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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/galacticcivilizationsii_twilight.jpg]]
2A FourX game from Stardock. First released in 2003, a remake of the vintage OS/2 series, with an expansion pack in 2004. Received a sequel in 2006, abbreviated ''Gal Civ 2'', with its own expansions in 2007 and 2008.
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4In the original, players took control of the Terran Alliance and faced up against five or seven enemy civilizations.
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6In the sequel, the player could take control of any one of 10 civilizations, or make their own. This was increased to 12 in the first expansion pack.
7
8It is known for its advanced AI and its lack of intrusive CopyProtection.
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10''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owdjizoiqVY Galactic Civilizations III]]'' was revealed on Stardock's [=20th=] anniversary. Its new features included multiplayer, political intrigue, and more mod support. It was released in mid-2015.
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12''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qPGcO514Us Galactic Civilizations IV]]'' was revealed in May of 2021. It adds the new mechanic of the Subspace Streams, which connect distant regions of the galaxy with each other. It was released on the Epic Games Store in April 26, 2022.
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14!!Tropes present in the series include:
15
16* AbsoluteXenophobe:
17** The Dread Lords desire to wipe out all other intelligent life, because they believe it is not worthy of existence (they would have left their Arnor brothers alone, but the Arnor [[ThisMeansWar strongly objected]] to their genocidal plans).
18** The Korath, who were originally a clan within the Drengin, ended up breaking away from the Empire after they secretly joined up with the Dread Lords, pursuing the Dread Lords' goal of annihilating all other forms of life in exchange for great power (and the [[YouWillBeSpared right to continue to live]]).
19* AbusivePrecursors: The Dread Lords, who sought to annihilate all forms of non-Arnor life, as they thought that life had no purpose in the grand scheme of eternity.
20* TheAce: [=GalCiv3=] introduces Citizens, rare exemplars rising above from the common clay of your civilization. They can be molded as you see fit to improve different aspects of your empire (or be assigned to massively improve output of one particular planet), boosting things like Science or Production, expanding your administrative capacity, or being assigned to a fleet to improve the stats of every ship in it.
21* AIIsACrapshoot: The Yor. The Iconians built them, but they [[TurnedAgainstTheirMasters rebelled against their creators]] after the Dread Lords corrupted them. It's even [[LampshadedTrope lampshaded]] in the manual, "[[GenreBlindness apparently they didn't have any science-fiction]]"
22** There is also a random event in which your empire finds and accidentally activates some Precursor war robots, which go wild and start laying waste to your people. You can either destroy them and save your people, or sacrifice a portion of your population to examine their performance and improve your military power.
23** A random mega-event has one of the factions find and accidentally activate the Peacekeepers, who then start attacking everyone but the faction that found them. Their ships are powerful enough that only late-game factions can stand against them. If you happened to be the one who got the event, you can quickly find yourself at the top of the ladder, as all the enemy fleets get obliterated, leaving planets wide open to invasion and resourced for appropriation.
24* AllPlanetsAreEarthLike: Averted. Some planets are uninhabitable at all, starting with Dark Avatar some require special technologies to colonize due to special conditions like high gravity or toxic atmosphere, and each planet has a Planet Quality rating which affects how much you can build on it.
25** It's also worth mentioning that Earth itself is a fairly average planet, as are the other homeworlds, with a class of 10, with 26 being the highest possible class before Terraforming and modifiers.
26* AlphaStrike: Favored tactic of the Arceans and custom Super Warrior races as of Dark Avatar. Pack as much firepower as possible on to each ship and as many ships as possible (or as many as needed) into each fleet and try to eradicate your enemies in that first strike alpha before they can retaliate. Also the favored tactic of anyone in the original Dread Lords game, where attacker-gets-first-strike was the norm; this was changed in Dark Avatar where defenders get a guaranteed CounterAttack against anyone who is not a Super Warrior.
27* AlwaysChaoticEvil: The Drengin Empire, The Dominion of the Korx, and the Korath Clan are the undisputed examples of this for the major races in the sequel, with the Yor being a lesser example -- they're still jerks but they're more pragmatically so. And bigger than them all are the Dread Lords. The Dark Yor and Snathi represent this for the minor races.
28** While the Drengin are plain vanilla AlwaysChaoticEvil, the others have more specific evil motives -- the Korath are {{Omnicidal Maniac}}s, the Korx are CorruptCorporateExecutive, the Yor were originally {{Omnicidal Maniac}}s but then later slipped into a sort of jerkass-isolationist attitude, and the Dread Lords themselves are ManipulativeBastard AbusivePrecursors whose original crusade to eliminate the younger races stemmed out of them seeing said races becoming a threat should they be allowed to grow powerful. The evil minor races of course exist just ForTheEvulz.
29* AMillionIsAStatistic: Played very, very straight. If you take the Evil choice in an event that will kill millions or even hundreds of millions of your own people, you'd hardly notice the population drop at all! Replacing those losses takes so little time it's almost funny, especially for races with the Super Breeder ability.
30** The game measures most aspects in billions to begin with. Oddly, 1000 soldiers equal 1 billion of population, which makes every planetary invasion into a bloodbath that costs billions of lives.
31*** Which begs the question how a transport ship can fit so many people to begin with.
32* ApocalypseHow: Most planetary invasions are pretty much Planetary Disruption (at least) by default; the Terror Star superweapons go all the way to ''Stellar Annihilation'', taking out entire star systems and reducing everything to asteroid fields.
33** To elaborate, planetary invasions can be done in a variety of ways, from conventional warfare to ''blowing up the core of the planet''. Generally, the invasion can be made easier with tactics that, on the downside, will permanently reduce the quality of the planet if the invasion succeeds, though there are options that are simply more expensive and provide moderate boni without impacting the planet.
34* ArbitraryHeadcountLimit: You can only play against 9 other major races and 8 minor races though more than 8 minor races can appear if the Fundamentalists, I-league, or Jagged Knife rebels from an evil, neutral, and/or good empire respectively.
35** Also, stars can only have a maximum of 5 planets orbiting around them, and planets can only have a maximum of 1 moon (or 0 moons if they're ringed planets) orbiting around them.
36** While there is no limit on ships, fleets have a limit on how many ships they contain (doesn't prevent you from stacking several fleets on top of each other though).
37*** There are, however, some variant modes that allow you increased or unlimited logistics points.
38* ArmorIsUseless: The sequel splits weapons and defenses into three categories. Each defense is only good against one type of weapon. This means that, while strong armor is essential against kinetic weapons, it provides very little protection (specifically, a square root of its normal rating) against energy and missile weapons. Those require their own counters.
39* ArtificialBrilliance: The AI is capable of Machiavellian planning and [[GambitPileup Gambit Pileups]] that even players often need a full recap of the game to understand.
40** This trope can still wind up being very subject, especially when the alleged Brilliance still seems accidental.
41** The focus leans away from tactics a bit, which helps the AI shine (see below).
42** Interestingly, all players can also increase their "diplomatic" rating. AIs with a better diplo rating with the human will demand better deals, and those with a lower diplo rating will give generous deals. This implies that first the AI goes through all its normal Machiavellian algorithms to determine what would be a fair deal for them, and then, after locking in what it's prepared to offer, adjusts that deal depending on their diplomatic standing compared to the civ they're trading with. This would fall apart a bit if the game was multiplayer.
43** If an AI fears your military or has been at war with you recently, they outright refuse to trade any weapon techs with you, suspecting you might plan to use these techs on them.
44** The AI will redesign its ships as appropriate to counter the most pressing threat, changing out weapons and defenses for ones specifically meant for that purpose. For example switching from beams to mass drivers if their enemy has strong shields or switching from armor to point defense if their enemy is using missiles.
45* ArtificialStupidity: All the more odd for the high standard all the brilliance sets, but computer players do some really stupid things sometimes. In general, while it's good at strategic decisions, its tactical abilities are... not so impressive.
46** The Dread Lords are pretty heavily subject to this, going out of their way to destroy any starbase the player builds, no matter where. They can also pretty easily be lured into chasing after a fast unarmed ship (though their innate speed makes it hard to build such at early tech levels).
47** The AI seems to consider starbases as important targets in a war, but completely neglects their combat statistics, which can be absurdly high given proper investment. As such, you can have a well fortified starbase and watch wave after wave of ships attack it without even denting it.
48** The AI in II is extremely good at exploiting abstract concepts and sabotaging the player through agents and diplomacy shenanigans, but suffers from several fundamental flaws that can completely cripple it over the course of a long game.
