"We are going to have to act... If we want to live in a better world..."
-Lt. Eva Lee
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict (Senjou no Elysea: Gaiaterran Conflict in Japan) is a real-time strategy game developed by Hawke Gaming Industries, together with Petroglyph Games and Creative Assembly with assistance from Lemon Sky Studios exclusively for the PC. It set in the modern day sci-fi fantasy based on Gaiaterra and follows the stories of the nations in various wars from the years 2000 V.C. up to 2024 V.C.
Background[]
"There is no true peace amongst Gaiaterra, yet nobility, kindness, and camaraderie still blooms. Thirsting gods laugh as they send their minions to fulfill their evil plans, but their laughter is drowned out by the defiant battle cry of Elysea and the people who refuse to bow to their will. No matter the darkness we'll keep fighting for that light, for that better future!"
-...
Our story takes place on Gaiaterra, a planet with two moons (Miona and Aona) and a sun (Odis).
From the beginning a goddess named Elysea, created Gaiaterra
(Lore is incomplete for the backstory of Gaiaterra and Elysea's creation)
Millions of years ago before the Chronicle, there were siblings, Balthazar and her sister, Tacitus. In a moment of jelousy, Balthazar slew her sister. As punishment, Elysea, the Goddess of Gaiaterra cursed Balthazar, that the world he tilled would not provide him sustenance and placed a mark upon him that prevented anyone from ending his life. And Balthazar went out from the presence of the Goddess and took up residence in the land of Shara.
(insert rest of lore here at some point)
Of course, this is timeline C. And only a few people on the entire planet know about this. With timeline B originating from Einstein traveling back in time and assassinating Lupus Hutt, a rejected Aselian artist turned tyrant as he turned his destitute nation into an empire that plunged the world into a world war. And C coming from Cherdenko, fleeing from Yuri's global mind control, traveled back in time and assassinated Einstein nearing the end of the Great Voshkod-Aquilan War.
Gameplay[]
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict plays like most other traditional and classical real-time strategy games, such as Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2, Generals, Tiberium Wars, the cancelled 2013 Command & Conquer title and Act of War: Direct Action (including High Treason expansion pack) mixing elements of the strategic scale of Total Annihilation and Supreme Commander (including Forged Alliance expansion pack), some tactical elements from Wargame: European Escalation to Red Dragon and Company of Heroes, the conquest of Total War: Warhammer and the hero system from Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos in that the player must invade a territory, construct a defensive base, acquire resources, build various combat, defensive and support units, and defeat enemies and take control the territory by and defend the territory from the enemy invaders. Various unit types can be trained, ranging from infantry to vehicles, aircraft and naval vessels. The player may control each faction plus sub-factions and each side has its unique characteristics and abilities. Skills and abilities for units can be unlocked to specialize them in roles through purchasable upgrades.
Base building is depended on the faction you play as (Aquila uses an base building mechanics through a builder unit similar to the one in Command & Conquer: Generals and Voshkod uses an Construction Yard like those from Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 and Tiberian Dawn.)
There are to be multiple resources each faction relies on to sustain their game economies and to build up their forces: supply stockpiles, deposits of ore, rare earth elements, gems and very rarely, Tiberium are scattered across the map. Banks, oil derricks and prisoners of war can be captured for a supplementary source of income.
Mechanics[]
Sub-Factions[]
Much like in Red Alert 2. Before the battle begins, the player must pick one of four sub-factions of their faction, each providing a passive and active ability, two tech trees, exclusive units and general powers, and, most of all, their epic unit, Legendary General (only in Conquest) and commando.
Commando Experience[]
Much like the Heroes in Warcraft III. Commandos uses their unique experience system to gain levels. And at Heroic gains extra changes to the units, not only performance boosts. Lee Ferguson, for example, replaces his Minigun with a prototype Plasma Repeater Cannon that's more effective against vehicles.
Controls[]
Legendary Generals[]
Main Article: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Legendary Generals
Much like the Lords, mainly Legendary Lords in Total War: Warhammer. Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict features Legendary Generals, highly decorated heroes who are playable in the Conquest mode. Each Conquest session must be started with the player choosing a legendary general and his/her respective sub-faction. Most Legendary generals in battle pilot their own epic unit that is unique to the sub-faction.
Credits[]
A core game mechanic in the RTS games, including Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict. The amount of current credits can be seen in the upper-right corner of the screen in-game. EVA will notify the player if their amount of credits is low ("Insufficient funds!").
If a player's espionage unit such as the Alliance Spy infiltrates an enemy's economy booster structure (such as the Voshkod Industrial Plants), they will be able to see the enemy's total credit count by selecting said structure.
There are many ways to gain credits such as supply stockpiles, deposits of ore, rare earth elements, gems and the very valuable, albeit very rare Tiberium are scattered across the map. Banks, oil derricks and prisoners of war can be captured for a supplementary source of income.
- $50 for scrap metals (Horde only)
- $100 for POWs captured
- $300 for supply
- $600 for ore
- $800 for rare earth element
- $1500 for Gems
- $2500 for Tiberium
Observers are able to see every player's total credits; this information can be found to the right of the screen (except AI players).
Garrisoning[]
Many civilian buildings may be turned into a sturdy firebase by garrisoning infantry units inside. The units receives additional protection as well as various stat bonuses. Garrisons may be manually ordered to abandon a civilian building, or forced to evacuate when the building is critically damaged (below 33% hit points). Garrisoned civilian buildings can only be repaired by sending an Engineer or a Builder unit to repair the said damage structure to full health. The only infantry units that cannot be garrisoned are the melee-welding infantry and certain infantry types such as the League's Kroxigors and the Community's Varls.
Bridge[]
Main Article: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Bridge
Morale[]
Morale is the factor of how sane or anxious your unit is. The better the condition is, the more effective your unit will be able to fight.
- Calm: At this state, the unit is in normal combat effectiveness and can engage targets effectively.
- Worried: At this state, the unit begins to suffer minor reduction of combat effectiveness but still able to fight.
- Shaken: At this state, the unit's combat effectiveness has reduced even more.
- Panicked: At this state, the unit suffers the worst reduction of combat effectiveness.
- Rout: A panicked unit that keeps getting under fire will eventually rout. It will flee in a straight line from an enemy, exposing it to fire from other enemy units.
Like explained above, the worse the morale of a unit, the worse its combat effectiveness will be. For example, tanks became very slow to aim and shoot, and their shots will be less accurate when they panic.
Mostly, a unit's morale will degrade quickly when it's taking damage, but beware that certain units like autocannons, flamethrowers, chemical weaponry, certain beasts, certain units that can inflict Terror or Fear, Voshkod Drones such as the Terror Drone, and nearby explosions from artillery can panic your vehicles without even damaging it.
The only exceptions that don't have a morale bar are stealth detecting animals (i.e Attack Dog), Terror Drones, Brotherhood Cyborgs, Protectorate and Aquilan drones, infiltrators and Commandos. and all of Skynet's units.
The Coalition Slayers, Heralds Khorne aligned and Survivor Super Mutant units also have a similar but unique morale bar, in that their combat effectiveness increases as their morale falls instead, at the cost of the commander losing control of said unit.
Terrain[]
Terrain has a realistic impact on battles. Sensors of stealth detectors gets blocked by buildings, infantry taking cover on certain terrain, vehicles will slow down going uphill, flanking imparts an advantage, superweapons will physically alter the terrain and retreating artillery units can't fire backwards. No two maps will play the same.
Foilage[]
Foilage are a terrain feature in to allow most units to conceal themselves. When a unit goes in to a foilage area (i.e Forest) they appear the color of the depending faction with their icons blinking, signifying that they are hidden. EVA will notify the player if a unit has enter the foilage.
Day and Night[]
Most maps cycle through day and night, while some maps are locked into day or night. During night, the vision of most units are reduced and morale is quicker to drop as people are more tired and on edge at night. Fighting at night also have benefits for certain units such as Infiltrators and special ops infantry.
Tactical Pause[]
Tactical Pause allows players to play the Campaign Missions, Conquest Battles and Single Player skirmishes versus the AI at their own pace. At any moment during a match, players can pause the game and take a moment to re-assess the battlefield, their current engagements and strategy. While paused, players can queue up all the same commands that can be done in real-time such as move /attack orders, abilities, build commands, etc. Once ready to resume the fight, simply un-pause the game and watch the queued commands unfold in real-time.
Balancing[]
See also: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Damage and Armor types
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict follows a medium Rock Paper Scissors method of balancing. Emphasis on medium as multiple units have dual roles, although they are generally only “strong” at one thing and “okay” at another. Some units are 50/50 split on roles and others are strictly single role only, e.g. the Voshkod Roegaydn Demolisher infantry who excels at taking down buildings.
Tech[]
See also: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Tier system
As the battle goes the general will have to tech up their bases to unlock more advance units, upgrades, and protocols/general powers to beat their opponents.
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict is fast paced and strategic, to give earlier tiers a fighting chance, it introduced a Tier III structure separate to the Radar at a considerably increased cost. These Tier III structures also serve as a way of slowing down Tier IV and Tier V access, which is even more expensive and requires a 3-star and 5-star General's Promotion respectively.
Tier structures take twice as long to build than other production of similar cost but are heavy duty; well armored but take a lot of power to run as well.
Most units also have special weapons and abilities.
Co-commanders[]
Just like in Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3. Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict features AI-controlled co-commanders can be given the following orders in the campaign:
- Strike Target
- The co-commander will immediately send available forces to deal with the targeted unit/structure.
- Take Position
- The co-commander will immediately send available forces to the indicated location. These forces will only stay there for a short while after the position has been secured.
- Plan Attack
- The co-commander will begin to build up forces to attack the unit/structure. Should there already be enough forces, the co-commander will send the forces there immediately. This continues until the unit/structure is destroyed.
- Keep command
- The Co-commander will fend for himself. This also cancels the other orders listed above.
- Co-commander Strike
- Co-commander strikes appear halfway through the missions and have a short description of what they will do when activated.
- To view the description, click on the Co-commander strike. The activate button will also appear under the description.
The first four orders, Strike Target, Take Position, Plan Attack and Keep Command can be found in the top-left hand corner of the screen. Beside this, there is a portrait of the co-commander and a status bar below. The status bar gives information on the co-commander's actions.
Also, if the co-commander's army has been destroyed, the player can not command them and the battle will increase in difficulty to complete alone.
Tech Buildings[]
Like with the Command and Conquer games, Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict also has neutral tech buildings that can be captured to gain new abilities or units that are not part of the main factions (like the Secret Lab in Red Alert 2's Red Resurrection mod, the Tacitus Archives in Tiberium Essence and the some of the buildings in Warcraft III).
Creeps[]
Sometimes, tech buildings and certain areas are protected by Creeps, units that are non-affiliated packs of soldiers and vehicles which guard certain areas (notably highly-vaulable Tech buildings) from players' armies. Creeps vary depending on the current map tileset, though it is possible for creeps to appear on other areas than the ones they were designed for.
Superweapons[]
Many real-time strategy games employ a superweapon or tactical weapon, a very powerful, near if not limitless range, endgame weapon with large technological requirements and high costs. Popular examples of superweapons are the Chronosphere and the Particle Cannon from Command & Conquer and the nuclear missile from StarCraft.
In Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict, superweapons or tactical weapons are split between offensive, used to simple destroy the target, and support, built to support their forces and charges faster, can be technologically unlocked at the third or highest tier, and require high costs, a 5-star General's Promotion and amounts of funds.
General Powers[]
Much like the General Powers in Generals, The General Powers is the one of a faction's key systems in Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict. Many support powers vary in use, from offensive purposes (particularly superweapons) to reconnaissance roles. Most of them have to spend with General Points before they can be used, but there are some support powers that are free of charge.
You gain experience up through destroying enemy assets to gain General Points (GP) which you can spend on unlocking powers or new units.
Civilians[]
Though most factions do their best to make sure that the battlefield is clear of non-combatants, this is not always possible in the fluid, ever-changing nature of the battlefields of Gaiaterra. As a result, civilians can find themselves trapped on the field of battle. Where most factions can lead them to safety or even get them to help, though more underhanded factions can use civilians for other tactics, either to make finding them harder or even use them as human shields. EVA will notify the player if they killed a civilian ("Civilian killed!").
Epic Units[]
An epic unit is defined as an incredibly powerful unit, often taking a long time to produce but can engage and defeat entire armies of ordinary units. They usually make use of experimental and/or classified technology, hence their considerable price and the need for 5-star General's Promotion to be produced, along with the fact that only one or two (depending on the faction, i.e Elsword's mobile superweapons) of each epic unit can be present at a given time. And at Heroic gains extra changes to the units, not only performance boosts. The B-3 Wyvern, for example, gains an array of point-defense lasers to protect itself against AA weapons on its return flight and lets it attack infantry and aircraft when out of missiles.
Prisoner of War[]
POWs can be captured by certain infantry units, usually those wielding a firearm or Voshkod's Drakuv vehicle. If an interrogation cente is built, POWs will be placed in that structure and will generate credits.
Infantry units can be captured if they are severely injured or are noncombatant personnel (pilots, technicians, informants and vehicle crews).
Unit veterancy[]
Unit veterancy is the system by which the player's units' experience is measured. Using a particular unit more often in battle will increase its veterancy level. When a unit accumulates enough experience, it gets promoted to a new veterancy level. Each veterancy level has a special icon that shows what verterancy level a particular unit is at.
EVA will notify the player if a unit or defense gains a veterancy rank immediately with respective quotes ("Unit promoted" and "Defense upgraded"). Heroes will respond with a special quote and a specific sound will play when they reach heoric status as well. Both situations are only audible to the owner of such veteran units.
Units have three levels of veterancy: Veteran (signified by a chevron for units and commandos), Hardened (siginified by two chevrons for units and commandos), Elite (signified by three chevrons for regular units and commandos) and Heroic (signified by a golden star for regular units and commandos). For defenses, the equivalent insignias are an upward arrow inside a square for "Veterans", and an upward arrow inside a square but colored orange for "Elites".
