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A series of Real Time Strategy Star Trek games, the first of which was released in 2000, which take place in the same Alternate Continuity as the Star Trek: Voyager – Elite Force, Star Trek: Bridge Commander, and Star Trek: Away Team games, as well as Star Trek Starfleet Command 3.

The general plot of both games deals with an all but all out war against the Borg Collective, though the plot of the first is a bit more complex than that.

Both are generally good, though somewhat standard, RTS' in their own right. Of course, as with all games, Your Mileage May Vary. The most distinctive thing about these games is how they handle crewmen as a resource...

Tropes used in Star Trek Armada include:
  • Alternate Continuity: The majority of the games published by Activision share plot ties. These include: Star Trek: Bridge Commander, Star Trek Elite Force, Star Trek Starfleet Command 3, and Star Trek Away Team.
  • Awesome but Impractical: Applies to many of the superweapons...
    • Federation (Manheim Effect): Averted, so long as you can master using it. It can time-freeze enemy units anywhere on the map, and while it takes a long time to charge up, it can be used to devastating effect by taking out the enemy base's first line of defences.
    • Klingons (Subspace Shockwave): Averted; probably the most genuinely useful of the superweapons, as it has a fairly long range and can be unleashed to devastating effect on enemy bases.
    • Romulans (Subspace Rift): Definitely the case, as the craft that carries it has to be placed right in the middle of whatever enemy formation/base you want to destroy, and its shields are barely stronger than a scout ship, meaning that it's likely to get blown away before it can activate.
    • Borg (Transwarp Gate): Not so much in the first game, as it's an easy way of dropping your ships into an enemy base (just don't leave the gate open too long, or the enemy forces can fly back through it into your own base). Definitely impractical in the second however, as warp drive nullifies its main advantage, and it's a waste of money compared to the fusion cubes.
    • Cardassians (Dreadnought): The same basic effect as the Subspace Rift, but it comes in a missile that has to be crashed into whatever you want to destroy. It's at least a bit faster than the comparable Romulan ship, but that doesn't really affect the enemy's ability to target it, and it has even weaker shields.
    • Species 8472 (Combination Beam): This involves getting between 3 and 8 ships to slave their beam weapons together to form one huge blast. In theory this should be a good way of taking out things like starbases and fusion cubes, but in reality it's probably the most blatant example of this trope in the series. The range is too short, the charging time is too long, and the AI's targeting priority system means that the formation will always be attacked whenever it gets near the intended target, and likely wiped out before it can fire the combined beam.
  • Awesome but Practical: Each race gets at least one of these among its ships' special weapons.
    • The Federation Nebula class gets the Shield Disruptor, which is Exactly What It Says on the Tin, and Engineering Team, which can radically increase repair speed aboard friendly ships. Meanwhile, the Sovereign class gets the Corbomite Device, which reflects hostile weapons fire back at the shooter.
      • The Engineering Team is a very good way to repair bases, as bases take much longer to repair than ships.
    • The Klingon Vor'Cha cruiser gets the Polaron Torpedo, which ignores shields and causes damage to one enemy subsystem, which is great if it knocks out, say, a starbase's weapons or shield generator. Also, the Fek'Lhr gets the Ion Storm, and Area of Effect that strips the shields off enemy ships and buildings, and Death Chant, which increases rate of fire and special energy recovery for all friendly ships within a certain radius.
    • The Romulan Shadow get the Psychonic Beam, which turns the crew of an enemy ship temporarily insane and kills about half of them in the process, along with the Holographic Projector, which can have a group of enemy ships shooting each other. Also, the Warbird gets a device that drains an enemy ship's shields and adds that energy to its own.
    • The Borg Assimilator gets the Auto-Assimilator, which literally rips the crew off an enemy ship and adds them to the Borg's Crew resource pool; the Cube's Holding Beam locks an enemy ship in place and starts sending drones aboard to take it over, by far the game's easiest way to capture a ship intact.
