Star Control

''' Attention troper — heed this recorded message! This works page speaks with the voice and authority of the Ur-Quan! '''

Star Control is a series of shoot-'em-up/ActionAdventure games built around space battles modelled on but expanded from Space War.

As in Space War, a battle in Star Control involves two armed spaceships in a 2D space with a planet in the middle. Unlike Space War, there is a range of ships available, each notionally representing a different alien race and possessing a distinct appearance, handling characteristics, and weapons.

The original Star Control was a turn-based strategy game, pitting Earth and the Alliance Of Free Stars against the evil Ur-Quan Hierarchy. The game also included Melee mode, which skipped all the Resource Gathering and territory control stuff, and gave you a team consisting of one ship from each of the races on the side you had picked. Many players only ever played Melee.

Star Control II: The Ur-Quan Masters added a story mode, an RPG/ActionAdventure game akin to Starflight, set twenty years after the Alliance of Free Stars lost the war featured in the first game. The player character travels the galaxy searching for a way to overthrow the Ur-Quan, meeting (and, if conversations went badly, battling) most of the alien races mentioned in the first game, discovering several new ones and sooner or later learning that there are worse things than the enslaving Ur-Quan, and they're about to take an interest in mankind. Gameplay follows many RPG tropes, albeit at a different scale: for “character”, read “ship”; for “party”, read “fleet”; for “town” or “dungeon”, read “planet”. The game is highly regarded for its engaging story and for the inventiveness and humor of the world-building. It also included a Super Melee mode, which allowed you to choose a fleet of up to 14 ships from either game and battle (still one-on-one) against a human or computer-controlled opponent.

Star Control 3 was meant to create a game dynamic that mixed the strategy of the first with the Action Adventure of the second. Unfortunately, it was made without the involvement of the series’ creators, and it was not very well received by the fanbase.

All three Star Control games are available from Good Old Games (www.gog.com). An excellent — and free — port of Star Control II to modern systems, called The Ur-Quan Masters, is also available from this page. But Wait! There's More! A Fan Sequel to Star Control 2, called Project 6014, is being developed here.

''' PRIORITY OVER-RIDE. NEW BEHAVIOR DICTATED. MUST BREAK SUBJECT INTO COMPONENT TROPES. '''


 * All There in the Manual: The story is never explained in-game.
 * Artificial Humans: The Androsynth.
 * The Alliance: The Alliance of Free Stars.
 * Asteroid Thicket: In tandem with every starship battle being centered on a planet, they also all feature asteroids spawning from the edges of the "arena". They don't damage you, though, only throw off your momentum.
 * Battle Thralls: The Trope Namer, these are the races that fight for the Ur-Quan.
 * Black and Grey Morality: Consider the behavior of the Alliance of Free Stars, the ostensible good guys: whenever the Alliance captures a Hierarchy colony or mine, they annihilate it from orbit, killing untold numbers of civilians. Except for the Syreen: when they capture a Hierarchy colony, they first use mind control to recruit crew from the colony, then destroy the remainder from orbit. And they're not the only slavers in the Alliance: the humans of earth enslaved the Androsynth, who are, after all, just genetically engineered humans; that's why the Androsynth joined the Hierarchy after they escaped from slavery on earth. The Ariloulaleelay also have a track record of carrying out abductions of members of other species, and possibly of sexually molesting those they abducted. And then you have the Shofixti, a race of suicide bombers. So, kidnappers, slavers, rapists, and suicide bombers, and these are the good guys.
 * Call a Hit Point a Smeerp: Or, in this case, "crew".
 * The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: Computer-controlled ships can always keep track of where the planet is, even when it is not visible on the screen, and as such will never accidentally fly right into it as it appears from the edge of the display. But you will.
 * Copy Protection: Professor Zorg's Guide to Alien Etiquette.
 * Deflector Shields: Fortifications, which can be skipped by the Arilou and destroyed by the Ur-Quan. Also, this is part of the armament of the Yehat Terminator.
 * Double Knockout: Move a Starbase onto the same star as the enemy's Starbase and laugh as they destroy one another. Also possible if you take out a Hierarchy ship with a Shofixti Scout's Glory Device, that is, by suicide bombing. Or if you win a battle, but are very badly damaged, and then crash into the planet, killing your last crewman.
 * The Empire: The Ur-Quan Hierarchy.
 * Flying Saucer: The Arilou Skiff.
 * Fog of War: Star clusters are hidden from player view until traveled to, if the aptly-named "Hidden" option is selected; even when "Visible", exactly what the stars are is unknown until visited (only in the Genesis version). Even in the PC version, planet types are concealed until a star system has been visited.
 * Fragile Speedster: Both the Arilou Skiff and the Shofixti Scout. The Umgah Drone is normally quite slow, but has powerful retro-rockets that enable it to fly very fast, albeit only backwards.
 * Gravity Sucks: Averted. Gravity in melee behaves very realistically for a 2D arcade-style game. You can orbit planets and use the gravity to accelerate in the so-called "Gravity Whip" maneuver.
 * Kinetic Weapons Are Just Better: As a general rule. Energy weapons, like the VUX or Mmrnmhrm lasers are often quite powerful, but are generally very short-range and tricky to aim. The Arilou laser is pretty much the worst of all possible worlds: very short-range and low-damage. Projectile weapons, on the other hand, while not always as powerful, usually have a much longer range and usually come with tracking capabilities, meaning that they are much easier to hit with. The Earthling MX missile, for example, has very long range, excellent tracking, and does quite respectable damage. The Mmrnmhrm missiles, while doing little damage per strike, have phenomenal range and very good tracking. The one big exception is the Mycon plasmoid, an energy weapon with long range and tracking, but even it is pretty slow, meaning that many ships can outrun it.
 * Leitmotif: Each race has a specific tune that plays when one of their ships wins a battle.
 * Lightning Bruiser: The Mmrnmhrm Transformer is this to some extent. In its x-form, it is extremely fast, albeit slow turning, and fires extremely long-range, reliably tracking missiles. In its y-form, it is very maneuverable, albeit slow, and fires very deadly, albeit short-range, lasers. If used properly, then, it has all the advantages of a fast, maneuverable ship that can hit easily and do tremendous damage. Its only real drawback is that actually transforming the ship costs all its fuel, so the key is transforming at just the right moment. Unsurprisingly, it is one of the deadliest Alliance ships, while still being relatively low-priced.
 * Little Green Men: The Arilou.
 * Lotus Position: The Arilou.
 * Luck-Based Mission:
 * Since the star clusters in the full game are generated randomly every time according to data in the scenario file, you may end up starting the game with the enemy ships and your starbase/colonies/mines in one "arm" of the cluster, and your own ships in another. Now imagine what happens if the losing condition for your side in this scenario is losing your starbase/colonies/mines.
 * If one of your ships just happens to run across a Precursor artifact, that can radically improve that ship's power, especially if it's an artifact that that particular ship could really benefit from.
 * Mana Meter: Each ship has one, representing energy for weapons and special features.
 * Mighty Glacier: The Ur-Quan Dreadnought and the Mycon Podship. On the Alliance side, the Chenjesu Broodhome.
 * Planet Looters: To replenish their crew reserves, Syreen ships must raid Hierarchy colonies.
 * Powers as Programs: Finding and installing Precursor technology on your fleet.
 * Starting Units: Depends on the scenario being played.
 * Stat-O-Vision: The detailed starship schematics that can be accessed in Practice mode.
 * Suicide Attack: Pretty much the Shofixti hat.
 * Turn-Based Strategy: The Full Game mode.
 * The Unpronounceable: The Mmrnmhrm. (MUR-na-hurm)
 * Unfortunate Name: The Third (Paul) Reiche.
 * Word of Gay: The Androsynth, according to Paul Reiche III. It's subtly indicated even in the original material — look closely at their in-game art, and you'll notice that they have little pink triangles on their uniforms.
 * You Require More Vespene Gas: Starbucks, generated via mining colonies and Starbases.