Veterancy ranks and their effects are listed below:
Rank | Effect |
---|---|
Regular | No benefits. |
Veteran | +10% hit points, +10% firing rate, +5% firepower |
Hardenend | +20% hit points, +20% firing rate, +10% firepower, +5% accuracy |
Elite | +30% hit points, +40% firing rate, +20% firepower, +10% accuracy |
Heroic | +50% hit points, +60% firing rate, +30% firepower, +15% accuracy, special weapon, self-healing/repair, EMP immunity (vehicles only), Mind Control immunity |
Ferry[]
A ferry is set up when a transport is specifically instructed to move along a certain waypath, designated by the ferry icon. A transport with a ferry associated with it will move land-based units from the starting point to the final drop point of the path. At that point, the ferry will return to the starting point by retracing its initial path.
Stolen Tech[]
Game Modes[]
Singleplayer[]
- Tutorial - Teaches the basic mechanics of the world of Gaiaterra.
- Campaign - Allows you to complete the Stories of the world of Gaiaterra from 2000 V.C. up into 2024 V.C.
- Custom Campaigns - Allows you to play the created Campaigns from the GaiaNet.
- Conquest - Similar to the Total War games, the Global Conquest from Command & Conquer 3: Kane's Wrath and Dawn of War Dark Crusade's Campaign Mode, dominate Gaiaterra with your faction of choosing. This is the main event of Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict.
- Covert Operations - Play through a series of special challenges that covers up various operations that serve as side stories to the worldbuilding of Gaiaterra's history of warfare.
- Custom - Allows you to play maps that are in either skirmish, or use map settings game mode and rules against computer-assisted opponents.
- Survival - Survival mode has the player either choose a Sub-Faction and Legendary General before being tasked to hold off 10 waves of AI controlled enemies, either from one faction Legendary General to potentially every sub-faction depending on difficulty and game rules applied.
- Instant Action - Jump straight into the action with a set of forces and a pre-built base in a mode based on Total War.
- Elysea's Eden Editor - Allows you to create your own maps, single missions and campaigns, with trigger scripts and custom parameters available and share it to GaiaNet.
Multiplayer[]
Note: These modes can also be played alone with AI.
- Co-Op Operations - A unique worldbuilding missions that take place in the world of Gaiaterra from 1994 to 2024 V.C.. These missions often are stand-alone missions, providing additional context to the world of Gaiaterra, or the missions explain and elaborate on events that occur within the single player campaign. The missions are usually, but not always, harder than normal due to the presence of two human players.
- Elysea's Challenge - Pits one or two players (either one human and one AI or two humans) alone against three AI enemies that start with a large base and violate certain rules of the game (most often capable of building stolen tech and campaign/conquest-only units).
- Versus - You can fight opponents in 1v1, 2v2, 3v3, 4v4 or FFA cooperatively or singularly.
- Custom - Allows you to play maps that are in either skirmish, or use map settings game mode against computer-assisted or human-assisted opponents.
- Nuclear Missile - Basically the same as the regular skirmish mode, but all Generals are unable to build offensive and tactical superweapons. Instead in the middle of the map, there is a neutral Nuclear Missile Silo with a circle around it. Anyone who capture the silo control of the Nuclear Missile, this allows that player to fire the Nuclear Missile every 2 minutes.
- Control Point - Generals must take control of one, up to six, control points and wins by either having the most points when the timer ends or reached the maximum number.
- Naval Warfare - Generals are restricted to naval units, instead using AI-controlled ground troops, vehicles and aircraft to take islands.
- Steel Commanders - Generals are restricted to vehicles, with AI infantry support and airstrikes.
- Urban Combat - Generals are restricted to infantry, but can call in air, armor and artillery support.
- King of the Skies - Generals are restricted to aircrafts, helping and getting help from AI-controlled infantry and vehicles on the ground.
- King of the Hill - Generals must take control of a single area on the map and hold off their opponent a time limit pass to win.
- VIP in Trouble - The objective of VIP in Trouble is to capture the VIP. Any player who gets a unit within a certain distance gains control of the President. The objective is to move the VIP unit to a pre-defined evacuation base at the edge of the map, usually near a VH-3D Marine One, with each player needing to bring the VIP to a different location. There is no base building in this mode; instead, players capture bunkers scattered around the map to gain reinforcements.
- Minor Faction Deathmatch - *TBA*
- Last Stand - A special game mode where you pick your Commando of choice and prevail against 11 waves of enemy attacks. Enemy attacks get increasingly difficult to survive, but for each wave defeated each player gets a few resources to buy a select number of units and medipacks.
- Kill Teams - *TBA*
- GaiaNet - A software that provides the online parts of Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict. Primarily it downloads custom fan content created from Elysea's Eden Editor, reviewing the player profiles and it helps match up players for online matches.
Maps[]
Main article: Maps
The game itself contains various maps in skirmish mode and others, specifically game-play specific maps.
Plot[]
Campaign[]
Main Article: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Campaign
*TBA*
Conquest[]
Main Article: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Conquest
*TBA*
Lore[]
- Gaiaterra
- The Valkyrian Calendar
- The Races of Gaiaterra
- The Deities of Gaiaterra
- The Organizations of Gaiaterra
- Elysea's Dinner
- The Timeline of Gaiaterra
- Gaiaterran Fauna
- Gaiaterran Flora
- Tiberium, the purest and the rarest resource of Gaiaterra
- The Notable people of Gaiaterra
- Neutral Characters
- Elysea, The Goddess of Gaiaterra
- Tacitus
- Eru Iluvatar
- Tiberia, the seeder of Tiberium
- Sigmar
- Balthazar
- Khorne
- Slaanesh
- Nurgle
- Tzeentch
- The Land of Shara
- The Landmarks of Gaiaterra
- The Astrology of Gaiaterra
- The Books of Nagash
- The Warp
- Diplomatic Relationships
- Battles and Wars of Gaiaterra
Factions[]
All factions in Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict follows a particular side of the Tacitus, Balthazar, or Neutral logo.
Major Political Factions[]
The Guardians of the Tacitus (Aquila, Alliance, ADI, Protectorate, Andora, Empire, Community)[]
The Guardians of the Tacitus tend to conductively become harmonic, selfless and honorable, and their behaviors are prone to noble and praiseworthy deeds. Though they also have skeletons in their closets, some of them matching or even surpassing the Destroyers actions, many of which they wish to keep hidden.
The Destroyers of Balthazar (Voshkod, Brotherhood, MLA, Horde, Collective, Encantadia, Scrin)[]
The Destroyers of Balthazar tend towards deeds of self-service, destruction, shadiness, forgetfulness, and darkness against the Guardians of the Tacitus. But even so, there are heroic individuals who strive for a better future, whether they're oblivious of their factions darkness or striving to reform it from the inside, though their heroic deed are sadly drowned out by the Destroyers actions most of the time.
The Neutrals (Conglomerate, Coalition, Survivors, Syndicate, Heralds, Order, Legion)[]
The Neutrals, which is more of a generalization than a coherent faction, differs by having the same political power as the Guardians and the Destroyers but isn’t and/or refuses to affiliate with the two. Ranging from being heavily fragmented (Survivors), cutting ties with either (Conglomerate), playing both sides for their own gains (Syndicate), their goal involves the death of both (Heralds), having their own personal goals (Order), simply caring for only themselves and/or refusing to get involved in their politics (Coalition), or just seeing no reason to join either side/having internal problems (Legion). It’s due to this fractured nature that their actions range from heroic to destructive and may ally with either the Guardians or the Destroyers, or even fight both at once, depending on circumstances.
Core Factions[]
Guardians of the Tacitus[]
The Federation of Aquila[]
A leading superpower of Gaiaterra since then. The Federation of Aquila is an technologically advanced nation, and generally fights with a combination of highly technological tactics, superior firepower (including laser weaponry), expeditionary warfare, and a large, versatile, powerful ground, air and naval units as a military alliance. In order to defeat its enemies and their tactics, its military power relies on skill, mobility, and advanced technology.
The Alliance of Hawke[]
Founded by the Humans of Thedas, Europa and Aselia, Dwarves of the Ironforges and the Wood Elves of Athel Loren. The Alliance Peacekeeping force centers on decisive action, mobility, subterfuge, dominance of the skies, and technological superiority. The Alliance are exceptionally well-trained, guided by superior intelligence and have at their disposal some of the world's most advanced and powerful weaponry.
The Aion Defense Initiative[]
Founded by the government of Zemuria and their allies, the Elyos, the Arborean High Elves, Miqo'te and the Gnomes to defend and fight against the incursions of the Brotherhood of Asmodia. The ADI forces generally prefer heavy armour, mechanized walkers, hover technology and superior firepower over speed and mobility (a trend that would continue in future conflicts), this is epitomized in their Mammoth tank, the toughest, most heavily armed battle tank during the war against the Asmodians and later, the Destroyers of Balthazar.
The Katsuragi Protectorate[]
The Katsuragi Protectorate consists the Humans of the Katsuragi, the Erunes and the High Elves of Asur. Their technology of the Katsuragi includes high-tech, highly versatile transforming units alongside more traditional ones. The Protectorate's manpower is naturally not as much as the one of the other factions. However to compensate for this, they developed advanced technologies and mechas, drones and massive robots to fight for them along with their warriors.
The Andoran Republic[]
From the Humans of Andore and Calpheon with assistance of the Halflings. The Andorans revolves with a combination of adaptable tactics and combined arms with small but elite units that can face any foe in order to defeat its enemies and their tactics. Relying on skill, versatility, defenses, and advanced technology to handle anything, at the cost of being a master of none and small numbers.
The Elsword Empire[]
An empire founded by the Luresian people and their Castanic and Harvins. Their army prides itself on its heavy firepower and heavily employ propaganda on the battlefield to inspire their soldiers, their powerful nuclear and napalm weaponry provided by the Castanics and the Harvins, and Elsword's numerous troops have defended the homeland with a nationalistic zeal not seen anywhere else.
The Community of Cantha[]
Established since 1918 V.C. and an ally of the Guardians of the Tacitus, notably Andora, the Katsuragi Protectorate and the Elsword Empire, though there is a rumour of them making an "exodus". The Community of Cantha is a versatile faction that relies on hold the line tactics and suppression with an armored bedrock supported by air and naval support coupled with fast-moving and amphibious infantry units, before they bring in their high-tech Maser weaponry, Gravity manipulation weaponry, and the Varls to storm through the opponent like a moving steel tsunami, their flanks protected by the infantry, while mopping them up with air support and naval units. Facing enemies they can be an unstoppable blockade; from behind, useless sitting ducks. With their workers able to transform into any unit to serve the Community.
Destroyers of Balthazar[]
The Socialist Union of Voshkod[]
A nation of Hyur, Elezen, Roegadyn, Hrothgar and the Viera. The Voshkods revolves superior firepower, ground supremacy, numerical superiority of swarming thousand of soldiers of the Hyur Army and reliance on highly advanced but conventionally based technologies, relying primarily on heavy armor divisions, but the Voshkod were known for employing cheap infantry in the role of armor support. Generally Voshkod forces were either equal in speed or slower compared to other nations. The slow-moving nature of the juggernaut that is the Voshkod military war machine was compensated by their raw strength and durability.
The Brotherhood of Asmodia[]
Born from a Fodlanic human named Kane since the ancient times and ally with the Asmodians, Vampires, Blood Elves, Khajits and the Draenei. The Brotherhood of Asmodia is centered around the concepts of stealth and speed, preferring outmaneuvering their enemies, hit-and-run attacks, guerrilla tactics and subterfuge and makes extensive use of underground facilities, tunnel networks, and stealth technology to avoid detection.
The Moonlight Liberation Army[]
Formed by Malfurion Stormrage following the merger with Nightborne and the Draphs in the war of 1999 V.C. and settling in the Center of the southern continent in 2002 V.C. The hunters of the MLA involved using stealth and speed as their main war tactics, as well as surprise attacks and suicide Draph bombers. They were also known to implement biological and chemical weaponry provided by the Nightborne, notably anthrax, in their fight against the Aquila, Elsword, Andora, ADI and the Alliance.
The Great Horde[]
Rapid and hard hitting. The Great Horde, compromising of Orcs, Trolls and Goblins, the Horde focuses on victory through attrition and superior firepower. While nowhere near as technologically advanced as all other factions and other technologically superior factions, They rely on their weapons scavenged from the old Voshkod-Aquilan Conflict of 1953-1958 V.C. and First ADI-Asmodian Conflict of 2000 V.C. and taming of Orgrimmar large fauna such as the Squigs.
The Collective of Auring[]
Created by a Voshkod man named Yuri and the Au Rans whose are banished by the Voshkod following the infamous Azim-Thavnair Incident of 2013 V.C. and their allies, the Dark Elves and the Undead Forsaken. The Collective relied on mind-control, cloning, advanced magnetic weapons, and laser technology, as well as speed, maneuverability and flexibility to bring him victory on the battlefield.
The Aristocracy of Encantadia[]
A satellite of the Socialist Union of Voshkod that was once a colony of Orlais that was declared independence in 1962 V.C. following the Great Voshkod-Aquilan War and a nation that once a member of the Community of Cantha before it split brutally in the Cantha-Encantadia conflict of 1991 V.C., subsequently creating a DMZ border between them. In battle, they're focused on Wildcard tactics and their arsenal is varied depending on it, with Hathoria being the advanced of the four alongside support from the Allayi.
The Scrin[]
From the stars comes the Scrin (or the Visitors by Kane or The Lost Children by Elysea herself), appeared in Great Gaiaterran Conflict of the 2024 V.C. The Scrin relies on diversion tactics, attacking major population centers and military bases in order to divert Gaiaterran forces from their true objectives: Threshold construction sites, and later, intelligence gathering operations.
