The
StarCraft series includes a core set of titles that carry the main storyline. These games were released in chronological order, with each new title following on from the events that are depicted in the previous title. A full second game,
StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty, was released in 2010, taking place four years after the end of
Brood War. Two expansions,
Heart of the Swarm and
Legacy of the Void (both currently stand alone games), were planned from the beginning; the former was released in 2013 and the latter was released in 2015. All the games in the main series are
real-time strategy games, where the player views the events as a military commander for each of the three species. In addition, two spin-off titles have been released; these are authorized expansion packs to the original that focus on other characters and settings based at the same time as the main storyline.
StarCraft StarCraft, released for
Windows on March 31, 1998, is the first video game in the
StarCraft series. A
science fiction real-time strategy game,
StarCraft is set in a distant sector of the Milky Way galaxy. A
Mac OS version of the game was released by
Blizzard Entertainment in March 1999. A
Nintendo 64 port including
StarCraft,
Brood War, and a new secret mission "Resurrection IV" was released in the United States on June 13, 2000. The game's story revolves around the appearance of two alien races in Terran space and each race's attempts to survive and adapt over the others. The player assumes three roles through the course of the three campaigns: a
Confederate colonial governor who becomes a revolutionary commander, a Zerg
cerebrate pushing forward the species' doctrine of assimilation, and a Protoss fleet executor tasked with defending the Protoss from the Zerg.
StarCraft soon gained critical acclaim, winning numerous awards, including being labelled "the best real-time strategy game ever made" and being ranked the seventh best game of all time by
IGN in both 2003 and 2005, and the eleventh best game in 2007.
StarCraft: Brood War is the official expansion pack for
StarCraft, developed by Blizzard Entertainment and
Saffire. Released for Windows and Mac OS in the United States on December 18, 1998, the expansion directly continues the events of
StarCraft. The expansion's story continues only days after the conclusion of the original game. It starts with the Protoss' struggle to ensure the survival of their species and continues with the intervention of the United Earth Directorate into local Terran affairs. The livelihood of both the Protoss and the previously silent Earth government is then threatened by the ever-increasing power of Sarah Kerrigan and her Zerg broods. In addition, the expansion introduces new features and improvements. A total of seven new units with different functions and abilities are included, the artificial intelligence behavior was modified, new graphical tilesets for terrain were added, and the game's
level editor received improved scripting tools to facilitate cut scenes with the in-
game engine. The expansion received critical praise for fixing various balance issues with the original game, development attention on par with that of a full game, and for continuing with single player campaigns that were heavily story-driven. In April 2017,
Starcraft received its first update in over eight years, and
Brood War was released for free to both PC and Mac. A
remastered edition of the game,
StarCraft: Remastered, released August 14, 2017, preserves the gameplay of the original while adding support for
ultra-high-definition graphics, Blizzard's modern online features, and re-recorded audio (soundtrack and sound effects). On July 10, 2019, Blizzard released
StarCraft: Cartooned, a graphics overhaul pack for the game by Carbot Animations, the producers of multiple Blizzard-related parody animations, including their first and longest-running one, the
StarCrafts series. As a graphical overhaul, its effect applies to all game modes and menus in
StarCraft: Remastered. A port of the
StarCraft and
StarCraft: Brood War campaigns was released in 2011 as a
fan-made mod for
StarCraft II under the name
StarCraft: Mass Recall. The mod includes the original units, campaigns, and hidden missions, but uses the
StarCraft II engine including the AI mechanics, which makes the game notably more difficult than the original. It was completed in 2019 and has since received minor technical updates.
StarCraft II StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty is the official sequel to
StarCraft released for Windows and
Mac OS X by Blizzard Entertainment on July 27, 2010. The game was announced at the Worldwide Invitational in South Korea on May 19, 2007, with a pre-rendered cinematic cut scene trailer and a gameplay demonstration of the Protoss. Further demonstrations regarding the game's new features have been showcased at subsequent
BlizzCons and other games conventions. The game incorporates a new 3D graphics engine and adds new features such as the
Havok physics engine.