Tropes A–F
""This humble warrior will take the Shofixti maidens you possess, gently wake them, and then perform ribald feats of unsurpassed fertility! ...With their consent, of course.""
 * Absolute Xenophobe: The Kohr-Ah cannot feel safe or secure while a single member of a single other sentient species survives. Their trauma runs too deep.
 * Action Bomb: Theoretically, you can shoot ships down with the Shofixti Scout's "main" weapon. But usually it's not the most efficient of the Scout's tactics.
 * Acting for Two: Some of the voice actors do multiple voices:
 * Rick Betz plays both the Ariloulaleelay and the Druuge.
 * David Bryce voices the Kohr-Ah, Ilwrath, Shofixti and Spathi.
 * Greg Johnson, in some real Mood Whiplash, voices the Orz, Pkunk and Utwig.
 * Madeleine Wild, besides voicing the Syreen, also does the voices of the Zoq-Fot-Pik and the VUX.
 * Larry Zee does the voices of the Melnorme, Umgah and Ur-Quan.
 * Adam and Eve Plot:
 * One of the races is reduced to one or two males and a handful of females. Within two months, they have an effectively infinite population. Granted, they are a rodent race...

"We know your soul, young Captain. It is no brighter than ours! We acknowledge our greed. We revel in it. You are the dishonest one! Hiding your shame in shadows, you fabricate justifications, rationales! In the end, we are just the same."
 * Same with the Syreen, although they start their repopulation with a larger gene pool: 500 males and 10.000 females. Happily, the Syreen look very human, Syreen women tend to look like extremely attractive human women, and Syreen can breed successfully with humans. And they will, whenever given any type of chance, with gusto.
 * Adam Smith Hates Your Guts:
 * Mostly averted. The Starbase is highly efficient and totally dedicated to your cause, so you can buy and sell items for 100% of standard value, so you can try out different ship builds.
 * Since the Starbase has limited staff, for every thousand crew members you lose, the resources needed to hire them increase. There is a quest you can do to find a reliable source of crew, which stops this from happening. In addition, selling your crew into slavery will raise the cost of crewmembers, since, understandably, no one will want to work for you.
 * Affably Evil: The Ur-Quan are almost too damn nice for a race out to enslave all sentient life. The Kohr-Ah are also remarkably polite considering what they're trying to do.
 * Alien Kudzu: The Mycon's Deep Children, which burrow into the lower crust and turn the planet into lava hell.
 * All There in the Manual: The game manual provides 220 years' worth of history in the introduction, starting from how radio waves sent in the 1930s attracted the attention of the Ur-Quan and other benign races, proceeding through the 2000s and various technological advances humanity made, passing into the 2100s when Earth was made part of the Alliance of Free Stars, describing how the player's ancestors got stranded around Vela, and finally ending in 2155, literally 48 hours away from the start of the game. However, the manual only gives information that your people, in Vela, would know and so omits some rather vital information. The game itself provides a greatly abbreviated version.
 * Exclusively Evil:
 * Blatantly parodied with the Ilwrath, who tout their own evil so proudly the player can introduce criticism of the trope into a conversation with them. See Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad.
 * Played straight with the Dnyarri.
 * Amazon Brigade: The Syreen.
 * Ambiguous Gender: Most of the characters, including your human crew members.
 * And I Must Scream: go through this as part of their backstory.
 * Another Dimension: The Orz, one of the more "alien" alien races, are visitors from another dimension. The Arilou are native to our dimension, but also travel extensively through another, and their homeworld can only be reached through it.
 * Anti-Villain:
 * Apocalypse How: Several variants, including multiple genocides, slagged planets, a once-habitable system roasted by a massive solar flare, and a bomb capable of blasting an entire planet to dust.
 * Apocalyptic Log: The homeworld is basically covered in this. You don't get to read it, which is just as well given the effect it seemed to have on the crewman who did.
 * Arbitrary Maximum Range
 * Arc Words: The Armor-Piercing Question below.
 * Armor-Piercing Question: "Hold! What you are doing to us is wrong! Why do you do this thing?"
 * Asshole Victim:
 * Asskicking Equals Authority: Pushed to the limits and beyond with the Thraddash: they have so many civil wars it almost looks like a pastime to them. Their rather antiquated ships systems are the logical conclusion to this: each "change of culture" knocked them back by about 500 years in the technology race.
 * At Least I Admit It: The Druuge give you this beautiful speech as you are about to :

"Hayes: To remember the color sequence from good to bad... the miner had a mnemonic that went like... Very Young Orangutans Could Grow Bananas, Perhaps Rather Well."
 * Battle Thralls: The Trope Namer. The slave races that fight for Ur-Quan.
 * Benevolent Precursors: The Precursors, most of the time. Their technology is user friendly, their planet destroying bombs have a clear warning, but their terraforming equipment is a bit "buggy".
 * Berserk Button: Save game, then *Dancing* ensues. Or tell the Syreen what really happened to their homeworld, then see whether they still can remain content and fatalistic.
 * BFG: Several ships have one, notably the Druuge Mauler's massive axial cannon, the Ur-Quan Dreadnought's fusion blaster, and the Chmrr Avatar's heavy x-ray laser.
 * Blatant Lies: Just about any conversation you have with the talking pet.
 * Boarding Party: The Orz Marines.
 * Boldly Coming: Goes hand in hand with the Blue Skinned Space Babes.
 * Border Patrol: If you try to leave the solar system without fixing the starbase first, you are faced with massive swarms of Slylandro Probes.
 * But Thou Must!: Although some alien races can become enemies if you say the wrong things, the ones whose assistance you need to win the game will laugh off any amount of insolence. There is also one justified example...
 * But What About the Astronauts?:
 * At the end of the war, the Alliance lost and Earth was trapped under a slave shield. Thankfully, a research group had established a colony that went unnoticed by the bad guys.
 * When the Syreen's homeworld was destroyed, most of the survivors were the member of the all-female Space Patrol.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall: The characters appear to be talking to the player during the Hilarious Outtakes.
 * Cast From Hit Points: A ship's crew functions as its hitpoints. The Orz can send crew members into space to board the enemy ship, while The Druge can sacrifice crew members in order to regain energy.
 * The Cavalry: The, right before the final battle, if you play your cards right. Considering that makes the final battle a lot easier, this is highly recommended
 * Chaotic Stupid: Umgah aren't malevolent, but continuously modified themselves and became very... mentally unstable. So they have a taste for slapstick comedy up to "Drop asteroid into their ocean! Boom! Splash! Big waves! Lulz!" level and worse.
 * Character Customization: The Precursor vessel can be outfitted however you like, letting it be a warship, a mining rig, a crew transport, or a tanker with enough fuel to circle the map three times over.
 * Chekhov's Gunman:
 * Civil War: You can start one among the Yehat. Also, the Ur-Quan sub-species, the Kzer-Za and the Kohr-Ah, are fighting against each other to determine the fate of other species in the universe.
 * Cloudcuckoolander: The Mycon come off as a fairly non-humorous version of this. It doesn't really matter what you say to them most of the time, they will just ramble on about Juffo-Wup, and then occasionally speak in the voice of a long dead member of their species (due to Genetic Memory). And then they attack you. The only straightforward conversation you can have with them is when you inform them of a new planet to colonize.
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience: Star systems, planets and minerals. For the former, brighter colors mean hotter stars, and thus planets with better minerals and harsher conditions. For the two latter, vivid and funkier colors mean greater loot quality.