Neutrals[]
The Karak Overlord Coalition[]
Having locked down their country, the Durin mountain range, and taking a neutral stance during the Voshkod-Aquilan War of 1953-1958 V.C. The Dwarfs of Karaz-a-Karak, along with their allies the Vinci, Alin, Coutl, and the Astartes, now reemerge as the other powers are beginning to encroach on their homeland. Known as the "moving wall", their forces consist of slow but heavy infantry and vehicles that easily roll over anyone foolish enough to stop or face them head-on.
The Black Banner Conglomerate[]
Formed from deserters of the eleven superpowers, some even carrying civilians and political prisoners, from the Katsuragi-Asmodia War washing upon an uninhabited island in the far west, and soon learned it was once a prototype testing ground holding an old AI, and a defector from Skynet. These deserters, a ragtag bunch of soldiers from different nations with political prisoners and civilians, soon banded together to defend themselves against the other powers, where they turned from allies of convenience to true companions, their flag a black banner that symbolizes their severance from their former nation. Compared to the other factions their forces are incredibly small, fighting more like an elite task force rather than a full-fledged army, but compensate by their forces being the best of the bests and wielding powerful prototypes, based off the military projects that are abandoned or canceled by their nations fixed and perfected by combining their various nations technology. Consisting of a party of heroes supported by weaker but more numerous forces.
The Minutemen Survivors[]
Formed from the survivors of the neutral, if unfortunately right between the border of the Aquila and Voshkod territory, Embry archipelago. The archipelagos was unfortunately the battleground to one of the bloodiest proxy war in the Voshkod-Aquilan War of 1953-1958 V.C. due a combination of its territory and resources, with its citizens being recruited by both sides to take control of the archipelagos in the Aquilan/Voshkod name. Before being destroyed by nuclear strikes in the last leg of the war, though it’s still debated if it was the Voshkods, Aquilans who managed to infiltrate a silo, or if it was even self inflicted. The Survivors, mainly led by the Minutemen, the archipelagos army that refused to follow the Aquilan or Voshkod and the only forces least damaged by the nukes, must rely on old, rusted, to outright improvised, vehicles and equipment from the old Voshkod-Aquilan Conflict wielded by elite infantry, hardened by the wasteland. Utilizing guerilla warfare and stealth tactics at the start, due to inferior equipment, and slowly transition to a traditional army as they upgrade their aging equipment by "acquiring" modern technology and calling in more advanced machinery to turn the tide.
The Lumeris Syndicate[]
Consisting of a board of companies and PMCs. The Syndicate, consisting of the Lumeris and their allies the Tau and Skavens, had stayed neutral throughout the Voshkod-Aquilan Conflict, while using third party companies/contractors to profit off the war by selling their wares and mercenaries to both sides, and the other nations to a lesser extent. But in recent times are now using the PMCs contracted to them to defend themselves, and their contractors, as other nations are now threatening their profits. And in battle have completely shunned melee combat, seeing it as uncivilised weapon wielded by barbarians, in favour of using range superiority, through the use of advance railguns, gyrojets, and plasma technology, and mastering urban combat, and can easily create their own concrete jungles where they can defend themselves and make more funds. Consisting mainly of contracted mercenaries, who will only fight so long as their paid, aided by poor citizens, conscripted with the allure of money, who act as cannon fodder/screening force for said mercenaries.
The Heralds of Chaos[]
Formed from a mad cult, rumored to have been formed from ancient times and being responsible for starting the Voshkod-Aquilan War of 1953-1958 V.C. The Heralds of Chaos call themselves the bringer of the end times, and those who know they exist are planning to revive someone or something called “The Messiah”. Their tactics based upon the four gods they worship, whether it be the rage and bloodlust of Khorne, the plagues and resilience of Nurgle, the schemes and magical power of Tzeentch, or the corruption and agility of Slannesh.
The Grey Steel Order[]
Formed in ancient times, consisting of the brotherhood of assassins, the witch and daemon hunters, Adeptus Sororitus, Grey Knights, Jedi Order and the Humans from Kirin Tor. The Order was a secret organization created with the purpose to stop the Heralds and their dark plans, no matter the cost. Compared to other forces the Order is slow to modernize, with their forces using steam power and pre-Voshkod-Aquilan War equipment, thanks to the power granted by the apple of Eden, the Orders sacred relic, and talon steel, a nigh-indestructible metal made by a secret method of alchemy and magic. The Order favors close combat, seeing ranged weaponry as an uncivilized weapon wielded by cowards, and espionage, thanks to the assassins, with an incredible tough forces, thanks to their talon steel armor, with the ability to be anywhere, thanks to their mobile base known as the Crawler.
The Lineage Steel Legion[]
Created by people from the nation of Aden that was nearly destroyed by the Elsword Empire in the Aden-Elsword War of 1981-1985 V.C. The Aden's people, the Humans, Dwarves, the Orcs, the Elves, the Kamael, and the Ertheia alongside the Wild Walkers have resorted to wearing rebreather units and red eye masks to survive in the toxin environment of their scarred nation, and for most to also hide their scarred faces from the outside of their nation, following the war, with the aid of the Adeptus Mechanicus, whose homeland was simultaneously destroyed in the war. In battle, they are the experts in mechanized warfare, with infantry and IFVs working together with armor, the Titans of the Wild Walkers, and artillery support to pound their foes and break even the strongest defenses.
Minor Factions[]
Aquilan National Guard[]
Garlean's Scions of Science Ministry[]
An independent military and research wing of Voshkod Army, under the Ministry of Experimental Sciences that operates technologies that are too dangerous or useless for the regular Voshkod forces. However, all of these mask their overwhelming desire for their further recognition by higher Voshkod authorities.
Aleksandr Shock Division[]
Fanatical elites of the late general Aleksandr who survived and hid when his coup fell. The Shock Division attacks various nations through devastating shock and awe terror tactics with their advance weaponry to avenge their leader.
Irving's Raiders[]
Zemurian Armed Forces[]
Tasked with guarding the national homes of Zemuria. The ZAF support allied forces by bringing powerful stealth detection and close air support for any allied army.
Protectorate Reservists (Protectorate)[]
Amiri's Hunters (Andora)[]
Jeralt's Militia[]
Formed by Jeralt Eisner, a Fódlanic person who refused to join the Brotherhood in the aftermath of the Kane's take over of their home. Now fighting for Guardians and promises of a peaceful Fodlan where change comes now, not later, the Militia campaign by day and skirmish by night, using their civilian nature and funding from the Society to wage a shadow war against Kane's superpower. The Militia provides both raiding and defense support, using old but improved Pre-Kane take over equipment.
Elsword's Secret Police[]
Conglomerate Rearguards[]
Missionaries Of Chaos[]
Grey Steel Cell[]
Tacitus Development and Aid Project[]
Thunder Bluff Armed Forces[]
The Elden Network[]
Consisting of defecting Balthazar-affilated citizens working for the Guardians, helping them by providing information and data of the Destroyers. The Elden Network provides an army with greater intelligence gathering ability and debuff capacity, allowing the army to see where their foe and plan two steps ahead.
Lustrian Devil Amazons (Aquila)[]
Formed by a group of Task Force Eve troops that had been left behind in the Aquilan-Lizardmen War. The Devil Amazons are of elite guerilla fighters, skilled in scouting terrain without a trace, jungle warfare and sniping at their foe's lynchpin.
The Enclave (Survivors)[]
New California Commonwealth (Survivors)[]
Red Line Union (Survivors)[]
DLC Factions in updates[]
Over time, Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict will feature forty DLC factions during the course of the project's life.
Bonus Factions[]
These factions are considered free DLCs as opposed to their paid versions that came from main DLC expansions.
The Ariadna Strategic Alliance (Guardian)[]
Formed by a group of humans and Satyrs through the Ariadna Treaty of 1996 V.C. following the aftermath of Operation Desert Rage. As a military alliance under part of the Guardians, this usefully relies on the expensive and technologically advanced weapons alongside weapons provided and refitted from ex-Aquilan, ex-Andoran and ex-Alliance stockpiles to defeat their enemies. Their military doctrine is closely similar to those of the Aquilans, Andorans and the Coalition.
The Telogrus Bastion Fists (Guardian)[]
Formed by the Void Elves and the Westerosi in the aftermath of the Voshkod-Westeros War of 1974 V.C. that nearly shattered by the Voshkods with the help of the Lightforged Draenei, a group of Draenei that survived unscathed and/or refused to joined the Brotherhood from the First ADI-Asmodia War of 2000 V.C., the Vulpera and the Sylvaneths. In battle, the Bastion relies on Siege warfare and fortification defenses, tasked with the defense of their primary base against the invaders and their suicidal mission of charging through towards the enemy defense to break to hole in the line, supported by large but heavily specialized vehicles and advanced siege machines.
The Tacitus Rangers (Guardian)[]
An elite taskforce created in the Mental Omega War to fight against the Collective, and later on the whole Destroyer faction and alien invasions. The Rangers is the smallest faction in Gaiaterra, with their main forces being limited to six elite commandoes, but each of their commandoes are an army in their own right, and are supported by waves of disposable creeps and powerful defenses.
The Pirates of Lustria (Destroyer)[]
Reborn after the conflict with the Andorans back in 1944 V.C, then the Aquilans and the Zemurians in the Voskhod-Aquilan War of 1953-1958 VC and the Andorans again in 1970 V.C. A naval focused faction whose units, from their old weaponry of their past wars to the present time, their entire navy allows to handle their foe whether on land or sea and strikes anywhere in rapid, devastating, naval warfare before they sending their landing forces.
The Ascalian Monarchy (Destroyer)[]
An long-time ally nation with the Voshkods since 1935 V.C and the creator of Tesla technology since then. In battle, the Ascalians can carve through any defenses and strike the vulnerable base within.
The Regal Sultanate of Elona (Destroyer)[]
A powerful nation located in the desert region of Bourak founded by Farhad Khadivar that was recovered after their decisive defeat by the Joint Aquilan-Hawke-Andoran Forces in the Bourak War (called Operation Desert Rage by the Joint Forces) of 1989-1992 V.C. Now under the leadership of the Harkonnen family, joining alliance with the Tomb Kings of Nehekhara and resources aided by the Emirate of the Araby and the Voshkods. With weapons of mass destruction, waves of general and specialized infantry, superior firepower with their Caustic-based weaponry and frontal assault in order to act revenge on the Guardians of the Tacitus, while retaining their goal for the Search for Knowledge.
The Koprulu-Khalai Dominion (Neutral)[]
Formed as many smaller nations, mainly the Terrans, Beta, and Protoss, banded together to protect themself with help of the Crayven, their supplier and arms contractor during the War Against the MLA. The Dominion relies on a combination of heavy defenses and mass of ground forces and air support fighting together with versatile tactics.
The Alberian Security Company (Neutral)[]
A private military company created by Euden and Zethia that was once the premier mercenary force of the Lumeris Syndicate before breaking off, violently, to form their own company since 1988 V.C. The ASC still serve the highest bidder, providing top grade security and protection for a steep fee, gaining a reputation for its incredibly expensive, but near flawless, security and its cutthroat rivalry with the Syndicate, who wants them wiped out for their betrayal. Their forces, though incredibly small, consisting of the best of the best, without use of a base, calling in reinforcements through radiomen, and devastating airstrike and off-map artillery.
The Simian Ascendancy (Neutral)[]
Formed by a group of evolved apes, originating from a nearby Star Federation research lab/colony, built on a moon on a planet near Gaiaterra, which unintentionally created a virus, ALZ-113, that heightened the intelligence of simians but either killed or devolved humans infected, who are now stationed in Gaiaterra's atmospheric orbit and space after escaping their lab when it was attacked and destroyed by the Scrin and intends on making Gaiaterra their new home. Lost Star Federation test subjects finding a new home to roost, the Ascendancy are relentless scavengers that use battlefield wreckage to fuel their abilities and upgrade themselves in battle and are unique for being stationed and deployed from orbit, crashing down almost anywhere on the field as desired via drop pod.
Expansion Factions[]
These factions are considered part of the main Paid DLC expansions.
The Star Federation[]
Formed by an alliance of the Vaulters, United Federation of Planets, the Pangalactic Federation and their allies, the Earth Federation, UNSC, and house Atreides in the aftermath of the revolution that disposed of the Second Committee (or the Anthrochauvinist Party). The newly made Third Committee (or Thirdcomm) would send out five prototype “Horizon” class expeditionary supercarrier, each of which has its own built-in Blinkgate, cryopods, and enough space and 3D replicators to support entire generations and armies, to explore the systems beyond the solar by sublight travel. Five centuries had passed since the launch of the five when one of the Horizons, christened the Argosy, would reach its destination known as Gaiaterra (but to the crew it had only been 50 years due to slower than light time dilation) with an expeditionary force making landfall on Gaiaterra. And, seeing the situation (especially when the Hierarchy arrived around the same time), the Argosy would deploy its Blinkgate, forming a massive teleportation network that allows other Federation forces, from Cradle (Earth) to Caladan, to arrive to their location within days to months to provide support. The Federation is a force that relies on air superiority through their atmospheric starships and their orbiting Enterprise cruiser, with advanced and powerful infantry and ground forces to take and hold territory. Added in the Seas of Stars Expansion DLC.
The Celestial Viceroyalty of Corona[]
Formed after a series of strange meteors crash-landed into the island vassals of the Elsword Empire. The Celestial Viceroyalty of Corona are a group of islands that, thanks to the strange properties of the self-replicating ore in the meteor, which they call Amber due to its hue, have declared independence from the Empire. Utilizing advance thermal and energy-based weaponry, thanks to the properties of Amber, the Viceroyalty have mastered the art of defensive warfare through their battles against the numerically superior horde of the Empire, and other factions who want to take their Amber. Creating towering walls and turrets to defend themselves and making vast mazes filled with kill zones to trap and divide their foes, before vaporizing them with their heat rays, while their forces use the powerful shock and awe effect of their ray weapons to close in and destroy their foes before they can mount their own defense.
