It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
Let’s celebrate Star Trek Day in the best way possible, by bringing back and enjoying some of the best classic Star Trek games now available on GOG.COM!

This year marks the 55th anniversary of the first Star Trek show airing on TV as well as the 100th birthday of the late Gene Roddenberry, who imagined a future in which people have overcome their differences and gone on to explore strange new worlds and seek out new life and new civilizations.

What started as a quirky sci-fi TV show in the ’60s, has become one of the biggest and most recognizable franchises in Western entertainment. 55 years, 11 TV and streaming series, and 13 blockbuster movies later, the Star Trek universe is still growing with unique characters, beautifully designed starships, alien races, and amazing adventures that bring us joy and hope for a better future.



Games: the final frontier
Star Trek also made its mark on the world of video games. The first text-based computer games set in the universe are dated back to 1971, with many official and even more unofficial releases appearing in arcades, on Apple I and II computers, various models of Atari, the Commodore 64, and all the way to DOS and Windows PCs.

You might already know about the adventure games Star Trek: 25th Anniversary and Judgment Rites but an absolute golden era of Star Trek games began at the end of the ’90s and the beginning of the 2000s with new games landing every few months. Unfortunately, many of those titles have become unavailable in recent years and are basically unplayable on modern machines.

This changes now with 6 classic Star]https://www.gog.com/partner/startrek”>Star[/url] Trek games releasing for the first time in digital distribution on GOG.COM.



Discover 6 classic Star Trek games
Preserving classic games is very close to our hearts, so we made sure that these games are up to date, running smoothly on Windows 10, and some of them even offer a working LAN multiplayer.

Every game from this list will give you a unique opportunity to immerse yourself into the world of Star Trek, interact with beloved characters, and explore new parts of the universe.

In Star Trek: Voyager - Elite Force you become a security officer on board of USS Voyager, assigned to a new special unit called the Hazard Team. Together with AI-controlled crewmates, you take on the most dangerous missions, including fighting the Borg. Between the missions, you can explore the ship and interact with the well-known bridge crew with all the actors reprising their roles.



Star Trek: Elite Force II takes the first-person shooter experience to the next level with improved visuals (it’s one of the best-looking games using the Quake III Arena engine), and a set of new missions to complete. This time, your character is being transferred to serve on Enterprise-E where you receive your orders from Captain Jean-Luc Picard himself!

Star Trek: Hidden Evil also gives you a chance to assist Captain Picard and Lt. Cmdr. Data with both Patrick Stewart and Brent Spiner reprising their roles. In this third-person adventure game, you take the role of Ensign Sovok and explore alien ruins and try to save your team before the conniving Romulans make use of an ancient biological weapon.

This next game is perfect for everyone wanting to run special operations on new planets. Star Trek: Away Team is an isometric turn-based tactical game influenced by titles like Commandos and the X-Com series. You need to pick the best away team for each mission and lead its members through dangerous covert operations across locations like the Klingon homeworld, a Borg cube, and Starfleet Academy.



Star Trek: Starfleet Command III gives you a tactical challenge of a completely different scale. In this game, you play the story campaign as a Klingon, Romulan, or Federation captain. Your task is to customize your starship and lead it into space battles while uncovering a plot around the construction of the first Klingon-Federation space station.

Finally, Star Trek: Bridge Commander is probably the most immersive Star Trek gaming experience as it sits you in an actual captain’s chair, surrounded by a crew waiting for your orders. Combat is not the main focus of this title as you spend a lot of time talking to your crew, managing the ship, exploring space, assisting endangered colonies, and conducting diplomatic negotiations.



Make it so!
We hope you’ll enjoy these 6 classic Star Trek games, all updated to work on modern computers, and now available on GOG.COM. In addition, two real-time strategy titles, Star Trek: Armada and Star Trek: Armada II are coming soon and you can now add them to your wishlists.

As every game on this list offers you a different experience and a chance to meet some of your favorite characters, let us know in the comments which one is your favorite and why!