"Thraddash: And did the change to Culture Fifteen set us back five hundred years? NO! SNORT! Two, maybe three hundred years, tops."
 * Collector of the Strange: Admiral ZEX.
 * Comically Missing the Point: The Thraddash Culture Fourteen warned that each civil war results in a setback of 500 years, due to the Thraddash nuking themselves into the stone age. And then they were conquered by Culture Fifteen.

"Chmmr: WE KNOW THE DNYARRI ONLY FROM LEGEND, WHERE THEY ARE DESCRIBED AS THE EMBODIMENT OF EVIL AND CRUELTY. IF THERE EVER WAS A DEVIL, CAPTAIN, IT WAS THE DNYARRI. Ur-Quan: ... a creature so horrible, so evil that it makes ANYTHING else you have ever known TRIVIAL by comparison. There is no equal to the Dnyarri's cruelty, to its love for torment. Dying a THOUSAND TIMES would be preferable to what is in store for you if we do not stop that creature."
 * Compilation Rerelease: The short-lived Star Control Collection, which combined the first two games on a CD-ROM. Given that the games were small filesize-wise (as they'd been created with floppy disks in mind), the rest of the CD was stuffed with game demos for other Accolade products.
 * Complete Monster: The Dnyarri are seen this way.

"Fwiffo: As yet, The Ultimate Evil remains largely unmanifest, and its powers and exact intentions are still a bit obscure ... since it lurks just outside the range of even the most sensitive, long-range detectors ... which we feel gives conclusive evidence as to The Ultimate Evil's nefarious intent."
 * Cool Starship:
 * The player character's flagship, a Precursor tugboat, built by a re-activated robotic factory.
 * The Ur-Quan's flagship, the Sa-Matra,, destined to be the trophy in the Ur-Quan's
 * Copy Protection: Name the star at this location on the bundled map, please.
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive: The Druuge and their Crimson Corporation.
 * Cosmic Horror: Despite the silliness, the Arilou, Ur-Quan and Orz all imply that reality really bites in this universe, and it's all about to get much, much worse.
 * Covers Always Lie: The octopus-zerg-esque monster in the boxart never appears ingame. Some people argue it is the VUX Monster (who just gets text and a distinct monster sprite in the game, but nowhere near as detailed as the box picture); others suggest that it's a very off-model Ur-Quan. In the fan sequel Project6014,.
 * Cowardly Lion: The Spathi will attempt to run away from every threat if possible. If it's not, don't underestimate them.
 * Creator Cameo: Co-creator Paul Reiche III provides the voices of the Mycon and the Talking Pet. The victory sequence includes cameos from him, his father Paul II, his daughter Arianna, and his son Devin.
 * Creepy Monotone:
 * Both Ur-Quan subspecies.
 * The mind-controlled.
 * Critical Existence Failure: The Life Meter literally consists of crew members being killed by malfunctioning hardware, and the ship itself doesn't take any damage until everyone's dead, at which point it blows up.
 * Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass.
 * The Spathi don't seem particularly smart when you talk to them. They are ridiculous, ramble on pointlessly, live in perpetual paranoia bordering on full-out insanity, and insist on mispronouncing "Human" as "Hunam." ...They also advanced from their Bronze Age to Nuclear Power in less than a century while threatened by the Evil Ones, and are one of only two species to figure out a particularly important piece of Imported Alien Phlebotinum (and the other was probably the most intelligent in the game). If asked, the Starbase Commander describes a Spathi as a "cowardly mobile clam, armed with a howitzer." He's pretty spot-on.
 * The Spathi's ship, the Eluder, is another demonstration of their hidden badass. It's large, brightly colored, and clownish looking. It's designed purely for running away while the gunner is firing blind and panicked, probably while crying. It's also one of the most effective ships in the game specifically because it's designed to run away (High speed) while the gunner is firing blind and panicked (Rear-firing homing missiles), and the large ship means a large crew compliment (lots of hitpoints). Eluders can last a DAMN long time in a fight, as long as you fight like a Spathi.
 * Cutscene: Prologue and epilogue. They seem to show a rather Zeerust retro sci-fi future with Space Clothes.
 * Cycle of Hurting: There is no Mercy Invincibility in Hyperspace, and this will show when you enter a star system while pursued by many fleets: One fleet will catch up during the jump-into-hyperspace animation, then another will catch up during the before and after battle animation, then another, then another, then you get accidentally back into the star system, then another, until you load a previous save.
 * Cycle of Revenge: Though not with many iterations: Dnyarri → Ur-Quan → neo-Dnyarri.
 * Death Seeker: You, if you're silly enough to confront a mind-controlling alien without the Shield. Tanaka and the Ultron-less Utwig also have suicidal tendencies.
 * Deflector Shields: The Utwig Jugger and the Yehat Terminator both have these, though they function quite differently.
 * Developer's Room: The game was going to have one of these as the Secret of the Rainbow Worlds, but they ended up not doing it since they couldn't come up with enough gags for it.
 * Dialogue Tree
 * Did We Just Have Tea with Cthulhu?:
 * Dirty Coward / Lovable Coward: The Spathi's hat. As their prayer goes: "Oh, God, please don't let me die today! Tomorrow would be so much better!"