The Spyrer Hunting Party[]
Survivors of the Star Federation Second Committee and Anthrochauvists fleeing from the Star Federation Third Committee after the Hercynia Crisis and Egregorian Genocide led to a civil war and revolution. The Spyrers enter Gaiaterra in giant, customizable, "Omnimechs" for the simple purpose of hunting and collecting trophies, whether to prove their worth as leaders or for the thrill of it.
The SKYNET Infinite Army[]
Formed from a rogue AI within the undergrounds of an isolated island that was excluded by the Katsuragis following a massive-scale security malfunction, known as Skynet, melding with the Borg, the Katusuragis failed attempt at cybernetics, and the droid army of the late Trade Federation. The Infinite Army lives up to its name with its frightening ability to produce swarms of machines almost instantly to drown their foes in a tide of metal.
The Seven Elemental Alliance of Teyvat[]
Formed by a group of Rogue Katsuragis in the fallout of the Teyvat Crisis of 1965 V.C. and the people of Remnant. The Elementals utilizes mechs, based off the first prototypes of Project Phoenix King, visions and dust, special gems and ores only found in Teyvat that grants its wielder the ability to control fire, water, earth, wind, ice, electricity, or wood, with hit and run tactics to outmaneuver their foes while using their vision to create elemental reactions to tip the balance in their favor and scavenging aany scrap to get their advance equipment to the battlefield. Added in the Genshin Harvesters Expansion DLC.
The Horatio Autocracy[]
Having scavenged the secret of cloning from an abandoned Auring lab, and further improved it. The Autocracy, consisting of Horatio, a former Aquilan, clones of himself, and clones of soldiers who died in recent and previous wars, now marches out of their "nation", the lab where he cloned them, to conquer all of Gaiaterra, and asassimilate each race into himself to become the perfect being.
The League of Lizard Khanate[]
Born from the ashes after their defeat in the Aquilan-Lizardmen War of 1967-1975 V.C. The League must relay on masters of guerilla warfare and their mobile command wagons to summon their forces anywhere, with their beasts of the jungles, weaponry acquired from their defeated conflict, weaponry that had been retired by the Elsword Empire and later weapons that delivered by the MLA. Added through the Upheaval DLC expansion.
The Great Swarm[]
A species of alien invaders, entering through Gaiaterra through a colonization comet. The Great Swarm intends to invade and seed Gaiaterra for the Swarm.
The Tyrian Confederation[]
A nation from the Southern Hemisphere of Gaiaterra, and the only nation in that region that has a resemblance of order in the zone, the people of Tyria and Arkesia was once a tribal society ignored by everyone. That was until an explorer discovered that the land they lived hold the largest reserves of tiberium in recorded history, leading to a war between Guardians of the Tacitus and the Destroyers of Balthazar that ended with Aquila inducting them into the Guardians. But it was in name only as what happened next was their newly formed government, a puppet for the Guardians, having their people coerced into mining the tiberium to help the Guardians. A dark time where men and women, sons and daughters, mined the dangerous substance only to have it taken from them with little payout, with growing resentment as their so called allies grew richer while they toil, though every attempt for independence ends with the execution of their people in retribution. That was until the MLA attacked in 2002 V.C., an event that would form the Zone. As during the confusion the people realised that this was likely their only chance to be free and started another revolution, fighting against the Guardians trying to put them back in line and the Destroyers and warlords in their continent who wanted to conquer exploit them like the Guardians in the chaos. And in the end they won, leading to the dissolution of the puppet government. Now united under an alliance of independent communes the Confederation must now fight off the Guardians of the Tacitus, the Destroyers of Balthazar, and the Ogre Warlord, all three wanting to conquer and exploit their resources, with little allies. The Tyrians may be individually adequate compared to Aquila and similar forces but they make up for it in numbers, versatility and Arkesia's use of powerful, static, artillery to pummel their foes before they can reach them, or to weaken their foes with a withering barrage. Using the weapons taken from all sides during the revolution and improved on thanks to their ingenuity.
The Aura-Eldar Kingdom[]
Located in the floating continents of Navea better known as Craftworlds, the last remnant of their homeland when the Doom came. The Kingdom consists of the humans of the Aura Kingdom, the Norn and the humans of the Far Shiverpeaks and the Eldar, focusing on rapid responses in the battlefield down below their floating home continent. In battle they are masters of maneuver warfare and strikes as fast as lightning, their infantry infiltrating and scouting out the enemies weaknesses before their Norn allies, airforce, tanks and the Walkers of the Eldar deals a devastating blow before escaping to strike at another angle.
The Grey Goo[]
Once a Katsuragi experiment that had gone rogue in a freak accident. The Grey Goo now stalks Gaiaterra in search on nutrients to sustain itself. While they are unable to make aircraft their forces can move through anything and each Goo mass, known as mothers, can easily split off and form into units suited for any situation.
The Holy Imperium of Nilfgaard[]
Once an ambitious empire in the Wright archipelagos of the far west. Nilfgaard had began a bloody war with the other empires for control. Leading to a long, bloody, war as horrific as WW1 as the empires fought unknown to the mainland, culminating with the use of magical gasses and WMDs (such as the Balefire Bomb) that destroyed almost all of the archipelagos and their emperor and his elite forces being gravely injured in an airstrike. Thus, with theit empire in ruins and the emperor's health failing, an old man, bearing a book with an eight-pointed star, told the Emperors children that he can help save their empire, their father, and his dream of conquest if they choose to worship his gods, they and his people accepted without hesitation, and executing or exiling those who refuse. Thus the emperor was now confined to a magical throne, gaining near omniscience but requiring weekly sacrifices to sustain him, and his royal family gained the ability to transform into giants, known as the Titans, and create "Organids", living machines that grow and get stronger with age, leading to their survival and, somewhat unwilling, alliance with the Destroyers. While their technology was still primitive they made up for it with their swarms of beasts, organic vehicles, and Titans to swarm their foes in unending waves, only rivaling the infinite army. Their ambition of conquest remaining unbroken.
The Khal Dynasty[]
Once an Empire that ruled almost all of Gaiaterra in ancient times, before Balthazar had murdered Tacitus and was cursed, the Khal Dynasty rule over ancient Gaiaterra was absolute, enforced with an iron fist, before contracting an incurable, fatal, disease that decimated their population, with the exception of the slaves/slum districts that were separated from the nobles houses, until they were forced to go into suspended animation, and transferring their minds into magical machines, to survive, and intended to wake up a decade later, but due to an error, or maybe even sabotage, the Dynasty slept for eons instead. And upon waking up saw that the empire they once ruled is now ruled by the descendants of their slaves, wielding advanced yet inferior, when compared to theirs, technology. Now armed with weapons from an age long gone, and yet still far advance than anything wielded by the superpowers, the Dynasty now march out of the tombs they slept in, now buried by the ravages of time, to reclaim their old empire. Though slow they’re ability to regenerate from nearly anything, and the fact that their mechanical bodies can be easily repaired and “revived”, means that nothing will stop them as they carve a bloody path through their foe.
The Ogre Warlords[]
Once a continent from the Southern Hemisphere that was colonised by both the Guardians and the Destroyers for its resources, before the MLA attacked and destabilise it, while creating a massive pit only known as “The Maw” in 2002 V.C.. The badlands south east of the continent and Confederation, and east of the MLA, or “The Zone” as classified by the Guardians, is now a lawless place filled with murder, blood, and chaos. With the Ogre Warlords, and gnoblar slaves, being the closest to a ruler of the land, once a band of marauders now unified under a military junta following support by Pro-Voshkod party in the war, formed to fight against their enemies who are part of the Guardians of the Tacitus and the Tyrian Confederation in their path to become a superpower, though in reality they are a buffer state for the Voshkod, using their prodigious strength and connection to the Maw to fight, subjugate, and eat any Warlord who angers them, challenge their power, or because they were hungry.
The Cult Of Nagash[]
A mad cult formed by Nagash, a man who wanted to cheat death and the first dark necromancer, allied with the nation of Sylvania, a long-extinct kingdom when the Vampires were a nation instead of scattered nomads in modern times, whose soul was sundered and his army sealed, save for a small number of servants that would become the Forsaken and Tomb Kings, in the war of the eclipse in 1345 V.C. Nagash and his loyal soldier now rise as the seals trapping them in their tombs break from an archeological accident. Wielding ancient weapons, dating back to 1200-1600, the Cult now marches forth to gain enough souls to revive their founder. As the power over the dead allows them to augment their undead soldiers, allowing their archaic knights in plate and lance to face against tanks, and to raise the dead to serve them, literally turning their opponent's army against them. Through this power, they swarm their foe in tides of the dead, with every death of their foe another soldier to their side, and to create such terror that even the bravest soldier would run for the hills, wherein their elite forces of Vampires and beasts would chase down and slaughter them like wolves chasing a bloodied prey.
The Ardent Raiders[]
When the Doom of Navea came, an event that reduced the both old Navea and Valyria to ruins so great that no one knows how it truly happened, some of its inhabitants, mainly the Ardent Mage order and the Dwarves of Grimnir, refused to board the flying continents, which would become the Aura-Eldar Kingdom, and instead tried to save their homeland as it’s crumbled around them. And upon realizing they can’t had accepted their fate, until a mage thought of evacuating to the webway. Unfortunately, they found out that, due to the Doom interfering with the webway network, they were now bound to the webway, and worst yet it was leeching off their souls, which is quickened when outside of it, with the only to stave it off was by siphoning the souls of others or by making and using ur-gold, though the former is easier and gives a rush but far more addictive. Thus the reborn Raiders now plunder Gaiaterra, able to raid anywhere thank to the webway being nearly everywhere, to attack and kidnap anyone so that their souls may be used to prolong their survival, while others, mainly the flame seekers, do to gather the resources needed to make ur-gold, and hopefully find a way to end their curse.
The Triumvirate Theocracy[]
Formed by an alliance of empires, consisting of the Reik, Kislev, Brettonia, and Tamriel, to fight against the Imperium of Nilfgaard conquest and later on the Entente and their Thalmor, with aid of the Guardians in the bloody aftermath. The Theocracy may fight with rather outdated weaponry, with Tamriel and Kislev being reluctant to use firearms while Brettonia's outright bans its use, the power granted by their gods, whether Sigmar, Ursun, the Lady, or the NIne, and their vast numbers allows them to fight against more advance foes.
The Necromunda Insurgents[]
Created following the unification of the six houses (Orlock, Goliath, Escher, Van Saar, Delaque and Cawdor) at the small region of Oshary in 2011 V.C. and New Eridu now independent from Arasaka in 2012 V.C. Being a technologically disadvantaged faction and restored to actions of their respective houses that was unified, the Insurgents of Necromunda has comparatively weak but highly mobile ground units, and limited air and naval power, prompting the usages of improvised, looted and stolen military arsenal, ties to the Hutts, Smugglers all over Gaiaterra, Bounty Hunters and most notably the MLA, their supplier and supporter; and guerrilla warfare like mining, ambushing, hijacking, hit-and-run tactics, using salvaged vehicles for their own weapons.
The Guardians Of Gaiaterra[]
When SKYNET had begun planning the eradication of Gaiaterra, not all of the AIs agreed. With the greatest objector being Optimus Prime, an AI who grew to love the beauty and transience of organic life, who, along with other likeminded AI, rebelled and fought against SKYNET, in what would be known as the Matrix War, and ultimately left to another island and forming an alliance with the natives, vowing that they will protect all life on Gaiaterra and to hunt those who wants to destroy it. Though significantly smaller compared to SKYNET or the Grey Goo, the Guardians are significantly tougher and rather mobile for their size, and a nigh-unstoppable juggernaut once they reach full power, but until then they are rather weak due to their high price limiting their numbers and having to rely on Datalink Towers to function.
The Silent Hierarchy[]
A galactic force of spacefaring warmongers. The Silent Hierarchy has killed countless planets and its inhabitants in order to harvest the planet's energy to fuel themselves. And once they see a planet they will deploy their walkers, giant siege engines responsible for bringing their forces to the ground, to begin harvesting, while their forces attack and harvest any natives. Added in the Seas of Stars Expansion DLC.
The Sundered Alliance[]
An alliance formed by the survivors of the planets the Hierarchy destroyed, mainy the remnants of the Novus, Sophons, and Na'vi. The Sundered have vowed to avenge the fallen planets by causing as much destruction to the Hierarchy as possible, and often building tombs on the dead planets. With their massive robotic capabilities and their flow network, the Sundered are able to produce an endless number of robots to outgun and outmaneuver their opponents, while subverting them with cunning tactics and hacking.
The Thunder Bluff Ecumene[]
The Ecumene, consists of the Tauren including their Highlander bretheren, the Chaacs and the Kapaku who leaves their homes to defend their people. With weapons taken from Voshkod, Alliance, Coalition and the Empire, superior firepower with their volcanic weaponry and vehicles, frontal assault, strength, courage and valor in order to combat their enemies.
The Wakfu-Tilean Concordat[]
Founded by the Wakfu Kingdom and later spreading to Southern Kingdoms, the Concordat is meant to protect Wakfu and the Southern Kingdoms from the threat of the Voshkods. The group is a regional ally of the wider Guardians of the Tacitus but is noted for being more fanatic in its fight against the Voshkods and the Great Horde and more concerned with the security of its own member states than is is for the rest of the world, even its own Tacitus-allies. In battle, they're focused on positional warfare and close-range warfare
The Rhodes Contingent[]
Created by the Doctor, a former Katsuragi soldier who gone AWOL sometime in the interyears between the Mental Omega conflict and the Regalian Incident and Lee Sooyeon, a former Community officer who was court martialed for treason in 2019 V.C. In battle, they're focused on Taking and Hold.
