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1[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/200px-oldmanswar1sted_8282.jpg]]
2
3->''"I did two things on my seventy-fifth birthday. I visited my wife's grave. Then I joined the army."''
4-->-- '''John Perry'''
5
6''Old Man's War'' is a series of SpaceOpera novels by author Creator/JohnScalzi. Its follows the recruits of Earth's [[SpaceMarine Colonial Defense Force]], tasked with protecting Mankind's far-flung colony worlds from ruthless alien species. The twist? All recruits to the CDF are ''elderly citizens''; the minimum sign up age is 75 years old. Recruits sign up while they are still on Earth, having already lived a long life, and are then given young, genetically-enhanced bodies upon joining the CDF.
7
8The series thus far:
9* ''Old Man's War'': The first novel, following a man named John Perry as he joins up with the CDF. The story follows his experiences as he is given a young new body, goes through hellish training, and is sent out into the galaxy to protect various colonies of humankind. In the middle of a pitched battle, John sees the face of his long-dead wife...on the body of a Special Forces soldier named Jane Sagan, who has no clue who John is.
10* ''The Ghost Brigades'': A human scientist named Charles Boutin betrays humanity and becomes a hero to an enemy alien race. To figure out why he did it and what he plans to do next, the Colonial Union downloads his stored memories into a new clone body so they can interrogate him. When the process doesn't work, the not-quite Boutin is given the new identity "Jared Dirac" and assigned to the Special Forces as a soldier in a new body. But things don't go quite according to plan as Boutin's memories start to resurface in Dirac. Along the way, Dirac meets Jane Sagan and finds out more about the mystery behind her.
11** ''The Sagan Diaries'', a novella from the rather unusual perspective of Jane Sagan, sometimes touching on events from the past two books.
12* ''The Last Colony'': Follows the founding of a new colony [[WhatDidYouExpectWhenYouNamedIt called Roanoke]]. John Perry and Jane Sagan, reunited at last, are placed in charge of making sure the colony succeeds. Amid hostile local lifeforms, limited technology, and tensions between the colonists, John and Jane find out things are even worse than they seem: the Colonial Union violated a galactic agreement in creating the colony, and now every intelligent alien species in the area wants to wipe the colony out.
13** ''Zoe's Tale'': A companion novel to ''The Last Colony'' that [[POVSequel retells the events of the story]] but from the perspective of Zoe, John and Jane's adoptive daughter.
14* ''The Human Division'': Takes up the where the series left off, dealing with the fallout from ''The Last Colony'' and bringing back old characters while introducing new ones. Serialized as a "season" of short stories/chapters, it was released in weekly e-episodes, with each installment featuring unique cover art by illustrator John Harris.
15* ''The End of All Things'': The sequel to ''The Human Division''. Despite what the name suggests, this novel is by no means necessarily the final chapter in the Old Man's War universe. It resolved the previous book's titular human division (between Earth and the Colonial Union).
16
17In August 2014, the Syfy Channel [[http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/syfy-adapting-futuristic-military-drama-723323 announced]] it was adapting the books into a television series called ''The Ghost Brigades'' (it still will begin with John's story from ''Old Man's War'', they just thought the name [[RuleOfCool sounded cooler]]). In 2017, Netflix [[https://whatever.scalzi.com/2017/12/07/old-mans-war-in-development-at-netflix announced]] a movie adaptation.
18----
19!!This series provides examples of:
20* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: ''Old Man's War'' makes it appear as if the storyline takes place in the near future, albeit one in which space travel is more advanced and space elevators are an actual thing - but with enough references to real-world modern-day technology (cars, etc.) to suggest not too far ahead. It's not until ''Ghost Brigades'' that we learn that it's actually quite a bit further into the future, [[spoiler: but Earth's day-to-day cultural and technological development has been held back.]]
21* AbortedArc: [[spoiler:The werewolves of Roanoke never come up again after the first conflict with them. Zoe's War goes into a bit more detail about them, though.]]
22** At the end of the third book, Szilard comments that John's actions have forced the CU to rely more on the Special Forces and grant them liberties, but this isn't given much detail in the next book, (although this is somewhat justified if you consider what John did for them the end of the process rather than the beginning of it).
23* AbsoluteXenophobe: ZigZagged with the Consu. They consider themselves to be superior to any other species without exceptions (and at least technologically, they're quite right), so much so that their "diplomats" actually are convicted and dishonored criminals who are sent to negotiate with members of other species only because they are killed afterwards - if not during the negotiations - and not only that, [[{{TheresNoKillLikeOverkill}} the ship/structure on which contact with another species took place is then destroyed, compacted and flung into a black hole]] because the constituent atoms have been "contaminated" by the inferior beings. However, the ultimate species-wide goal of the Consu is, [[{{UnreliableNarrator}} according to themselves]] [[spoiler: actually to help the other species to perfection (by becoming more like the Consu), apparently a somewhat twisted expression of desire to help due to "universal love" the Consu feel towards all other species.]] So basically, they act condescendingly towards every other species without actually wanting to be condescending.
24* AbusivePrecursors: Possibly the Consu to the Obin (a species artificially created by the Consu). The Obin [[spoiler:have no souls or sense of individuality]] but have just enough awareness to ''know'' that their missing this and want to achieve it somehow, with Boutin speculating the Consu might have done that to them on purpose. This theory is confirmed by a Consu in ''Zoe's Tale''.
25* ActualPacifist: The mennonites who are part of the Roanoke colonization effort, with their leader [[spoiler: dying when he refuses to defend himself from the werewolves]].
26* AffectionateNickname: In ''The Last Colony'', John has a tendency to call Zoe "teenage daughter" whenever he's ribbing her; she gets back at him by calling him "[[OlderThanTheyLook ninety-year-old dad]]".
27* AlienAmongUs: Hickory and Dickory.
28* AlienInvasion: Not on Earth, but pretty much everywhere else.
29* AlwaysWantedToSayThat: When Harry (who is from Earth) meets a bunch of Earth dignitaries, he says "Greetings, Earthlings."
30-->'''Lowen:''' Was it everything you wanted it to be?\
31'''Harry:''' It really was.
32* AnalogyBackfire: In ''The Ghost Brigades'', Boutin compares the Obin and their quest for [[spoiler:individual sentience and identity]] to Adam and Eve. Dirac dryly asks if that makes Boutin the serpent, something that the scientists admits is ActuallyPrettyFunny.
33* AnguishedDeclarationOfLove: No in-plot examples, but Master Sergeant Ruiz mentions having had it happen to him; characteristically, the reason he brings it up is to make the point that if you're attracted to a fellow soldier, the time to talk about it is not when you both should be concentrating on not getting killed.