"Kohr-Ah:"
 * David Bryce's voice acting pushes them more towards the latter than the former, mostly because of the humour of the electronically processed whine he uses for the Spathi.
 * Disproportionate Retribution: Just say one unkind word about the Ultron to the Utwig, or even show them a broken Ultron - and the Utwig will never forgive you for that. You will become their enemy number one, forever. Most races will be willing to give you a chance to make up for your past mistakes, but not the Utwig.
 * Ditto Aliens:
 * Lampshaded by the Zoq-Fot-Pik: "You must meet with our leaders. They are wiser... more powerful beings!" "They look just like us, though."
 * Partly averted with the Spathi Safe Ones, who look like other Spathi, but wear clothes that clearly identify them as rulers.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: The Syreen Penetrator. Yes, it looks exactly as you'd expect. It's even ribbed.
 * Doomed Hometown: Inaccessible subtype. Although strictly speaking the adventure isn't caused by what happened to the player character's homeworld, since he has already embarked on the adventure before he learns about it (and if you take the view that Unzervalt, rather than Earth, is the character's homeworld, it's possible to play out the entire game without going home and discovering ).
 * Downer Beginning: The Alliance lost the war in the previous game and its former members are now slaves of the Ur-Quan. Your goal is to exact revenge on them.
 * The Dreaded:


 * Dueling Games: With Electronic Arts' Starflight series. Note that Paul Reiche III is credited in the Special Thanks for Starflight while being one of the co-creators of Star Control, and Starflight's lead designer, Greg Johnson, also took part in the development of Star Control II, so the developers probably don't feel any need for animosity between fans of both games. (For that matter, fans usually like both games.)
 * Earth-Shattering Poster
 * Easily Forgiven: The first time you meet Fwiffo on Pluto, he (in typical Spathi fashion) mistakes your harmless lander crew for a hostile force and, without any provocation, opens fire and kills several people. He blames his ship's automated defences for the incident, but it's pretty clear that he is lying. A few minutes and one conversation later, he becomes your first alien ally, and his ship forms an important part of your fleet, potentially for the rest of the game. You can fight him to avenge your dead crew instead, but he's alone on his ship (meaning it has only one hit point), making the victory feel quite hollow, and failing to ally with him makes the game much harder.
 * The Eeyore: The Utwig, after they broke their sacred Ultron. They get better.
 * Either World Domination or Something About Bananas: The Orz speak a really strange language, so much that the flagship's translation software fails spectacularly at deciphering it. While it can poorly translate most of its speech, it cannot grasp the true meaning of certain key words, and so picks other words to fill the blanks.
 * Egocentric Team Naming: there's a part where you can pick the name of your new coalition. Options include "The New Alliance of Free Stars," "The Concordance of Alien Nations," "The United Federation of Worlds," and "The Empire of (Your name)." Hayes is a bit put off if you choose the Empire of Me option, but goes along with it.
 * Eldritch Abomination: The authors manage to give rather subtle overtones of this to.
 * Enemy Civil War: The Doctrinal Conflict.
 * Energy Absorption: The Utwig Jugger cannot recharge its own battery, but its energy-hungry shields convert incoming damage into energy.
 * Everything's Better with Bob: The first two games were developed by Toys For Bob. There's also an Umgah captain called Bob.
 * Everything's Better with Spinning: The Pkunk's "Death Blossom" attack — release the thruster and fire while constantly turning.
 * Evil Sounds Deep: Any deeper and the Ur-Quan would trigger involuntary bowel movements.
 * Eviler Than Thou: The Kohr-Ah pull this one on the Ur-Quan Kzer-Za. And the Ilwrath try to do this on everybody else.
 * Executive Meddling: Fortunately averted. The executives wanted to release the game in a buggy and highly incomplete state with placeholder dialogue everywhere. The developers spent 6 months of their own time and money to finish the game, rather than have the unfinished version released.
 * The Fair Folk: The Arilou, aloof Little Green Men that they are.
 * Fantastic Measurement System: Briefly mentioned for laughs by the Zoq-Fot-Pik.
 * Fan Sequel:
 * TimeWarp, which was supposed to replace SC3 and contains a fairly hefty selection of fan-created starships to use in Melee, including the planet landers. Unfortunately, the project eventually collapsed and split into several forks, which also did not fare too well.
 * XR, or Expanding Realities, was another attempt at making a Fan Sequel, which did not go beyond a small and buggy melee demo. Then the project switched to making a movie, but even then nothing was released.
 * Now there is another Fan Sequel in development, called Project 6014, which uses UQM's engine.
 * Fantasy Counterpart Culture:
 * The Melnorme, or Mael-Num, are similar to the Jews. They were nearly exterminated by the Ur-Quan and forced to flee their homeworld. They have survived for thousands of years as interstellar merchants and financiers par excellence. They are brilliant scholars: they are the source for all the upgraded designs for your ship, and they are themselves willing to pay for any biological data you find on your voyage. Additionally, it is strongly implied that they seek to discover the fate of the Precursors in the hopes of some day being redeemed from their exile. They are portrayed fairly positively, however, so they aren't quite Space Jews.
 * The Shofixti are the Theme Park Version of the Japanese, with emphasis on their warrior traditions, especially on the kamikazes, and, unfortunately, the broken, heavily-accented English.
 * Faster-Than-Light Travel
 * Fetch Quest
 * Fictional Sport: Frungy, frungy, frungy!
 * Fight Woosh
 * Fixed Forward-Facing Weapon: A mainstay across the majority of ships. Notable exceptions include the Orz Nemesis, with his rotating artillery cannon, and the Spathi Eluder, whose most effective weapon is aimed backwards.
 * Freeware Games
 * Freudian Excuse: For at least two whole species.
 * Frickin' Laser Beams: The Arilou, VUX, Mmrnmhrm and Chmmr all pilot starships which use instantly-generated lasers as primary weapons, and the Earthling Cruiser and Precursor flagship use point defense lasers as secondaries. There's a few small craft, such as the Dreadnought's fighters and the Avatar's ZapSats, which use them, too.
 * Fun with Acronyms
 * Backward Utilized Tracking Torpedo, a Spathi weapon which shoots a backward-aimed homing missile (that makes a farting sound when launched).
 * De-energizing Offensive Guided Interceptor, a Chenjesu weapon which siphons battery energy from an opponent (and makes dog-like noises as it does or when it's destroyed).
 * Fiery Ring of Inevitable and Eternal Destruction, a Kohr-Ah weapon which projects a ring of fire around the ship.
 * The VUX (Very Ugly Xenomorph).
 * Fusion Dance: The Chmmr, resulting from the Chenjesu fusing with the Mmrnmhrm.
 * The Future