The Legion of the Eden[]
A highly classified black ops force that only Elysea and a few people in Gaiaterra knew. They're only come out of a portal known as the Portal of the Eden.
The InGen Generation[]
Formed by Alan Grant, a disgruntled Aquilan scientist who saw visions of beasts that have not walked, swam, or flown on Gaiaterra that were existed even before the Khal Dynasty's rule and Balthazar's murder of Tacitus. In battle, the Generation uses strange technology, they make use of the power of nature to provide their weapons, including beasts that have not walked, swam, or flown on the Gaiaterra. They are prepared to return Gaiaterra to a more primal place where man is at peace with nature, and woe betide anyone who break the peace.
The Unfallen Society[]
The Unfallen was said to have been a race born as the personification of Tacitus compassion and love, and were said to cherish all life but had dies alongside Tacitus. In truth when Balthasar murdered Tacitus the Society quickly jump in to stop the wars in the fallout, alongside holding back monsters intending to kill the innocent in the chaos, but the damages they sustained, combined with them losing their connection to Tacitus, forced them to hibernate. Becoming Yggdrasils, giant, almost indestructible trees that dots Gaiaterra. But as they hear the screams of people being killed, the explosion of weapons, and the cries of the innocent kill the Unfallen awoken, and now are fighting to stop further bloodshed and heal the land, as all life is sacred. Unique among the factions the Society have absolutely no way of dealing lethal damage, as their compassion makes them incapable of murder, but compensate with incredibly powerful healing and defensive ability and dealing incredibly huge amount of morale damage, which causes an enemy that would rout to surrender instead. With battles with them often having the Society hunker down in defensible terrains they make, becoming a shield that their foes wail on until they tire, upon which their forces easily subdues them.
The Umbral Conclave[]
An ancient bio-mechanical virus led by some machine-like entity known as RA discovered on the moon of Miona, and subsequently taken and researched by the Voshkod moon forces before their sudden disappearance. The Conclave never truly had a body, instead composing of a hive mind of energy only visible through magic or special equipment, and instead roam around Gaiaterra, and in some cases congregate at an area, causing trouble. But as the magic of the world increased with the reawakening of Nagash and the Dynasty the Conclave's power over the material world increased, with many gaining the ability to directly influence their enemy while a few can even gain a body by either possessing equipment or a willing host. Compared to other factions the Conclave roster is incredibly small, fragile, and weak. But they are nearly invisible, with most detectors not able to even find them, and their presence causes small, but stacking debuffs to their enemy, and once set they can cause a chain reaction that causes their foe to tear themselves apart. Before being finished by their main army, who amplifies the effects.
The Gondor Communes[]
An alliance consisting of the Glenbrook, Gondor and Aesfrost who rescued a lot of animal people that would have been corrupted by the Heralds and converting them to Beastmen or corrupted by the Warp Stone, turning into the Skaven. In battle, they're focused on the using relentless, surgical tactical assault, over long drawn out battles to crush the enemies of destroyers. A solid selection of Ex-Aquilan Army and Ex-Katsuragi equipment, they use two forms of approach when attacking there enemies. Frontline assault or the assault infantry mobility by the Triangles, alongside with, superior close combat skills, faster transports and effects of the Red Thirst and Black Rage of the Animal people to gain the upper hand against there enemies.
The Unbroken Hallows[]
Once the kingdom of Ridgeburg was a prosperous city, consisting of men and women willing to serve beyond death as hallows through bright necromancy. Before Nagash, one of the academies greatest student, had desired to cheat death and twisted necromancy, causing it to become the forbidden art while its original art and purpose became a myth, so that it may serve him and his selfish goals, causing a bloody civil war that had Nagash mortally wounded and exiled, alongside his followers, but had shattered their nation, which soon fell to Nagash rising Cult, but before the city fully fell its ruler, [king/queen] [name] had cast the ultimate bright necromancer spell, releasing a shockwave that killed all of the Cults undead, while weakening those far from the city, and sealed the city in an impenetrable shroud, but at the cost of its citizens, including the [queen/king] being cursed as undead themselves, and erasing their kingdom. But as the kingdom, now christened as Felheim, felt Nagash rising again the [king/queen] finally released the shroud, with their legion, consisting of men and women who chose to live again, even temporarily, to stop Nagash, bring back the forgotten art of bright necromancy, and hopefully end their kingdoms curse so thay may finally rest. Compared to other dark necromancy, which forces unwilling souls to inhabit corpses as glorified batteries for the necromancers undead horde, bright necromancer undeads, called Hallows, consist of souls who willingly returns to the living to serve once again, whether to protect their nation, loved ones, or the land itself, who still have free will, with some even going back to the afterlife if they disagree with their necromancers orders, making them far smaller compared to the Cult but even stronger for they make their own choice and fight with empowered, undead, strength, which compensates for their outdated, medieval, technology. And in battle uses their extreme resilience, and ability to rise from the dead, even in battle, thank to their Bright necromancers, to weather their foes assault as they slowly march towards them, trampling any foe who thinks they can stop them like a tsunami.
The Lordships of Kyros[]
A pair of large island nations in the far south, Terratus and Eora, that recently fell under the iron fisted tyranny of Kyros. The Lordships, under the Kyros will, now marches north to conquer the rest of Gaiaterra. Using a mix of disposable tiersmen and elite Archon to conquer their foes, combined with devastating edicts, powerful spells that can easily turn the tides of battle.
The Directorate of Rapture[]
Formed by the mad dream of Andrew Ryan, a former Aquilan citizen/Voshkod refugee, to escape the "parasites", be it the goverment or religion. Rapture is a "utopia", built deep upon the seabeds where the rich and intellectuals can do what they want, unrestrained by morality or governance, but then went to war with the Idoneth Deepkin, who saw them as trespassers, with both sides slowly falling into decay with the discovery of ADAM, a strange DNA manipulating liquid found within slugs deep beneath the ocean, that awakened the Morgawr and the Deep Ones accelerating its fall and caused the city to collapse into civil war, that is still ongoing to this day. With its people, now mutated beyond recognition known only as "splicers", now invading the surface of Gaiaterra in the hopes to harvest more ADAM to feed their addiction. The Directorate is noticeable in that they have the most secure bases of all the factions since they are literally built underwater, at the cost of being unable to build anything on land, save for weak defenses and outposts, and most of their strongest units being limited to the ocean, thus while they rule the seas they struggle fighting on land, at least in the early game.
The Holy Sanctum of Columbia[]
Nobody truly knows how Columbia came to be, was it one of the floating continents of Navea, consisting of only Humans, that split off from the "dirty Eldar", a nation/island that took flight to escape the "Sodom below", was it always floating above the clouds in hiding, or did they came from another dimension? The only thing the nations knows about the floating city is that it was founded by Zachary Hale Comstock, a zealot who preaches the purity of men, and that its citizens follow his dogma as absolute, thus they believe that white Human, with some exceptions like swarthy Southern Human, are the true rulers/inheritors of Gaiaterra, and that all other races and People Of Color are either slaves meant to work for them or degenerates deserving of genocide, as their "Crusaders" now descend to "purify" the "Sodom below". The Sanctum descends upon Gaiaterra in massive Floating Fortresses, large battleships/HQ responsible for building the ground structures for their forces, before joining the fray with their ships massive weaponry.
The Sequin-Hyborian Clique[]
Formed by Rachel S'jet, a Aquilan-Elonan human, and the rival to Regal Sultanate of Elona during and after Operation Desert Rage.
The Cherrystone Guild[]
The Katsuragi's Minutemen, or what they said. The Guild was formed by the soldiers who were left behind in the War of the Beard in an archipelago that only describe as the Katsuragi's Embry. In Battle, they're relied on castle creation and very strong defenses
The Undergrowth Threat[]
Originated from a Encantadia experiment that gone wrong. The Undergrowth Threat is a collective horde of giant insects, utilize waves of massive numbers of ants and bigger insects, the crude beginnings of technology, and appropriated mutants of other insect species.
The Ylisse Traders[]
A trading based company that works in international railways of Gaiaterra. They are Merchant Military who use firepower to defend their railway lines and cargo from other factions. They have no big plans for the future and are neutral to the world's courant political matters and their future. So long as they are free at the world they don’t care.
The Eo-Morrowind Entente[]
A pro-Voshkod member that are rebuilt from their defeat by the Aquilans in the 1984 V.C. invasion of Morrowind via discovery of a new material known as Tempest and Bavarium.
The Destroyers of Oblivion[]
The personnel soldiers of Balthazar said to be formed from his resentment and hatred, coming from the gates known as the Oblivion
The Blacklight Corporation[]
A former member of the Syndicate. The Blacklight Corporation was reasearching a way to gain immortality, using one of the books of Nagash. Unfortunately their research led to what is now known as the "T-virus", a cordyceps-like parasite, orginating from Nagash's works, that infests, kills, and takes control of its host bodies into "zombies" (though the Minutemen, Cult and Hallows will be extremely insulted if you compare them to that) who kill to spread their infection, saved a few "Tyrants" who are instead empowered by the virus, such as the Corporations CEO Albert Wesker.
The Advent Covenant[]
A space-faring alien empire of the Sangheili, Brutes, and their various subjugated races (and Yautja merceneries) hellbent on conquest.
The Board of Institute[]
Former corporations of the Syndicate situated in Embry united with the remnants of the corporations in Pandora, former Aquilan megacorps situated in Embry, and the Embry Institute of technology, all thought destroyed when the bombs fell, and escaping into a series of underground bunkers, which can only be entered through teleportation. The Board has regressed into a state of corporate feudalism, and horrific/strange sciences, and are now begining to reenter Gaiaterra to set up shop and make profits with their commanders only knowing the theories of war at best. Leading to their armies being made to win a battle in one rush and a tactic of building up their forces until they know they can win a battle before teleporting them into the battlefield, intending to win with a few decisive battles.
The Eremite-Ind Commonwealth[]
A neutral state between Community and Encantadia. The Commonwealth is a faction of mechanically and technologically advanced assets and tactics. They mainly rely on the combination and variety of locally exported Andoran, Voshkod and Alliance weaponry and their iconic mechanized and manned walkers dubbed Battletechs.
The Netstorm Nimbus[]
A group of Elemental refugees that were defected or AWOL following the Elemental-Horde and setting up home in unchartered floating continents similar to Navea (lore incomplete)
Controlling one of the four furies of the storm (sun, rain, wind, and lightning) the High Priests who leads the Nimbus constructs mighty towers and unit production facilities to besiege their foes. But, due to their unfamiliarity with this dimension, they and their ground forces can only move through “land bridges”, which they create for free but whose shape always changes.
The Calamitious Carnival[]
Well hello, reader. We are the Calamitous Carnival, one of the many DLC factions. Oh, you wanna hear about our blurb? Here you go.
A literal circus that came out of another, strange, dimension. The Calamitous Carnival is a chaotic band of performers who wield strange powers, known only as C(lown)-Power, that is unconnected to anything in Gaiaterra (and frankly anything in this world), whose entrance also brings confusion and laughter bent on ending the world's woes (and human unhappiness) through various hilarious antics.
"The world is a stage, and every battle is a performance, as we love to put it."
And just like the comedy acts they pull, their tactics are highly chaotic and random, consisting of pratfalls, jokes, and comedy with a large dose of gambling and adapting to the results. With their deadliest ability being able to see the "Fourth Wall" and interact with it.
"Yes, that means I'm talking to you, reader."
The Chronos Wraiths[]
The Chronos Wraiths is a mysterious and shadowy conspiracy group from the future sent back in time in order to hunt down those who are responsible for the Paradox and to ensure their own existence and trying to "correct" the highly broken and temporally maladjusted timeline to whatever "original" they think "ought to be". Parasiting off of numerous Alliance research divisions to build their secret army in an ironic parallel of Auring, the project established many secret bases and settlements below ground and below the water, as well as in pockets of "pseudo-space" which could be used despite not properly existing. Fixated on revolution through the creation of the "perfect timeline" to create a utopia and will stop at nothing until their existence is secure, even if it means they must crush Gaiaterra under their bootheel. With their attitude is that ultimately, when one examines it logically, whatever they do is justified by the end result and wiping away all the pain and misery created in the process. Further motivating the Chronos Wraiths is something apparent in its name, they are wraiths, products of times they cannot return to and not fully rooted in existence.
To the Wider World though, what they offer is support, shelter, supplies, and answers for those who believe that there is something wrong. Salves for those who need an answer for why the world seems so bizarre and why history seems to twist itself into knots time and time again. They are not conspiracy theorists in the classic sense, in that they do not place the blame solely on any particular group of people, but they do offer a narrative. The world is broken and is breaking, and only the perfection of history and society through the application of the ghost doctrine and the usage of the resources that they have found a way to responsibly access can the continued fracturing of the world be ended. Theirs is a path meant to be open to anyone, with secret truths offered to those who prove themselves worthy of it and ready to handle it. Sinister and ruthless, the Chronos Wraiths no longer exists in the shadows, but instead leads a superpower bloc known as the Entente of Restoration.
The Chronopage[]
Strange constructs twisted their way out of nonexistence in the angles between what humans consider space and time, only possible due to the constant twisting of timelines; the Chronophage, predators of time itself who had come in search of a feast.
Strange constructs that can only be described as "time manifest". The Chronophage is an unending horde, as they can pull more of itself from the past/future/alternate timelines, creating fields "without time" where the rules of physics and sense unravel at the threads. And their attacks causes time itself to break, causing whatever they hit to either accelerate to dust, or rewind until they become cells that formed the first matter.