49*** They don't use special resource tiles well at all, often ignoring juicy 300% manufacturing bonuses in favor of building farms or entertainment buildings.
50*** They rely entirely on stock vessels, never retire pathetically obsolete designs (which still cost maintenance fees) and place a very low priority on researching the absolutely critical Logistics and Miniaturization technology branches.
51*** They will make you pay through the nose for even the simplest military technologies, but have no problem selling vital trade goods like Xinathium Hull Plating (20% to the HP of all your ships) for a comparative pittance.
52*** If you have a decent diplomacy rating, they will happily plunge themselves into years-long interstellar wars with their best trading partners for less money than it takes to rush-build a single mid-tier warship.
53*** While great at sabotaging strategic buildings like your Manufacturing Capital (double planetary production) or that Interstellar Refinery you built on top of a Precursor Mine (800% regular output), the A.I will occasionally become obsessed with sending agents at comparatively useless buildings like Recruitment Centers (20% population growth), wasting dozens of agents to deny you a grand total of a few BC each turn in economic revenue.
54*** The AI is paranoid about troop transports and will give you a hefty diplomatic penalty if they so much as spot a single one parsecs away from their territorial boundaries, but they will frequently ignore your use of Influence Starbases to blatantly subvert entire solar systems at once. By the time the effect grows big enough for them to declare war on you in desperation, you'll likely have claimed 4/5ths of their entire empire.
55*** They will never rush-build Super Projects or Trade Goods, making it trivial to amass a stockpile of all the one-off buildings in the game just by researching them first.
56* AscendedExtra: The Snathi began as just one of several minor races... and then they got one of ''III's'' first DLC all for themselves, turning them into a major (playable) race of their own.
57* AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence: The outcome of two victory conditions, either by researching an expensive and otherwise useless branch of the TechTree, or by holding on to one or several Ascension Crystals for a sufficiently long time.
58** The latter is specifically made more difficult by making the starbase built around the crystal non-upgradable, preventing you from turning it from a sitting duck into a fortress.
59* AsteroidMiners: Introduced in the sequel's first expansion.
60* AsteroidThicket: In the sequel: justified in the representation of asteroid fields on the galaxy map (what else would you use as a map symbol for an asteroid field?) - but not justified in the cutscene when you investigate your first anomaly.
61* AwesomeButImpractical:
62** Terror Stars.
63*** Yes, they can blow up entire solar systems and can end wars with one shot, but first you have to research them (which takes five different techs, each of which takes about a dozen turns if you set your entire economy to research), build them (which takes six Constructors and includes a 10 week waiting period between completion and actually being able to use it) and get them to the target (they move 1 parsec a turn and have no defensive weapons without using up even ''more'' valuable constructors). All in all, it's quicker and easier to just conquer people the traditional way.
64*** On the other hand, there are a lot of systems with no inhabitable planets, which would really be more useful if they were just asteroid fields for your space miners. When empires get rich and bored enough, and have constructors to burn, Terror Stars start looking like big mining charges.
65*** At full strength, Terror stars have significant defense while producing influence. Sending a pack of them allows you to gradually take over the galaxy. In the second expansion to the sequel, Terror Stars are their own type of starbase that can't be upgraded with weapons, defenses, or any other types of modules specifically to avoid this, requiring you to have a powerful fleet on hand to protect them.
66** Building lots of fully equipped starbases will give you massive bonuses to your economy, industry, influence, military, and ascendance crystal mining, but it will take you a looooong time (or a lot of planets constantly churning out constructors which presents its own problems) to fully equip so much as a single starbase much less multiple. That or money. Lots and lots of money.
67* TheBadGuyWins: In the sequel, by Dark Avatar the Drengin have conquered virtually the entirety of the Altarian and Arcean Empires and the Terran Alliance, with the Earth sealed behind an impenetrable barrier; and none of the other races being anything more than an nuisance to their now massive and ascendant empire. [[AlwaysABiggerFish Then the Dread Lords come in]] [[EnemyCivilWar and convince the entire Korath Clan to rebel against the rest of the empire and fight for them]].
68* BarbarianTribe: SpacePirates, who appear either through the destruction of civilizations who still have warships that they did not include in their surrender deal, or through a mega event wherein they appear out of nowhere with large fleets of inexplicably powerful warships. In both cases, they attack everyone not themselves endlessly, preying especially on freighters and starbases, until someone wipes them out.
69* BeamSpam: This what happens if you load up ships with lots of Beam Weapons. They start out with the mundane and ordinary laser weapons. But as you progress, you get bigger and better beam weapons to spam the enemy with. Eventually, it ends with the ships spamming with [[WaveMotionGun Doom Rays]]! Better yet, all beam weapons are designed with Beam Spam in mind!
70* BigBad: Who occupies this role tends to vary based on where the story is at the moment. At first it's the Drengin, due to their aggressive campaign of conquest; then it's the Dread Lords, who want to slaughter everybody; then it's the Drengin again; then the Korath show up and prove to be EvilerThanThou by continuing the Dread Lords' campaign of extermination; and the final BigBad ultimately turns out to be [[spoiler:DL Bradley/Draginol]].
71* BigGood: The few Arnor who show up often end up occupying this role, providing advice and hyper-advanced technology to help humanity and its allies fight their enemies.
72* BiotechIsBetter: In ''II'' the [[AbusivePrecursors Dread Lords]] have ships that look and act like they were alive. Not even the most technologically advanced ships that can be built by the playable races can match them, the only way to beat them is through [[WeHaveReserves attrition]].
73* BlackAndGreyMorality: The storyline of Dark Avatar. The Drengin want to enslave the galaxy, the Korath want to exterminate all non-Drengin life.
74* BoringButPractical: Miniaturization. It doesn't improve weapons, but it makes every ship part including weapons smaller (to keep the numbers easy, it makes the ship "bigger", effectively the same thing), so more can be crammed on the same design. ''Actual'' bigger hulls have more hit points and can hold even more, but require more research to perfect and then take a lot longer to make.
75** The fact that it's BoringButPractical is lampshaded by the 'news report' announcing that you've perfected a new level of miniaturization. While most other techs get breathless description and/or cheap jokes, the miniaturization ones have descriptions like, "You remember the last miniaturization breakthrough? Well, it's like that, but more so."
76** The same is true of defenses, life support systems, and sensors. Kanvium plating isn't anywhere near as cool as the next generation of railgun, but it's really useful if you want your ship to tear through the Drengin fleet rather than bounce off.
77** The Industrialist political party, which doesn't even merit its own description (it's referred to as "the opposite of the Technologists"), but will make your building one-fifth faster. ''All'' your building. With a solid investment in social production at the Stats screen, your infrastructure gets turbocharged.
78* BreakTheCutie: The Drengin do this to the Torians in the backstory. Twice, even. The Torians are less than pleased when they finally return as a galactic power.
79* CanonWelding: Later games reveal that [[spoiler:the Altarians are actually the "Humans" from ''VideoGame/ElementalWarOfMagic'']].
80* CardCarryingVillain: The evil races take so much ''joy'' in having piles of skulls, especially since, if you're on their side, they will send you messages warning you about how the good races want to stop both you and them torturing people. Very considerate for a bunch of slavers, cannibals, and/or genocide-mongers!
81* CentrifugalGravity: Many of the default Terran ships (in particular the colony ship) have rotating sections. The problems with spinning to provide gravity are addressed in the description for ArtificialGravity.
82* CharacterAlignment[[invoked]]: An actual game mechanic in the first and second games. There is a Karma Meter for every civilization (1 is pure evil, 99 is pure good, 50 is neutral), and picking different sides gives different benefits. Note, however, that each of the below is merely a default alignment. If the player is in control, there's nothing stopping them from making the Drengin into the nicest guys in the universe or the Altarians into bloodthirsty psychopaths.
83** The Terran Alliance is Good (75), with the humans valuing their personal benefit above all and acting in enlightened self-interest. They will make strong alliances and trade relations willingly, but only when they also gain from the protection of their allies or the profit garnered from trade.
84** The Yor Collective is Evil (25), with a hatred for all organic life. They are however less inherently evil than the other evil races in that they mostly seem content to keep to themselves rather than oppress and conquer everyone else.
85** The Drengin Empire is Evil (1), with the Drengins' economy so dependent on slavelings that they have, in their history, planned conquests tens of thousands of years in advance to get more.
