Star Trek’s ideals don’t sit all that well with your average video game. Trek’s idealistic view of the future mostly dealt with conflict through discussion rather than liberal phaser blasts to the face, and video games are usually the other way around. That’s why a first-person shooter in the Star Trek universe should never have worked. Until it did.




Released in 2000 and set during the sixth season of Voyager, Raven Software’s Elite Force put players in the boots of Alex Munro, second-in-command of a new “Hazard Team” security force created by Tuvok to handle the increasingly hostile areas of the Delta Quadrant. You were the security team called in when shit went down, and Elite Force was all about shit going down—Voyager gets transported to a derelict ship graveyard by a mysterious shockwave, and while the Bridge crew were tasked with investigating how to get back to their journey home, Hazard Squad was called in to protect them... mainly by blasting anything in sight that even looked at you funny.

Seven of Nine and Hazard Team transporting to an Away mission.


And hoo boy, could you blast things. Previous Star Trek games gave fans the thrill of piloting ships and exploring strange new worlds, but Elite Force was about letting you experience tons of crazy Trek weapons. Elite Force was one of the rare Trek games out at the time to actually give you the sense of being someone on the ground of the Star Trek universe.



While Elite Force was a great shooter—with a multiplayer component based off of Quake III Arena, as crazy and intense as any PC shooter on the market at the time, but made even better with its Star Trek skin—where it truly shone is using its first-person perspective beyond shooting action to root you in the world of Voyager. In between action missions, Munro was mostly given free reign to explore the halls of Voyager, performing tasks for members of the crew.

Of course you fought the Borg. They were annoying as hell, too, with those adaptive shields.

You could interact with the main cast of the show, all voiced by their actual actors (Jeri Ryan did not initially return to reprise her role as Seven of Nine, but later did for the game’s expansion, re-recording all of her lines for the base game as well). For the time, the graphics were top notch, and unlike past games where you were restricted to only a few locales to visit, Elite Force’s recreation of Voyager was grand in scale. The game’s expansion pack added a mode that added another 10 decks worth of the ship to explore in “Virtual Voyager”mode, which let you poke and prod at replicators, panels in engineering, perform shipboard tasks for the bridge crew, and read personal logs (including Neelix’s recipe for Leola root stew!).



At the time, it was remarkable: the chance to completely explore one of franchise’s famous ships from stem to stern, and be part of that world in a tangible, personal manner. It was a playground to explore and interact with a Star Trek series unlike anything any previous game had attempted. As someone who was young enough to discover Star Trek through Voyager, it was an incredible experience.


Star Trek games since have often struggled to balance solid gameplay that video game fans crave with the chance to explore the franchise’s beloved universe, to capture that intangible but vital “trekky” feeling. Elite Force was arguably the first that gave Trek fans the best of both worlds—and that’s why 16 years later it’s still my favorite Star Trek game.