capital ships have destroyable subsystems. Take out the powerplant, it can't move. Destroy the weapons generator, it can't shoot. Blow up the shield generator, and its deflector shields won't regenerate. There are occasions where time constraints make this mode of attack inadvisable, but they're rare.
 * Ax Crazy: The Demon pirates.
 * The Battlestar: Star Patrol cruisers are a combination of frigate, cruiser, and carrier. Too bad we never see them in action.
 * Betting Minigame: At New Vegas Starbase, appropriately enough.
 * Big No:
 * Bounty Hunter: Jake in the mission to capture Redship Rory. Although, to be fair, Jake is working with Star Patrol on this one. It doesn't help when
 * Brainwashed and Crazy: The Demon Pirates, because of
 * Brick Joke / Inverted Chekhov's News: During the Justified Tutorial (see below), a group of target drones go haywire and attack you. After your exile, the news reports that the flight instructor you evaluated saves her students from a similar encounter.
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience: Bora ships and stations come in earth and rust tones, GalSpan's wear silver and light blue. Neutral factions are variants of gray, but the Demon pirates will wear red.
 * Cool but Inefficient: the railgun seems wonderful on paper. A ton of damage delivered via Hit Scan - which is a boon in the Tachyon world, where every other weapon has painfully slow projectiles that require lots of leading. But the firing rate is very slow, and most importantly every shot eats a ton of energy, so it's impossible to resort to railguns as your only weapon. And even using them with other guns, it doesn't take long before you figure out you'd almost always do more damage by shooting continuously with something else instead of waiting for the railgun(s) to recharge.
 * This also falls under Crippling Overspecialization. The railgun takes too many hits to go through even fighter or bomber shields to be worth it, most of the time...but it destroys capital ship powerplants with a single shot.
 * The Bora Pulsar Laser is a lot of fun and will chew up a target with ease. Unfortunately, it drains your reactor's energy like no one's business...energy you need to share with your shields or engines.
 * The Helios Rocket. Big boom. Nice explosive radius. Slower than molasses and expensive to boot...it is also an anti-capital-ship weapon, but there are better choices for both factions.
 * Except for multiplayer, where it's the only weapon capable of taking out a starbase.
 * Cool Ship: The Deliverance..
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive: GalSpan Regional Director Gustav Atkins. Strangely enough, NOT the head CEO Roland Belliar.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Logan gets a lot of this, but the queen of snark in this game is Baroness Onrald. One of her voice-overs layers the sarcasm on so thickly that
 * Defeat Means Friendship: Averted with Straw Feminist Lakita Ramos. The only reason she's available as a wingman is because her supervisor told her to be, and she never forgives you for being male or, more to the point, for showing her up.
 * Determinator: The Bora are portrayed as this in both timelines, best summed up in the final battle when the frigate Courageous is going to explode.
 * Determinator: The Bora are portrayed as this in both timelines, best summed up in the final battle when the frigate Courageous is going to explode.


 * Earthshattering Kaboom: Not quite Earth-shattering, but capital ship explosions are quite spectacular.
 * Escort Mission: Boy oh boy, there are a LOT of these. It's hard enough to get some of the escortees alive in one piece.
 * Everything's Better with Spinning: Jake does a totally gratuitous barrel roll upon leaving New Vegas station.
 * Foreshadowing: What Jake says before being thrown past the gate to the Hub: The Fringe is a lawless region, controlled by corrupt corporations, fanatical colonials, pirates... and well, madmen.
 * Fluffy the Terrible: Redship Rory, the most fearsome pirate in the Fringe. He doesn't like people making fun of the name.
 * For Want of a Nail: Whichever side you pick wins; therefore, the entire war depends on the decision of a single fighter pilot.
 * Frickin' Laser Beams: It gets to the point that laser bolts travel slower than railgun shots.