86** The Altarian Republic is Good (99), being the zealous {{paladin}}s of the galaxy, organizing the forces of good to combat evil. They also have a strong spiritual tradition, and are more idealistic than even the other good-aligned civilizations.
87** The Drath Legion is Neutral (50). Though they are inherently pretty nice guys, they are also highly passive-aggressive, and will use the [[ManipulativeBastard manipulative skills]] they've honed over the history of their civilization to indirectly harm anyone who opposes them. Generally, this means getting everyone to attack the Altarians.
88** The Torian Confederation is Good (75). Also nice guys, but as a result of the strife they suffered through in their history, they have grown to become somewhat xenophobic.
89** The Arcean Empire is Neutral (50). They just don't care about anything not related to honor. They'll act for their personal benefit normally, like the Terrans, but will go out of their way to achieve honor and glory and/or avoid disrepute, regardless of the morality in doing so.
90** The Dominion of Korx is Evil (1). They are the ultimate CorruptCorporateExecutive, valuing immediate profit above all else, and are willing to sell anything and do anything if there's enough money attached to it, with no concern about the morality of their actions... and evil choices, i.e, outright selfishness, helps them achieve this objective.
91** The Iconian Refuge is Good (75), being the eldest and wisest of the younger races, once the pupils of the Arnor themselves, and now considering themselves the heirs to that long-gone civilization.
92** The Thalan Empire is [[BlueAndOrangeMorality Other]] (50). Seeing as they are a mysterious HiveMind from the future, it's no surprise that their morality is... different.
93** The Korath Clan is Evil (1), being AlwaysChaoticEvil Drengin who have gone even further beyond as a result of their DealWithTheDevil, resulting in violently xenophobic {{Omnicidal Maniac}}s.
94** The Krynn Consulate is Neutral (50). ''Another'' shade of {{Knight Templar}}s, but more subversive than the Altarians, with their specialization being espionage. Also, while the Altarians seek to uphold the philosophy of Good in general, the Krynn seek to spread their own religion, called The Way, and eventually unite the entire galaxy under it.
95** The third game replaces this with a new Ideology system: Benevolent, Pragmatic, and Malevolent. Civs of similar Ideology get Diplomacy bonuses, and Ideology "points" are awarded that can be used to unlock bonuses. Which bonuses are available depend on Ideology.
96* ChurchMilitant: The Krynn Consulate. Not terribly so, but they are willing to be, especially if a galactic war breaks out.
97* CivilWarcraft: What typically happens when the Fundamentalists, the I-League, or the Jagged Knife rebels against someone's rule and takes a noticeable chunk out of everyone's empires with them in the sequel. Technically the Drengin Empire vs Korath Clan conflict is this in Dark Avatar, but the Korath are somewhat altered in physical appearance (their features are more elongated and simian-like, and their flesh is far paler and they have glowing eyes) and have a somewhat altered tech tree (as of the ''Twilight'' expansion).
98* CommieLand: A rare benevolent version in the form of the [[{{TheRepublic}} Altarian Republic]] (later [[{{LaResistance}} Altarian Resistance]]) and the [[TheRemnant Iconian Refuge]]. For the latter, the idea of a profit seeking private sector economy is against their values of an equal and egalitarian society; while for the latter, they have been operating under a communist style collectivized economy for so long that the entire concept of capitalism and private property is alien to them. However, since they are major powers that have to interact with other galactic powers that work differently, their entire economic technology tree consist of them slowly reforming into a mixed economy in order to keep up with everyone else.
99* ComicallySmallBribe: You can absolutely offer another race the interesting opportunity of giving you all of their ships, planets and tech for 1 bc. The AI *will* treat this as the deliberate insult it is. On the other hand, while the AI is pretty damn good at managing its economy and using its money to the fullest, it hardly ever makes cash reserves (or blows them all the second a war starts anyway) which often leads AIs on the losing side of a war to sue the player for peace, please, they'll give you all they have! Here, take these 5 bc!
100* TheComputerIsACheatingBastard: Can happen if you tell it to, but to the credit of the developers they put in a heck of an effort to make the AI as human-like as possible. After the Intelligent or Tough levels it stops getting smarter and just starts cheating with the resources to increasing degrees (according to the manual.)
101** There was a review of GC that felt that the AI was cheating in multiple games, going from on-the-ropes to Powerful Army Of Doom within a few turns. The developers [[BerserkButton ripped into the reviewer]], digging into the reviewer's save-games and finding that the AI wasn't cheating, it just coincidentally discovered 2-3 major game-changing things each time. When the reviewer was asked to retract the accusation of cheating, the reviewer essentially said "The game doesn't cheat, it just has a nasty habit of making sure it looks like it."
102*** Another effect under this heading is when ''coincidentally'' there's a mega-event that massively boosts another empire's influence, the turn before they build a Restaurant of Eternity and culturally conquer the entire map.
103** On the "Normal" level, ''you'' are the cheating bastard, as the AI's economy runs at 80%.
104** The Dread Lords have access to ships more powerful than anything the player could hope to build, and their soldiers have such an insane advantage that ''10'' of them are a serious invasion force against planets defended by 8000-20000 soldiers. Do note that soldiers are measured in units of a million each so it's a little less silly than it would seem at first glance.
105** In GalCiv II and III, some AI ships (most notably traders) have no range limits whatsoever and will casually cross the entire galaxy, while yours are still markedly range-limited.
106* ConflictBall: Seems to happen occasionally. Everything will be... okay in the galaxy. Trade is good, the economy is good, relations are wary between longtime enemies... Then someone says something and suddenly everyone declares war on everyone else.
107** The Drath, with their ability to persuade other races to go to war, and the Altarians, who can get others to fight in their defense, tend to be the biggest causes of this sort of thing -- not least because they're bitter rivals. Other than that, there's the good old Bismarck special, where A attacks B because B attacked A's ally C, who attacked B's ally D because one of D's citizens killed C's leader. Its like [[UsefulNotes/WorldWarI Sarajevo]] [[RecycledINSPACE in space]].
108*** Thanks to the actually pretty intelligent AI, if one civilization attacks another, ''everyone'' will attempt to capitalize on the moment. You don't need entangling alliances when you can clearly see that, with your neighbor occupied with a massive war on the other side of their territory, they don't have sufficient resources to protect the side closest to ''you''. The AI will take advantage of this as often as possible, and it's ''extremely'' rare that war is only declared between two races.
109** See RandomEvent below, which suggests that the AI ''purposefully'' [[KillerGameMaster does whatever causes the most grief]], be it random assassination attempts, or population increases, or even spawning Dread Lords on the map.
110** "Good guys have gone to war with X. You're good, do you want to fight X too?" "... sure."
111** AI players almost always honor their alliances, which is largely responsible for this.
112* CorralledCosmos: Until humanity developed the hypderdrive, the space-faring races were largely confined to a handful of systems connected by jump gates.
113* CripplingOverspecialisation: Ships are generally built focusing on one kind of weapon and defense, due to the difficulty of researching multiple kinds of weaponry/defense systems without becoming a MasterOfNone. Setting up your ships to exploit this is workable, at least for a while.
114** Making up for this is the tendency for a mix of weapons to be more effective, but it's still only worth it later in the game; early on, it's good to focus, keeping in mind the weapons and defenses of the most threatening civs, which in turn brings about the importance of espionage.
115* {{Crossover}}: ''Gal Civ III'' has one with ''VideoGame/StarControl Origins'' via two sets of DLC, which add the Tywom, Mowlings, Mu'Kay, Free Trandals, Scryve, Measured, Phamysht, and Xraki as major civilizations to play.
116* DarkestHour: The storyline of ''Gal Civ II'''s expansion packs ''Dark Avatar'' and ''Twilight of the Arnor'' can be seen as the galaxy's darkest hour, not only has most of the galaxy been enslaved by the Drengin but the Korath are planning to annihilate all non-Drengin life at the behest of the Dread Lords who weren't truly defeated at the end of the core game's campaign. The only forces left in the galaxy that can fight the Dread Lords are the Drengin Empire whose forces are too preoccupied by the Korath clan's rebellion to fight the Dread Lords directly, and the remnants of the Terran fleet which remained a factor only because they stumbled across the last of the Arnor who provided them with his race's superior technology and warships. As of the third game, the Dread Lords have been eliminated as a major player (hopefully for real this time), but the Thalans still maintain that things are only going to get worse, and it's all the Terrans' fault somehow: "[[ArcWords A crusade is coming...]]"