StarCraft II also incorporates
DirectX 10 level effects in Windows. Originally envisioned as a single game,
StarCraft II was split into three parts during development, one for focusing on each race. The base game,
Wings of Liberty, follows the Terrans, while two expansion packs,
Heart of the Swarm and
Legacy of the Void, have been released to complement
Wings of Liberty and further the story from the views of the Zerg and Protoss, respectively. The story of
Wings of Liberty continues from four years after the conclusion of
Brood War and revolves around Jim Raynor's struggles against the Terran Dominion.
StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm is an expansion pack to
StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty and was released on March 12, 2013. It is part two of the
StarCraft II trilogy. The expansion includes additional units and multiplayer changes from
Wings of Liberty, as well as a continuing campaign focusing on Kerrigan and the Zerg race. It spans 27 missions (20 main missions and 7 side missions). The saga of
StarCraft is ultimately completed with
StarCraft II: Legacy of the Void, which was released on November 10, 2015.
StarCraft II: Legacy of the Void is a stand-alone game in which new units are added to all three races as well as changing existing units, and also makes groundbreaking changes to the economy-aspect of the game. The story of
StarCraft is concluded by following the Protoss Race in their quest to reclaim their homeworld and for Kerrigan to ultimately slay the greatest threat to the entire universe. The game is divided into a 3-mission prologue, a 19-mission main story campaign, and a 3-mission epilogue that wraps everything up. At
BlizzCon 2015, during the "Future of
StarCraft II" presentation, it was revealed that Blizzard will release additional mission packs to keep players engaged with
StarCraft II. The first pack is called
Nova Covert Ops, and will center around the character
Nova. The mission pack consists of three episodes, with a total of nine new missions. It did not require the purchase of
StarCraft II and could be played with the Starter Edition. The release date for the first episode is March 29, 2016. At the same time, Blizzard has announced that new commanders are planned to be added to the co-op mode in
Legacy of the Void as a DLC, with Karax to be the first addition given for free.
Spin-off titles The success of
StarCraft spurred the creation of two authorized add-on titles to
StarCraft, as well as one failed attempt at a deviation into a
genre other than
real-time strategy.
Insurrection Insurrection was the first add-on pack released for
StarCraft. Although developed and published by Aztech New Media, it is authorized by Blizzard Entertainment. It was released for the PC on July 31, 1998. The expansion's story focuses on a
Confederate colony during the course of the first campaign of
StarCraft. As in
StarCraft, the player takes control of each race in three separate campaigns. In the first campaign, Terran colonists attempt to defend themselves from the Zerg invasion of the sector as well as from a rising
insurgency. The second campaign has the player directing a Protoss task force sent to clear the Zerg infestation of the colony by any means necessary. In the final campaign, the player assumes the role of a Zerg cerebrate, whose goal is to crush all opposition on the surface. The expansion contains 30 new campaign missions and over 100 new multiplayer maps, and is not widely available. Although the add-on is authorized by Blizzard Entertainment, they offer no comment on support or availability of the game.
Retribution is similarly not widely available, and Blizzard Entertainment offers no comment regarding support or the availability of the add-on despite authorizing it. the game was constantly delayed due to various issues, including a change of development team from
Nihilistic Software to
Swingin' Ape Studios in July 2004. As updates about the development of the game became less frequent, and the graphics and game mechanics became more outdated, suspicion began to grow that Blizzard would cancel the game. Finally, on March 24, 2006, Blizzard indefinitely postponed the game's development. The story of the game is about
Nova, a of the
Terran Dominion. Frequently used as an example of
development hell, in 2008, Blizzard Entertainment refused to list the game as
cancelled. It was not until August 23, 2014, in an interview with
Polygon, that
Chris Metzen confirmed that
StarCraft: Ghost was indeed cancelled.
Ares Blizzard still has yet to produce an FPS game based on
StarCraft. In summer 2019 there was a second project called
StarCraft: Ares that was cancelled when Blizzard focused on developing
Overwatch 2 and
Diablo IV instead.
Activision Blizzard CEO
Bobby Kotick disliked
Ares for adapting the gameplay of the
Battlefield series, which Activision executives viewed as inferior to their
Call of Duty franchise. ==Development==