34* AntiHumanAlliance: Certain things the CDF does bring about an alliance between many of their neighbors. In a bit of a twist, [[spoiler: this alliance eventually decides to court a relationship with Earth, hoping to deprive the CDF of their major source of manpower, and forcing the CDF to rely more on diplomacy rather than force.]]
35* AnyoneCanDie: John Perry, Jane Sagan, and Zoe seem to have PlotArmor, but nobody else does [[spoiler:including Jared Dirac, who dies via TakingYouWithMe]].
36* ArtificialLimbs: Actually, whole artificial bodies in ''Old Man's War'', but also soldiers regularly have whole limbs replaced and regrown using nanobots.
37* AscendedExtra: Harry Wilson, one of the last three survivors of the Old Farts in ''Old Man's War'', returns as an extra in ''The Ghost Brigades'', and is a major protagonist in ''The Human Division''.
38* TheBadGuyWins: How [[spoiler:''The Human Division'']] ends, with [[spoiler:the conspiracy succeeding in driving a permanent wedge between Earth and the Colonial Union.]] The tables are turned in the following book, however.
39* BatmanGambit:
40** In ''The Ghost Brigades'', [[spoiler:Charles Boutin's attempts to gain revenge on the Colonial Union and repeated adapting to changes in plans]].
41** In ''The Last Colony'', [[spoiler:they're all over the place--The Colonial Union's attempt to destroy the Conclave, John Perry's plan to defeat Admiral Eser, and the most convoluted, General Szilard's "plan" to bring the Special Forces into the open.]]
42* BenevolentAlienInvasion: [[spoiler:Earth's enforced isolation is ended by a Conclave trade fleet.]]
43* BiotechIsBetter:
44** In the later novels the CDF starts phasing out the cybernetic [[BrainComputerInterface BrainPals]] in favor of completely biotech ones.
45** The [[SpacePeople Gameras]] are 100% biotech in contrast to the CDF's normal soldiers that are a mixture of bio- cyber- and nanotech with the objective of eventually making them capable of breeding true and forming a human species that doesn't need to compete with aliens for planets.
46* BizarreHumanBiology: Justified in the CDF: nanites, genetic engineering and other modifications have led to green skin, cat eyes, and gray blood that knows when - and when not - to clot instantly.
47* BlackComedy: And plenty of it. This is, after all, a war story.
48* BloodKnight: Many Special Forces soldiers, such as CrazyIsCool Harvey, and Goodal (who goes into a ritual duel with a Consu grinning, and does a little jig as he leaves victorious despite leaving behind one of his ears).
49* BloodyMurder: CDF soldiers can ignite parts of their [=SmartBlood=] at will. It's mostly used to deliver a satisfying demise to alien mosquito-analogues, but Jared comes up with some more... ambitious applications. ''The Human Division'' has further application of this, with [[spoiler:a captured CDF officer using it to incapacitate her torturer.]]
50* BlueAndOrangeMorality: The Consu are, by their own lights, well-intentioned and helpful toward other races, but their idea of helpful is everyone else's idea of condescending and hostile.
51* BolivianArmyEnding: Near the end of ''The Ghost Brigades'', [[spoiler:Harvey]] is left alone on a planet swarming with hostile Obin, with days until possible rescue. The next chapter [[OffscreenMomentOfAwesome strongly implies he survived]].
52* BrainInAJar:
53** Mentioned in ''The Ghost Brigades'' as the CDF punishment for refusing direct orders.
54** In ''The Human Division'', [[spoiler:the [[TheConspiracy Evil Conspiracy]] uses them to turn spacecraft into drones, with the added bonus of making it look like the Colonial Union is behind things, thanks to the aforementioned punishment.]]
55* BrainUploading:
56** Central to the series. The CDF recruits retirees and transfers their adult consciousness into a speed-grown SuperSoldier body partially based on their DNA. Their Special Forces are ''fully'' synthetic people given a 'starter personality' by nanotech in their brains, but these soldiers - while superior - lack emotional maturity... and [[FantasticRacism aren't completely trusted]] by their creators.
57** Charles Boutin in ''The Ghost Brigades'' perfects the storage and downloading of mental copies, though it has kinks.
58* BullyingADragon:
59** The CU's plan to break the Conclave turns into this. [[spoiler:They humiliate the Conclave by using Roanoke as bait for their unified fleet and destroy it. Somehow they didn't realize that nearly every ship in the fleet was the flagship of each member race, meaning they just gave 412 different races a personal kick in the nuts.]] So they get the internal strife they wanted, but [[NiceJobBreakingItHero it's largely over whether or not to wipe out all humanity in retaliation]]. Turns out, though, that it worked out better than it seemed it would when it happened, as explained in the Conclave chapter of ''The Human Division''.
60** In ''The Human Divison,'' a quartet of unmodified Earth soldiers attempt this on Harry. He takes it in stride.
61* CasualInterstellarTravel: Averted due to the CU monopoly on skip drive. Trade, communication, and most of all colonization are strictly controlled.
62* ChekhovsBoomerang: In ''The Ghost Brigades'', [[spoiler:the method of weaponizing [=SmartBlood=]]] comes up no less than three times: [[spoiler:once when it kills a mosquito, once when Jared uses it to blind an enemy in combat, and finally (and most epically) when he uses it as a TakingYouWithMe to counter Boutin's GrandTheftMe.]]
63* ChekhovsGun: [[spoiler:The use of tree climbing to avoid hostiles]] in ''The Ghost Brigades''.
64* ChildSoldiers: Ghost Brigade soldiers enter the battlefield at two weeks of age, due to the unusual nature of their creation. Despite being utterly deadly, barely-human killing machines, the lack of emotional maturity does show on occasion and they tend to have poor social skills.
65* CloneArmy: The Ala, one of humanity's few allies, used massive armies of fast-bred clones... until the Obin used a genetically engineered virus to wipe them all out at once and then genocide the civilian population. This is why the CDF doesn't use clones.
66* ColonyDrop:
67** In ''The Ghost Brigades'', one of the techniques used by the Special Forces to cover their tracks is to drop an asteroid on the site of their activities. They've apparently used this trick often enough to become very good at making it look like an accident. They also drop asteroids (with some pre-placed seismic sensors) to spot underground caves and complexes.
68** Averted in ''The Human Division.'' [[spoiler: Well, Earth Station ''does'' get blown up, but it's designed well enough to self-destruct rather than land intact on the city beneath it.]]