©2021 CBS Studios Inc. STAR TREK and related marks and logos are trademarks of CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.
avatar
Mr.Mumbles: I just could never get over the fact of how campy TOS could be. *shrug* I do appreciate it paving the road for what was to come afterwards.
avatar
andysheets1975: *shrug* I've never liked how the TNG era shows looked or sounded and although the actors are good, the characters never really grabbed me. There are episodes here and there that I enjoy but I've found over time that I simply can't force myself to enjoy it.
I guess you two are the exact opposite and it's fine. TOS is for people who want Flash Gordon-esque style of story telling but with more realism. TNG is for people who want to remove the Flash Gordon influence and make it more like space drama and a lot more realism (even though some episodes can be campy as well, especially the Holodeck episodes).
avatar
Shadowstalker16: This is a great inclusion. GOG should use this momentum to get the Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds series made by Ensemble studios
avatar
DerBesserwisser: Aren't they available anymore ? I bought them here, I can view the store page, and theoretically buy them as a gift
Yes you're right, they are available. Didn't show up in my search though.
avatar
RedRagan: I guess you two are the exact opposite and it's fine. TOS is for people who want Flash Gordon-esque style of story telling but with more realism. TNG is for people who want to remove the Flash Gordon influence and make it more like space drama and a lot more realism (even though some episodes can be campy as well, especially the Holodeck episodes).
They are both campy to some extent, and both have some small hold of realism too (which many other shows do not have). Basically they are the same though. How many times some super powerful being put TOS/TAS crew to the test and they needed to prove themselves worthy. And then TNG came along, and already in the pilot episode Q put TNG crew to the test and they needed to prove themselves worthy.

And then there were things like "The Naked Time" and "The Naked Now".

There were many things in TOS which actually were less campy and more realistic than some stuff they had in TNG. Like those handheld communicators. That Starfleet thing that they carried on their chests in TNG was not a very good idea.

And it became very stupid when they forgot to hang up the phone! If you watch TNG from the beginning, they pressed that thing to open and then again to close the communication channel. But somewhere during the first season, they actually stopped closing the channel, and never did it again. They sure have some big phone bills after keeping those lines open for years, or they would, if they knew what money is.

The concept of holodeck was first used in a TAS episode actually, of course with a different name. Then TNG took it and used it as a plot device too many times.

Some of the worst episodes of TOS are very stupid, but at least they never did a clip show*, which TNG did.

* = Okay, they did "The Menagerie", if that counts.


But here's the question: which GAMES are better, TOS or TNG games?
Does Elite Force 2 supports widescreen resolution in GOG version ?
Post edited September 09, 2021 by S-man_87
Ho...ly.... shit!

Bridge Commander is like one of my top 5 games I hoped would show up here - SUPER excited.

Elite Force is WAY up there too - I missed them the first time around and always regretted it!

Obviously Bridge Commander is a must buy - but any opinions on Elite Force? The first looks a bit more dated than I thought it would but the second is still gorgeous...

... am I okay to maybe grab the second and if I'm really ready for more, go back and play the first? Or is the first just heads and tails an awesome game that I really should put on my rose-colored glasses and enjoy a slightly dated looking true classic?

For reference, I actually went back not too long ago and solved Jedi Knight and LOVED every minute of it despite the dated visuals. I actually ended up liking it a lot more than the sequel - it held up extremely well - so it's not like I'm totally opposed to that look.
avatar
Ixamyakxim: Ho...ly.... shit!

Bridge Commander is like one of my top 5 games I hoped would show up here - SUPER excited.

Elite Force is WAY up there too - I missed them the first time around and always regretted it!

Obviously Bridge Commander is a must buy - but any opinions on Elite Force? The first looks a bit more dated than I thought it would but the second is still gorgeous...

... am I okay to maybe grab the second and if I'm really ready for more, go back and play the first? Or is the first just heads and tails an awesome game that I really should put on my rose-colored glasses and enjoy a slightly dated looking true classic?

For reference, I actually went back not too long ago and solved Jedi Knight and LOVED every minute of it despite the dated visuals. I actually ended up liking it a lot more than the sequel - it held up extremely well - so it's not like I'm totally opposed to that look.
There is a consensus about considering the first Elite Force the best one, with great production values, great design, great moments, great gameplay and a very good story at the level of a chapter in the series. The only negative thing could be that due to the focused script the game is shorter than, for example other Q3 Engine games from Raven like Jed Outcast.