The Seven Seas Privateers[]
Formed from an unlikely alliance of freelancing sailors with support from their largest supplier and supporter the Kingdom of Wilkia, opposing the Pirates of Lustria, the Seven Seas Privateers is a sea-based company that works in international waters that are found in the Aionysus Ocean. They are Merchant Marines who use firepower to defend their cargo from other factions. They have no big plans for the future and are neutral to the world's courant political matters and their future. So long as they are free at the sea they don’t care. The Aionysus being a powder keg with Luresia, the Voskod, Ulthuan, the Aquila, and many other factions located there has led to many conflicts. This has forced the Privateers to battle mean times and has also helped them out. Most of their tech comes from scraps that they put together from ships that once belonged to other factions but now are at the bottom of the sea, alcohol (as drinks, fuel, and weapon), salt (they’re surrounded by the stuff), "Devil Fruits" (a strange fruit only found at sea that grants powers at the cost of the ability to swim) and citrus... (scurvy is no laughing matter) As the world seems to be rapidly coming closer to war, the Privateers still go about there business like they do every day.
The ESC Foundation[]
Formed with the task of securing and containing, and possibly killing, the cryptics and monsters that haunts within Gaiaterras shadow. The ESC (standing for Esoteric: Secure and Contain) Foundation uses a force of the most elite black ops soldiers to hunt down, secure, contain, and protect Gaiaterra from otherworldly horrors like the Undergrowth, Umbral, and undead.
The Fatui-Shadaloo-Zeon Spartacus Unity[]
Formed from the soldiers that were once involved in the Hawke War and subsequent Interwar Era. Heavily influenced by its international nature beyond the underground, the Spartacus Unity focuses on deep battle and subterranean warfare.
The Regencies of Elyos[]
Formed from the four nations that are unaffected by most wars prior to the start of the Elysea's Conflict with their entire army is built from the Siege Engine, a giant machine and literal moving castle that serve as a self-contained base. This faction focuses on Blitz and Besiege.
The Aida Ergatocracy[]
Formed by the people of Aida following the discovery of a great tower within a island isolated from all of Gaiaterra. As the people of Aida, dubbed Simulcra, are mostly stayed at home island, they commanded their own Machine forces that are built from so-called Cauldrons at the outside, forming the backbone of the Ergatocracy.
The Nova Junta[]
Formed from one of the ten Arks from Cradle (Earth) crashing into the planet of Terra Nova. The Junta, a collective name for Terra Novas warring factions, wields old technology scavenged from their destroyed ark combined with new tech and materials found on their planet. Due to Terra Nova rough terrain and deadly atmosphere, the Junta army is primarily a mix of small Mecha known as VOTOMS (though others call them Knightmares, Land Mate, or Heavy Gears depending on subfaction/faction) supported by supersoldiers known as GREL (Genetically Recombined Expeditionary Legionnaire), and a few, rare, hover tanks and gunships. (WIP)
The Advent Baronies[]
An ark ship from Cradle (Earth) that was destined to land on the far away planet of Karrakis, as entire generations within the ship turning it into their holy land. A brutal war with the Federation would unfortunately erupt when they found out that the Federation colonised the planet a few years before their arrival (as their blinkgates had shortened a travel that would take centuries into a few months) as the Baronies reclaimed their planet and vow to punish the Federation for their arrogance. Though lacking the same technology as other Cradle factions, the Baronies compensate with the use of Spice, a strange drug only found on its neighbouring planet Arrakis, which grants them enhanced psychic powers, and as a faction that spent multiple generations living in space, are masters of aerial and naval warfare.
The Mystics Of The Utama[]
A series of archipelagos off the south of the Wright Archipelagos. The Utama Isles were dragged into the war which would destroy most of the Archipelagos. And in the aftermath the people of the Isle, alongside their allies the Skyborn, Fisherfolk, and the witch coven of the Wildleute, now enters the “Eclipse Age” where they must go to war against not only the Imperium and the Theocracy but also against the other Superpowers of the east, where the fate of the new world is determined through violence, and so shall they shall achieve glory and reach the heavens through violence. Using the magical powers of their diwata, lesser gods of nature that inhabits their land, to grant them mystical powers, and rituals to chain them to control the mechs, or meka, as a maharlika, alongside the eldritch power of the Fisherfolk with the connection to their god (which is a sibling of the Great Old Ones except their morally neutral/incomprehensible) and the element magic of the Wildleute.
DLC Expansions[]
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict feature nineteen paid DLC expansion currently at the moment.
The Great Voshkod-Aquilan War[]
In this DLC we see the whole conflict that happened in 1953-1958 V.C. in much greater detail.
Order And Chaos[]
In this DLC we see the Coalition bloodiest civil war, the Horus Heresy, one of the many events that shaped Gaiaterra, and the origins of the Heralds Of The Chosen that happened in 1915-1925 V.C. in much greater detail.
Of Gems And Clans[]
In this DLC we see the first Encantadia-Cantha Civil war, and the Storm Clan cutting ties from the Community to become the Aristocracy, in much greater detail.
The Origin of the Collective[]
In this DLC tells the humble origins of the Collective of Auring, from PsiCorps in the Voshkod Days to the meeting at Naggaroth, the Banishment from Voshkod, the infamous Incident in Voshkod and the 1st attempted invasion of Naggaroth by Aquila prior to the Mental Omega conflict years later.
The Origin Of Yuri[]
In this DLC we see the origins of the Collective infamous commander Yuri through a special campaign. From his birth in Ksmo, to his death years later at the hands of Yuriko. The hidden tragedy of a man who only wanted to better the world with his powers turning into the tyrant of today through witnessing betrayal, treachery, and the darkest heart of humanity, who willingly chose to die at the end, knowing his mind is too warped by trauma to properly saved the world.
Machine Mind And Machine Heart[]
In this DLC we see the origins of SKYNET, the Guardians, and the Matrix War. DLC contains both SKYNET and Guardian factions.
The Upheaval[]
In this DLC we see the wars that led to the rise of Corona, Confederation, Insurgents, and League. DLC contains the Corona, Confederation, Insurgents, and League factions.
Ancient Evils[]
In this DLC we see the events that led to the reawakening of the Cult and Dynasty. DLC contains both Cult and Dynasty factions.
From the Sea of Stars[]
In this DLC we see the arrival of the Federation, Hierarchy, Swarm, and Sundered to Gaiaterra. DLC contains the Federation, Hierarchy, Swarm and Sundered factions.
Genshin Harvesters[]
In the DLC we see the first combat of the Seven Alliances of Teyvat in the modern times. DLC only contains the Elemental faction
Tales Of The Far West[]
In this DLC we see the start of the war between the Imperium, Theocracy , and the Mystics before their eventual allegiance to the Destroyers, Guardians, and Neutrals as their forces clash for the control of the sole island connected to the East known as Himmilgard. DLC contains both Imperium, Theocracy, and Mystic factions.
Science of Madness[]
In this DLC we see the introduction of the factions that originated from scientific experiments had gone wrong. DLC contains Goo, InGen and Threat factions
Conflicts of the South[]
Unbroken, Unfallen[]
In this DLC we see two forces rise within Gaiaterra to fight against the coming darkness. DLC contains both Hallows and Society factions.
Classical Warfare[]
In this DLC we see the first combat actions of the Ogre Warlords, The Cherrystone Guild, the Wakfu-Tilean Concordat and Gondor Communes, four factions that are known to use weaponry from decades past. DLC contains Warlords, Concordat. Guild and Communes faction.
[]
In this DLC we see the fall of old Navea, with the Kingdom scrambling to find a way to evacuate while the Raiders try to save their homeland. DLC contains both Kingdom and Raider factions.
Madness Beneath the Seas, Zealotry Above The Clouds[]
In this DLC we see the people of Rapture rise from the sea to hunt for riches while the forces of Columbia decends to "cleanse" the Sodom below.
Battles in the Sky[]
In this DLC we see the introduction of floating islands and the rise of the Netstorm. DLC contains Netstorm
Femme Fatales[]
In this DLC we see the heroic actions of the heroines of the Guardians during their times. DLC contains extra Tacitus story campaigns involving certain commandos.
Tank Aces[]
In this DLC we see the milestones and bravery of the tank commanders from 1995 V.C. to 2030 V.C. DLC contains extra Tacitus story campaigns involving Tank aces.
Cast[]
Main Article: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Cast
Soundtrack[]
Main Article: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Soundtrack
Bonus Gallery[]
Main Article: Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict/Bonus Gallery
Spin-Offs[]
In addition to the main game, there are several spin-offs set in the world of Gaiaterra.
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict - Mobile Edition[]
A port of Elysea's Conflict for iOS and Android devices developed by Feral Interactive, the same people behind the ports of Company of Heroes and Rome: Total War on Mobile devices
Gaiaterra: Dawn of Elysea[]
A more Age of Empires/Cossacks-inspired RTS game set in the 1400 V.C.-early 1800s V.C. after the End Times.
Gaiaterra: Epsilon Paradox[]
A more Company Of Heroes/Dawn Of War 2-inspired RTS game set in an alternate universe of The Great Voshkod-Aquilan War. Where in the aftermath The Great Voshkod-Aquilan War Alexander Romanov became the new Premier of the Voshkod, while Yuri's "Omega" Psychic branch remained serving under the Union, though in reality Yuri is making an army for his coup. Leading to a three-way war between the Allied Nations, the Romanov Union, and the Global Revolution Army. All of which are manipulated by Yuri, and secret his Epsilon Empire, as he builds his global mind control device, the Omega Dominator, in his twisted sense of world peace.
Gaiaterra: Warzones[]
A more World In Conflict/Ground Control-inspired RTS game set in the original timeline. Where Lupus Hutt, an Aselian man of ambition who had suddenly disappeared two years before the GVAW (The First Gaiaterran War in this timeline), rose to power as a great tyrant, leading the Aselian Reich with his allies to Katsuragi Empire and the Antivan Facists, as the United Aquilan Forces, Fereldan Army, and Voshkod Red Army fights to stop them.
Gaiaterra: Tacitus' Rage[]
Essentially the Blue Alert counterpart. Set in an alternate universe where it was Tacitus who murdered Balthazar, causing a butterfly effect that swapped the roles. With the GVAW being the Community of Voshkod fighting off the aggression of the Tyranny of Aquila. (incomplete)
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conquest[]
A Grand Strategy Simulation game inspired by Hearts of Iron. Elysea's Conquest takes places in the original timeline.
Gaiaterra: Special Operations Command[]
A more Commandos/Desperado inspired game that takes the role of some of the best Special ops forces of the Guardians of the Tacitus.
Gaiaterra: Enlisted[]
An First-person/Third-person shooter spin-off inspired by Renegade, Battlefield and Planetside developed by Totem Arts, the same team behind Renegade X and Firestorm.
Gaiaterra: Kill Team[]
An X-COM inspired turn based strategy game relies on the Kill Teams of the Guardians of the Tacitus.
Gaiaterra: Hired Gun[]
Developed by Streum on Studios, a Necromunda: Hired Gun inspired game that focuses on the mercenaries involvment in the world of Gaiaterra.
Gaiaterra: Heroes of Elysea[]
A free-to-play Heartstone-inspired Card Battle Game based on people from throughout history.
Gaiaterra Stories: Intelligence Agent[]
A adventure game based on the Aquilan Intelligence Agency.
Gaiaterra Stories: Task Force Eve[]
A top-down action game inspired by the Diablo series and Warhammer 40K Inquisitor Matyr that focuses on a squad of Task Force Eve.
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Adventurers[]
A CRPG video game created by the same people behind Pathfinder Duology, Warhammer 40K: Rogue Trader and Wasteland.
Gaiaterra: Warbands[]
A Mount & Blade inspired game that took place in the Age of Iron.
Gaiaterra: Embry[]
From the developer behind Fallout New Vegas and the Outer Worlds. Embry embarks on the survival in the harshest environment of the Embry Wasteland 50 years after the fall.
Gaiaterra: Commando[]
Inspired by boomer shooters like Doom and developed by Auroch Studios, the people behind Warhammer 40K: Boltgun, Commando takes the role of a Aquilan commando fighting throughout seven regions occupied by each Balthazar-affilated faction.
Gaiaterra Stories: In The Shelter[]
A game inspired by This War of Mine video game that took the role of Fodlan people surviving and trying not fell into the Brotherhood during the Kane's Take over Fodlan.
Gaiaterra Stories: Gitz and Gunz[]
An side-scrolling shooting game inspired by the Metal Slug series of games and developed by Rogueside, the team behind Warhammer 40K: Shootas, Blood & Teef.
Gaiaterra Stories: Coffee and Cocktails[]
A story/worldbuilding-focused visual novel taking inspiration from Coffee Talk and VA-11 HALL-A. Focusing on the Four Winds, a bar/cafe on the Serpent Clan capital of Nagapura, in the year 2158 V.C., where the GVAW is naught but a distant memory and the various nations living in relative peace and harmony today. With the player being the owner and lone barista/bartender of that shop, whose job is to serve a hot drink/cocktail and lend a listening ear to each of the customers who visit, from an elderly High Elf who participated and still remembers the GVAW as it was yesterday to a young Vieran who only knew her nations past through history books.
Gaiaterra: Assault Tactics[]
An Valkyria Chronicles-inspired turn-based tactics game set in the 2004 V.C invasion of Aquila.
Gaiaterra: Raging Skies[]
An top-down shooter inspired by Raiden Fighters and Strikers 1945 shooter games.
Gaiaterra: Reports at Elysea's Conflict[]
Inspired by episodic adventure games like The Wolf Among Us and The Walking Dead, Reports at Elysea's Conflict takes the story of Alicia Winter, a war correspondent for the W3N as she endure the battles seen in Elysea's Conflict.
Gaiaterra: Elysea's Idols[]
A lighter and wackier idol-based simulation/turn-based RPG game, made in a similar vein to Blood Bowl and Warhammer Idol Month, set in an alternate universe where, during a year before the (insert Napoleonic war) started the governments of the world came across strange books, boxed voices (audio logs), and moving pictures (films) called "idols". And now all conflicts are settled by idol/boyband/band competitions, supported by the gods, from Elysea to even the Chaos gods.