69* CondescendingCompassion: The Consu think you're inferior and unworthy to the point that everyone and everything that has come into contact with you afterwards must be ritually disposed of... [[spoiler:but they love you anyway and hope to someday bring you up to perfection, like them. ([[BlueAndOrangeMorality By way of constant warfare.]])]]
70* CongruentMemory: In ''The Ghost Brigades'', the reason copying Boutin's mind into Jared doesn't work at first is that he's a blank slate with nothing for the mind to connect to. When he starts having experiences that relate to Boutin's (enjoying one of Boutin's favorite foods, visiting a place Boutin has been), parts of Boutin start to reappear.
71* CozyVoiceForCatastrophes: How else would we read calmly about such things as the graphic sentient mold attack?
72* CreativeSterility: The Obin, perhaps because they [[spoiler:don't have souls.]]
73--> '''Boutin:''' The Obin have no ''art'' Dirac. They have no music or literature or visual arts. They comprehend the concept of art intellectually but they have no way to appreciate it.
74* CripplingOverspecialization: The CDF troopers can use their [=BrainPals=] to control just about everything, and their rifles are designed only to allow someone with a [=BrainPal=] to use them. Meanwhile, civilian humans can use their [=PDAs=] for many things, pulling up information, controlling equipment, communicating with each other, etc. ''The Ghost Brigades'', ''The Last Colony'', and ''Zoe's Tale'' all explore the problems with this when the various technologies become unavailable [[spoiler: or disabled,]] or when their mere presence can give them away to the enemy.
75* CutTheJuice: In ''The Ghost Brigades'', [[spoiler:Steve Seaborg blows up the power generator running the Obin [=BrainPal=] jammer, and himself]].
76* DarkIsNotEvil: Or Horrifying Is Not Evil, as the case may be. This is {{Invoked|Trope}} during John's training as the recruits are shown two images of alien races, one a {{Starfish Alien|s}} that looks like something out of [[Creator/HPLovecraft Lovecraft's]] nightmare, the other a cute deer. They're then informed that the Lovecraft aliens are actually rather personable and friendly, whereas the deer-like aliens [[ToServeMan think humans are quite tasty.]]
77* DeadpanSnarker: All of his protagonists either start out this way (John and Zoe) or grow into it (Jared). Also, Savitri and Gretchen. Each character has their own flavor of snark too.
78** And when aliens finally start getting speaking roles about midway through the series, it almost graduates to a [[WorldOfSnark Galaxy of Snark]]. One character, eavesdropping on some bickering among his mixed-species captors, notes that [[LampshadeHanging sarcasm must be a near-universal trait of intelligent species]].
79* DecapitationPresentation: At the end of the ''Human Division'' story "We Only Need the Heads", the Bula ambassador Ting gives Abumwe and Schmidt a case holding Drew Talford's head (one of the undercover [=CDF=] soldiers from Wantji).
80* TheDogBitesBack: Rafe Daquin against the TheConspiracy in the first episode of ''The End of All Things.'' It's glorious.
81* DoomedHurtGuy: Wigner in ''Ghost Brigades'' is wounded in the drop, and while he does last for a while, ultimately doesn't make it home.
82* DrillSergeantNasty: Master Sergeant Ruiz, who tells the recruits that he is not like those [[LampshadedTrope drill sergeants you see in the movies]], he really does think they're worthless because he knows what humanity is up against.
83--> '''Ruiz:''' You're under the impression that[...] at the end of your training, you'll have earned my grudging respect. [...] I'm talking to you like this because I sincerely believe, from the bottom of my heart, that if you're the best humanity can do, we are magnificently and totally fucked. [...] The best I can do is make sure that when you go, you don't take your whole fucking platoon down with you.
84** Comments from veterans that he's served with suggest that it's not an act: he really is hateful, contemptuous and sadistic.
85* DropShip: It's military sci-fi. Everyone's got 'em. And in extreme cases, they'll drop ''without'' a ship.
86* DyingMomentOfAwesome:
87** In ''The Ghost Brigades'', [[spoiler:Jared Dirac planting a Trojan Horse virus in his body that will destroy it when the guy taking it over opens a message explaining just how screwed he is.]]
88** In ''The Human Division'', [[spoiler:Captain Coloma]].
89* ElectronicTelepathy: The [=BrainPal=], especially when used by Special Forces.
90* EmptyShell: The Obin. They were uplifted to give them intelligence but not individual self-awareness. Their own word for their species means "lacking." They border on TheSoulless due to their drive to acquire consciousness [[spoiler:and the utterly inhuman debt they feel towards Boutin for working on how to provide one for them]].
91* EstablishingCharacterMoment: In ''The Last Colony'', Perry reflects on his first meeting with Savitri, his HypercompetentSidekick, during a PR tour he was doing as a war hero. She stood up during his talk and called him a "tool of the imperial and totalitarian regime of the Colonial Union."
92-->'''Perry:''' [[OddFriendship I liked her immediately.]]
93* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Boutin might be orchestrating an interstellar war that will kill billions of humans, but he's genuinely devoted to his daughter Zoe.
94* EvilGenius: Charles Boutin.
95* FalseReassurance: Downplayed, but after enlisting, the new soldiers are always told that 75% of them will likely die in their ten year tours of duty. This is a grim enough figure itself, but the fifth book reveals that this figure is actually ''too low'', considering the number who are killed after re-enlisting for a second tour.
96* FasterThanLightTravel: Subverted: speeds approaching ''c'' are still impractical, so the skip drive drops your ship into a nearly-identical [[AnotherDimension analogue universe]] at the location you wanted to go to, while ''their'' virtually-identical version of the same ship drops into ''your'' original universe. For pragmatic purposes, it's teleportation: the physicists tend not to dwell on the fairly mind-boggling ramifications when laymen are around.
97* FictionalUnitedNations: The Conclave, intended by its creator to put an end to the incessant territorial warfare between the LoadsAndLoadsOfRaces and divvy up colony worlds fairly. First mentioned in ''The Ghost Brigades''; ''The Last Colony'' and ''Zoe's Tale'' deal with an attempt by the Colonial Union to sabotage it. [[spoiler:After determining that the alien in charge had the right idea after all, especially since the Union's success immensely pissed off 412 different species, John and Zoe help the Conclave reform and end Earth's enforced isolation by sending a Conclave trade fleet.]]
98* FirstPersonSmartass: John, Zoe, and Harry. Especially Harry for his chapter of ''The End of All Things''. In contrast, the ''Sagan Diaries'' indicates that Jane is exactly as fun in her head as she is in person.