The second is a very good game as well with improved graphics, maybe not a so good story and smaller maps. t least the feeling is in that way.

But Both are worthy and great games, To whom do you love the most? your father or your mother? :)
avatar
Ixamyakxim: Obviously Bridge Commander is a must buy - but any opinions on Elite Force? The first looks a bit more dated than I thought it would but the second is still gorgeous...
It's still a blast (or more than just one) to play even almost 21 years later. I've never touched the second game before so I'm excited to check it out soon.
Fantastic news. Hopefully the best Star Trek games are also coming soon in the form of A Final Unity and DS9: Harbinger.
avatar
Ixamyakxim: but any opinions on Elite Force? The first looks a bit more dated than I thought it would but the second is still gorgeous...
They both look dated to me. All 3D graphics from before the xbox 360 era look VERY dated to me. Gorgeous? Don't you see the low amount of polygons in the character models? Or are you referring to some other aspect of the game's graphics?

I liked Elite Force 1 better. It was more of a first person Star Trek action adventure, while the second one felt more like a Quake-style FPS with some Star Trek themed cutscenes thrown in.
avatar
teceem: I liked Elite Force 1 better. It was more of a first person Star Trek action adventure, while the second one felt more like a Quake-style FPS with some Star Trek themed cutscenes thrown in.
You've interchanged something here. The first game is the Quake-style one (Quake 3 engine).
avatar
teceem: I liked Elite Force 1 better. It was more of a first person Star Trek action adventure, while the second one felt more like a Quake-style FPS with some Star Trek themed cutscenes thrown in.
avatar
Berzerk2k2: You've interchanged something here. The first game is the Quake-style one (Quake 3 engine).
I referred to gameplay (style), not the engine being used.

Also:

Elite Force II is based on a heavily modified version of the Quake III: Team Arena engine with Ritual's ÜberTools GDK,...
[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_Elite_Force_II]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_Elite_Force_II[/url]
Post edited September 09, 2021 by teceem
avatar
S-man_87: Does Elite Force 2 supports widescreen resolution in GOG version ?
Yes. The Elite Force games run on id Tech 3, so arbitrary aspect ratios and resolutions are easily set via the console. The commands for most id Tech 3 games are (adjust values for your needs):

cg_fov "96"
r_customwidth "3840"
r_customheight "2160"
r_mode "-1"

Make sure to also issue a vid_restart so that changes to video settings take effect immediately. These will set the FOV correctly for 16:9 aspect and 4K resolution. You might also want to play around with r_subdivisions (the lower the value, the more subdivisions meshes/curved surfaces have; 4 is default and 1 is smoothest) and r_lodCurveError (the higher the value, the further away curved surfaces will be drawn; 250 is default and 10000 means always draw but don't go insane on this or your performance will suffer - 1000 or 2000 should be good).
avatar
GOG.com: Let’s celebrate Star Trek Day in the best way possible, by bringing back and enjoying some of the best classic Star Trek games now available on GOG.COM!

This year marks the 55th anniversary of the first Star Trek show airing on TV as well as the 100th birthday of the late Gene Roddenberry, who imagined a future in which people have overcome their differences and gone on to explore strange new worlds and seek out new life and new civilizations.

What started as a quirky sci-fi TV show in the ’60s, has become one of the biggest and most recognizable franchises in Western entertainment. 55 years, 11 TV and streaming series, and 13 blockbuster movies later, the Star Trek universe is still growing with unique characters, beautifully designed starships, alien races, and amazing adventures that bring us joy and hope for a better future.

Games: the final frontier
Star Trek also made its mark on the world of video games. The first text-based computer games set in the universe are dated back to 1971, with many official and even more unofficial releases appearing in arcades, on Apple I and II computers, various models of Atari, the Commodore 64, and all the way to DOS and Windows PCs.

You might already know about the adventure games Star Trek: 25th Anniversary and Judgment Rites but an absolute golden era of Star Trek games began at the end of the ’90s and the beginning of the 2000s with new games landing every few months. Unfortunately, many of those titles have become unavailable in recent years and are basically unplayable on modern machines.

