Battlestar Galactica: Deadlock, from Australian developer Black Lab Games, is a turn-based strategy game heading to PlayStation 4, PC and Xbox One. Based on the 2004 reboot of the spacefaring franchise, it will be published by Slitherine.

Deadlock is based on a “we-go” system first introduced in Black Lab’s Starhammer: The Vanguard Prophecy. Players will take turns issuing orders to their fleets, and then watch the action play out in scalable, pausable real-time. It’s similar to a system made popular by the Combat Mission series, but will also allow for full replays after each battle. Players can review the footage from any angle, and even use it to create their own machinima.

Black Lab tells Polygon that the game will take place during the First Cylon War, and cover the events that transpired between Battlestar Galactica and the spin-off series called Caprica, both of which aired on the Syfy network.

“That timeframe gives us a much broader scope for making a cool game,” said Black Lab’s Paul Turbett. “When the opportunity came, we talked about how do we actually make a game themed to that universe and how we would stay true to that. The First Cylon War's definitely the way forward ... because it's such an unexplored area in the TV shows.”

Black Lab says that it worked with NBC Universal and Galactica’s original showrunners to flesh out the story and the units on both sides of the conflict. Expect to see saucer-shaped Cylon ships and chromed out, 1970’s era robots. Rather than a 60-year old wreck, Deadlock’s battlestar-class Colonial ships will be top-of-the-line vessels and will fight alongside many other never before seen types of ships.

“We've got the Galactica, we've got Vipers, we've got Raptors and we've got original Cylon Raiders,” said Slitherine’s David Sharrock. “Those are known things. People know those shapes. But we needed more than that for a strategy game. We needed lots of different ships like frigates, a destroyer, a cruiser, that sort of thing.”

Both Slitherine and Black Lab say their designs had to be approved by the team at NBC Universal, so their game will introduce new units into BSG lore for the first time.

“Each one is different,” said Turbett. “They each have a different load-out and different purposes. There's like an all-rounder ship which is kind of a smaller one, a bit newer than you might remember of the Galactica. The sizes range all the way up to a massive carrier — a dedicated carrier — which has more weapons than the battlestars do. There’s also a whole bunch in between, like missile cruisers and destroyers.”

Entire fleets and ships themselves will also be customizable, allowing players to adapt different tactical approaches. Every ship and every weapon system will be grounded in the series gritty, tactile, realistic style.

“We're sticking to the license,” said Sharrock. “Battlestar: Galactica was all relatively realistic with its physics. It didn't try to do much techno-magic, so we're trying to match that. You will be firing solid rounds and missiles. There's a bit of computer hacking that goes on in there, but it's the fisticuffs style of sci-fi, not the magic and lasers.”

While the graphics will be three-dimensional, battles will effectively take place on a plane. But the space will have density, and ships will be able to change elevation within that plane. So rather than turning 90 degrees and diving down into the map, capital ships will be able to pass above and below one another within a predefined range. They will also be able to collide, doing impact damage or performing boarding actions.

The game, which is expected to launch this year, will feature 14 set-piece missions in the main storyline with smaller, unscripted missions in-between. Black Lab cited Firaxis’ XCOM as an inspiration in structuring its mission mix, and promised that each battle would be grounded with a diversity of terrain and objectives.

More on the game is being shared today during a livestream on Twitch.