99* ForScience: Why the Consu uplifted the Obin. They just wanted to see what would happen.
100* FreakOut: John has one during the [[CurbStompBattle rather one-sided battle]] against a race of [[{{Lilliputians}} inch-high aliens]]. In a subversion, he's told afterwards that not only were his superior officers expecting him (and every other new recruit) to have one eventually, they would've been worried about his mental health if he ''hadn't''.
101* FreakyFridaySabotage: At the climax of ''The Ghost Brigades'', [[spoiler: Charles Boutin pulls a GrandTheftMe on Jared Dirac, a Colonial Special Forces soldier cloned from him. He then hears a message from Jared explaining that, shortly before being taken over, [[WhyAmITicking he programmed his body's nanites to self-immolate]].]]
102* {{Gendercide}}: The Crimp which made â…“ of Earth's male population sterile.
103* GenderIsNoObject: The Colonial Defense Force makes no distinction between its men and women. Their super-soldier bodies outweigh any gender differences. (And since the genetic engineering leaves them all sterile, female soldiers never get sidelined by maternity leave.) In the Special Forces, at least, fraternization is in fact encouraged.
104* GladToBeAliveSex: In ''The Ghost Brigades'' this is apparently a tradition after each mission for the Special Forces.
105* GovernmentConspiracy: An oddly public one. Everyone knows that the Colonial Union controls information since it controls all FTL travel. They don't know the full extent of what is being hidden because, well, the CU is good at hiding it. While most of the colonies are only mildly perturbed when details of the Conclave come to light, [[spoiler:Earth is ''pissed'' when they discover that they've been nothing but a farm for soldiers and colonists. They aren't even considered humanity's homeworld any more]]. One minor CU character justifies her continued support of the CU by saying that the CU has given countless people opportunities to escape hellish conditions on Earth. While she acknowledges that the CU doesn't actually care about anyone, she considers the good that they are accidentally doing to be worth it. [[spoiler:She doesn't seem to have realized that the reason significant parts of Earth are in a constant state of civil war is because the CU was deliberately keeping them that way]].
106* GrandTheftMe: In ''The Ghost Brigades'', [[spoiler:Charles Boutin, having discovered that Jared Dirac is his Special-Forces-enhanced clone, attempts to steal Jared's body]].
107* GraveMarkingScene:
108** The first thing John Perry did on his seventy-fifth birthday, at the beginning of ''Old Man's War'', was visit his wife's grave.
109** Zoe Boutin visits her family grave at the end of ''The Ghost Brigades''.
110* GreatOffscreenWar: The Subcontinental War in ''Old Man's War''. The India/Pakistan region was at war with the United States, and the States used nuclear weapons to win.
111--> '''Master Sergeant Ruiz:''' Six fucking years to beat an enemy that barely had firearms, and you had to cheat to win. Nukes are for pussies. ''Pussies.''
112* GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe: The members of the CDF: their skin is photosynthetic, they are all in perfect physical shape, they won't age past appearing to be in their early twenties, and they are possibly altered to look even sexier than their normal genetics would allow, to encourage bonding and to exploit the natural human tendency to treat good-looking people better. Ruiz calls out minorities during his spiel at the start of basic training... then yells "BULLSHIT! You're all green!" (He has NWordPrivileges, since his original body was Latino.)
113* GreyAndGrayMorality: And plenty of it. Interestingly, it's often the Colonial Union (i.e., ''humanity'') that comes across as a slightly darker shade of grey, though it's a very close-run thing.
114* GuiltFreeExterminationWar: The CDF leadership seems to feel this way in regards to their alien neighbors. It's not an entirely uncommon feeling: if nothing else, spacefaring races almost categorically refuse to share planets with each other, and exterminating someone else's colony prior to establishing your own is common practice. Subverted, however, by the narrative itself (which doesn't seem to agree with this), and by the fact that enough people eventually got fed up with this to form the [[TheFederation Conclave]].
115* HatesEveryoneEqually: Ruiz can come up with a reason to hate ''everyone'' except John (whom he finds a reason to ''like'', which Ruiz finds 'disturbing'). He immediately puts John in a position of authority... so that he can start hating him once he screws up.
116* HeroAntagonist: [[spoiler:General Gau]]. He's an honorable being with few personal ambitions who is working hard for peace.
117* HellishPupils: The members of the CDF have feline pupils.
118* {{Hermaphrodite}}: The Obin.
119* HigherTechSpecies: The Consu.
120* HonestAdvisor: Ristin Lause of the conclave shows herself to be this in the sixth book (with shades of TheGoodChancellor). She is actively analyzing and considering the factors that threaten to make the Conclave collapse from within, and warns Sorvalh and Gau about them, while urging that steps be taken to fix this.
121* HonorBeforeReason: The Consu again. Their highly ritualized style of warfare and [[BlueAndOrangeMorality idiosyncratic]] goals are basically the only reason they haven't wiped out every other intelligent species in the area.
122* HotterAndSexier: A literal application of the trope with regards to the CDF soldiers, who have had their minds transferred from their aging human bodies into newly created bodies that are far sexier and attractive than their originals. So much so, that basic training allows time for CDF recruits to have as much sex as they can handle as they get used to and enjoy their new bodies before getting down to proper instruction.
123* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: Specifically the Colonial Union, which is often of the [[MagnificentBastard magnificent]] variety. It keeps Earth, its source of colonists and soldiers, as an isolated, technological backwater. It strictly controls communication and travel between the colonies themselves. Even set against a backdrop of hundreds of feuding alien species, very few of whom are nice guys, humanity stands out for its merciless tenacity. That said, there is a back-and-forth as to whether they are justified in this. The CU covers things up and insists to those who must know that its more bastardly tendencies are justified by the more horrifying tendencies of the opposing species. Mostly humanity is just absolutely, completely ruthless, far from actually malevolent, which is actually required for survival because humans are one of the newest and smallest species on the galactic stage. Anything else means extinction, at best, or being farmed for meat, at worst. Then again, other viewpoints suggest that when other species are horrible to humanity, it's because humanity has such a terrible reputation.
124* HumansThroughAlienEyes: The opening in ''The Ghost Brigades''.
125* HumbleGoal: All that the Obin really want [[spoiler:is individual souls and consciousness, to end their CreativeSterility and give them a sense of individuality and self]].
126* ImADoctorNotAPlaceholder: In ''The Human Division''.
127-->'''Dr. Danielle Lowen:''' I have no idea, Jim. I'm a doctor, not a private investigator.
128* ImmortalProcreationClause: The bodies of the CDF soldiers are infertile/sterile. It's intentional, so they don't get ideas about trying to supplant humanity.
