Development of the project (under a different name) was started in January 2002 by Tim Ansell. Originally it was going to be a simple
clone of
Stars!. Later, Tim decided to try starting a full open source project to become the "
Worldforge" of space empire games. He hoped that this would encourage other people who didn't want to just clone
Stars! to help out with the project and give it a broader appeal. After the announcement of the project Lee Begg was the only person who joined it. Lee remained the only other major contributor until early 2007. By the year 2006
Thousand Parsec had not reached the envisioned goals. Partly the problem had been in the underestimation of the amount of work needed and partly because the project did not initially attract any new developers. Despite these setbacks,
Thousand Parsec has a huge code base of framework; according to the
Ohloh project stats, the project has produced 95,000 lines of code, while
Thousand Parsec's own code count puts it at 90,000. The number of features left before full games of the complexity of
Stars! can be produced is extremely small. According to the software analysis website
Ohloh the project has had 47 individual contributors. Progress since late 2006 and early 2007 has been increasing rapidly with a number of new developers joining the project. The project also went on a recruitment drive by running an AI programming competition and active promotion during
linux.conf.au. In 2007
Thousand Parsec was allocated 3 slots in the 2007
Google Summer of Code. In 2008
Thousand Parsec was fortunate enough to be allocated 8 slots for
Google Summer of Code. Projects include three new rulesets, a 3D client, three AI-related projects, and a project to extend the server and create a single-player mode. In 2009
Thousand Parsec again participated in the
Google Summer of Code, being given 7 slots. Thousand Parsec has had significant success in developing students into full-fledged contributors;Local developer Eugene Tan, who last year contributed code to the Thousand Parsec project--an open source framework computer game--was invited by the project's lead developer to mentor this year's participants for the project. Tan told ZDNet Asia: "Returning as a mentor is important to me because this is in keeping with the spirit of the open source community, where I am sharing my knowledge and contributing my expertise to collaborate with other programmers to develop better, more innovative applications." In August 2010, the project migrated its code repository from
SourceForge to
GitHub. In 2012 the project announced itself as discontinued and recommended instead
FreeOrion. == Reception ==