BATTLETECH
(Redirected from Battletech)
'''BattleTech''' is a wargaming and science fiction franchise, launched by FASA Corporation and currently owned by WizKids. The series began in 1984 with FASA's debut of the board game ''BattleTech'' (originally named ''BattleDroids'') and has since grown to include numerous expansions to the original game, several video games, a collectible card game, a series of science fiction novels, an animated television series and more.

Chicago-based FASA Corporation's original, 1984 ''BattleTech'' game focuses on enormous robotic, semi-humanoid battle machines called ''BattleDroids''. Their name was changed to BattleMechs in the second edition because George Lucas and Lucasfilm held the rights to the term "droid." The visual design of the earliest line of BattleMechs were taken from ''Macross'' and other anime, including many signature images. In later years FASA abandoned these images as a result of a lawsuit that was brought against them by Playmates and Harmony Gold over their use[1]. The BattleMechs taken from Macross were then considered "Unseen". When Fantasy Productions licensed the property, these "Unseen" images were expanded to include all art produced "out-of-house" - that is, whose copyrights resided with the creators, not the company. Catalyst Game Labs has continued this practice[2].
The game's popularity spawned several variants and expansions to the core system, including ''CityTech'' which fleshed out infantry and vehicle combat, ''AeroTech'' which focused on air- and space-based operations, and ''Battlespace'' which detailed large spacecraft combat. FASA also published numerous sourcebooks that featured specifications for new combat units that players could select from. However, despite the large number of such pre-designed BattleMechs, vehicles, aerospace units and other military hardware, the creators also established a complex system of custom design rules, enabling players to generate their own units and field them in combat. This engineering aspect of the game, itself expanded by several design and technology sourcebooks, has proven to be enduringly popular and may explain ''BattleTech's longevity.
FASA launched two additional systems to complement the core game: ''BattleTroops'', an infantry combat system, and ''BattleForce'', a large-scale combat simulator governing the actions of grouped ''BattleTech'' units. ''The Succession Wars'', a board game released in 1987, is one of only two purely strategic titles of the series (the other being "The Stars At War" from the Combat Operations book). 'The Succession Wars' is played on a political star map, with players vying to capture regions of space.
Recent years have seen a trend of consolidating the expansions into the core products, beginning under FASA's aegis and continued by both FanPro and Catalyst Game Labs. Of the current set of core rules, ''Total Warfare'' includes elements originating in ''CityTech'' and ''AeroTech 2'' (itself a consolidation of ''AeroTech'' and ''Battlespace''), while ''Tactical Operations'' and ''Strategic Operations'' are slated to include remaining ''AeroTech 2'' elements and a version of ''BattleForce''.
The ''BattleTech'' franchise first extended beyond the tabletop wargame format with the release of ''MechWarrior'', a role-playing game in which players monitor battlemech pilots or other characters in the 31st century. The RPG system has been republished in several editions and expanded by various sourcebooks and supplements. In 1996, FASA also introduced the ''BattleTech Collectible Card Game'', a CCG developed by Wizards of the Coast, creators of the popular ''.
WizKids, the owners of the ''BattleTech'' franchise since 2001[3], introduced a miniatures-based variant of the classic tabletop game called '' in 2002[4] (later renamed ''). The game incorporates WizKids' "Clix System", a means of tracking the combat statistics and abilities of each figure by turning a dial in its base.

BattleMechs, the hulking flagship units of the franchise, made a natural subject for computer emulation, and so in 1989 the first BattleMech combat simulator for computers was released. Entitled ''MechWarrior'' and published by Activision, the single-player game gave users the opportunity to pilot a range of 'Mechs and engage in combat against computer-controlled opponents. Sequels ''MechWarrior 2'' (1995), ''MechWarrior 3'' (1999) and ''MechWarrior 4'' (2000) created progressively finer and more engaging simulations. The MicroProse titles ''MechCommander'' (1998) and ''MechCommander 2'' (2001) also recreate 'Mech-based warfare, but with a greater focus on controlling groups of units. Two titles have also been published for the Xbox (''MechAssault'' in 2002 and ''MechAssault 2'' in 2004) and one for the Nintendo DS ('' in 2006).
When the creators of BattleTech envisioned the BattleTech universe, they had originally dreamed of creating an actual 'simulation' of the 'Mech piloting experience'. The net result of this dream were the BattleTech Centers, the first of which opened at the North Pier Mall in Chicago in 1990.