129* InformationWantsToBeFree: The CDF keeps a ''very'' tight grip on all human communication, which it can do thanks to a monopoly on all forms of interstellar travel and communication. Earth knows absolutely nothing about the rest of the universe, and while the colonies are better off, they are still kept in the dark about any rebellions, CDF defeats, and especially about the Conclave. General Gau grouses that he sometimes wishes he could just drop satellites over human worlds and start broadcasting, but they'd be shot down before they could say much. [[spoiler:John Perry convinces him to send a trade fleet to Earth (which doesn't have a significant CDF presence and the rest of the galaxy largely ignores) and give them all the information that the CDF has been hiding from them for two hundred years. The CDF tries to spin it as best they can, but without much luck]].
130* ItsRainingMen:
131** When using a DropShip to land on a hostile planet is unworkable, the CDF troopers can sky-dive from orbit, protected by a heat shield made from nanomachines which turns into a parachute before landing. While sometimes used by regular CDF troopers, this is a Special Forces signature move.
132** In ''The Human Division'', this maneuver is used [[spoiler:for Harry Wilson and Danielle Lowen to escape the destruction of Earth Station.]] When he has to do it ''again'' in ''The End of All Things'', Harry thinks to himself that he'd like to visit Earth the normal way for once.
133* KickTheDog:
134** The CU does this a few times in each book, with increasing severity as the story goes along.
135** [[spoiler:Equilibrium]] does almost nothing but this throughout ''The Human Division''.
136* KickedUpstairs: At the end of the sixth book it's speculated that Abumwe has been given the prestigious (yet difficult) job of overseeing the constitutional convention partially out of spite for committing the CU government to that convention (which is necessary for both the short and long-term survival of the Colonial Union, but costs the big wigs some of their power and ego).
137* LateArrivalSpoiler: Knowing the title of book four, combined with the OneSteveLimit, takes most of the surprise out of a major plot twist in book two.
138* LilliputianWarriors: One of the alien races fought in ''Old Man's War'' have great similarities to humans in their warmbloodedness, rapid reproduction, and general dealings with other species, except they're only an inch tall. They're depicted as being hopelessly outmatched by the human military in ground battles, but at the very least evenly matched in space battles. Tiny ships can only have tiny weapons, but they're also too small to aim at properly... and they're [[ZergRush very, very cheap]].
139* TheLoad: What the SF forces worry John Perry will be when he asks to drop with them on Coral. [[spoiler: They change their minds when he carries a wounded Jane across half a battlefield.]]
140* LongevityTreatment: The CDF's main selling point. Rejuvenation treatment via consciousness transfer to a genetically enhanced body is only available to military personnel - and the minimum age for joining the military is 75. The twenty percent or so who survive long enough for their term of service to end get another one - they're loaded into a ''true'' clone of their original body so they can retire.
141* LostColony:
142** Roanoke, though it's both deliberate and temporary. LampshadeHanging ensues when, after he figures out what's happening, the main character chews himself out for having missed the reference.
143** Before the CU monopoly on skip drive, "wildcat" colonies were fairly common: most failed within a year.
144* LowCultureHighTech: The Consu give the Rraey a sensor far in advance of any race's ability and understanding that can predict the exact location where a ship is about to arrive from AnotherDimension, which they only bother to use for its intended purpose. When Perry manages to get the "owner's manual", it's enough to revolutionize human understanding of skip drive theory and allows major breakthroughs in the following books.
145* LoyalPhlebotinum: The standard CDF assault rifle is designed so that it won't fire except in the hands of its authorized operator. In training, that's the weapon's owner. In combat, that's any CDF soldier. This comes in handy more than once, but becomes a problem in ''The Ghost Brigades'' when the villain disrupts the authentication process, leaving the attacking soldiers stuck with guns that won't fire for anybody.
146* MachiavelliWasWrong: [[spoiler:And the Colonial Union gets itself into some serious trouble as a result.]] But then manages to get out of it without a war.
147* MadScientistLaboratory: Charles Boutin has one in ''The Ghost Brigades''.
148* MadScientistsBeautifulDaughter: Zoe, though fairly well subverted in that you meet her at the age of 7.
149* MeaningfulName:
150** ''The Last Colony'' has a few spoilerish examples: [[spoiler:Roanoke colony and Perry calling himself a Commodore play it straight. Trujillo, the ambitious politician, is a subversion, since he's one of the good guys.]]
151** An InUniverse example, as The Obin named themselves after the word for "lacking" in their own language due to feeling their lack of sentience and being bothered by it.
152* MentalFusion: Special Forces are raised with an active [=BrainPal=] from "birth", allowing them to share their senses, thought, emotions and memories. While not a HiveMind, it creates a powerful anti-self pro-group type of bias in them, and it's very unpleasant for them to be denied integration.
153* MildlyMilitary:
154** Heavily averted in ''Old Man's War'', where professionalism and discipline are repeatedly displayed to be the only things standing between CDF soldiers and being eaten by aliens.
155** It occurs to some extent in ''The Ghost Brigades'', though, justified by the characters being SuperSoldiers taught to fight from birth: being an effective soldier is ingrained deeply enough into their identity that strict military discipline is redundant. But even they stick to business once they're on the clock.
156** Seen later on in Heather Lee's squad in ''The End of All Things'', who spend most of their episode bickering and debating the CU's response to colonial unrest.
157* AMillionIsAStatistic:
158** Manfred explains this as why he expects the CU to kill off Roanoake. To them it's not twenty-five hundred people, it's just one colony. They lose colonies all the time, so what's one more? [[spoiler:He's wrong about most of the details, but the general idea that they're expendable is correct]].
159** And then there is the conspiracy that is trying to destroy both the CU and the Conclave. [[spoiler:They are a group of hundreds of disparate races dedicated to keeping everything at a stable equilibrium. They justify this because they want to preserve all the races, while if anyone gets too powerful they'll get wiped out. They're perfectly fine with millions of people dying in pointless wars as long as the actual ''species'' survive]].
160* ModernStasis: Earth, [[EnforcedTrope enforced]] by the Colonial Union.
161* MorallySuperiorCopy: The authorities make a clone of a rogue scientist, implanted with a copy of the original's memories from just before he went rogue, in the hope that the clone will be able to tell them what the scientist is up to and how to stop him. The memory copy seems at first not to have taken, so the clone is given his own name and allowed to start building a life for himself, and by the time the memories do start surfacing he's formed his own moral code and freely chooses to oppose his progenitor.