117* DeadpanSnarker: The GNN's tongue is planted very firmly in its cheek when it's describing whatever technology you just researched. For example when you complete the space defense research it will say something to the effect of; "Space is a very hostile place, the vacuum can kill you if you're not protected, which is very rude. But even if you are protected by a hollowed out piece of metal you may bump into other people in hollowed out pieces of metal who may not like you."
118* DefenselessTransports: The default troop transport has no weapons or defenses, though the players can design new transports that are armed. And one of the possible United Planets referenda is a mandate that transports have defenses, after all they carry millions if not billions of people.
119* DeflectorShields: The Shield defense category, used to protect against EnergyWeapons.
120* DeityOfHumanOrigin: The backstory has a human go back in time and become involved in the creation of the universe and the Precursors. His influence also creates the Altarians.
121* DemotedToExtra: The Dominion of Korx were a playable faction in the second game (and the resident CorruptCorporateExecutive race). In the third game, the Korx are not playable or even a faction, but just the guys running the galactic bazaar where you can buy resources and mercenaries. True to form, they don't care whether you're Malevolent, Benevolent, or even Pragmatic, only that you have credits to spend.
122* DesignItYourselfEquipment: Leads to a LensmanArmsRace.
123* DevelopersForesight: While it is theoretically possible for both ships in a shootout to have so powerful defenses and so weak weapons that they mutually cannot hurt each other, if such a stalemate actually happens during gameplay and the battle drags out for a set number of turns, the game runs a tiebreaker calculation over which side has more health/firepower remaining and declares them the winner in order to avoid getting stuck in the battle viewer.
124** Similarly, if an unarmed but heavily armored transport gets attacked by enemies who cannot penetrate its defenses and said transport has no armed escort to shoot back, the game automatically kills the transport since it has no way to actually win the engagement without weapons.
125** If you set the enemy AI extremely low and then use simplistic cheese tactics that would have no chance of working against an opponent who hadn't been lobotomised (like surrounding their planets with troop transports right before you declare war on them), the enemy leader will actually call you up and tell you that they know damn well what you're doing ([[LeaningOnTheFourthWall "What do you think this is? A video game?"]]) and the only reason you're going to get away with it is because their "military generals" have had their AI set too low to stop you.
126* DoomyDoomsOfDoom / DeathRay: The Doom Ray, the most powerful beam weapon available.
127* DynamicDifficulty
128* EasterEgg: The second game has Terror Stars, which [[ApocalypseHow destroy stars]]. It is possible to get a game over by [[TooDumbToLive using Terror Stars on your own civilization]], which produces [[http://i.imgur.com/8mDrQ.png a unique game over message.]] Building one for the first time in a game also treats you to a brief FMV with the description advising you to "watch out for that exhaust pipe".
129* EasyLogistics:
130** One branch of the TechTree, Logistics, allows the player to field bigger fleets and more starbases. Mind you, the larger fleets only applies with regards to unitary task groups; you can field 200 or more battleships without ever learning about more advanced logistics. Likewise, starbases become more expensive to build once you start exceeding your logistics stat.
131** Downplayed example with trade; there are actual freighters that automatically ping-pong between the two planets involved, and they're generally defenseless in times of war. Their income also fluctates depending on where they are on the route.
132* EasyModeMockery: The game is very easy when the artificial intelligence is low, but when you do things like start building an invasion fleet next to their planet, AI factions ''will'' call you out on it. This was mainly because print game journalists often play games on easy settings to work through them more quickly, and Stardock was concerned that because the AI was nerfed on those difficulties, reviewers might unjustly pan their AI players.
133* EnemyCivilWar: The typical result of the Fundamentalist minor race (good), the I-league minor race (neutral), and/or the Jagged Knife minor race (evil) forming due to a random event and making their territory by taking a substantial fraction out of the planets of the players that will probably be bigger than any single major race's empire at the time of their rebellion, though they (the rebels) will be very spread out. The Drengin-Korath war is basically this from the viewpoint of the other races.
134* EvenEvilHasStandards: The Drengin are quite horrified when they discover that the faction that broke away from them, the Korath Clan, wants to [[OmnicidalManiac outright exterminate all other forms of life]] instead of simply enslaving them. Coming from a species that makes massive use of slaves (even for research, in the case of the "Slaveling Imagination Center") and considers chopping up and eating someone's spouse in front of them to be hilarious, this is saying something.
135* EvilIsEasy: Oh so easy. And profitable. But it does leave you in a bit of a lurch when the rest of the galaxy goes ape and declares war on each other, which seems to happen at least once per game. Being evil increases the likelihood that the goody-two-shoes alliances will declare war on ''you'' and you, being evil, won't have many friends -- the other evil races aren't exactly [[EvilIsOneBigHappyFamily your big happy family]], after all.
136* EvilPaysBetter:
137** Literally in the first and second game. The Evil option in random events gives you the best bonuses while the good option will give you penalties or nothing most of the time (Neutral, of course, is somewhere in the middle). Though in a few cases the evil option will have a small cost, typically the lives of some of your people, but population is incredibly easy to replace in the game. However, when it comes time to choose a definitive alignment for your civilization via the Xeno Ethics technology, Neutral is the clear winner in terms of advantages bestowed. Also, some civilizations like the Altarians and Drath in the ''Twilight of the Arnor'' expansion gain better technologies through Good than they would with other alignments, and don't have to take the Good choice in random events since their KarmaMeter is already set to that alignment.
138** Largely averted in the third games with the introduction of Ideologies instead of Ethics. When presented with an ethical choice, each one gives points toward that ideology as well as some reward that fits it, depending on the event. For instance, a Benevolent choice may increase your empire's approval, a Pragmatic choice might improve your Science instead, while the Malevolent route may lean toward a militaristic boost.
139* EvilVsEvil: [[OmnicidalManiac The Korath Clan]] vs [[TheEmpire The Drengin Empire]]. One wants to kill pretty much all non-Drengin or Dread Lord forms of sapient life, the other merely wants to keep all non-Drengin forms of sapient life as slaves, pets, zoo attractions, and the occasional snack. However, during this particular storyline, the Drengin Empire is portrayed in a more positive light and it's made clear that they're the ones that you should be rooting for.
140** Evil races are far more willing to attack others of the same alignment if they think the civ in question is getting too powerful - or too vulnerable.
141* {{Expy}}:
142** The standard Resource Mining Station sure looks like [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Terek Nor]], if the central hub was replaced with a huge geometric crystal.
143** The Terran Alliance's flagship, which is intended for scouting, surveying anomalies and generally going where no man has gone before, is a dead ringer for the [[Franchise/StarTrek Starship Enterprise.]] In particular, the medium-size hull used by said ship resembles the Enterprise's saucer and engineering section without the nacelles.
144** Similarly, one of the Terran ship style's huge-sized hulls has a bow shaped almost identically to a [[Franchise/BattlestarGalactica Battlestar]].
145** The Altarians started out looking as pretty much identical to humans, but in the third game have been given a visual redesign that makes them look a lot like the [[Franchise/MassEffect asari]] (except with hair). It's unclear whether they actually now have blue skin or if it's just the lighting making it look that way.
146** Similarly, the third game gave a redesign to the Krynn that now makes them resemble the [[Franchise/MassEffect Protheans]].
147* ExtremeOmnivore: The Drengin Empire, type one - they eat the races they conquer, in addition to enslaving them. Part of their motivation for conquering the universe ([[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence and the next]]) is finding out what every creature in it tastes like.
148* FlingALightIntoTheFuture: A race that finds itself on the ropes in a war can choose to surrender all of their assets to an ally or a race they are friendly with, with the hopes that said race will be able to avenge them.
149* FourX: Well, obviously...
150* ForTheEvulz: The Dark Yor and the Snathi's motivations in a nutshell, the Dark Yor emphasizing the evil, and the Snathi emphasizing the lulz, both are played for laughs. The Drengin are also this to a lesser extent, but it's done in a somewhat more serious manner. The Korath Clan can be argued as being this since they almost immediately joined the Dread Lords crusade of omnicide in return for a fairly crappy incentive of near equality in their new world order that [[GenreBlindness any thinking being would have known right away]] [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness would turn out to be a promise that the]] [[BigBad Dread Lords]] [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness have no intention of keeping]].
151* GalacticConqueror: The outcome of achieving the military victory setting. Also what the Drengin Empire wants to become.