The BattleTech Center featured 16 networked full sized 'Cockpits' or 'Pods' that resembled a fully functional BattleMech cockpit. Each player (or pilot) would be able to select his or her 'Mech to duel it out against up to 7 other human players in the other cockpits. With over 80 fully functional controls, this was the first time this kind of simulation technology was brought to the masses. Later, the new company 'Virtual World Entertainment' would open many Virtual World centers around the world.
VirtualWorld eventually merged with FASA Interactive Technologies (FIT) to form Virtual World Entertainment Group (VWEG) to better exploit the various FASA properties in location based entertainment venues as well as the retail market.
In 1999 Microsoft Corporation purchased VWEG to integrate FIT into Microsoft Game Studios and sold VWE. VWE continues to develop and support the current BattleTech VR platform called the Tesla II system featuring BattleTech: Firestorm.
The popularity of the ''BattleTech'' games and the fictional universe it inhabits has led to a number of related projects in other areas. By the far the most active of these is the line of popular science fiction novels, with more than 100 titles published to date. The novels are set in both the ''Classic Battletech'' era (mid-3000s) and the ''Dark Age'' era (3130s). BattleCorps[1], an online writing community, is another fertile source of ''BattleTech'' fiction.
'', a 13-episode television show produced by Saban Entertainment, aired on Fox in late 1994. Plots centered around the character of Major Adam Steiner and his First Somerset Strikers, and their conflict with Clan Jade Falcon.
Electric Entertainment, a company under contract to Paramount Studios, has leased the rights to produce a motion picture based on the ''BattleTech'' universe, but development has been slow and little is known about the project's status.

The breadth and volume of material written for ''BattleTech'' has yielded a fictional universe with a richness and complexity that rivals ''Star Wars'' and ''Star Trek''. A detailed timeline stretching from the 21st century to the mid-32nd describes humanity's technological, social and political development and spread through space both in broad historical terms and through accounts of the lives of individuals who experienced and shaped that history. Individual people remain largely unchanged from those of modern times, due in part to stretches of protracted interplanetary warfare during which technological progress slowed or even reversed. Cultural, political and social conventions vary considerably between worlds, but feudalism is wide spread, with many states ruled by hereditary lords and other nobility, below which are numerous social classes.
A key feature of the ''BattleTech'' universe is the absence of non-human intelligent life. Despite one or two isolated encounters in novels, mankind is the only sentient species, making the incessant warfare among humanity's feudal empires seem a more realistic and direct extension of the past and present. Though not the norm, fictional futures in which humanity is alone have been explored in a number of other popular series, including Frank Herbert's ''Dune'', Isaac Asimov's ''Foundation'', Grant Naylor's ''Red Dwarf'', and Joss Whedon's ''Firefly''.
Above all, the central theme of ''BattleTech'' is conflict, something to be expected given the franchise's wargaming core. Interstellar and civil wars, planetary battles, factionalization and infighting, as well as institutionalized combat in the shape of arena contests and duelling, form the grist of both novelized fiction and game backstories.
Main articles: History of the BattleTech universe
Most events in ''BattleTech'' occur during the early to middle decades of the 31st century, though a few publications concern earlier ages, including a technical readout describing 2750s-era technology. ''MechWarrior: Dark Ages'' and its related novels take place in the first half of the 32nd century.[5][6][7][8]
Main articles: BattleTech technology
The level of technology evident in ''BattleTech'' is an unusual blend of the highly futuristic and the nearly modern. Radically advanced tech like faster-than-light interstellar travel and superluminal communication mix with such anachronisms as internal combustion engines, projectile weapons and artillery. Artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, androids, and many other staples of future fiction are generally absent or downplayed. Incessant war is generally blamed for the uneven advancement.[9][10]
''BattleTech's universe is governed by numerous interstellar human governments that vie for supremacy. Described below are the major areas into which these factions fall.
Main articles: Terra (BattleTech)
Terra is the homeworld of mankind (no longer called Earth) and former capital of the Star League. Many planets around Terra were rendered uninhabitable during the first two Succession Wars, and surviving planets suffer from the damage even centuries later. Several dozen of these worlds, in what came to be known as the Chaos March, briefly gained their independence between 3057 and 3081. Historically, whichever faction controlled Terra has held more political power than any single Great House. Several groups have held Terra, including the Terran Alliance, Terran Hegemony, ComStar, Word of Blake, and Republic of the Sphere; most of these nations fought bitter struggles upon Terra, scarring the motherland of mankind.