 * Grey and Grey Morality: On the surface this looks like a typical 'evil corporation' plot, but after playing through both sides you find that either faction has their share of evils. In one of the GalSpan escort missions you learn that the Bora commonly raid GalSpan shipping, even if it's not war-related, as well as preying on Gal Span-related civilian shipping. GalSpan  as well as associating with the criminal Barons and  . Bora actively deal with terrorists and madmen. Both sides have valid reasons for fighting; Gal Span has legitimate claim to the territory the Bora occupies, and the Bora of course are fighting for their homes. Unfortunately, it is also stated in a news broadcast that should GalSpan fall, the huge redundancies that will follow will wreck the entire Fringe economy, making you, as the destroyer of GalSpan...
 * Guide Dang It: There's a bunch of extra opportunities to make money that you'll only find by wandering around the regions. This FAQ lists most of them.
 * The Hedonist: Baron Hajod.
 * Hit Scan: the railgun. Every other weapon has moving projectiles, but the railgun is instant-hit.
 * Hub Level: Not exactly, but after Jake gets banished from Sol, this is where he can access multiple regions via megagates after choosing a career.
 * Justified Tutorial: And a pretty clever one at that. Since Jake Logan is already supposed to be an established fighter pilot, Novalogic framed the tutorial as an evaluation of a newly hired flight instructor.
 * Killed Mid-Sentence:
 * La Résistance: Bora's hat. They started as a political group after the formation of One World Order and decided to leave the Sol sector through a one-way gate. Obviously, they didn't bother to get permission to settle a region of space far from Sol from a government they hated.
 * Large Ham: Damn it all Hajod, even your Narm Charm  makes this even more rich.
 * Need remembering?
 * This is particularly notable because his voice actor manages to out-ham Bruce Campbell himself, a man whose chin overacts. Sadly, Hajod's voice actor only ever did work on Tachyon and does not appear to have surfaced in any other projects.
 * Logan himself only seems to alternate between making snarky asides to himself and loudly taking up the entire communication channel in response to the rest of the cast.
 * The Arena commentator: JAAAAKE LOOGAN!
 * When isn't an arena commentator a Large Ham?
 * Laughing Mad: Baron Hajod again.
 * Leaning on the Fourth Wall: One newscast mentions that Saturn's NovaWorld Arena is expanding. NovaWorld is the game's multiplayer hosting service.
 * Left Hanging: The only clue we had for a possible sequel was in a news report later in the game that implied there was a faster-than-Tachyon travel system possible. But seeing as Nova pulled the plug on this game, well...
 * MacGuffin: The five core components for the Hephaestus Module or Project Deliverance.
 * Mad Scientist: Dr. Randall Cassitor, because of his acts of human experimentation (which got him banned from the League of Scientists). All because he claimed it was For Science! and the betterment of humanity.
 * Meaningful Name: The game is full of those, especially the names of ships for GalSpan.
 * Zeus: Director Atkins' flagship and the most powerful ship in GalSpan fleet, since it.
 * Olympus: Atkins' headquarters.
 * Orpheus: "ripped apart" by Bora.
 * Persephone: captured and held in Rory's "underworld".
 * Hephaestus: GalSpan's enormous forge.
 * Mega Corp: GalSpan is the biggest example, but pretty much every company in the game.
 * Magnetic Hero: Susan Bradley.
 * Multiple Endings
 * Negative Space Wedgie: The Twilight Fog. The Ripstars, as well.
 * No Fair Cheating: Entering any cheat code causes voiceovers of Bruce Campbell calling you a little bitch.
 * No OSHA Compliance: AGT,.
 * Old School Dogfighting: Let's face it: the game lives by this trope (and its unique twists on it, like the "slide" function).
 * Oh Crap: Jake Logan on a number of occasions, particularly when things explode that generally shouldn't.
 * Pass Through the Rings: One of the mini-games.