152* GameBreakingBug: If it's not the last game you install, [=GC2=] goes and sulks in a corner of your hard drive, refusing to work at all. It loads, then immediately crashes to desktop.
153* GameMod: Lots of them, especially because they are so easy to make.
154* GlassCannon: Ships built with the all-weapons-no-defenses philosophy. These are the mainstay choice for late-game highest-tech ships, since even the best defenses cannot protect your ships effectively against fleets of extremely heavily armed dreadnoughts focusing fire on them. In the second game, they work extremely well when used by Super Warrior races who can take out some or all of the opposition before the enemy gets a chance to attack. Conversely, such ships tend to struggle when used against Super Warrior opponents.
155** Dread Lord ships may have massive attack and respectable defense (in the same category) but have fairly little health.
156* GodIsEvil: Draginol, the mad creator of the Dread Lords. [[spoiler:[[HumansAreBastards He's also a human.]]]]
157* GuiltBasedGaming: [[SchmuckBait "Surely one more turn won't hurt?"]]
158** [[SequelEscalation Kicked up a notch in the sequel]], which requests you take ''several'' more turns.
159** And in 3: "Are you sure you want to quit? [[JustOneMoreLevel You're so close...]]"
160* GunboatDiplomacy: The other races don't ''like'' you having a big army -- but if you've got a bigger army than them you can expect them to be very polite to you.
161** Strangely, only existing military forces will cause this attitude. Having the technology to design superior ships to those of your opponents, the industry to produce large numbers of these ships, and the economy to fund this war fleet doesn't get factored -- if you have no standing forces, you're still considered to be 'weak' in their eyes. There's even a special planetary construction you can create which ties into this, massively inflating the perceived combat value of any ships orbiting that particular world; it's possible to significantly boost your civilization's perceived military strength and make yourself out to be a threat in this way with a "paper army."
162** Mind you, having a big military presence will only ''maintain'' the status quo. If anything (and we're talking ''anything'', from the discovery of a powerful artifact to a weird wave of energy that increases everyone's fertility) changes the status quo, there's a chance that those you've cowed into submission will re-evaluate their position and decide to come out with guns blazing.
163** Some races will actually only respect you if you have at least some military forces, but not too much compared to their own.
164* HardCodedHostility: [[SpacePirates Pirates]] are heavily armed ships that attack ships, particularly freighters, of all civilizations. Sometimes they randomly appear, sometimes a fleet of them shows up after a breakout from a galactic prison, and when an evil or neutral civilization is defeated many of their remaining ships become pirates.
165** [=GalCiv2=] also introduces the Dread Lords, AbusivePrecursors who get let out of their [[SealedEvilInACan can]] in the campaign or a random event in sandbox games, and then proceed to attempt to wipe out all other life in the galaxy. And unlike pirates they invade planets as well.
166* HostileTerraforming: The Korath Clan in ''2'' prefer to eliminate a planet's entire biosphere. They can then colonize the resulted toxic world.
167* HumanAliens: Altarians. They don't get it either.
168** It is mentioned in the descriptions of some of the technologies unique to the Altarians that they are not the same ''species'' as the humans, but that they *are* more genetically similar to humans than they are to any of the other species on Altaria. To the highly religious Altarians, this is no accident and it's obvious that their gods have reunited them with their long lost brothers. To the Humans, who are much less religious, this is one of the greatest mysteries of the universe (and a little bit creepy). Most of the other races who care either way agree with the humans.
169** Also, the Dread Lords, in their brief appearance in the intro of the original game.
170* HumansAreBastards: In the backstory, the Drengin convinced a race called the Xendar to go to war with the Terran Alliance. Humans exterminated every last one of the Xendar...[[SubvertedTrope according to the official histories, just as the Drengin intended]]. In reality, humans merely fought the Xendar to their homeworld; the Drengin, fearful that humans would find out about their involvement and turn their attention to them, nuked the whole Xendar homeworld as a preemptive measure.
171* HumansAreDiplomats: This is how most races see humans. In the second game, their Super Ability ''is'' Super Diplomat. However...
172* HumansAreLeaders: The Terran Alliance is in charge of [[TheAlliance the coalition]] against the Dread Lords in ''Gal Civ II'' and the union they forge with the Iconians and the Krynn (also against the Dread Lords) towards the end of the expansion pack ''Twilight of the Arnor''.
173* HumansAreWarriors: While humanity's hat appears to be diplomacy, they have been killing each other for over nine thousand years, and they have gotten very good at this. The Drengin are the only aliens who realize this, and it ''terrifies'' them.
174* HumanoidAliens: The majority of the races, both minor and major in the game are this.
175* IdiosyncraticDifficultyLevels: Overall; Cakewalk, Easy, Simple, Beginner, Normal, Challenging, Tough, Painful, Crippling, Masochistic, Obscene or Suicidal, which is a function of the intelligence of the AI races, each of which can be set to Fool, Dunce, Beginner, Sub-Normal, Normal, Bright, Intelligent, Gifted, Genius, Incredible, Godlike or Ultimate.
176** Tough and Intelligent are actually the only fair difficulty levels, this is the difficulty where the AI makes full use of its programing and has no bonuses or penalties to their economy. At lower difficulties, the AI is less intelligent and it has penalties to its economy, while at any setting higher than intelligent it gains bonuses to its economy. You can, however, customize the AI to have a "fair" game with a dumber AI.
177* ImportedAlienPhlebotinum:
178** Found a Precursor artifact? Research bonus! Or a free ship! Precursor ruins on your newly-colonized planet? Extra productivity!
179** You can also ''literally'' import alien phlebotinum, by buying technology or ships from other races via the diplomacy screen. Or export your own phlebotinum for fast cash.
180** In rare scenarios if the Dread Lords are present, and you are not at war with them and are able to contact them, trading stuff for their massively advanced phlebotinum can give you a terrific boost in tech levels.
181** The third game introduces exotic alien resources such as Durantium or Ilyrium, used for things like Weapon or Starbase construction, or special planetary improvements. You can find and harvest them from space or colonized planets yourself, but depending on where you started and how quickly you expand, you may have to ''literally'' import it from other races to keep up your supply.
182* InfoDump: The recaps in the campaign mode.
183** High level espionage info, which details pretty much everything the target faction has.
184* InsufficientlyAdvancedAlien: Even after some 10,000 years as interstellar empire, no species has figured how to make the gates into hyperdrives. Then the humans do it, thanks to one unique energy technology: Fusion. The elemental force behind every star, the most hard to overlook reaction in the universe. Yet not one species figured out to copy it in millennia.
185* ISurrenderSuckers: Can be done by negotiating peace with an opponent, then attacking again a short time later. Said opponent will never again consider peace talks with you.
186** A bug in the AI (at least on lower levels) applies this behavior to races you had research or economic treaties with as well. If you go to war with them for whatever reason, they will refuse to negotiate peace with you and all the other races won't trust you as a result, with text directly relating to "making peace only to reload and try again."
187* KarmaMeter: In the first and second games, you have a karma meter that slides between 1 (Evil) and 99 (Good)), with 50 being Neutral. It is affected through your decisions during random events which occur when you colonize some planets or throughout the course of the game. In ''Galactic Civilizations II'', you can make a permanent choice of alignment after [[YouHaveResearchedBreathing researching Xeno Ethics]], though you'll have to pay for it if your KarmaMeter doesn't agree with your choice. After that, you can avail various bonuses granted by your alignment, and further random events will be auto-resolved on the basis of your permanent alignment.
188* KilledOffForReal: Subverted with the Drath. The events of the second game appeared to have killed them off, and consequently they are absent from the third game... until the ''Retribution'' expansion brought them back with the explanation they'd used their shapeshifting abilities to hide and prepare for their re-emergence as a civilization.
189* KillerRabbit: Possibly the only race to match the Korath in absolute baby-eating evil are the Snathi, a minor race who have an uncanny resemblance to an Earth species known as 'squirrel'.
190* LaResistance: In the sequel this is present in the form of The Jagged Knife (Evil rebels) for Good Empires, the I-League (Neutral rebels) for Neutral Empires, and the Fundamentalists (Good rebels) for Evil Empires. Unlike most minor races they will have more than a single planet due to taking a sizeable chunk of the empire they rebel from, and in the cases of especially large empires, the rebels can hold more territory than some of the major players. They invariably become a major problem for the empire they rebelled from and provide the game's version of Civil War. Also, how the Torian Confederacy got its start. The scattered remains of the Terran Alliance and the Altarians become this in Dark Avatar due to the Drengin Empire conquering the majority of both factions and the Solar System being sealed away from the rest of the universe. The Altarians' faction name even changes from the Altarian Republic to the Altarian Resistance.