Tropes G–M

 * Game Mod: There are actually quite a few, including one that greatly lengthens the time limit and makes time pass slower.
 * Gambit Pileup: The races known to have large-scale plots going on are the Arilou, Druuge, Dnyarri, Humans (i.e., you), Melnorme, Mycon, Orz, and Umgah.
 * Gendercide: The Syreen homeworld was destroyed by a cataclysmic disaster, and their spaceships were almost entirely crewed by women.
 * Genetic Memory: Mycon, neo-Dnyarri, Ur-Quan. And newborn Shofixti are getting skills from somewhere, possibly this.
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: When you ask the leader of the all female Syreen race if she and her colleagues ever get "lonely" she says "Don't worry about us, Captain. We make out alright (the original DOS version also added "with just us females")." Then there are the Androsynth, the Syreen's similarly inclined male counterparts (it's Word of God). And all of ZEX's dialogue. In fact, this game had more sexual references than you would expect for something with an E rating....
 * Ghost Planet: The Androsynth, Burvixese, and Taalo homeworlds. Every homeworld, everywhere, if you don't stop the Kohr-Ah in time.
 * Giggling Villain: Admiral ZEX. (Hee! Hee! Hee!)
 * Glad I Thought of It: The Thraddash with the Captain's suggestion about attacking the Kohr-Ah in order to impress their Ur-Quan Masters.
 * God Guise: The Umgah do this to the Ilwrath by means of a powerful hyperspace transmitter. As a joke, they tell the Ilwrath to go to war with the neighboring Pkunk. If the player gets that transmitter, they can pull the same trick, and tell the Ilwrath to attack the warlike Thraddash, leading the two bloodthirsty species to annihilate each other.
 * God Save Us From the Queen: The Yehat were not happy when their queen decided to surrender to Ur-Quan.
 * Go Mad From the Revelation: Poor Bukowski.
 * Green Skinned Space Babes: The Syreen (except they're blue). Heavily lampshaded, from their outfits to their Penetrator ships.
 * The Greys: The Arilou are green, but they otherwise fit the slightly more benign (maybe) version of the trope. They still probe people, though.
 * Guest Star Party Member: Although you can ally with them, the will leave you soon afterwards.
 * Guide Dang It:
 * While most things in the game have at least some clue somewhere, they are often obscure and easy to miss. It is all too easy to get stuck on your first playthrough without ever seeing the main plot.
 * The 3DO version, and consequently UQM, removed two bits of dialogue that a player might want to know about: the information about the game's time limit, and the location of the Mycon homeworld. This has led to many forum topics. Other pieces of missing information include the fact that Melnorme traders can be summoned with the caster, and the original starmap (which is required to decode the location of the VUX Beast).
 * The VUX Beast puzzle was still rather Guide Dang It even with all the hints.
 * What to do if you run into Tanaka is extremely counter-intuitive. You have a hostile response or a calm response...the hostile response will. of course, cause him to attack you. The calm response will cause him to laugh at you, and then attack you. What's the correct response? How'd anyone figure this out without a forum topic? At the same time, something tells you how to do this... but it's highly possible to have completed this before you even get this information offered to you. The designers foresaw the unintuitiveness of it all and coded in Katana, his brother, as a replacement in case the player screwed up once.
 * Heroic Sacrifice: Parodied, near the end of the game. Also, the Shofixti did it with their entire species.
 * Hidden Elf Village: The Arilou homeworld; appropriately, as they are practically The Fair Folk.
 * Hilarious Outtakes: A set of fake outtakes in the closing credits, preceding the ones in Pixar's movies by a few years, including the Orz complaining about its dialogue and a Pkunk doing an impression of a phone psychic commercial.
 * Hitbox Dissonance: Averted completely. Each sprite has a 1-bit mask for each of its frames that matches its shape and serves as its "hitbox".
 * Hit and Run Tactics: Standard tactics with Spathi Eluders, though they were designed with Run first and Hit second. Several others ships are also effective with this strategy.
 * Honest John's Dealership: Two races, in different ways:
 * The Melnorme, who will sell you fuel, technology and plot points in exchange for information they find interesting, are a benevolent version. Their culture considers giving away free information immoral, but their prices are fairly reasonable, and they are generally very helpful. Lampshaded if you get the Melnorme to tell you about the Druuge — when Greenish complains about how their only concern is profit, he notes that your character is smirking at him.
 * The Druuge are a race of Corrupt Corporate Executives, looking only to make a profit off of you, no matter what, and the resources they are most interested in are Human Resources. Some of the stuff they sell is useless, making them Snake Oil Salesmen as well. (By contrast, everything the Melnorme offer has some potential use.)
 * Horde of Alien Locusts: Slylandro Probes.
 * Human Aliens:
 * Justified with the Androsynth, who were cloned from actual humans before taking to the stars and becoming a political power of their own.
 * Not so justified with the Syreen. The characters point out that this can't possibly be a coincidence, but no real explanation is given why they are so genetically compatible with humans that they can produce fertile offspring. Wild Mass Guessing abounds, mostly involving the Arilou.
 * Humans Are Leaders: Averted. The more advanced Chenjesu were actually the leaders of The Alliance, and retake their role in all but name once you get all the relevant plot coupons to complete the game.
 * Humans Are Psychic in the Future: It's mentioned randomly that some humans have 'esper' capabilities and are sensitive to various items or happenings in the galaxy.
 * Humans Are Ugly: The VUX think so, and if you annoy them enough they'll reveal.
 * Humans Are Warriors: Variant 2, Humans Are Soldiers.
 * Human Resources: Well, Druuge Resources, or whatever slaves of other races they have. Their ships' Mana Meter can be replenished by sacrificing crew members.
 * Hyperspace Is a Scary Place:
 * Fortunately for everyone, the... *below* level of reality isn't commonly reachable. Yet.
 * The 3DO background music that plays as you travel through Quasi-Space is definitely quite creepy, and includes bits that sound like the screams or yells of... something. Appropriate, considering some of the things the Arilou will tell you...
 * Hyperspeed Escape: Ships can flee combat. Since they're expensive to replace, this is often a good tactic, especially if it's your flagship that is threatened (since its destruction means your death, and is an automatic game over).
 * The Hypnotoad: The Dnyarri (literal hypnotoads who came nine years before the Trope Namer). The reason they didn't conquer the universe before the Ur-Quan stumbled upon their homeworld was because the Dnyarri were too damn lazy. They never bothered to develop spacefaring technology. On the other hand, once they had a race of space-faring predators under their control, they started making up for lost time with a vengeance.
 * Incredibly Lame Pun: Umgah's Khan Fusion joke.
 * Informed Ability: Ironically, the one ship specifically advertised in-game as being able to "defeat any ship in space," the Chmmr Avatar, is not as effective against the heavy Ur-Quan ships as a number of other ships in the game. They're not too bad against Dreadnoughts with some damage, but there are better ships to use. Marauders eat them for breakfast.
 * Intentional Engrish for Funny: The Orz.
 * In-Universe Game Clock: Time does not stand still. Certain events will happen at specific times after others, and there's a phenomenon which only occurs at a particular date. And, of course, there is a time limit.
 * It Amused Me: The Umgah's motivation for doing anything.
 * I Shall Taunt You: The Pkunk's modus operandi. Couples well with rapid fire, almost range-less spread guns, considering that taunting actually reloads their ship batteries.
 * It's a Wonderful Failure: The, unless you are very quick. On the other hand,
 * The Jailer: The Ur-Quan Kzer-Za.
 * Jerkass: Many of the dialogue options allow the Captain to embody this trope.
 * Jigsaw Puzzle Plot: You have to piece together everything from the hints, rumors, and bits of information the aliens give you.
 * Karmic Death:
 * Kick the Son of a Bitch: Leaving behind to die in the end.
 * Killer Rabbit: The Evil Ones look like teddy bears that don't move, but if you touch one, you get a taste of their true powers. Don't do that. (Their damage rating against a lander that runs into them is set to the maximum possible, meaning they're as deadly as the VUX Beast.)
 * Knight Templar: Both Ur-Quan subspecies turn out to be this.
 * Knowledge Broker: The Melnorme.
 * Late to the Party
 * Law of Chromatic Superiority: The Black Spathi Squadron.
 * Life Meter: Each ship has one, purportedly representing how many surviving crew it has.
 * Lost Forever: Certain events can make you lose the ability to build certain ships, such as the Spathi Eluders and Thraddash Torch. You can keep the ones you have in stock, but can't build more.
 * Love Freak: The Pkunk.
 * Machine Monotone: The Chenjesu and Mmrnmhrm (and later the Chmmr).
 * Market-Based Title: The Star Control II part of the title was dropped for the open-source version of the game (ported from the 3DO port of the game to modern operating systems), due to the name Star Control being owned by Atari.
 * Mars Needs Men: Admiral ZEX wants to be "friends... perhaps even more" with the Captain, to the point that.
 * Mercy Invincibility: Applied to ship encounters on the map screen. Unfortunately, though, not in hyperspace, showing why this trope exists in the first place.
 * Mildly Military: Used for laughs during one conversation with Syreen commander. You may come down on her for her attire (which is Stripperiffic to say the least), only to hear that that's official military uniform.
 * Mr. Exposition: Commander Hayes, since the Captain has been out of touch with the rest of the galaxy for twenty years, and he needs to be brought up to date. Greenish will also provide a wealth of backstory and hints, but demands to be paid for every item.
 * Microts: The Slylandro in Star Control 2 have "rotation," "Drahnasa," and "Drahn" which are something like their equivalent of days, years, and millennia (not particularly similar in duration to ours though). It would be tricky to decode these except that pretty much everything interesting that's happened on a galactic scale happens in one of three time periods (Quite Recently, A Long Time Ago and A Really, Really Long Time Ago) so luckily it's not too hard to figure out what they're on about.
 * Might Makes Right: The Thraddash way of life.
 * The Missing Faction: "There are no Androsynth now. Only Orz."
 * Money Grinding: Mineral gathering, which will give you Resource Units to upgrade your ships and fleet. It is quite easy to overdo it, though you will not realise it until it is too late.
 * My Species Doth Protest Too Much:
 * Admiral ZEX, the one VUX who is not a frothing xenophobe. Because he's a frothing xenophile.
 * The fabled Black Spathi Squadron, which according to the stories goes about performing "brave and hostile deeds" against the Ur-Quan. Very un-Spathilike.