162* {{Nanomachines}}: The CDF is very reliant on nano-technology (and that reliance is turned against them at points). Types of nanotech form armor, ammunition, blood substitute, etc.
163* NeglectfulPrecursors: The Consu created and abandoned the Obin, and have been extremely uh, snippy every time the Obin try to get in touch.
164* NeuralImplanting: Multiple instances and variations, particularly in ''The Ghost Brigades''.
165* NeverMessWithGranny: The CDF took this to the next logical level by putting Earth's grannies in twenty-year-old SuperSoldier bodies.
166* NeverTheSelvesShallMeet: Special Forces soldiers can't ever meet their dead progenitors - obviously - and it's sheer accident that John even finds out what happened to Kathy's "unused" clone.
167* NoSenseOfHumour: The woman in the army recruiting office doesn't respond to Perry's attempts to make jokes. She claims that her sense of humour was surgically removed when she was a child.
168* NoSocialSkills: A common opinion of the Special Forces soldiers, combat-trained clones who rarely have ages in the double digits. They resent it, and ''The Ghost Brigades'' shows that this is mostly due to ElectronicTelepathy being their preferred mode of communication.
169* NoTranshumanismAllowed: Averted. The CDF creates a spectrum of oddities built out of human DNA - ranging from 'pretty green people' to 'space tortoises'. Also, every CDF soldier has a computer in their head, and Special Forces soldiers utilize this to the level of {{Synchronization}}.
170* NotSoWellIntentionedExtremist: It slowly becomes clear as the series goes on that the CDF leaders are more interested in maintaining their own power than doing what is best for humanity. Most of ''The Human Division'' is about all the various morally dubious things they've been doing, and how the rank and file soldiers have to deal with the fallout. Their ways of dealing with the Conclave stand out starkly: [[spoiler:They try to destroy it, first politically and then with an engineered civil war. When that fails, they finally resort to diplomacy... with everyone ''but'' the Conclave]].
171* NumberedHomeworld: The Obin planets except Obinur. (The Obin don't have much imagination.)
172* OlderThanTheyLook: All traditional CDF soldiers, owing to the whole BrainUploading thing. Zoe hangs a [[LampshadeHanging lampshade]] on it in ''The Last Colony'' by calling (the apparently 30-something) John "[[AffectionateNickname ninety-year-old dad]]".
173* OneManArmy: Daniel Harvey.
174* OneWorldOrder: Averted in the case of Earth, which explicitly has no unifying government, making interstellar politics an interesting experience in later books. The United Nations sends a delegation to the Conclave, and the narrative clarifies that the UN is ''not'' the government of Earth, but they often pretend to be for the sake of representing the planet's interests offworld.
175* OurWerewolvesAreDifferent: An intelligent, humanoid yet hairy species on Roanoke are called "werewolves" because that's the closest thing they resemble. As far as we know, they don't shapeshift.
176* PayEvilUntoEvil: When the CDF gets their hands on one of the conspirators who has been putting people's brains in jars, they put his brain in a jar. Wilson isn't fond of the decision, but doesn't lose any sleep over it.
177* PocketRocketLauncher: The standard-issue weapon is the MP ('''M'''ulti-'''P'''urpose)-35, [[SwissArmyWeapon a gun that can adapt itself for whatever role the user needs]] by interfacing with their [=BrainPal=] neuro-implant, including launching salvoes of miniature missiles.
178* PhysicalFitnessPunishment: On the platoon's first day in training, Master Sergeant Ruiz makes a point of finding a reason to give each and every person a twenty-kilometer run, with the threat of everyone having to do it again if one person takes longer than an hour. This is partly so everyone knows where they stand with him, and partly to make the point that, with their new technological enhancements, they all ''can'' run twenty kilometers in an hour, among other feats.
179* POVSequel: ''Zoe's Tale'', and ''The Sagan Diaries'' in a more disjointed way.
180* PeopleFarms: One possible fate of a human colony conquered by aliens who think human meat makes good eating. The Rraey even capture a few breeding specimens so they can raise babies as ''veal.''
181* ProHumanTranshuman: The soldiers of the CDF. During boot camp one guy asks why they're bothering to defend baseline humanity when their new bodies are the next step in human evolution. Sergeant Ruiz tells him he couldn't be more wrong - all the alien DNA in their genomes makes them sterile and thus an evolutionary "dead end". One of the reasons for the advanced enlistment age is to ensure that many of the recruits would have grandkids back home... grandkids they will fight to the death to protect.
182* PsychicLink: Created through [=BrainPal=] technology for soldiers.
183* PunyEarthlings: The reason why the Colonial Union no longer uses unaltered humans as soldiers. They didn't want to - the cost of producing CDF super soldiers is pretty high - but it was the only way to keep up with the neighbors: the first Battle of Coral was a PyrrhicVictory with a staggering death toll. It seems that every single alien species is individually far stronger and tougher than a baseline human. Whether this is because the aliens have long since genetically altered themselves or are just naturally stronger is unclear.
184* TheQuietOne: Maggie.
185* RadioSilence:
186** Used during the battles on Coral because the Rraey can detect [=BrainPal=] communication.
187** Forced upon the Roanoke colonists in order to avoid the Conclave's attentions.
188* RankUp: Perry starts ''Old Man's War'' as a recruit, and is commissioned as a lieutenant by the end. It's mentioned in ''The Last Colony'' that he later rose to be a Major and commanded a battalion before retiring. In comparison, Harry Wilson, in the same time period, seems to have topped out as a Lieutenant, possibly because he doesn't toe the party line and tends to annoy his superiors.
189* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Interestingly, John delivers a proxy version in ''The Last Colony" about the absent Colonial Union leaders (albeit in front of someone who can repeat this to them) about all of the major moral and policy mistakes they've made, and why that's leading him to [[spoiler: show the Conclave where Earth is to break their monopoly]].
190--> '''John:''' Out of every government or species or intelligent race, the Colonial Union is the one that is the best at looking out for us. For humans. But I've come to doubt that the Colonial Union is doing that job ''well''. Look how the Colonial Union treated us at Roanoke. It deceived us in the purpose of the colony. It deceived us in the interest of the Conclave. It made us complicit in an act of war that could have destroyed the entire CU. And then it was willing to sacrifice us for the good of humanity. But none of the rest of humanity ever knew the whole story, did they? The Colonial Union controls communication. Controls information. Now that Roanoke survived, the Colonial Union will never tell any of it. No one outside the CU power structure even knows the Conclave exists. ''Still''.... The British didn't sacrifice Coventry. And the Colonial Union shouldn't have been willing to sacrifice Roanoke.