191* LaughablyEvil: The Evil choices for random events have your character being both a DeadpanSnarker and GenreBlind CardCarryingVillain ''at the same time''. The result is sometimes worth checking on the prompt for the mental image it conveys.
192* LawyerFriendlyCameo: The Terran survey ship strongly resembles [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries another famous ship]]... The description [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] this: "To boldly go where no man has gone before... into anomalies!"
193** Mind, that description appears on every flagship, Terran, Yor, or Drengin.
194* LensmanArmsRace: Creating custom ships to counter threats can soon turn into this.
195** To help you get an idea, realize that the end of the weapons tech tree has a black hole generator as a hardpoint, and that the computer just loves to stack the strongest weapons on by the ton to the point of having a DOZEN of those things equipped...
196*** Of course, it then can only afford one or two of said ships because of the maintenance costs for the hundreds of long obsolete warships it never seems to retire. A side that builds just one of those ships will often sweep the entire armadas of factions that the stats say are vastly more powerful.
197* LivingShip: The Dread Lords use these. The Iconians can research technologies to do it, but their ships still look mechanical in-game.
198* LostTechnology: Precursor artifacts. The whole campaign mode story is set off because the Drengin and the Terrans just ''had'' to go poking some Arnor technology.
199* LuckStat: Luck is one of the abilities you can buy in the second game. It increases the probability of getting an helpful random event, as well as the minimum damage done in a ship fight.
200* MacrossMissileMassacre: The effect of loading your warships with missile weapons. The missiles in this game are equipped with mini-hyperdrives, and while they start out as conventional explosives (and not nukes), the warhead technology advances through various incrasingly powerful {{Antimatter}} and Phlebotinum torpedoes to culminate, finally, in the ''Black Hole Eruptor'' missile.
201* MassiveRaceSelection: About 14, when you count the various expansions. And that's ''before'' you start making your own.
202* MechanicalLifeforms: The Yor and the Dark Yor.
203* MightyGlacier: The Arceans, with their Super Warrior ability combined with tough ships and larger fleets from their racial bonuses (in hitpoints and fleet logistics, respectively), are very good at space combat. However, in ''Twilight of the Arnor'', they also recieve a racial speed penalty and ''completely lack'' advanced engine technologies (replacing them with weaker planet-based 'Navigation Centers'), and, while not having engines frees up even more shipboard space for weaponry, they end up getting slower in relation to the other races over time. Hence, they play this trope straight.
204** Can also apply to any customly-designed ship. This is especially useful for ships designed to defend planets from spore ships and invasions.
205* TheMilkyWayIsTheOnlyWay
206* MoreDakka: Stacking Mass Driver weapons by the dozen onto ships will turn them into machine guns!
207* NonEntityGeneral: Or national leader, in this case. The game will use the name you have typed in for your character in the conversations, and you can even choose an image for your leader, but otherwise you're pretty much just "Emperor."
208* NoPointsForNeutrality: Averted. There are Good, Neutral and Evil alignments, each with their own bonuses. Neutrals don't get diplomacy penalties with anyone like the good and evil races do against each other. They also get massive trade bonuses, the best scientific building in the game and instantaneously maxed out planet quality, making Neutral the best choice for non-militaristic races (except for those that get better techs for sticking with their usual choice, and even then it may be a toss-up).
209* NoSell: The Galactic Privateer structure makes your freighters invulnerable when they're shuttling between your homeworld and their destination. Literally, invulnerable. Enormous pirate battlecruisers and Drengin swarm-fleets come out of nowhere, scream down towards the tiny freighter that doesn't even have weapons, and come to a dead halt. You can almost imagine the pirate captain turning to his subordinates and demanding to know why their guns aren't working.
210** United Planet Laws may also protect freighters, but only for a limited time.
211** Research the right defenses and cram enough of them on a ship and watch every shot the enemy fires result in 0 damage, at least until the AI switches up their weapons, which they will.
212*** The second game's combat system was overhauled in ''Dark Avatar'' to lessen this. Even if a ship has enough defenses to completely shrug off an incoming shot, its defensive value is still decreased by the amount of damage the ship would've took otherwise. The reduction lasts until the end of the combat turn and stacks with successive hits, so multiple attacks will eventually overwhelm the defenses and get through.
213* OmnicidalManiac: The Dread Lords and the Korath Clan, oh so very much. The Dark Yor and the Snathi too, but they're played for laughs and have no serious chance at succeeding.
214* OneNationUnderCopyright: The [[PrivatelyOwnedSociety Korx]] would sell you their own mothers, but they've already sold them to someone else.
215** There are many resources that can be built for bonuses, but once one civ builds it, they have a monopoly, and can trade it to as many other civs as they want if they so choose; otherwise there is no way for the other civs to get it.
216* OneWorldOrder: Subverted; if your population shoots up suddenly, the "news" will note this has to be from various non-affiliated members of your race applying for citizenship. Because a planet's population doubling in two weeks would be silly, see?
217** The game also notes that only the tax-paying population is accounted for.
218*** This means that, as you raise your tax rate, you will find that, at some point, you will get ''less'' revenue than before, as many citizens simply can't afford to pay taxes at the rate you set. Your overall population count will also be lower for the above-mentioned reason.
219* OurGnomesAreWeirder: One of the minor races in the game are described as being about one meter tall, very spunky and enthuasiastic, and quite skilled with technology. In other words they're quite blatantly gnomes in space in terms of personality. However, this minor race is one of the strongest in the game with a ton of racial bonuses and will build a pretty substantial fleet. Like most minor races however, they'll be swept away by the mid game in most cases because minor races never expand.
220* PacifistRun: Completely doable, although you still need to build a decent fleet or absolutely everyone will see you as a pushover and attack.
221** At least one victory condition works in the favor of someone attempting a pacifist run. You can win just by getting into an alliance with every major race in the game. If you have some races that are allied with you and people they don't like open fire on you, you can just call in your allies and let '''''them''''' get their hands dirty for you.
222*** The first After-Action Report linked at the top of this article actually ended with a technological victory, which does not require any offensive action. The guy was literally turtling from the moment he realized he had no chance in hell of winning any important offensive battles. Incidentally, one AI race actually denied the other two AI races a Diplomatic Victory (Ally with all major races, have no wars active) by singlehandedly calling a full cease-fire on all wars... then starting another war up with the player.
223** There's also the Influence Victory option which can be pacifistic, where instead of bombing the shit out of your neighbors with superior firepower, you "win hearts and minds" with your pop culture and/or propaganda.
224*** If you have researched a lot of influence tech, you can culturally conquer enemy planets pretty easily by building an influence starbase in the enemy system and quickly upgrading its influence modules. Then wait a few dozen turns for the planetary population to rebel. The only way to counter this is with your own influence starbase or a super project that makes a planet immune to such things.
225** With ''Twilight of the Arnor'', there's another pacifist victory condition: Ascension Victory, which requires you to build a starbase to exploit a special resource known as an Ascension Crystal. It's effectively time-based (although having more than one under your control does speed up the process). That being said, it also paints a big target on your faction, since if all of said starbases are destroyed, the counter resets.
226%%* PhotoprotoneutronTorpedo: The sequel is rife with these.
227* PlanetaryCoreManipulation: A Planetary Siege attack in ''Galactic Civilizations II'' involves "Detonating the planet's core," causing every volcano to erupt at once. Effective, but absolutely buggers Planet Quality.
228%%* PlanetTerra: Home of the Terran Alliance.
229* PointlessDoomsdayDevice: Since Terror Stars are so utterly AwesomeButImpractical, the only point in building one is so you can have a weapon that eats suns and craps {{Asteroid Thicket}}s. They're more effective for ''mining'' than they are fighting wars with, although, as per the trope, great for pulling a TakingYouWithMe when your home fleet gets Curb-Stomped and the assault ships come a-knocking.
230* PoweredByAForsakenChild: One of the random colonization events has your explorers discover a Precursor factory, which can greatly increase production - at the cost of slowly killing its operators.
231* {{Precursors}}: The Arnor and the Dread Lords. And they were proceeded [[spoiler:and created]] by beings known as [[SufficientlyAdvancedAliens the Mithrilar]]. The term "Precursor" mainly applies to Arnor-made pieces of technology.