Tropes N–Z
"Children: "But Grandfather! What happened? Where did you go? And how did you find the Mark II?" The Captain: "That, my children, is an entirely different story.""
 * Neglectful Precursors: They owe the galaxy much child support.
 * Never Be Hurt Again: 's motivation.
 * New Age Retro Hippie: The Pkunk.
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: The Shofixti blew up their own star to take down about a third of the Ur-Quan Kzer-Za fleet. That's great and noble and all, but it turns out the Kzer-Za's genocidal cousins are coming, the Ur-Quan are going to have a war to determine whether their official policy would be "enslave the universe" or "genocide," and the Shofixti just nuked the "enslave" side into numerical inferiority.
 * Nice Job Fixing It, Villain: Applied to 'younger races' more than literal children, but the Ur-Quan Kzer-Za and Kohr-Ah would like to, respectively, totally subjugate or annihilate anything that isn't an Ur-Quan in case it eventually becomes a threat. This is what directly causes most, if not all, of the races who fight them to fight them, culminating in their crushing defeat.
 * Nightmare Fetishist: ZEX does, in fact, find humans and most other species ugly, just like all the other VUX. That's why he... enjoys them.
 * No Canon for the Wicked: Averted. The Alliance of Free Stars lost the war depicted in the first Star Control.
 * No Hero Discount: Even though all life in this sector of the galaxy is threatened with extinction, and the Melnorme have an abundance of knowledge and technology that could be given to you to prevent it from happening at any time, you won't get anything from them until you pay up. Justified by the fact that their culture is completely fixated on business transactions and considers giving things for free to be crass and insulting, and by the fact that the Melnorme will be leaving this sector of the galaxy shortly before the extermination begins.
 * No Name Given: Officially, the player-character is merely called "the Captain", so as to work within the confines of being able to name him/her whatever the player wishes. The 3DO version gives the Captain and his flagship default names, Zelnick and the Vindicator respectively.
 * Nonstandard Game Over: If you surrender to the Kzer-Za or play with the Utwig bomb you get dumped into the opening screen.
 * Omnicidal Maniacs: The Kohr-Ah.
 * One-Gender Race: The Syreen, with some justification and a lot of Lampshade Hanging.
 * One Nation Under Copyright: The Druuge's Crimson Corporation.
 * One World Order: Each alien race in the game, with a few exceptions.
 * Optional Sexual Encounter: Take a guess as to what race this is with. Hint: it ain't the Supox.
 * Organic Technology: The Umgah, Supox, and Mycon all use organic technology.
 * Pinata Enemy: Slylandro Probes, the moment you get enough equipment to defeat them safely. They yield the most RUs when defeated, at 550 a piece. On the flipside, they only come in groups of one.
 * Pig Latin: You can get the Thraddash to greet you this way.
 * Planet Looters: The Mycon, who are corrupted Organic Technology.
 * Planet of Hats: Each alien race, in its own way.
 * Plant Aliens: The Supox; the Mycon are fungi.
 * Player Headquarters: The Starbase.
 * Power Nullifier: The Taalo shield nullifies the Dnyarri's mind control. Try going after him without it, and you'll regret it.
 * Practical Taunt: The Pkunk regain battery by insulting their opponent.
 * Preexisting Encounters
 * Press X to Die: You can blow up the Utwig Bomb from the Devices menu, taking your flagship with it.
 * Proud Merchant Race: The Melnorme.
 * Proud Warrior Race Guy: The Thraddash are a parody of the concept. The Yehat and Shofixti are more serious examples.
 * Puny Earthling: The Ilwrath in their dialogue comment frequently on how squishy humans are and how easily they can be ripped limb from limb. The Arilou hint that humans are particularly vulnerable and need to be protected from things like.
 * Puppeteer Parasite: The Dnyarri.
 * Quicksand Box: You are dumped into a huge star system to explore without any clear instructions. The plot relevant hints are obscure and easy to miss, so unless you pay close attention to all the dialogue, obsessively talk to everyone, and write down everything they say, it's very easy get stuck your first time, or just plain lose thanks to running into the.
 * Raygun Gothic: The Syreen have this aesthetic. Their ships are old-fashioned rockets; their ship controls look ripped from the covers of 1920s sci-fi pulp; the Syreen themselves might have walked straight off the pages of "Amazon Princesses of Space" or some such. All this helps lampshade the fact that the Syreen are a race of good old-fashioned Blue Skinned Space Babes in a game otherwise populated by Starfish Aliens and Eldritch Abominations.
 * Recoil Boost: The Druuge Mauler ship is a flying cannon. Its theoretical max speed is painfully slow, but the cannon's recoil is so great that it's easier just to ignore the engine entirely. Just take care to avoid the planet.
 * Red Shirt: Your crew members are occasionally mentioned by name when you explore planets. Many of them die. Or worse.
 * Reincarnation:
 * The Pkunk ship can physically reincarnate with all hands when destroyed on the field of battle. It has a 50% chance of happening each time, so with the help of the Random Number God the Pkunk can be an unreasonably formidable race given that every captain is a New Age Retro Hippie . They appear to believe in it for everyone.
 * The Kohr-Ah believe they're doing other races a favor by wiping them out and giving them the chance to reincarnate as fellow Ur-Quan.
 * Relationship Values
 * Religion of Evil: Parodied with the Ilwrath.
 * Retcon:
 * The Spathi  Discriminator  Eluder-class voidships.
 * The first game placed the battles between the Hierarchy and the Alliance during the 2600s; several documents within the manual are dated 2612. The conflict was pushed back to the 2100s for SC2, as noted in the manual.
 * Some other minor lore from the SC1 manual was retconned as well, like the Arilou previously being "tormentors of the human race".
 * Scary Dogmatic Aliens: Several different types, including the Ilwrath, the Kohr-Ah, and the Kzer-Za.
 * Scottish English: Most Yehat speak with this accent.
 * Screw This, I'm Outta Here: The Melmorne will leave the galaxy, and thus you won't be able to trade with them past that point.
 * Sealed Evil in a Can: The Dnyarri.
 * Sealed Good in a Can: Races slave-shielded by the Ur-Quan Kzer-Za..
 * Sequel Hook