191* ReplacementGoldfish: Played with with Jane. She is her own person and wants to be treated as such but also wants very much to know about Kathy's life and John.
192* RousseauWasRight: It takes a while, but it slowly becomes clear that when given the chance for peace, most people are willing to take it. Unfortunately, centuries of horrific violence between species mean that many governments remain convinced [[SillyRabbitIdealismIsForKids that peace is a doomed effort]] and dismiss it out of hand. The Colonial Union causes many problems for itself in later books (which are invariably cleaned up by the main characters) because they can't stop being lying, backstabbing bastards and just trust anyone.
193* SapientEatSapient: It's brought up repeatedly that multiple alien species are quite willing to eat humans, given half a chance. In one horrific instance that the protagonists get told about in boot camp, an unauthorized colony of humans got captured by another species which promptly killed and ate most of the men and used the few that were left to forcibly impregnate the women so they could [[EatsBabies eat the resulting babies like veal]]. When Colonial Union forces arrived on planet, they barbecued and ate a number of the aliens in retaliation after defeating them.
194* SarcasticDevotee: Savitri.
195* ScaryDogmaticAliens:
196** The Consu. Curiously enough, though, that dogma makes them ''less'' dangerous than they might be - they're so advanced that they could easily steamroll everyone else in the galaxy, but their philosophy/religion calls on them to fight 'fairly' in their continued effort to 'help' other races 'perfect' themselves so they limit themselves to using the same level of tech as their opponents. In their eyes, it's a species-wide EarnYourHappyEnding: in the eyes of most of their neighbors, it's random, scary mayhem.
197** [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters The Colonial Union]]: a fascist, xenophobic, and violently expansionistic state that keeps its own people in the dark and farms them to populate colonies and die in endless wars.
198* SenseLossSadness: In ''Ghost Brigade'', being pulled out of Integration (a type of MentalFusion) has this effect, as does having the [=BrainPal=] shut off. Given that [=SpecOps=] troops are literally raised by their [=BrainPals=], and spend pretty much their entire lives integrated, it's less 'sadness' and more 'crippling, mind-destroying shellshock'.
199* SettlingTheFrontier: ''The Last Colony'' and ''Zoe's War'' both focus on the difficulties facing settlers creating a new, secret colony.
200* ShootTheDog: How the Colonial Union justifies the various atrocities it commits. Much of the series involves deciding whether or not its actions are necessary for humanity's survival. [[spoiler:Turns out that not only are they unnecessary (despite what initially seem like some pretty decent justifications), they're actively harmful.]]
201* ShoutOut:
202** In ''Old Man's War'', two of Perry's fellow recruits are named [[Creator/NeilGaiman Gaiman]] and [[Creator/DaveMcKean McKean]].
203** ''The Ghost Brigades'' has the main character, John Dirac, assigned to research pop culture depictions of ArtificialHumans;
204*** He reads about the creation in ''Literature/{{Frankenstein}}''.
205*** He runs across R. Daneel Olivaw from Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/RobotSeries''.
206*** He runs across Data from ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration''.
207*** He runs across HAL from ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey''.
208*** He runs across the titular character of ''Manga/AstroBoy''
209*** He runs across the robotic and cybernetic Terminators from the ''Franchise/{{Terminator}}'' franchise.
210** ''The Ghost Brigades'' introduces the Gamerans, whose collective name [[Film/{{Gamera}} is itself a shout out]], and who take their individual names from science fiction writers, including [[Creator/CharlesStross Stross]] and [[Creator/GeorgeRRMartin Martin]]. The members of the Special Forces are similarly assigned surnames that are shoutouts to famous scientists of the past.
211** The chap named [[Webcomic/PennyArcade Gabriel Brahe]] can't be a coincidence.
212** The Obin are an author-admitted tip of the hat to Creator/DavidBrin's Uplift series.
213** In ''Old Man's War,'' a whale-like species known as the [[Literature/TheSilmarillion Finwe]] gets a brief mention.
214** The entire first book [[http://www.scalzi.com/whatever/002329.html is a tribute to]] Literature/StarshipTroopers.
215** A piece of software that tricks a ship's computer into running on a virtual machine, [[LotusEaterMachine leaving it unaware it isn't running on its real hardware]], is known as [[Film/TheMatrix Blue Pill]].
216* SmartGun: The Colonial Marines' weapons are biometrically locked, computer-controlled and programmable {{Swiss Army Gun}}s. Special Forces can also control the gun remotely.
217* SpaceAmish: The Colonial Mennonites in ''The Last Colony'', though they don't seem to actually have an objection to technology per se, but simply object to ''excess'' technology, and that's why the CU sends a large group of them to Roanoke, which is likely to be cut off from the rest of the CU for a very long time, meaning that coping with lower tech levels would probably be necessary at some point.
218* SpaceElevator: On Earth, but operated by the Colonial Union. A notable example because even though a SpaceElevator could be built in the real world, the one the C.U. operates ''isn't'' physically workable (its anchor is in too low an orbit). This gratuitous violation of physics indicates to astute Earthlings that the C.U. is keeping secrets from them: the message is targeted at the various Earth governments who might become independence-minded if not for this constant mute warning.
219* SpiritualSuccessor: Although it is definitely its own novel, ''Old Man's War'' is, according to Scalzi, a riff on Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/StarshipTroopers''.
220* StarCrossedLovers: Harry and Danielle look like they're heading in that direction by the end of ''The Human Division''. [[spoiler:By the end of ''The End of All Things'', they appear to have the "star-crossed" bit sorted out.]]
221* StarfishAliens: Just about everyone who isn't a human. There's only one race of aliens mentioned who get explicitly compared to humans, and they're about an inch tall. The most advanced race in the known universe look like giant, blade-armed beetles.
222** A few like the Whaidians and Covandu are physically different from us but seem quite comprehensible in terms of motives and culture. Even the Consu have understandable (if odd and frightening) values. Hell, the man-eating Rraey even have celebrity cooking shows!
223** The Gamerans are [[HumanSubspecies Starfish Humans]].
224** Progressively averted over the course of the series, however, especially in ''The Human Divison'' when the focus shifts from the Colonial Union's military to its diplomatic corps.
225* SterilityPlague: The Crimp, which caused a third of Earth's male population to become permanently sterile, and resulted in the Quarantine Laws. [[spoiler:''The Ghost Brigades'' reveals that Earth was told that it was an extraterrestrial disease, and Charles Boutin believes that the Colonial Union created it in order to justify said laws and help maintain the status quo.]]