Main articles: Inner Sphere
The Inner Sphere, heart of the BattleTech Universe, contains all worlds within 500 light-years of Terra. It is dominated by five "Great Houses": House Davion, House Liao, House Marik, House Steiner and House Kurita. (The term "Inner Sphere" sometimes refers to these houses collectively). The leader of each Great House claims to be the rightful successor to the rule of the Star League, and so their nations are known as the Successor States.

There are few other significant nations in the Inner Sphere. The St. Ives Compact was a short-lived state that broke away from the Capellan Confederation after the Fourth Succession War, and was reabsorbed following a brief war in 3062. The Free Rasalhague Republic was created in 3034 by a deal between the Draconis Combine and the Lyran Commonwealth. It rivaled the Capellan Confederation for size, but by 3052 it had been almost entirely conquered by the Clans; in the 3070s, much of it was incorporated into the Ghost Bear Dominion (which is known as the Rasalhague Dominion by 3130).
Main articles: Periphery (BattleTech)
The space surrounding the Inner Sphere contains a number of independent nations, known collectively as the Periphery. The largest of these nations (the Outworlds Alliance, Taurian Concordat, Magistracy of Canopus, and Rim Worlds Republic) predate the Star League and rival the Successor States themselves in size, but are inferior economically and militarily. More moderately sized nations, such as the Marian Hegemony or Bandit Kingdoms, also lie near the Inner Sphere.
The Periphery contains countless other independent nations, many consisting of a single star system each and rarely playing a significant role in Inner Sphere politics. The mostly uncharted space beyond the nearby Periphery states is known as the Deep Periphery and contains numerous pirate havens and lost Star League colonies.
Main articles: Clans (BattleTech)

During the Fall of the above-mentioned Star League, the Star League Defense Force exiled itself and eventually settled in the Deep Periphery. They reformed into the Clans, a warrior-centric caste society relying on genetic manipulation and artificial birth. The four strongest of these Clans returned to the Inner Sphere as would-be conquerors in 3049, were reinforced by three more Clans a year later, and were joined in the late 3060s by another two. Of the original twenty Clans, by 3067 three were absorbed, two were annihilated, two fragmented, two defected, and one was abjured. The Clan Occupation Zones together occupy a region roughly equivalent to one of the Successor States.
[11]
Main articles: Mercenaries (BattleTech)
Inner Sphere has many private military companies. Some of them are quite powerful, and their actions have influenced the history of the known universe. Among the most famous mercenary groups are the Wolf's Dragoons, Eridani Light Horse, Kell Hounds, Northwind Highlanders, Gray Death Legion, and McCarron's Armored Cavalry.[12][13]
★ ''BattleTech'' has won three Origins Awards and its various expansions and spin-offs several more.
★ Many of the novels and sourcebooks incorporate pop-culture references, in names and places. Anime and manga seem to be a popular source of names for minor characters, as does true history.
★ FASA, the company that produced ''BattleTech'', sued Playmates for trademark infringement for using several mecha designs that FASA leased from ''Macross'' and other anime series for their ExoSquad toyline. Law requires that anyone with a trademark pursue possible violations. The related lawsuits were settled and later products of BattleTech do not use the designs under contention. In the Japanese edition of BattleTech, all of these designs got redesigned by Studio Nue, creator of Macross. Contrary to popular belief, FASA was never sued by Harmony Gold.
★ An estimated twenty-five million people have played a ''BattleTech'' or ''MechWarrior RPG'' or read a ''BattleTech'' or ''MechWarrior'' novel, and at least ten million people have played the ''BattleTech''-based computer games. More than eleven million copies of ''MechWarrior'' PC games and a similar number of '' Collectable Miniatures Game figures have been sold to date. Over three hundred and fifty different ''BattleTech''/''MechWarrior'' game and toy products have been produced to date; several products, such as the ''Technical Readout'' series, the core rulebook and base box set, have been in continuous print (in one form or another) since publication. More than five thousand World Wide Web pages have been created to date by the online ''BattleTech'' community.