 * During the credits, the neo-Dnyarri, the Syreen, and the Druuge all claim that the sequel will be about them.
 * Sequence Breaking: There are two major ways to do this:
 * It's possible to skip much of the game by Why do quests for alien species when you can simply wait for
 * Additionally, you can finish the story mode without allying with the Earth Starbase. This feature went undiscovered to the programmers themselves for more than ten years. It also crashed the game prior to a special handler being added in The Ur-Quan Masters. Doing this is both difficult and extremely tedious, which helps to explain why it took so long. See here and here for more information.
 * Shout-Out: There's a long "Influences and references" page on The Ur-Quan Masters wiki, and it starts with the "This page is currently incomplete..." template, including many references to Starflight; not only its setting inspired many Star Control features, but some of the developers worked on both.
 * Sidequest
 * Single Biome Planet: Averted. Earth-like planets are called "water worlds" and there is no in-game indication that they are geographically any less diverse than Earth. The only case when this is "played straight" is when the "biome" in question is some variation on "irradiated space rock", which is perfectly realistic.
 * Sins of Our Fathers: After humans created the Androsynth in the early 2000s, they were used as slaves and treated as second-class citizens. They escaped, and 100 years down the line the humans' grandkids would have to fight them.
 * Slap Yourself Awake: A species-wide example.
 * Sliding Scale of Silliness Versus Seriousness: There is silliness all over the game, but it has quite a lot of serious moments as well, such as Also, considering other games Toys For Bob has created, this is probably the most serious game they have ever released. Yes, things can be like that in context.
 * Snake Oil Salesman: Be careful when dealing with the Druuge.
 * Something They Would Never Say: It can help a lot when your partner in conversation Or has been brainwashed.
 * Space Elves: The Syreen are of the blue space babe variety, while the Arilou are of the mystic alien intruder type.
 * Space Opera
 * Space Is an Ocean: Except for True Space being frictionless, the portrayed universe fits the trope pretty much.
 * Stalked by the Bell: The Death March.
 * Starfish Aliens: Many species, but especially the Orz. The Slylandro are pretty much this as well, being floating translucent gas bags with glowy bits inside them. Glowy bits which you aren't supposed to be able to see and which they get very embarrased if you mention, being their reproductive organs.
 * Starfish Language: Orz again.
 * Start of Darkness: Of the Freudian Excuse variety. You can get slightly different perspectives of the story from the Melnorme/Mael-Num, both Ur-Quan subspecies, and — if you don't mind Blatant Lies — the Talking Pet.
 * Stealth in Space: Ilwrath specialty. Many factors usually give away the location though, and its main use is that the homing weapons are rendered ineffective and when decloaking the ship automatically positions itself towards the enemy.
 * Stripperiffic: The Syreen. Lampshaded thoroughly.
 * Stunned Silence: The Captain after Pkunk's proclamation of giving love.
 * Subspace or Hyperspace: It's the World Map!
 * Suddenly Voiced: The original PC version of the game in 1992 was text-only, but the 3DO version in 1994 added voice acting (by members of the development team, and their family and friends), a remixed soundtrack and 3D-rendered cutscenes. The developers had to use the 3DO source code for The Ur-Quan Masters because the original PC one was lost. Which version is preferable has been known to cause quite the Broken Base.
 * Superweapon Surprise: The back-story gives us two examples, though apparently it wasn't enough.
 * Surreal Horror
 * Suspended Animation: The Shofixti Maidens.
 * Tactical Rock-Paper-Scissors: While the end result of a battle is heavily influenced by skill, there are a lot of predatory relations between ships given the wide range of ship specifications and weaponry. This often shows in the backstory and the scripted events in the game. For example, Illwrath ships are very effective against Earthling cruisers thanks to their cloaking devices, and the Illwrath will constantly boast about how they kill humans for sport.
 * Take Your Time: Averted with the main quest. Played straight with the Sylandro Probe sidequest, where despite everyone urgently telling you to wipe them out before they grow exponentially, their growth rate stops eventually, so they never grow too numerous no matter how long you wait.
 * Taking You with Me: The purpose of the Shofixti Glory Devices. They then took the concept to the next level by blowing up their own sun to destroy a good part of the Ur-Quan fleet.
 * Talk to Everyone: Very important if you want to get anywhere. The game just throws you into a huge map with hundreds of star systems to visit, and the only way to find out where important things are is to pay very close attention to the dialogue. Many hints are only repeated once and are easy to miss, so take notes.
 * Tele Frag: When using the Arilou Skiff's teleportation, there is a small but nonzero chance of teleporting into the planet. Unsurprisingly, this is immediately fatal.
 * Teleport Spam: This can be a useful strategy when using the Arilou.
 * Terminally Dependent Society: The Utwig, sorta. They don't need the Ultron to survive, but they get so depressed without it that the difference doesn't matter a lot.
 * That Makes Me Feel Angry: The Utwig talk like this a lot. Their culture is based around this concept. They invented the Mask Etiquette to stop themselves from transmitting emotional content through their facial expressions, and thereby achieve a higher level of civilization.
 * These Are Things Man Was Not Meant to Know: Which the Arilou claim is why they won't tell you anything. After what happened to Bukowski, we believe them.
 * Timed Mission: See Time Limit.
 * Time Limit: At a certain point in the game, When they reach Earth, you lose. It's possible to delay it, as well;
 * Throw It In: Paul Reiche III said in an IRC chat that the Orz language evolved from some of Erol Otus' randomly scrawled notes (which included the first appearance of *happy campers* and *Jumping Peppers*).
 * Too Dumb to Live: The Thraddash stoneaged themselves with nuclear war. Repeatedly. And they are proud of it.
 * Translator Microbes: Precursor technology. One alien race, the Orz, is so alien that the device is unable to cope, rendering their dialogue in a bizarre fashion that manages to be both humorous and sinister. The VUX apparently have their own, even more sophisticated translators, and the Ur-Quan use their Talking Pets.
 * Troperiffic
 * Turned Against Their Masters: The Androsynth, against humans.
 * 2-D Space
 * Uncanny Valley: In-universe example. The VUX also see the humans as this, mentioning that when the necks move on a human, it looks like it's broken and they look like a talking corpse.
 * The Un-Reveal: You are told the Rainbow Worlds were left as possible clues to the ultimate fate of the Precursors, left behind before they departed. Discover all the Rainbows Worlds, connect them on the Hyperspace map, and you'll find Follow the clues an you'll find... absolutely nothing.
 * Uplifted Animal: The Shofixti were already sentient, but they were given technology by the Yehat, which is called "Uplifting" in-game.
 * Urban Legend of Zelda: The manual clearly showed an Ilwrath Cloaking Device on the inventory screen.
 * The Very Definitely Final Dungeon
 * Vichy Earth
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential:
 * You can sell your own crewmates into slavery to the Druuge, allow the Kohr-Ah Death March to begin so that you don't have to talk to people and can just pick their Plot Coupons off their planets as soon as they are destroyed, and refuse to intervene when the Zoq-Fot-Pik or the Pkunk are endangered.
 * When preparing for the final battle, almost all the space on your flagship is taken up by the modified bomb, making it impractical for you to equip it with much in the way of weapons or other defenses; the one thing you can do to make sure your ship has a good chance of making it close enough to the Sa-Matra to blow it up is to buy as many crew pods as you can fit on the ship, and fill them up completely, since crew act like hit points. Just one problem, though: the escape pod your ship has only holds one person, you.
 * Video Game Cruelty Punishment: See What the Hell, Hero?, below.
 * Video Game Geography: Explorable planets behave like cylinders — going off one side of the map brings you back on the other side; the top and bottom edge of the map are impassable barriers.
 * The Voiceless: The middle member of the Zoq-Fot-Pik, termed the Fot in the game's source code.
 * The Wall Around the World: Slave shields.
 * Warp Whistle: The QuasiSpace Portal Spawner.
 * We Need a Distraction: Fwiffo explains to the Captain how the Spathi stationed on the moon kept the Human Starbase convinced of their presence as such; machines were automated to push piles of dirt around to simulate militaristic activity, and the station's transceiver was fixed to "Send" using tapes of an indecipherable alien porn flick.
 * We Come in Peace, Shoot to Kill: The Slylandro probes.
 * Weapon of Mass Destruction: The Utwig Bomb. No matter how shiny it looks in your inventory: Don't. Touch. (How bad could it be? It's just a giant bomb, and our scientists urge that if we test it, we be at least 17 parsecs away! What could go wr—)
 * Weaponized Exhaust: The Thraddash ships leave a fiery trail in their wake thanks to their afterburners.
 * Well-Intentioned Extremist: The Ur-Quan enslavers insist they do what they must to protect sentient life from genocide, extinction and things... far worse than that.
 * What Measure Is a Non-Cute?: In the first Star Control, most of the "evil" species were ugly, but no one would find any of the Alliance species disgusting. Star Control II rectified this somewhat by enabling the player to ally with one of the old Hierarchy species and introducing some more non-cute allies.
 * What the Hell, Hero?:
 * If you sell enough of your crew to the Druuge, your crew costs will skyrocket and the commander will flat out tell you that he'd kill you if you weren't their only hope.
 * The Yehat who remain loyal to their queen attack you, after pointing out that you ended a thousand years of peace among their people. But then, they hated you even before that, so it's not like it makes any difference.
 * Will Not Tell a Lie: The Ur-Quan will willingly put their busy schedule of slaughter and enslavement on hold to truthfully tell you their full backstory - if you just ask nicely enough...
 * Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds:
 * Wrap Around: East-west on planet surfaces; in all directions during space battles.
 * You All Look Familiar: All the races have a single graphic for their members, with the exception of the Spathi Safe Ones. Also 23 different sprites are used to represent all the non-sapient flora and fauna in the galaxy, except for the plot important ones, which get unique sprites.