      • The Borg also have the Fusion Cube. In-game, the normal Cubes are similar to those in Voyager, and can be destroyed fairly easily. The Fusion Cube merges eight Cubes together, creating a giant Cube which is more on par with the unbeatable Cubes seen in early TNG. And then you get to start creating Tactical Fusion Cubes...
  • Big Bad: Locutus and Sela in Armada 1.
  • Body Horror: Both the Borg and Species 8472 are playable.
  • Cannon Fodder: What you're crewmen will be if you attempt to capture another faction's ships or stations. If there is nobody alive defending it, than your Red Shirts are likely to be killed before life support is restored. Either way, just send a few more boarding parties.
  • Continuity Nod: The second mission takes place in the Briar Patch, the setting from Star Trek: Insurrection, and involves protecting Ba'ku from some seriously pissed off Son'a.
  • Cool Starship: Many ships from the TNG era of the franchise show up, and a few (such as the Premonition and many of the Borg's ships) were designed specifically for the game. The Premonition in particular has become an Ensemble Darkhorse, with higher detailed versions for both Star Trek Starfleet Command and Star Trek: Bridge Commander.
    • Don't forget USS Incursion from Star Trek: Away Team, able to holographically mimic any other ship.
  • Demoted to Extra: Chancellor Martok and Admiral Sela in the penultimate campaign in the first game. You control their ships but they have no lines or actual role in the plot.
  • Explosive Instrumentation: In battle, crewmen on ships die in the dozens, even if said ships's Deflector Shields are still at full strength! Good to know these games are staying true to the source material...
  • Game Mod: The first game was known for being exceptionally easy to create mods for, which led to a huge modding community springing up. Unfortunately the developers either didn't get the memo on this or actively disapproved of it, and so the second game was designed in such a way that most weapon functions couldn't be modified, and any significant amount of modding could actually break the game installation altogether. Some modders managed to work their way around the game's restrictions, but the Armada II modding scene never took off in the way it did with the first game
  • Geo Effects: Provided by nebulae, and lots of asteroid belts. Black holes slow ships down, and will suck them in if their engines are off-line. Yellow Mutara Nebulae slowly kill off crewmen, and green nebulae somehow cause your ships to get repaired faster.
  • Green Rocks: Dilithium, which everyone needs to power their ships and build new ones (except species 8472).
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: Patrick Stewart, Michael Dorn, and Denise Crosby reprise their roles as Picard/Locutus, Worf, and Sela.
    • The captain of an Aegian class was voice-played by Jonathan Del Arco, Who played Miguel Diaz.
      • Del Arco also played the Borg drone Hugh aka Third of Five in the TNG episodes "I, Borg" and "Descent II".
    • Michael Reisz played the captain of the Nebula class and Commander Graff
  • Horde of Alien Locusts: Both the Borg and Species 8472. Both are playable as well.
  • Human Resources: Actually a resource statistic. No matter how compassionate you are, or however much of a role-player you are, this game WILL have feeling that A Million Is a Statistic before the end. Crew die even if the shields are up (in keeping with the TV shows).
  • Karma Houdini: Sela. Helps Toral instigate a Civil War with the Klingons, allies with the Borg, stabs Toral in the back, then stabs the Borg in the back. No comeuppance.
  • Meaningful Name: USS Premonition
  • A Million Is a Statistic: Inevitable, with how the games model crew complements for ships and stations. You need to build Starbases and colonize planets to replace you're losses, but then again, it's the most plentiful resource in both games.
  • No Campaign for the Wicked Subverted, the Borg and Species 8472 are playable, so go nuts.
  • No Canon for the Wicked: The Borg campaign ends with Worf and Deming dead, and Earth assimilated, but it's eventually undone by the Enterprise travelling through time to avert it.
  • Obvious Beta: The first game suffered a really bad case of this on its initial release, and the 1.1 patch didn't do a whole lot to help things. Worse still, Activision cut off support for the game only a couple of months after its initial release, leaving incoming Armada II developers Mad Doc Software to create a 1.2 patch that finally fixed all the major problems with the game. Armada II itself suffered a few bugs on its initial release, including one very obvious problem in that ship explosions weren't implemented properly, but was nowhere near as bad as the first game.