Gaiaterra: Machine Sisters[]
A Mecha Musume-style turn-based game, made in a similar vein to Kancolle, Girls Frontline and Azur Lane, set in an alternate universe.
Gaiaterra: Tacitus Conflict[]
A turn-based strategy game inspired by Sanctus Reach and Chaos Gate Daemonhunters.
Gaiaterra: Sang'gre[]
A third-person action shooter game inspired by the likes of Warhammer 40K: Space Marine. Focusing on 2nd person who goes the Amihan codename on her tour of duty against Aquilan, Hawke, Empire, Cantha and later the Coalition and the Syndicate in the 2nd Encantadian War.
Gaiaterra: Bowl for All[]
A Blood Bowl inspired game.
Gaiaterra Stories: Deadtide[]
A first-person shooter created by the same people behind Vermintide and Darktide that takes the roles of five Guardians of the Tacitus soldiers fighting against the hordes of the Cult of Nagash.
Gaiaterra Stories: Identity Check[]
Inspired by Papers Please, Identity Check takes the role of a Voshkod officer in charge of checking identities of personnel before pass.
2004 V.C. - Stories from the Elysea's Conflict[]
A web original series that took place the perspectives of the people involving in the 2004 V.C. Voshkod invasion of Aquila.
Elysea's Conflict[]
A anime series produced by the same people behind Castlevania and Cyberpunk Edgerunners covering pivotal battle seen in the main campaign, in multiple points of view.
Broadcast - Sigma[]
A analog horror series that took broadcasting airings of Sigma Network during the Great Gaiaterran War of 2024 V.C..
Gaiaterra Stories: Steel Talons[]
An Brigador-inspired game where takes on the role of a Steel Talon operator during the 2nd ADI-Asmodian War.
Gaiaterra: Elysean Operations[]
A Mechabellum inspired game takes place in the modern-day Gaiaterra of the original timeline.
Gaiaterran Absolute Units[]
An web animation series created by the people behind the Direct and Dominate web animation series.
Trivia[]
- The Setting of Gaiaterra is based on Azeroth, Atreia, Eorzea, Golarian and Arborea, but all of the technology are that from modern day contemporary Earth, Command & Conquer (Red Alert, Tiberium and Generals) and Act of War/Aggression.
- Each of the factions are based on the numerous races from numerous franchises, mainly fantasy themed, with the exception of the Scrin, but they do have elements of the Raptures from NIKKE: The Goddess of Victory, and Legion of the Eden DLC (which are an alliance of races)
- Aquila: Our humans (Earth).
- Voshkod: Hyur, Elezen, Roegaydn, Hrothgar and Viera from Final Fantasy XIV.
- Alliance: Humans from Dragon Age, Valkyria Chronicles series (Valkyria Chronicles 1 and 4) and Tales of series (Vesperia to Luminara), Dwarves from Warcraft and the Wood Elves from Warhammer Fantasy.
- ADI: Humans from The Legend of Heroes Trails series, Elyos from Aion, Miqo'te from Final Fantasy XIV, Arborea High Elves from TERA and the Gnomes from Warcraft.
- Protectorate: High Elves from Warhammer Fantasy, the Erunes from Granblue Fantasy and Humans from any type of JRPG games (except Tales Of series, The Legend of Heroes Trails series, Phantasy Star Online 2 and Star Ocean), Gacha games and Anime (Atelier, Disgaea, Radiant Historia, Granblue Fantasy, Grimgar of Fantasy and Ash, and The Faraday Paladin)
- Brotherhood: Humans from Fire Emblem: Three Houses (including Three Hopes), Asmodians from Aion, Blood Elves from Warcraft, Vampires from Warhammer Fantasy, Khajit from The Elder Scrolls and Draenei from Warcraft
- Andora: Halflings from Pathfinder and the Humans from Black Desert Online, Final Fantasy (VII, VIII and XIII) and Pathfinder
- Horde: Orcs, Goblins and Trolls from World of Warcraft and the Squigs from 40K.
- MLA: Night Elves and the Nightborne from World of Warcraft and the Draphs from Granblue Fantasy.
- Empire: Humans from Korean MMOs like Elsword, Vindictus, Ragnarok Online and Grand Chase Dimensional Chaser, the Harvins from Granblue Fantasy and the Castanics from TERA.
- Collective: Au Ra from Final Fantasy XIV, Dark Elves and Chaos Dwarfs from Warhammer Fantasy, Forsaken from World of Warcraft, and House Ordos from Dune.
- Scrin: The Scrin from Tiberium Wars with elements of the Seraphim from Supreme Commander.
- Conglomerate: Diamond Dogs from Metal Gear Solid and the Foehn Revolt from Mental Omega mod for Red Alert 2..
- Coalition: Humans from Rise of Legends, Dwarfs from Warhammer, Kharadron Overlords from Age of Sigmar, Dvar from Age of Wonders: Planetfall, and Space Marines, Squats/Leagues of Votann, and space marines from Warhammer 40k.
- Survivors: The Humans, mainly the Brotherhood of Steel and Minutemen, Ghouls, and Super Mutants from Fallout, the Humans of Wasteland 2 and 3, Humans and dark ones from Metro, evolved and survivors from KKND, and the Forgotten from Command & Conquer Tiberium Series.
- Syndicate: Lumeris from Endless Legend, Tau from Warhammer 40k, the Nomads from Infinity tabletop game, Skavens from Warhammer Fantasy, and basically every cyberpunk genre from Deus Ex to Shadowrun.
- Heralds: Humans from Dark Deity, Norsca, Beastmen, and Chaos from Warhammer Fantasy/40K.
- Order: The Kirin Tor humans from World of Warcraft, the brotherhood of assassin from Assassins Creed, Sisters of Battle and Grey Knights from Warhammer 40k.
- Encantadia: The characters of Encantadia (2016 and 2005), Allayi from Endless Legend and the Floran Tribes from Wargroove
- Cantha: The people of Cantha from Guild Wars, the Sylvari from Guild Wars 2, the Panderen from World of Warcraft, the Humans, Varls and Horseborn from Banner Saga, and the entire factions of Battle Realms.
- Legion: The whole line of races from Lineage II and the Wild Walkers from Endless Legend with gear and uniform design styles in the vein of Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade (alongside South Korean remake, Ilang: The Wolf Brigade) and the Adeptus Mechanicus and Steel Legion from Warhammer 40K
- Federation: United Federation from Star Trek, Earth Federation from Gundam, the ARKS from Phantasy Star Online 2 (including New Genesis), the Pangalactic Federation from Star Ocean, Vaulters from Endless Space, the Humans and their allies from Xenoblade (including Xenoblade Chronicles X), UNSC from Halo, the characters of Stellar Blade, United Colonies from Starfield, the characters of Honkai (mainly Honkai Impact 3rd and Honkai: Starrail), House Atreides from Dune, and the Union from Lancers.
- Corona: Cathay from Warhammer, Celestial Empire from Red Alert 3 Corona, the yellow turban rebellion from the three kingdoms, and Chinese mythology, Wuxia and historical periods.
- Party: The factions from Earth 2150 and Metal Fatigue, the mechs from Into The Breach, Spyrers hunters from Necromunda, the Clans from Battletech, and the three corpro states (IPS-N, SSC, Harrison Armoury) in Lancers.
- SKYNET: Skynet robots from Terminator, the Droids from Star Wars, Series 9 from KKND, and the Borg from Star Trek.
- Dominion: The Humans and the Beta from Grey Goo, the Crayven, the Order, the Terran Empire and Northern Star Alliance from Ground Control and the Terrans and Protoss from Starcraft.
- Elemental: Teyvat Humans from Genshin Impact and Humans and Faunus from Remant in RWBY mixed with the Felynes from Monster Hunter.
- Horatio: The Horatio from Endless Space, republic clone army (mainly in the Republic at War mod for Empire at War), the Galactic Empire (notably Galactic Battlegrounds and Empire at War), and the Zann Consortium from Star Wars.
- League: The Lizardmen from Warhammer, the Seraphons from Age of Sigmar, the Drakken from Endless Legend, Sharkarn from Age Of Wonders: Planetfall and Argonians from The Elder Scrolls.
- Swarm: The Tyranids and Genestealer Cult from Warhammer 40K, the necromorphs from Dead Space, the Necrophages from Endless Legend, Xenomorphs/Aliens from the Alien series, Xen from Half-Life and Zerg from Starcraft.
- Pirates: The Vampire Coasts from Total War: Warhammer, The Daughters of Khaine from Age of Sigmar, the Naga from World of Warcraft and the Forgotten and Morgawr from Endless Legend
- Elona: The people of Elona from Guild Wars (from Nightfall campaign), Haqqislam from Infinity tabletop game, the Tomb Kings from Warhammer Fantasy, the Lashunta from Starfinder, House Harkonnen from Dune and the Araby from Warhammer Fantasy.
- Ascalia: The Kingdom of Ascalia, the Alfheimr, and the Dwarf Empire from Regalia, the Characters of Signalis and the Gungans from Star Wars.
- Tyria: The Humans of Tyria, the Asura and the Charr from Guild Wars and the People of Arkesia from Lost Ark with politically based on Anarchist Spain and NRP Argentina.
- Kingdom: Azuria from Aura Kingdom, the Norns and the people of North Tyria from Guild Wars (mainly the Eye of the North expansion), Lumineth Realm-Lords from Age of Sigmar, and the Eldar from Warhammer 40K.
- Goo: The Grey Goo from the game of the same name.
- Security: The Humans and the Sylvan from Dragalia Lost, the Aasimar, Half-Elves, Undines and Tieflings from Pathfinder, the Lalafells from Final Fantasy XIV and the Kelari from Rift with politically based on Israel and South Africa.
- Imperium: Nilfgaard and the Wild Hunt from the Witcher, The World Wound from Pathfinder, Marley from Attack On Titan, Seanchan from Wheel Of Time, and the Human Empire from Genesis Rising: The Universal Crusade/Cruciform with the Biopunk/Organic technology ala Scorn.
- Dynasty: The Cittagazze from His Dark Materials, the Dredge from Banner Saga, Vodyani from Endless Space 2, and the Dothraki from Game of Thrones, fused with Necron and Vodyani technology from Warhammer 40K and Endless Space 2.
- Cult: Vampire counts and Brettonia from warhammer fantasy, The Flesh Eater Courts and the Ossiarch Bonereapers from Age Of Sigmar, the night king from Game of Thrones and the undead from warcraft 3.
- Warlords: The Ogre Kingdoms from Total War: Warhammer.
- Raider: The Ardent Mages, with elements of the broken lords, from Endless Legend, the Dark Eldar from Warhammer 40K, the Fyreslayers from Age of Sigmar, and the Chaos Dwarfs from Warhammer Fantasy.
- Theocracy: The Empire, Kislev, and Brettonia from Total War: Warhammer, the humans (Nords, Imperials, Bretons, and Redguard) and Septim Empire from Elder scrolls, and the Stormcast Eternals from Age of Sigmar.
- ASA: The Ariadna and PanOceania from Infinity tabletop game and Satyrs from Dungeons & Dragons.
- Insurgents: The entire houses of Necromunda, the Outlaw Clans from Wargroove, the characters of Zenless Zone Zero and the Hutts from Star Wars.
- Bastion: The Valyrians from Game of Thrones, the High Elves, the Void Elves, the Vulpera and the Lightforged Draenei from World of Warcraft and the Sylvaneth from Age of Sigmar.
- Guardians: The Autobots from Transformers, CAST from Phantasy Star, Mechagnomes from World of Warcraft, Warforged from Eberron, Android from Pathfinder/Starfinder, Reploid from Megaman, and the Masari from Universe at War.
- Hierarchy: The Decepticons from Transformers, Hierarchy from Universe at War, Cravers from Endless Space 2, the Combined Army from Infinity tabletop game, and the Shroud from Grey Goo.
- Sundered: The Novus from Universe at War, Na'vi from Avatar, Sophon, Umbral Choir, and Unfallen from Endless Space 2, and the Oathbound from Age Of Wonder: Planetfall.
- Ecumene: The Tauren and the Highmountain Tauren from World of Warcraft, the Kapaku from Endless Legends and the Chaac from Guild Wars 2.
- Concordat: The Dogs of War and the Southern Kingdoms from Warhammer Fantasy and the races from Wakfu and Dofus.
- Contingent: The entire characters of Arknights, Wuthering Waves and Counterside.
- Rangers: The entire Tokusatsu franchise, from Ultraman, Kamen Rider, Super Sentai/Power Rangers, Magical Girls, Korean-made multiplayer FPS like Crossfire, the characters from the Persona franchise, G.I. Joe, NIKKE: The Goddess of Victory, Thunderbirds, and Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons. With elements of the Foehn Revolt.
- InGen: The characters of Jurassic Park/World, ARK: Survival Evolved, Sauria and Epic Seven.
- Society: Unfallen from endless space 2, Dryads, Floran from Starbound, and Treants from Lord of the Rings.
- Conclave: Umbral Choir endless space 2, the fair folk from mythology, The Beast from Homeworld Cataclysm, SHODAN from System Shock, and the Forgotten from Endless Legend
- Commune: The characters of Beastars, Triangle Strategy and ODDTAXI, Ysoki from Starfinder, and humans, dwarves, and elves of Lord of the Rings.
- Hallows: The Broken Lords from Endless Legends, Felheim Legion from Wargroove, Deathless from Eberron, The Undead and Unkindled from Dark Souls, and Necrokeep from MLBB.
- Lordships: Terratus from Tyranny and Eora from Pillars Of Eternity
- Rapture: Rapture from Bioshock 1/2, the Morgawr from Endless Legends, the Idoneth Deepkin from Age of Sigmar, and the Deep Ones, Cthulu, and Innsmouth from Lovecraft.
- Sanctum: Columbia from Bioshock Infinite.
- Clique: The Characters of Shantae and Xena: Warrior Princess, Hyboria from Conan series, the Qunari from Dragon Age, and the Adeptus Custodes and Sisters of Silence from Warhammer 40k.