★ History of the BattleTech universe
★ BattleTech technology
★ List of BattleTech characters
★ List of BattleTech novels
★ List of BattleTech games
★ MechWarrior
★ Military Organization (BattleTech)
1. ''"http://www.kaempen.org/alex/harmony_gold_v._fasa.html"''
2. ''"Record Sheets: Phoenix Upgrades"''
3. http://www.wizkidsgames.com/wk_article.asp?cid=4501&frame=company
4. http://www.wizkidsgames.com/wk_article.asp?cid=36939&frame=company
5. ''"Historical: War of 3039"''
6. ''"Historical: Brush Wars"''
7. ''"Dawn of the Jihad"''
8. ''"Jihad Hot Spots 3070"''
9. ''"Combat Equipment"''
10. ''"Technical Readout: Vehicle Annex"''
11. ''"The Legend of the Jade Phoenix Trilogy"''
12. ''"Mercenaries Supplemental"''
13. ''"Mercenaries Supplemental II"''
★ Classic BattleTech
★ Iron Wind Metals, official manufacturer of ''Classic BattleTech'' miniatures
★ HeavyMetal Software, official software for ''Classic BattleTech''
★ BattleCorps, official fiction and game material for ''Classic BattleTech''
★ BattleTech: Firestorm The mech simulator site
★ Battletech 3065 [2], a real-time, multi-player combat simulation site.
★ Inner Sphere Wars [3],Real-time multi-player combat featuring live drops 24/7.
★ Neveron [4], A free, massively-multiplayer strategy/combat game using technology and large amounts of rule sets from the BattleTech universe.
★
★
★ ''BattleTech: The Animated Series''
★ Mechwarrior: The Movie (Not Official)
★ BattleTech Wiki
★ MechForce.US BattleTech RPG resource site
★ Japanese Battletech at Gears Online
★ Solaris7 Battletech RPG/Fan-Fiction resource site
'''BattleTech''' is a wargaming and science fiction franchise, launched by FASA Corporation and currently owned by WizKids. The series began in 1984 with FASA's debut of the board game ''BattleTech'' (originally named ''BattleDroids'') and has since grown to include numerous expansions to the original game, several video games, a collectible card game, a series of science fiction novels, an animated television series and more.
Overview
A Shadow Hawk BattleMech from the cover of the Japanese edition of ''BattleTech''
Original game
Chicago-based FASA Corporation's original, 1984 ''BattleTech'' game focuses on enormous robotic, semi-humanoid battle machines called ''BattleDroids''. Their name was changed to BattleMechs in the second edition because George Lucas and Lucasfilm held the rights to the term "droid." The visual design of the earliest line of BattleMechs were taken from ''Macross'' and other anime, including many signature images. In later years FASA abandoned these images as a result of a lawsuit that was brought against them by Playmates and Harmony Gold over their use[1]. The BattleMechs taken from Macross were then considered "Unseen". When Fantasy Productions licensed the property, these "Unseen" images were expanded to include all art produced "out-of-house" - that is, whose copyrights resided with the creators, not the company. Catalyst Game Labs has continued this practice[2].
Expansions
The game's popularity spawned several variants and expansions to the core system, including ''CityTech'' which fleshed out infantry and vehicle combat, ''AeroTech'' which focused on air- and space-based operations, and ''Battlespace'' which detailed large spacecraft combat. FASA also published numerous sourcebooks that featured specifications for new combat units that players could select from. However, despite the large number of such pre-designed BattleMechs, vehicles, aerospace units and other military hardware, the creators also established a complex system of custom design rules, enabling players to generate their own units and field them in combat. This engineering aspect of the game, itself expanded by several design and technology sourcebooks, has proven to be enduringly popular and may explain ''BattleTech's longevity.
FASA launched two additional systems to complement the core game: ''BattleTroops'', an infantry combat system, and ''BattleForce'', a large-scale combat simulator governing the actions of grouped ''BattleTech'' units. ''The Succession Wars'', a board game released in 1987, is one of only two purely strategic titles of the series (the other being "The Stars At War" from the Combat Operations book). 'The Succession Wars' is played on a political star map, with players vying to capture regions of space.
Recent years have seen a trend of consolidating the expansions into the core products, beginning under FASA's aegis and continued by both FanPro and Catalyst Game Labs. Of the current set of core rules, ''Total Warfare'' includes elements originating in ''CityTech'' and ''AeroTech 2'' (itself a consolidation of ''AeroTech'' and ''Battlespace''), while ''Tactical Operations'' and ''Strategic Operations'' are slated to include remaining ''AeroTech 2'' elements and a version of ''BattleForce''.