 * Police Are Useless: In the Hub region at least. The local Star Patrol commander explicitly states he doesn't give a damn about the GalSpan/Bora war, only that they "keep it off my front porch". It takes quite a bit of trouble to get him off his ass, though it does happen (ignoring a "cease and desist" order is a good start).
 * Portal Network: The Tachyon Coil Generator Gates, although each gate only links to one other gate. Standard gates can only move a ship (small craft) to a location within a sector (i.e. system). Mega-gates allow movement between sectors, although this is usually done by the game automatically. There are also one-way gates. Capital ships are unable to use the gates due to their size. Instead, they are equipped with portable Tachyon Coil Generators, allowing them to independently enter hyperspace. It is, however, implied that they still use gates as beacons for calculating jumps.
 * Religious and Mythological Theme Naming: GalSpan fighters' names come from Greek Mythology, as do the names of their bases and capital ships. Usually paired with Meaningful Name in the last case.
 * Shiny-Looking Spaceships: GalSpan vessels are silver and blue and very pretty.
 * Shoot the Messenger: One mission has you deliver a message from Baroness Onrald to Baron Hajod. The message is a very thorough insult, and Hajod orders his slaves to kill you. You have to evade gunfire from his station's defense platforms (and a bunch of fighters that come from the only gate out of his sector) to escape, and it ain't easy.
 * The easiest way out?
 * Space Clouds: The Twilight Region, which is a giant nebula that obscures most sensors. In fact, you need special sensors and radiation screens just to survive there. The "fog" is even seeping inside the Deep Fringe Array station. It also drives people insane after prolonged exposure, although the radiation may have something to do with it. Scientists in the game agree that the fog is unnatural and try to study it.
 * Space Friction: Mostly played straight, sometimes to ridiculous extent with disabled vessels coasting to a stop. Slightly averted with the use of the "Slide" maneuver, which involves cutting engines and letting the ship coast with the same velocity. Can be used to go beyond normal "top speed". However, ship will return to top speed as soon as engines are re-engaged.
 * Space Pirates: Skavs, Void Runners, Blood Clan, Demon Pirates (only in name, as they don't care about capturing ships or cargo; they just kill all who enter the Twilight Fog), Cinder Station Mercenaries (only associated with pirates).
 * Space Police: Star Patrol.
 * Standard Sci-Fi Fleet: Both GalSpan and Bora have those. No one else does.
 * Straw Feminist: Lakita Ramos, a wingman you can hire early in the GalSpan plotline, treats you like an idiot because you're a man.
 * The Reveal: Warning: This is the most important part of the story. Read at own risk.
 * Units Not to Scale: Subverted. The game is known for its more-or-less realistic scale, with capital ships being much larger than fighters and space stations being truly humongous. Since planets always stay in the background, you are never sure how close you are to them.
 * Used Future: Bora ships look like they're made of rust. Possibly Justified since they're converted mining ships according to the manual.
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential: In one early mission, Jake runs into an old friend from Mars  who is on routine patrol with no enemies around. It would be a shame if something happened to her...
 * What the Hell, Hero?: Several instances of this trope occur. Especially on your first mission in the Hub (well duh, you blew up a hospital, framed or not, they still call you out on that).
 * What Could Have Been: A whole lot of fans for this game would have expected Nova to make a sequel for this, as they do for their most successful games. Sadly, this was not the case. Most of the online support died when Nova relocated their servers from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
 * Wide-Eyed Idealist: Anna Highfall.
 * Xtreme Kool Letterz: The cover art swaps the 'o' in 'Tachyon' with the Greek letter omega.
 * What Could Have Been: A whole lot of fans for this game would have expected Nova to make a sequel for this, as they do for their most successful games. Sadly, this was not the case. Most of the online support died when Nova relocated their servers from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
 * Wide-Eyed Idealist: Anna Highfall.
 * Xtreme Kool Letterz: The cover art swaps the 'o' in 'Tachyon' with the Greek letter omega.