An Empire of Stars
Wing Commander is a series of space combat simulation games developed by Origin Systems, a studio founded in Austin, Texas by Richard Garriott. When director Chris Roberts conceived the original game in 1989, his ambition was singular: to place players inside a living science-fiction film. The result - released on September 26, 1990 - redefined what PC software could be.
The series spans from 1990 to 1998 across fourteen titles, charting the long war between humanity's Terran Confederation and the feline Kilrathi Empire. Players assume the role of fighter pilots launching from carrier vessels, engaging in real-time 3D dogfights across a branching mission tree where victories and defeats shaped the narrative. The cinematic presentation - cut-scenes, voice acting, personality-driven wingmen - set a template that the entire industry followed.
By the mid-1990s, Wing Commander had grown into a Hollywood production. Wing Commander III introduced full-motion video sequences starring Mark Hamill, Malcolm McDowell, John Rhys-Davies, and Tom Wilson, shot on sets built at a cost rivaling B-movie films. Wing Commander IV escalated further with a $12 million budget. The series ended in 1998 with Secret Ops, distributed free online in weekly episodic chapters - a radical publishing experiment that anticipated the digital distribution era by a decade.
Watch the Series
Wing Commander - Full Longplay (DOS, 1990)
Wing Commander III: Heart of the Tiger - Complete FMV Movie
The Wing Commander Universe
From the original 1990 launch through Secret Ops in 1998, spanning DOS, SNES, 3DO, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, GBA, and Windows.
Wing Commander I sold over 500,000 copies, a remarkable figure for PC software in 1990, establishing Origin as a major publisher.
From 1990 to 1998, Wing Commander remained one of the defining franchises in PC gaming, influencing an entire generation of space sims.
Chris Roberts wrote and directed a Wing Commander theatrical film, starring Freddie Prinze Jr. and Matthew Lillard, released in March 1999.