Spin-off games
The ''BattleTech'' franchise first extended beyond the tabletop wargame format with the release of ''MechWarrior'', a role-playing game in which players monitor battlemech pilots or other characters in the 31st century. The RPG system has been republished in several editions and expanded by various sourcebooks and supplements. In 1996, FASA also introduced the ''BattleTech Collectible Card Game'', a CCG developed by Wizards of the Coast, creators of the popular ''.
WizKids, the owners of the ''BattleTech'' franchise since 2001[3], introduced a miniatures-based variant of the classic tabletop game called '' in 2002[4] (later renamed ''). The game incorporates WizKids' "Clix System", a means of tracking the combat statistics and abilities of each figure by turning a dial in its base.
The cover of the ''MechWarrior 4'' PC game.
BattleMechs, the hulking flagship units of the franchise, made a natural subject for computer emulation, and so in 1989 the first BattleMech combat simulator for computers was released. Entitled ''MechWarrior'' and published by Activision, the single-player game gave users the opportunity to pilot a range of 'Mechs and engage in combat against computer-controlled opponents. Sequels ''MechWarrior 2'' (1995), ''MechWarrior 3'' (1999) and ''MechWarrior 4'' (2000) created progressively finer and more engaging simulations. The MicroProse titles ''MechCommander'' (1998) and ''MechCommander 2'' (2001) also recreate 'Mech-based warfare, but with a greater focus on controlling groups of units. Two titles have also been published for the Xbox (''MechAssault'' in 2002 and ''MechAssault 2'' in 2004) and one for the Nintendo DS ('' in 2006).
Virtual World Entertainment
When the creators of BattleTech envisioned the BattleTech universe, they had originally dreamed of creating an actual 'simulation' of the 'Mech piloting experience'. The net result of this dream were the BattleTech Centers, the first of which opened at the North Pier Mall in Chicago in 1990.
The BattleTech Center featured 16 networked full sized 'Cockpits' or 'Pods' that resembled a fully functional BattleMech cockpit. Each player (or pilot) would be able to select his or her 'Mech to duel it out against up to 7 other human players in the other cockpits. With over 80 fully functional controls, this was the first time this kind of simulation technology was brought to the masses. Later, the new company 'Virtual World Entertainment' would open many Virtual World centers around the world.
VirtualWorld eventually merged with FASA Interactive Technologies (FIT) to form Virtual World Entertainment Group (VWEG) to better exploit the various FASA properties in location based entertainment venues as well as the retail market.
In 1999 Microsoft Corporation purchased VWEG to integrate FIT into Microsoft Game Studios and sold VWE. VWE continues to develop and support the current BattleTech VR platform called the Tesla II system featuring BattleTech: Firestorm.
Beyond gaming
The popularity of the ''BattleTech'' games and the fictional universe it inhabits has led to a number of related projects in other areas. By the far the most active of these is the line of popular science fiction novels, with more than 100 titles published to date. The novels are set in both the ''Classic Battletech'' era (mid-3000s) and the ''Dark Age'' era (3130s). BattleCorps[1], an online writing community, is another fertile source of ''BattleTech'' fiction.
'', a 13-episode television show produced by Saban Entertainment, aired on Fox in late 1994. Plots centered around the character of Major Adam Steiner and his First Somerset Strikers, and their conflict with Clan Jade Falcon.
Electric Entertainment, a company under contract to Paramount Studios, has leased the rights to produce a motion picture based on the ''BattleTech'' universe, but development has been slow and little is known about the project's status.
The BattleTech universe
BattleMechs in combat on the cover of ''Storms of Fate'' by Loren L. Coleman. Art by Fred Gambino.
The breadth and volume of material written for ''BattleTech'' has yielded a fictional universe with a richness and complexity that rivals ''Star Wars'' and ''Star Trek''. A detailed timeline stretching from the 21st century to the mid-32nd describes humanity's technological, social and political development and spread through space both in broad historical terms and through accounts of the lives of individuals who experienced and shaped that history. Individual people remain largely unchanged from those of modern times, due in part to stretches of protracted interplanetary warfare during which technological progress slowed or even reversed. Cultural, political and social conventions vary considerably between worlds, but feudalism is wide spread, with many states ruled by hereditary lords and other nobility, below which are numerous social classes.