Tropes

 * Alliteration: All Ploxis names seem to start with "pl".
 * Alien Animals: The Ortogs, who are mentioned in the previous game's manual,
 * Ambiguously Jewish: Unlike the nasal, electronically distorted tone of SC2, the voice actor for SC3's Spathi uses a Woody Allen-ish voice.
 * At Least I Admit It: The Lk openly admit that they are going to betray you when it suits them, and expect the same of the other races.
 * Brother Chuck: Good number of races from second game missing without explanation.
 * Canon Discontinuity: The creators of the first two games, who had nothing to do with the third, have stated that they don't consider it canon.
 * Compelling Voice
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive: Plexor and the other Ploxis Plutocrats.
 * Eldritch Abomination: Again, the . It's heavily implied that they're essentially The final mission of the game has you scrambling to keep them from depopulating the entire galaxy while
 * Executive Meddling: How the entire game came to be in the first place. The publisher wanted to get a third game out, but only held the rights to the name, and not the content. The creators who held the rights to everything else finally gave in, reasoning that it was better than having a new game under the same name with nothing carried over from previous titles.
 * Feet of Clay: the K'Tang.
 * Find the Cure: the Plague subplot.
 * Giggling Villain: Plexor, the Plutocrat.
 * Hannibal Lecture: Plexor exposes the hypocrisy of the League of Sentient Races and the player's role in it.
 * Just a Stupid Accent: The Ploxis replace their "th"'s (whether voiced or not) with Z's.
 * Lawful Stupid: The Owa. So much that their fleets stationed at the will fight you to the death, even knowing there is no point in that and knowing they have no chance of winning, simply because they received no order from the homeworld to stand down.
 * Manipulative Bastard: The Plutocrats, who else? Divide and conquer is their game.
 * Opening Monologue
 * Proud Warrior Race Guy: The Harika. The Ur-Quan also seem to have evolved into this.
 * The Symbiote: The Harika/Yorn.
 * Real Is Brown: And gray. Mostly gray. Contrast this with the previous game's palette.
 * Retcon: The intro tells you that instead of simply being unconscious from being caught in Sa-Matra's explosion, your character was briefly transported into the future to see the Eternal Ones killing everyone.
 * Re Lex: Apparently all alien languages are relexes of English, as
 * Shout-Out: ICOM, your onboard hint machine, looks exactly like HAL 9000. Lampshaded, too, in one of the Captain's responses.
 * Simpleton Voice: The Doogs speak in one.
 * This Is a Drill: One of the weapons of the Daktaklakpak Vivisector.
 * This Loser Is You: Watch as the Spathi leader tries to ward off what he believes to be an alien invasion.
 * Too Dumb to Fool: The Doog. It is impossible to get them to 'spill the beans' in the early stages of the game.
 * Vaporware: StarCon, a fully 3D sequel vaguely similar to Colony Wars. The Harika were one of the confirmed races.
 * Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe: The Owa speak this.
 * Your Approval Fills Me with Shame: See Plexor's Hannibal Lecture.