This changes now with 6 classic Star]https://www.gog.com/partner/startrek”>Star[/url] Trek games releasing for the first time in digital distribution on GOG.COM.

Discover 6 classic Star Trek games
Preserving classic games is very close to our hearts, so we made sure that these games are up to date, running smoothly on Windows 10, and some of them even offer a working LAN multiplayer.

Every game from this list will give you a unique opportunity to immerse yourself into the world of Star Trek, interact with beloved characters, and explore new parts of the universe.

In Star Trek: Voyager - Elite Force you become a security officer on board of USS Voyager, assigned to a new special unit called the Hazard Team. Together with AI-controlled crewmates, you take on the most dangerous missions, including fighting the Borg. Between the missions, you can explore the ship and interact with the well-known bridge crew with all the actors reprising their roles.

Star Trek: Elite Force II takes the first-person shooter experience to the next level with improved visuals (it’s one of the best-looking games using the Quake III Arena engine), and a set of new missions to complete. This time, your character is being transferred to serve on Enterprise-E where you receive your orders from Captain Jean-Luc Picard himself!

Star Trek: Hidden Evil also gives you a chance to assist Captain Picard and Lt. Cmdr. Data with both Patrick Stewart and Brent Spiner reprising their roles. In this third-person adventure game, you take the role of Ensign Sovok and explore alien ruins and try to save your team before the conniving Romulans make use of an ancient biological weapon.

This next game is perfect for everyone wanting to run special operations on new planets. Star Trek: Away Team is an isometric turn-based tactical game influenced by titles like Commandos and the X-Com series. You need to pick the best away team for each mission and lead its members through dangerous covert operations across locations like the Klingon homeworld, a Borg cube, and Starfleet Academy.

Star Trek: Starfleet Command III gives you a tactical challenge of a completely different scale. In this game, you play the story campaign as a Klingon, Romulan, or Federation captain. Your task is to customize your starship and lead it into space battles while uncovering a plot around the construction of the first Klingon-Federation space station.

Finally, Star Trek: Bridge Commander is probably the most immersive Star Trek gaming experience as it sits you in an actual captain’s chair, surrounded by a crew waiting for your orders. Combat is not the main focus of this title as you spend a lot of time talking to your crew, managing the ship, exploring space, assisting endangered colonies, and conducting diplomatic negotiations.

Make it so!
We hope you’ll enjoy these 6 classic Star Trek games, all updated to work on modern computers, and now available on GOG.COM. In addition, two real-time strategy titles, Star Trek: Armada and Star Trek: Armada II are coming soon and you can now add them to your wishlists.

As every game on this list offers you a different experience and a chance to meet some of your favorite characters, let us know in the comments which one is your favorite and why!

©2021 CBS Studios Inc. STAR TREK and related marks and logos are trademarks of CBS Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.
About time
avatar
S-man_87: Does Elite Force 2 supports widescreen resolution in GOG version ?
avatar
Serren: Yes. The Elite Force games run on id Tech 3, so arbitrary aspect ratios and resolutions are easily set via the console. The commands for most id Tech 3 games are (adjust values for your needs):

cg_fov "96"
r_customwidth "3840"
r_customheight "2160"
r_mode "-1"

Make sure to also issue a vid_restart so that changes to video settings take effect immediately. These will set the FOV correctly for 16:9 aspect and 4K resolution. You might also want to play around with r_subdivisions (the lower the value, the more subdivisions meshes/curved surfaces have; 4 is default and 1 is smoothest) and r_lodCurveError (the higher the value, the further away curved surfaces will be drawn; 250 is default and 10000 means always draw but don't go insane on this or your performance will suffer - 1000 or 2000 should be good).
I played one game (not sure which one) in 4:3 and the other in 16:9. The 4:3 one stretched the GUI/HUD when played in 16:9, the other didn't (probably a mod that fixed it).
(talking about the disc-based games, not the GOG releases)

Can you answer this question: Are both Elite Force GOG releases playable in widescreen without HUD/GUI stretching?

btw. widescreen settings can be made without using the console - see PCGamingWiki.
Holy cow, i loved Elite Force 1 back in the day and i wanted to play it again legally, thanks gog, i love you.