A key feature of the ''BattleTech'' universe is the absence of non-human intelligent life. Despite one or two isolated encounters in novels, mankind is the only sentient species, making the incessant warfare among humanity's feudal empires seem a more realistic and direct extension of the past and present. Though not the norm, fictional futures in which humanity is alone have been explored in a number of other popular series, including Frank Herbert's ''Dune'', Isaac Asimov's ''Foundation'', Grant Naylor's ''Red Dwarf'', and Joss Whedon's ''Firefly''.
Above all, the central theme of ''BattleTech'' is conflict, something to be expected given the franchise's wargaming core. Interstellar and civil wars, planetary battles, factionalization and infighting, as well as institutionalized combat in the shape of arena contests and duelling, form the grist of both novelized fiction and game backstories.
History
Main articles: History of the BattleTech universe
Most events in ''BattleTech'' occur during the early to middle decades of the 31st century, though a few publications concern earlier ages, including a technical readout describing 2750s-era technology. ''MechWarrior: Dark Ages'' and its related novels take place in the first half of the 32nd century.[5][6][7][8]
Technology
Main articles: BattleTech technology
The level of technology evident in ''BattleTech'' is an unusual blend of the highly futuristic and the nearly modern. Radically advanced tech like faster-than-light interstellar travel and superluminal communication mix with such anachronisms as internal combustion engines, projectile weapons and artillery. Artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, androids, and many other staples of future fiction are generally absent or downplayed. Incessant war is generally blamed for the uneven advancement.[9][10]
Political entities
''BattleTech's universe is governed by numerous interstellar human governments that vie for supremacy. Described below are the major areas into which these factions fall.
Terra
Main articles: Terra (BattleTech)
Terra is the homeworld of mankind (no longer called Earth) and former capital of the Star League. Many planets around Terra were rendered uninhabitable during the first two Succession Wars, and surviving planets suffer from the damage even centuries later. Several dozen of these worlds, in what came to be known as the Chaos March, briefly gained their independence between 3057 and 3081. Historically, whichever faction controlled Terra has held more political power than any single Great House. Several groups have held Terra, including the Terran Alliance, Terran Hegemony, ComStar, Word of Blake, and Republic of the Sphere; most of these nations fought bitter struggles upon Terra, scarring the motherland of mankind.
The Inner Sphere
Main articles: Inner Sphere
The Inner Sphere, heart of the BattleTech Universe, contains all worlds within 500 light-years of Terra. It is dominated by five "Great Houses": House Davion, House Liao, House Marik, House Steiner and House Kurita. (The term "Inner Sphere" sometimes refers to these houses collectively). The leader of each Great House claims to be the rightful successor to the rule of the Star League, and so their nations are known as the Successor States.
BattleMechs on the cover of ''Patriots and Tyrants'' by Loren L. Coleman. Art by Fred Gambino.
There are few other significant nations in the Inner Sphere. The St. Ives Compact was a short-lived state that broke away from the Capellan Confederation after the Fourth Succession War, and was reabsorbed following a brief war in 3062. The Free Rasalhague Republic was created in 3034 by a deal between the Draconis Combine and the Lyran Commonwealth. It rivaled the Capellan Confederation for size, but by 3052 it had been almost entirely conquered by the Clans; in the 3070s, much of it was incorporated into the Ghost Bear Dominion (which is known as the Rasalhague Dominion by 3130).
The Periphery
Main articles: Periphery (BattleTech)
The space surrounding the Inner Sphere contains a number of independent nations, known collectively as the Periphery. The largest of these nations (the Outworlds Alliance, Taurian Concordat, Magistracy of Canopus, and Rim Worlds Republic) predate the Star League and rival the Successor States themselves in size, but are inferior economically and militarily. More moderately sized nations, such as the Marian Hegemony or Bandit Kingdoms, also lie near the Inner Sphere.
The Periphery contains countless other independent nations, many consisting of a single star system each and rarely playing a significant role in Inner Sphere politics. The mostly uncharted space beyond the nearby Periphery states is known as the Deep Periphery and contains numerous pirate havens and lost Star League colonies.
The Clans
Main articles: Clans (BattleTech)
BattleMechs on the cover of ''The Legend of the Jade Phoenix'' by Robert Thurston. Art by Fred Gambino.