  • Organic Technology: Species 8472 are all about this, they even Transmute all other resources (including people) into Bio-Matter, before they can build with it. Because of the Organic Technology they are also a bit different to play, growing their ships from larvae, only needing one crew member per ship and have a weaker, but mobile, star base.
  • Pursued Protagonist: Captain Denning and the USS Premonition in Armada 1. And later the USS Avenger with Worf in command.
  • Real Time Strategy
  • Set Right What Once Went Wrong: The purpose for which the Premonition was built.
  • Standard Sci-Fi Fleet: The developers took artistic license to a bizarre degree on a few of the ships. By far the most Egregious case is with the Defiant Class. In DS9, and in Starfleet Command 3, the Defiant is a small overpowered warship capable of taking down ships five times it's size singlehandedly. In the Armada games, however, it's more or less Cannon Fodder and doesn't stand a chance against anything larger unless it's part of a fleet. And even then...
    • The first game was a LITTLE better about it, presumably because of the smaller ship pool (and because Worf uses a Defiant as his ship). However, in the second game, you're likely only building the basic shipyard because it's a requirement to build the advanced shipyard and gain access to the more powerful ships in your fleet.
    • The developers of Fleet Ops for Armada II were careful enough to take note of this inconsistency and restore its canonical status as a purpose-built Federation warship.
  • Standard Status Effects: Different colored Nebulae.
  • Subsystem Damage: Various parts of the ship can become assimilated or damaged, and many special abilities (and nebulae) temporarily disable certain ones. Repair times are influenced by how many crew are aboard, so replace you're Red Shirts often!
  • Time Travel: The Premonition, commissioned to Set Right What Once Went Wrong.
  • Timey-Wimey Ball: Where to begin? The Premonition is from a future where the Borg have assimilated the Alpha Quadrant, but it continues to exist even after history has been altered to the point where it should never have been built. The Enterprise is sent back in time just before the Borg win the Battle of Earth and proceed to assimilate the planet. In a "new" timeline, the Enterprise returns to Earth with a massive fleet of reinforcements just in time to stem the tide... then orders the Enterprise already there to go back and takes its place, which should result in two Enterprises, not one. A Borg cube goes back in time just at the moment of Locutus' defeat, destroys the Enterprise-D just after Farpoint Station, forcing the Premonition to go back and avert that event and protect the future. Yet, Picard remembers this event at the very start of the game! Finally, at the end of the game the Premonition quietly returns to the future... a future concurrent with the timeline they're in, meaning one where the Premonition was never built — and versions of Denning and the crew already exist.
  • Trailers Always Spoil: The opening cinematic of Armada 1 spoils a great deal about the plot before the game even starts.
  • Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny: The game has mods for everything from Star Trek, to Star Ocean, to Firefly, and beyond.
  • Video Game Cruelty Potential: Both the Borg and Species 8472 are playable.
    • Well... Both games include a Borg mission revolving around Assimilation. Species 8472's resource harvesters can literally suck people straight from their ships or colonies, to be turned into Bio-Matter!
  • We Have Reserves: While this is natural for any Real Time Strategy game, as you can see from the rest of this game's trope page, this is taken Up to Eleven compared to its fellows.
  • Red Shirt: A resource to keep track of!
  • Redshirt Army: Every race (except Species 8472) has these (or Mooks, depending on the race and circumstances). Note, that whenever you try taking over an enemy ship or station, more than 5 reds shirts die every second that they're fighting the defenders and/or fixing life support.
  • You Require More Vespene Gas: You also require more Dilithium, metal, crew, ships to assimilate...
  • Zerg Rush: More or less the only way a Venture or Defiant can take down large opponents in these games.
    • This is literally the only way to capture enemy ships or stations, see Redshirt Army above.
  • Zombie Apocalypse: Averting this is the reason the Premonition exists, and the entire point of both games. Also, don't let the Borg near your colonized worlds in Armada 2, aboard your ships in either game...
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