232* PretextForWar: One of the random events.
233* PrivatelyOwnedSociety: [[CorruptCorporateExecutive The Korx]], and later, [[HonestCorporateExecutive the Iridium]].
234* ProudMerchantRace:See PrivatelyOwnedSociety above.
235* ProudWarriorRaceGuy: The Arcean Empire. They're neutral in their alignment, but due to this they typically side with the good factions. Since they are on average twelve feet tall and very physically powerful, this isn't really a surprise.
236* ProxyWar: It's possible to manipulate other civilizations into making war on your behalf. In canon the Drath Legion (experts at this in game) paid the Korx to attack the Altarians in revenge for supposedly driving them off their homeworld millennia ago.
237* RandomEvent: Lots, from ethical dilemmas that pop up when you colonize some worlds, to "mega" events that can save or wreck your entire empire.
238** It's [[WordOfGod apparently]] not entirely random -- the AI picks whichever option is going to make the galaxy descend into batshit insanity. Like giving everyone an extra thousand or so bc per week just when it looks like the galaxy is about to go nuts and declare war on everyone.
239*** If the galaxy is largely at peace, an assassination event can trigger an unavoidable war between two factions. Then the other [=AI=] will jump on the opportunity presented.
240*** On the other end of the spectrum, it will sometimes institute a 5-parsec/turn speed limit in the middle of a war on the biggest maps, instantly making military conquest infeasible.
241* RapidFTLProliferation: For tens of thousands of years the only FTL available were the Stargates, which only allowed travel between two gates. But after the Arceans gave humanity gate technology they combined it with their existing fusion tech to create hyperdrives that could fit on individual ships, and gave the technology to every other species they encountered as a measure of good will (those idiots).
242* ReinforceField: According to the tech descriptions, these are ''mandatory'' in order to hold the largest ship classes together and ensure they don't tear themselves apart when maneuvering.
243* ReinventingTheWheel:
244** The tech tree gets reset every time you complete a mission in the campaign; it's possible (if you don't get bored first) to research everything up to and including Doom Rays in the first mission, but you'll still only have Lasers I in the second. Thankfully, though, each mission starts out with a more-advanced set of technologies already researched.
245** In-story, this actually happens with the Thalans; they're a race brought in from the future, and they have no shortage of incredibly advanced tech knowledge at their disposal. However, the infrastructure to ''support'' that tech doesn't exist in this time period, so they have to start with basic Hyperdrive tech like everybody else until they can reinvent the stuff needed to bring themselves back up to speed.
246** Likewise in the third game, the Terran Resistance have come in from god knows where with a capital ship that puts the Dread Lords to shame, which they then use to tear through the Drengins on their way to Earth. However, aside from that, most of the tech they acquired "simply doesn't work" here, in their own words, and they need to go back to basics.
247* RecycledINSPACE: As described above.
248* RenegadeSplinterFaction: The [[AbsoluteXenophobe Korath Clan]], which rebels from the Drengin Empire.
249* ReptilesAreAbhorrent:
250** Played straight in the original.
251** Subverted in the sequel: the Drath Legion are actually pretty nice guys [[note]]rating a 75 out 99 on the KarmaMeter (99 being pure good and 0 being pure evil)[[/note]]. However, they are [[TheChessmaster Chessmasters]] who will manipulate other factions into starting wars with one another. Also, if you're expecting long snouted theropod/lizard/crocodile people you're going to be disappointed; the Drath have long but fairly thick necks that end in a pretty flat face and resemble sauropods such as Camarosaurus far more than they do theropods like Tyrannosaurus.
252* RidiculouslyFastPopulationGrowth: Hangs a planet-sized Lampshade on this in many of the progress reports and flavor text for planetary improvements. "Of course most of this population growth is actually more people reporting taxes and voting, since X billion people couldn't actually have been born in that time."
253* RockBeatsLaser:
254** Completely averted, weapons technology is much more important than in many turn based strategy games like the Civilization series. No matter how many you have, Basic Laser will never top Black Hole Gun.
255** Played straight in a non-gameplay sense with mass drivers, which is as simple as shooting small metal balls really really fast. Only good old fashioned armor (made of futuristic alloys) can properly defend against it.
256* RougeAnglesOfSatin: The second game is marred by somewhat erratic proof reading, leading to stuff like the Terrans sending the message "I hope you're hear for trade".
257* RubberBandAI:
258** Regardless how advanced your fleet is, a sprawling pirate fleet can blast it to bits unless you create a max size fleet specifically made to counter pirates' technology. It gets ridiculous.
259** The Mega events in the Dark Avatar expansion can often make this go both ways, especially with the super-virus and rogue Precursor ships event.
260** The Pirate and Peacekeeper mega-event fleets are made powerful enough to defeat the galactic average tech level and tech types at the time when they spawn. If your fleets are far enough above the average or use a different weapon/defense type than that of the majority, you can still fight and defeat them sometimes. Though if you're still losing ships, it's generally a better policy to retire your fleet, let the invaders beat the tar out of everyone else, and then send fast troop transports on a blockade run to take those now-defenseless enemy planets.
261* ScaryDogmaticAliens: Subverted and played straight. Subverted in the case of the Altarians, who are highly religious, but their religion is extremely benign, resulting in a peace loving society with short work hours and a (formerly) four day school week. Played straight in the case of the Krynn Consulate who are much, much more zealous about spreading their beliefs which they call "The Way", though they still lean towards neutrality, so they probably try peaceful conversion before resorting to more...medieval methods.
262** Though the Krynn are a bit of a toss-up, oddly. There is no indication that they canonically use torture or slavery (though they certainly can, with an evil-aligned player), and while they are ''willing'' to convert by the sword in some cases, they believe that if they can convert the galaxy to the Way, it will both trigger the ascension of the Krynn and result in the resurrection of all members of the Krynnic faith who have died, ever...so kind of a case of UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans. Also, there's the fact that theirs is the only world in the backstory with multiple native intelligent species where they all learned to live together, rather than killing each other off.
263* SciFiWritersHaveNoSenseOfScale:
264** Creating a Galactic Empire that spans a dozen of planets inhabited by hundreds of billions of people takes about 3-5 years.
265** ''Painfully'' averted on the larger maps, especially if there's been a speed limit law enforced. As one review put it, the "Immense" map size seemingly approaches the actual size of a galaxy.
266** The highly improbable population explosions you can end up having at least get a nod -- the quarterly report will mention it's impossible for seven billion people to be born in one year... then point out the population is measure by ''taxpayers'', so what you're seeing is colonized worlds having their better-established government doing better censuses.
267*** Though it appears to trigger when a certain population growth for the quarter is exceeded, so sometimes it will call BS on a rather low percentile population growth (205 billion to 210 billion? people cant possibly be born at that rate!)
268* SettlingTheFrontier: As with most FourX games, it's wise to create new settlements early and often.
269* ShoutOut:
270** The ship descriptions and announcements of new technologies are full of various pop-culture references.
271** There is one random event involves [[Franchise/{{Pokemon}} alien creatures held in capture sphere and made to fight each other]]. The evil option includes a comment that you've "[[GottaCatchEmAll already got 98 of 126 of them]]"
272** Some planet names, too. One campaign mission features the worlds of [[Literature/TheRiftwarCycle Midkemia and Kelewan]] (which might have something to do with the developers being called [[WizardingSchool Stardock]]).
273** Also, there exist planets by the name of [[Franchise/StarWars Hoth and Alderan]].
274** One mission in the Dread Lords campaign had three planets called [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI Locke, Sabin, and Celes.]]
275** When you research technological victory, all your clocks show [[JustForFun/FortyTwo 42]].
276** The Drengins' split into two different factions over the merits of enslaving versus exterminating their opponents parallels the Ur-Quan Doctrinal War in ''VideoGame/StarControlII''. The fact that the rebel faction is called the Korath is probably a nod to this.
277** The Terran Alliance, in name, emblem and design philosophy, bears a notable resemblance to the [[Series/BabylonFive Earth Alliance.]]
278** Building on the previous point, this is spelled out completely by the Destroyer template for the Terran Alliance. It's an Omega Destroyer from [[Series/BabylonFive Babylon 5]]
279** Both the Terror Star cutscene and the Missile Defence tech newscast reference [[Film/ANewHope taking a torpedo up the exhaust port.]]