226* StupidEvil: One of the Colonial Union's key flaws (besides its arrogance) is its inability to look past short-term goals. They assume if they sow chaos among their enemies and win battles, they'll win the war. This worked for centuries because every other species was doing the exact same thing, but it begins to backfire when the Conclave actually proves to be a successful and reasonably peaceful union between hundreds of disparate races.
227* StrawCharacter: Interestingly played with in ''Old Man's War''. On one of their missions, John's squad gets a new recruit in the form of an ex-politician, who initially seems to perfectly fill out the military sci-fi stereotype of the obnoxious, sanctimonious bleeding-heart liberal. However, it soon turns out that his political views are at least somewhat correct - his problems (in the form of a raging Messiah-complex and blindness to practical concerns) are purely a matter of personality.
228* SufficientlyAdvancedAlien: The Consu.
229* SuperSoldier: The Colonial Union's soldiers require only a few hours of sleep, can survive ten minutes without breathing, and have a fantastic {{Healing Factor}}.
230** Their Special Forces (who don't have 'normal human' prejudices or instincts to cope with) have even better reflexes and reaction times, as well as other advantages that seem to vary by model number. And there are even some who can [[SpacePeople survive in hard vacuum.]]
231** As the drill sergeant in the first book [[JerkassHasAPoint points out]], the Union isn't giving its volunteers brand-new, youthful, super-tough bodies bristling with genetic and nanotech enhancements because it ''loves'' them: it's spending all this money because all the other sapient species out there have their own SuperSoldiers, and baseline humans have been proven to be totally outclassed.
232* SwissArmyGun: Justified in that it is a MatterReplicator for several different flavors of hurt.
233* TakingYouWithMe:
234** [[spoiler:Dirac's nasty surprise for Charles Boutin after the latter took over Dirac's body]] in ''The Ghost Brigades''.
235** [[spoiler:How Captain Coloma deals with the ''Erie Morningstar'']] in ''The Human Division''.
236* {{Telepathy}}: Possible to be done on anyone with a [=BrainPal=], by anyone with the right clearance.
237* ThanatosGambit: In ''The End of All Things'', [[spoiler:General Gau arranges for his own assassination in the middle of a speech to the assembled representatives of the Conclave, creating a crisis situation that catapults his aide into the top job and inspires the representatives to pull together against a common threat.]]
238* ThemeNaming: Special Forces soldiers have the last name of a famous person in science and philosophy (or science fiction, for the Gamerans). Their troopships, similarly, are not named after cities like those of the regular CDF (and the Mobile Infantry in ''Starship Troopers''); they're named after birds of prey.
239* ToServeMan: Some species, the Rraey in particular, find humans to be quite tasty.
240* TranshumanAliens: The Gamerans. Human brains, but everything else about them is a bizarre space-monster. They're specialized military forces, but the other facet of their existence is to get at least one branch of humanity out of the fighting-for-limited-real-estate game by letting them live free in outer space.
241* TreeBuchet: Used by Special Forces soldiers to escape an enclosure guarded by automatic turrets that lacked the ability to aim up. Justified by it being a treelike lifeform on an alien planet, more elastic than actual trees.
242* TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture: Subverted. At first it's taken for granted that Earth of the future is still recognizable to a reader in the early 21st century, but then the characters start questioning it, and it turns out the Colonial Union has been deliberately holding back Earth's social and technological development.
243* UnitedSpaceOfAmerica: The Colonial Union. English is the main language, the military is dominated by former US citizens, and the influential, older colonies are populated by many descendants of American (and other first-world) colonists. But subverted in that all the new colonies are populated by people from countries and regions that can't support their populations (thanks to being kept that way by the CU), which amounts to most of them being from Africa and Asia (especially India), though Norway is also mentioned as being unable to support its population, and so is a source for colonists.
244* WeirdnessMagnet: Whilst it's never quite clear whether he's blessed with exceptionally good luck or cursed with exceptionally bad, John tends to be at the centre of a ''lot'' of improbable coincidences. Only a Magnet, having survived the disaster that wiped out the rest of his 95,000-person strike force, would be personally rescued by a super-soldier constructed from the DNA of the wife he lost eight years previously.
245* WellIntentionedExtremist: Charles Boutin believes that the CDF leadership is corrupt and keeping humanity ignorant for their own power, and is willing to do anything to fix that. [[spoiler:Even kill off the entire military (who he acknowledges are mostly innocent) and leave the civilians defenseless]]. While it's made clear that he has a point, he's also working off limited information and the assumption that [[ItsAllAboutMe he's the smartest man alive]].
246* WeHaveReserves: ''Ghost Brigades'' explains this is why the CDF recruits the elderly, and only from Earth. They originally recruited youths from all over, but not only were their baseline human bodies too weak to fight aliens, losing so many of the young population was crippling the human race. Transferring seventy-five year-olds into engineered bodies had a number of advantages, not least being that people of that age are essentially a write-off, from society's perspective. They've made their impact and passed on their wisdom, so if they die in combat nothing unexpected is lost.
247* WeWillUseWikiWordsInTheFuture: Mostly for the trademarked hardware that makes up a CDF soldier's body: the smarmy focus-group-style names, complete with TradeSnark, are almost a running gag.
248* WhatDidYouExpectWhenYouNamedIt: Roanoke, which is very much ''intended'' to act like [[UsefulNotes/TheLostColonyOfRoanoke its namesake]].
249* WhatTheHellHero: Lots of 'em, in all sorts of different directions. Let's just say that this is a series that believes in giving weight to many different viewpoints in many different situations and leave it at that.
250* WikiWalk: The Special Forces [=BrainPal=] does this to explain concepts.
251* WorthyOpponent: John gets two in ''The Last Colony'', in the form of [[CommanderContrarian Manfred Trujillo]] and [[VisionaryVillain General]] [[NecessarilyEvil Gau]]. [[spoiler:By the end of the book, he's good friends with both.]]
252* WouldHurtAChild: The plan to force the Eneshans to break off from their alliance with the Rraey and Obin in ''The Ghost Brigades'' involves abducting the Eneshan Matriarch's heir and sterilizing it, forcing the Matriarch to choose a new consort or risk the destruction of her line. Afterwards, the Matriarch must stand by and let them kill her child to prevent bloody civil war.
253* YoungerThanTheyLook: Unlike the CDF, who are [[OlderThanTheyLook older people in younger bodies]], the Special Forces are "newborns" who have been inhabiting an adult body from their inception. Your average Special Forces member is a toddler or grade-schooler by regular human reckoning; high-ranking, experienced members may be in their teens.

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