During the Fall of the above-mentioned Star League, the Star League Defense Force exiled itself and eventually settled in the Deep Periphery. They reformed into the Clans, a warrior-centric caste society relying on genetic manipulation and artificial birth. The four strongest of these Clans returned to the Inner Sphere as would-be conquerors in 3049, were reinforced by three more Clans a year later, and were joined in the late 3060s by another two. Of the original twenty Clans, by 3067 three were absorbed, two were annihilated, two fragmented, two defected, and one was abjured. The Clan Occupation Zones together occupy a region roughly equivalent to one of the Successor States.
[11]
Mercenaries
Main articles: Mercenaries (BattleTech)
Inner Sphere has many private military companies. Some of them are quite powerful, and their actions have influenced the history of the known universe. Among the most famous mercenary groups are the Wolf's Dragoons, Eridani Light Horse, Kell Hounds, Northwind Highlanders, Gray Death Legion, and McCarron's Armored Cavalry.[12][13]
Miscellaneous
★ ''BattleTech'' has won three Origins Awards and its various expansions and spin-offs several more.
★ Many of the novels and sourcebooks incorporate pop-culture references, in names and places. Anime and manga seem to be a popular source of names for minor characters, as does true history.
★ FASA, the company that produced ''BattleTech'', sued Playmates for trademark infringement for using several mecha designs that FASA leased from ''Macross'' and other anime series for their ExoSquad toyline. Law requires that anyone with a trademark pursue possible violations. The related lawsuits were settled and later products of BattleTech do not use the designs under contention. In the Japanese edition of BattleTech, all of these designs got redesigned by Studio Nue, creator of Macross. Contrary to popular belief, FASA was never sued by Harmony Gold.
★ An estimated twenty-five million people have played a ''BattleTech'' or ''MechWarrior RPG'' or read a ''BattleTech'' or ''MechWarrior'' novel, and at least ten million people have played the ''BattleTech''-based computer games. More than eleven million copies of ''MechWarrior'' PC games and a similar number of '' Collectable Miniatures Game figures have been sold to date. Over three hundred and fifty different ''BattleTech''/''MechWarrior'' game and toy products have been produced to date; several products, such as the ''Technical Readout'' series, the core rulebook and base box set, have been in continuous print (in one form or another) since publication. More than five thousand World Wide Web pages have been created to date by the online ''BattleTech'' community.
See also
★ History of the BattleTech universe
★ BattleTech technology
★ List of BattleTech characters
★ List of BattleTech novels
★ List of BattleTech games
★ MechWarrior
★ Military Organization (BattleTech)
Bibliography
References
1. ''"http://www.kaempen.org/alex/harmony_gold_v._fasa.html"''
2. ''"Record Sheets: Phoenix Upgrades"''
3. http://www.wizkidsgames.com/wk_article.asp?cid=4501&frame=company
4. http://www.wizkidsgames.com/wk_article.asp?cid=36939&frame=company
5. ''"Historical: War of 3039"''
6. ''"Historical: Brush Wars"''
7. ''"Dawn of the Jihad"''
8. ''"Jihad Hot Spots 3070"''
9. ''"Combat Equipment"''
10. ''"Technical Readout: Vehicle Annex"''
11. ''"The Legend of the Jade Phoenix Trilogy"''
12. ''"Mercenaries Supplemental"''
13. ''"Mercenaries Supplemental II"''
External links
Official sites
★ Classic BattleTech
★ Iron Wind Metals, official manufacturer of ''Classic BattleTech'' miniatures
★ HeavyMetal Software, official software for ''Classic BattleTech''
★ BattleCorps, official fiction and game material for ''Classic BattleTech''
★ BattleTech: Firestorm The mech simulator site
Online multi-player sites
★ Battletech 3065 [2], a real-time, multi-player combat simulation site.
★ Inner Sphere Wars [3],Real-time multi-player combat featuring live drops 24/7.
★ Neveron [4], A free, massively-multiplayer strategy/combat game using technology and large amounts of rule sets from the BattleTech universe.
Animated series
★
★
★ ''BattleTech: The Animated Series''
Movie project
★ Mechwarrior: The Movie (Not Official)
References
★ BattleTech Wiki
★ MechForce.US BattleTech RPG resource site
★ Japanese Battletech at Gears Online
★ Solaris7 Battletech RPG/Fan-Fiction resource site
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psst.. try this: add to faves

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