280** The name Korath may also be a reference to a minor character from the [[Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration Next Generation]] era of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' named, well, [[http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Korath Korath]]. He even has his own Noble House named after himself, which is pretty much the Klingon equivalent of a Clan.
281** In 3, the Altarians will get mad at you if you try to conquer them Culturally. When they contact you about it, they will dismiss your efforts because their world, in the past, had survived Sorcerer Kings and Fallen Enchantresses. Those are the names of two of Stardock's other franchises.
282** Additionally in 3, the Conquest Victory ending cutscene has a very brief shot of a billboard advertising Offworld Trading Company, another Stardock title.
283* SiliconBasedLife: The Slyne are a race of sentient [[BlobMonster goo people]] who use technology to keep a ''roughly'' humanoid shape. The [[HonestCorporateExecutive Iridium]] are a slightly more typical example of rock-based life.
284* SonsOfSlaves: The Torian Confederation in ''Galactic Civilizations 2'' is descended from slaves of the Drengin Empire. This history makes them very erratic and xenophobic, especially as the Drengin Empire has the tools to invade and re-enslave them.
285* SpaceCompression: See UnitsNotToScale, below.
286* SpacePirate: One of the {{Random Event}}s will spawn huge amounts of pirate fleets across the map, attacking everything that isn't a planet or asteroid base. As an added bonus, their capital ships actually look like Age of Sail frigates and galleons.
287* SpitefulAI:
288** If you're about to conquer a race, you'll most likely get a message from them saying that they decided to surrender to another opponent. The message makes it clear that they did this purely out of spite.
289** Hilariously [[PlayingWithATrope played with]] in the first of the PC Gamer playthroughs. The AI's do seem to work together against the human player, but only because the human thoroughly insulted all of them. And even this turns out to be a ruse; the [=AIs=] are clearly planning and taking steps to undermine each other after the human is defeated (They apparently don't realize defeating him will end the game). Further, the human player actually has an AI empire surrender to him... because they were being beaten by another AI empire and surrendered to the human's non-allied faction out of spite.
290* StarKilling: Terror Stars.
291* StarfishAliens: The Torians have large heads reminiscent of amphibians, and they have no irises on their eyes. The Iconians have heads that resemble cuttlefish or squids. The most alien race, the Thalans, look like insects - large segmented limbs, but they lack any visible mouth parts, and have six nostrils.
292* SuperweaponSurprise: The player can do this. The computer often declares war based on standing forces, ignoring things like "huge technology advantage", "giant cash stockpiles allowing them to buy a fleet outright" or "allied with several races more powerful than me". All of this info is available to a human player through the Diplomacy system, so if you fall into it yourself you have no-one else to blame.\
293\
294This very thing happened in the back-story, when an alien race attacked human systems. Humans went from having no defense fleet to totally wiping out the attacking race and back to peaceful in less than a year. This totally freaked the Drengin out (they were watching to gauge how powerful humans were), and they decided that humanity was the most dangerous species they had ever seen up to that point.
295* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: [[HonestCorporateExecutive The Iridium Corporation]] in 3, replacing the [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Korx]] from 2.
296** Ends up being an aversion, however, because even though they are both merchant races, their similarities end there. The Korx were analogous to being a Space Mafia who were willing to sell anything, even their mothers, while the Iridium Corporation just really, really likes free-market capitalism, to the point that their whole society IS a corporation. While the Korx were almost pure evil, the Iridium are neither good nor evil, and while generosity might be somewhat unusual in Iridium society, it is understandable enough that it didn't stop them from electing their current leader, who is known for his great generosity. [[note]]This may be reflective of the fact that playing the Korx as their AlwaysChaoticEvil selves actually did not play to their strengths in the slightest. The commonly accepted strategy among the fans being to play them as a Neutral, leaning Good, ProudMerchantRace, which is precisely what the Iridium Corporation became.[[/note]]
297* TechnologyUplift: The Arceans gave humanity the blueprints to a Warp Gate, which suspiciously had no "off" switch, but instead humans combined it with their fusion technology (which the Arceans may have wanted to take by invading) to develop a ship-portable hyperdrive. They then gave hyperdrive and fusion to every sapient species they could contact, and then the game begins.
298* TechTree: A whole orchard of 'em, as of Twilight of the Arnor.
299* TheAssimilator: In III the Snathi become this if you have the proper DLC to make them a major race. One of their racial abilities is a percentile chance to "salvage" any enemy vessel destroyed in combat with them. The percentile is fairly high, so you don't want to send one of your fleets up against theirs unless you are sure your fleet will win. Otherwise you may soon end up fighting large numbers of your own ships and designs.
300* TheSingularity: The technological victory is a hard singularity in which your entire civilization achieves godhood.
301* ThrowTheDogABone: Part of the backstory of the Humans involves the near-extinction of the Xendar, as part of a war that the Drengin manipulated them into. The Drengin destroyed their homeworld to keep any word of their involvement getting out and they've been wandering the galaxy in the years since. However, in the third game, a United Planets resolution gives you the option of discovering a new homeworld for the Xendar to resettle; if you're Humans and you proposed this resolution ''yourself,'' well...
302* TimeDissonance: The reason behind the Arnor civil war in the game's backstory. The Arnor were biologically immortal, and one group of them didn't particularly notice or care about the passage of time (mention is made of one of them entertaining himself by ''watching a glacier form''), while the other was more aware of time. The latter group became aware that they would eventually die in the heat death of the universe, and this is part of the reason they became known as the Dread Lords.
303* TruceTrickery: You can re-declare war on a civilization you've just negotiated peace with. Expect any future peace treaties to be OffTheTable, as civs will accuse you of "making peace only to reload and try again".
304* TutorialFailure: The tutorial missions in the game are notoriously spotty. By ''III'', it reached the point where the tutorial itself gets bunch of fan-made guides to learn the ropes. And ''IV'' outright lacks any tutorial whatsoever, while the game introduces various changes to its predecessors.
305* TwoDSpace: Kind of necessary, because moving ships and managing things in 3D would be a pain in the neck. Also, see Units Not To Scale below...
306* UnitsNotToScale: Technically, they are, but only because the board is [[AllThereInTheManual mentioned as representing the time to travel between two objects]], [[SpaceCompression not necessarily the distance between them]]. Still the distances between planets of different star systems can be laughably short compared to other distances.
307* UniversalTranslator: Must be researched (though you will get a chuckle if you meet another race without having researched it).
308* UnknownPhenomenon: InexplicableTreasureChests [[AC: IN SPACE!]]
309* WeWillSpendCreditsInTheFuture: The primary game resource is credits, in denominations of billions (BC).
310* WorkerUnit: Colony ships, freighters, constructors, space miners, and surveyors, in the sequel. Mind you that you can still put guns on them and make them blow up something, though it's generally pointless in case of colonizers and constructors, which get consumed upon usage. However, upgrading freighters to carry armament and defenses is a good way to prevent their destruction in case you don't have dedicated warfleets nearby to protect them. You can also pack them with sensors and hence make automated drones that will show you what is happening around the map as they do their trade runs.
311* VillainProtagonist: The eponymous Dark Avatar of the Drengin Empire, in the sequel's first expansion.
312* VoluntaryShapeshifting: The Drath can do this, and this is likely how they manipulate everything. Their fate at the start of 3 is up in the air, because they are no longer playable, but while they are believed to be extinct thanks to the Drengin, the devs have hinted that a large number of them escaped death at the end of Twilight of the Arnor, and are now hidden among the other races, [[ExpansionPack biding their time]].
313* ZergRush: The AI is fond of swarm tactics, usually based around the idea that powerful gun + cheap, disposable body = a GlassCannon that can be produced en masse. It can be devastating as hordes of little blighters charge around mugging your transports and doing a little light piracy on the side if they find a freighter, but if you can hold off the outbreak of hostilities for a while you can rush your way to Huge ships that will cut through fleets of fighter craft and frigates like a Korath sacrificial dagger through butter.
314** On the other hand, in the base second game without expansions, the combat system only allows each ship to attack only one enemy per turn regardless of how many guns it has. Thus, even if a ship has enough firepower to instantly kill the opponent, the rest of the opposition each get to fire back before the attacker can shoot again, resulting in huge-hulled dreadnoughts loaded to the gills with endgame weapons but no defenses getting cut to pieces by swarms of tiny-hulled fighters with inferior weapons due to not being able to kill them fast enough.

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