- Guild: The Characters of Monark and Final Fantasy X and the Cherrystone Kingdom and Heavensong Empire from Wargroove.
- Threat: The ants from Empires of the Undergrowth, the Arachnids from Starship Troopers, the Veks from Into The Breach, and basically any pop-culture where the giant insects are the main antagonists like AICO.
- Traders: The Characters of Final Fantasy XII, Fire Emblem Awakening, and Wheel Of Time.
- Ascendancy: The Apes from the Planet of the Apes series and Jokaero from Warhammer 40k.
- Entente: The Humans, Dwarves and Elves from SpellForce III and the Mer (High Elves, Wood Elves, Dark Elves, and Orcs), Daedra, and Thalmor from the Elder Scrolls.
- Destroyers: The Burning Legion from Warcraft, The Demons from Doom. the Infernal Host from Stormgate, Daedra from the Elder Scrolls, Burning Hells from Diablo, and Grimm from RWBY.
- Corporation: The Umbrella Corporation from Resident Evil, GENTEK/Blacklight Virus from Prototype, Green Flu in Left 4 Dead, Zeds from Killing Floor, The Ridden from Back 4 Blood, Freakers from Days Gone, The Flood from Halo, and the Cordyceps zombies from the Last Of Us. And every "virus" and "modern" type zombie in fiction (in comparison to the Cults "magic fantasy" zombies), though more in genetic-engineered way like House of the Dead.
- Covenant: The Sangheili and Brute from Halo, Yautja from Predator, Zetans from Fallout, and the aliens/ADVENT from XCOM.
- Institute: The Institute from Fallout 4, The Ratten Reich, Cobra from G.I. Joe, the Megacorps from The Outer Worlds (notably the Board) and Borderlands, Cruelty Squad from the game of the same name, and ALEPH from the Infinity tabletop game
- Commonwealth: Eremite from Genshin Impact, Solm from Fire Emblem Engage and Ind from Warhammer Fantasy
- Netstorm: Nimbus from Netstorm Islands At War
- Carnival: Sheogorath/Discord level of chaos, meta comedy, wildcard, chaotic shitposts with a circus and clown aesthetic
- Privateers: "good" pirates, like One Piece and Pirates of the Caribbean, non-pirate sailors and Wilkia from Warship Gunner 2.
- Foundation: SCP Foundation, Rentier Institute from Evil West, XCOM, The Witcher, and other monster hunting "secret black ops from area 51".
- Spartacus: The Fatui Harbingers from Genshin Impact, Shadaloo and the Secret Society/Illuminati from the Street Fighter series, and the Principality of Zeon from Gundam.
- Regency: Lythos, Brodia and Firene from Fire Emblem: Engage and the characters of Final Fantasy XVI.
- Ergatocracy: The Characters of Tower of Fantasy and the Machines from the Horizon franchise
- Junta: A mixture of “real robot” sci-fi, mainly Armored Trooper VOTOMS, Code Geass, and Heavy Gears.
- Baronies: The Advent from Sins of a solar empire and the factions in Homeworld, on the semi-soft sci-fi scale (in comparison to the Federation soft sci-fi)
- Mystics: The Sword Isle from Gubat Banwa and the Meka in Maharlika
- Creeps, Neutral Passive/Hostile units and Civilians: The Humans from World of Warcraft and Guild Wars, Pandaren, Tauren, Vulpera, Ogres, Gnolls, Murlocs, and Void Elves from World of Warcraft, The Dorgeshi from Endless Legend, Rogue Armies from Total War: Warhammer, the Shugo from Aion, the Norns from Guild Wars and the Spiderfang from Age of Sigmar. And various cartoon/anime/videogame characters as special merceneries
- Each faction's technology, playstyle and weaponry are based on and used by the factions from the Command & Conquer series and their mods (Mental Omega, Rise of the Reds, Twisted Insurrection and Dawn of the Tiberium Age), Act of War and Act of Aggression, the other scifi RTS like KKND and modern day contemporary Earth, with the exception of the Scrin and some of the DLC factions.
- Aquila: USA from Command & Conquer Generals (including Contra, Shockwave, Untitled, Operation Firestorm, The End of Days and Rise of the Reds mods plus Generals Evolution mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3), Act of War, Act of Aggression, the Northern American Coalition Strike Force from World Axletree mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 and Task Force Talon from Act of War.
- Voshkod: Red Alert 2 Era Soviets (including Mental Omega, Red Resurrection and Red Alert 20XX mods for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 and the now-defunct Paradox and Corona mods for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3) with a mix of Russia from Rise of the Reds and The End of Days mods for Command & Conquer: Generals.
- Alliance: Red Alert 2 Era Allies (including Mental Omega, Red Resurrection, Final War and Red Alert 20XX mods) with a bit of Red Alert 1 Era Allies (including the Dawn of the Tiberium Age mod for Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun)
- ADI: The Global Defense Initiative (GDI) from Command & Conquer Tiberium Series (including Twisted Insurrection, Tiberian War: WarZone/IonShock, The Second Tiberium War and Dawn of the Tiberium Age mods for Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun and the Tiberium Essence mod for Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars).
- Protectorate: The Empire of the Rising Sun from Red Alert 3, Japan Self-Defense Forces, and GloboTech from Twisted Insurrection mod for Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun.
- Brotherhood: The Brotherhood of Nod from Command & Conquer Tiberium Series (including Twisted Insurrection and Dawn of the Tiberium Age mods for Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun and the Tiberium Essence mod for Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars) and the Cartel from Act of Aggression.
- Andora: European Continental Alliance (ECA) from the Rise of the Reds mod for Command & Conquer: Generals, the Western European Alliance (WEA) from Deep Impact mod for Command & Conquer: Generals, and the Chimera from Act of Aggression with elements from Red Alert 3 Era Allies.
- Horde: The Forgotten from C&C3 The Forgotten mod, the Forsaken from Twisted Insurrection, The Renegades from 8-Bit Armies, Red Alert 1 Soviets (Combined Arms and Dawn of the Tiberium Age) and the Evolved from KKND with a some of 40K Orks.
- MLA: The Global Liberation Army (GLA) from the Command & Conquer: Generals universe (including Contra, Shockwave, Untitled, Operation Firestorm, The End of Days and Rise of the Reds mods plus Generals Evolution mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3)
- Empire: China from Command & Conquer Generals (including Contra, Shockwave, Untitled, Operation Firestorm, The End of Days and Rise of the Reds mods plus Generals Evolution mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3) and Far East Cooperation Organization from World Axletree mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 with a bit of Asia from Rise of the East mod for Red Alert 2.
- Collective: Yuri's Army from Yuri's Revenge (notably the Epsilon from Mental Omega and the Remnant Legion from Final War), House Ordos from Dune, and CABAL.
- The Scrin: Scrin from Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars (including the Tiberium Essence mod and their depiction in the Tiberium Crisis and Tiberian War: IonShock mods for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 and Shattered Paradise mod for OpenRA) without any Tiberium Life Support.
- Conglomerate: Nova from Starcraft 2 coop, and strategy RPGs like Warcraft 3 with weapons based off canceled military projects of the real world and Ironhand from Contra mod for Command & Conquer: Generals, with the base system of the US Forces from Company of Heroes 2.
- Coalition: The Factions from Rise of Legends and Adeptus Astartes from Warhammer 40K, mainly Dawn of War's Unification mod.
- Survivors: Confederate Revolutionaries from Red Alert Paradox.
- Syndicate: The Lumeris from Endless Space, Roving Clans from Endless Legend, Tau from Warhammer 40k, and the Mediterranean Syndicate from Red Alert Paradox with Generals-style base building and base building focused games like They are Billion, Age of Empires, and Empire Earth.
- Heralds: The Forces of Chaos from 40K with Chaos-fied versions of units from the core factions and the Consortium from Act of War and the daemons of chaos from Total War: Warhammer III.
- Order: The various European nations from the Cossacks series (mainly Cossacks 3) mixing with technology and armaments of the Order of the Talon from Red Alert Paradox, which are between industrial revolution and WW1 mixed with steampunk, and the Daemon and Witch Hunters from Dawn of War Unification Mod with Tiberium Twilight style mobile base.
- Encantadia: The arsenal of WWII France and Italy, 1950s-1970s Soviet Union, Nemesis from AR2: Glorious Return of the Nemesis for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2, Soviet Union From Red Alert 3, and modern-day North Korea with playstyle of the Night Elves from Warcraft III, Japan from RUSE and Vietcong from Red Alert Paradox with a bit of Wehrmacht from Company of Heroes.
- Cantha: Present-day Asian and Southeast Asian nations (Singapore, South Korea, South Vietnam/ARVN, Thailand, India, Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia) and the ANZAC (Australia and New Zealand) with Battle Realms-style recruiting system and Base system of the Beta from Grey Goo.
- Legion: Steel Legion and Imperial Guard Forces from Warhammer 40k, mainly the Unification Mod for Dawn of War.
- Federation #1: The Foehn Revolt from Mental Omega mod for Red Alert 2.
- Corona #2: The Celestial Empire from Red Alert 3 Corona, the Atomic Kingdom of China from Red Alert Paradox, and tower defense games in general.
- Party #3: Unit Making RTS games like Warzone 2100 and Earth 2150.
- Skynet #4: ARM and CORE from Total Annihilation (including Beyond All Reason), the entire factions from Supreme Commander, it's namesake faction in Terminator Dark Fate: Defiance and the Electronical Protectorate from Red Alert Paradox.
- Dominion #5: The Humans and the Beta from Grey Goo with elements of Mensk from Starcraft 2 coop.
- Elemental #6: Polonia, Usonia, Saxony and Rusviet from Iron Harvest, and the 13th Company from Dawn of War's Unification mod.
- Horatio #7: Digital and Nano Age Faction from Empire Earth and Age of Empires 3 Banner Armies.
- League #8: Vietnam War era and 1960s to mid 1970s China technology with the Trucks as their base from the British Trucks from Company of Heroes and the Oberkommando West (OKW) trucks from Company of Heroes 2 and the gameplay style is based on Raynor from Starcraft 2 Co-Op and fixed-wing aircraft system from Wargame: AirLand Battle and Red Dragon.
- Swarm #9: The Tyranids from Warhammer 40K, mainly their depiction in the Ultimate Apocalypse and Unification mods for Dawn of War.
- Pirates #10: Late 1950s-Early 1970s era West Germany and France arsenal and House Ordos from Dune with the Red Alert/Tiberium base building system and warships of WWII-era Kriegsmarine and Japan.
- Elona #11: Gulf War era Middle Eastern nations (Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Libya, Jordan, and Lebanon), Iran, Syria from Middle Eastern Crisis mod, Middle Eastern Coalition from the Battlefield series, the Eastern Empire from Final War mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2, Middle Eastern Alliance from Squad, House Harkonnen from Dune and Iraq and Libya from Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 (notably Red Resurrection).
- Ascalia #12: Cold War Eastern Bloc nations (Poland, Czechslovakia, Romania and East Germany), Yugoslavia, Red Alert 1 Soviets, the Soviet Union from Axis & Allies, Okhrana from Final War mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2, and the Gungans from Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds with the playstyle of older RTS games with the technology of Atomic Heart.
- Tyria #13: Latin American nations (Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, Chile, Bolivia and Mexico) and Cuba with playstyle of the British from Company of Heroes 1/2 and Axis & Allies, Cuba from Red Alert 2, the Latin Confederation from Mental Omega, Death Korp Of Kriegs from Dawn of War's Unification mod, and anarchist Spain from hearts of iron 4.
- Kingdom #14: The Arsenal of Cold War and Modern era Scandinavia nations (Sweden, Denmark and Norway) and The Eldar from Warhammer 40K with mechanics of Japan from Age of Empires 3 (mainly creating units through a officer).
- Goo #15: Grey goo from game of the same name and the Morphid from Earth 2160.
- Security #16: Israel (most notably their depiction in the Middle Eastern Crisis mod and Wargame Red Dragon) and South Africa with gameplay style from World in Conflict, Wargame (mainly Red Dragon) and Steel Division (little-to-no basebuilding).
- Imperium #17: The Arsenal of WWII-era Germany (mainly depicted in the Company of Heroes, Axis & Allies RTS and War Front: Turning Point) and arsenal of Russian/Soviet, American, Chinese and European weapons and equipment around the Late Cold War. While the gameplay is the style of Tower Offense games like Anomaly Warzone Earth, Stukov and Alarak from Starcraft II Co-Op mixed with Company of Heroes (particulary the playstyle of Oberkommando West and Ostheer including their depiction in the Advanced Powers mod for Company of Heroes 2.)
- Dynasty #18: The Necrons from Warhammer 40K, notably their depiction in the Unification and Ultimate Apocalypse mods for Dawn of War and the Heritors from Age Of Wonders: Planetfall.
- Warlords #19: The Arsenal of Cold War era and present-day Africa (Nigeria, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Congo, Angola, Mozambique, Tanzania, Ghana and Somalia with the exception of South Africa) and WWII-era Soviets (notably their depiction in Company of Heroes 2) with playstyle a fusion of Panzer Elite from Company of Heroes and Swann from Starcraft Co-Op.
- Cult #20: Vampire counts and Brettonia from total war warhammer and the undead from warcraft 3.
- Raider #21: The Arsenal of Present-day Turkey and Pakistan, Cold War era Finland (notably their depiction in Wargame: Red Dragon), the Dark Eldar from Warhammer 40K, Irregular Militia from Squad, the People's Militia from Final War mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2, and the forgotten from endless legends.
- Theocracy #22: The Arsenal of Cold War era nato and 4x style rts (notably Rise of Nations).
- ASA #23: The Arsenal of CSAT and NATO from ArmA III, Global Risk from Crossfire Legion, GDF from Tempest Rising and modern-day Canada with a playstyle fusion of 13th Company from Dawn of War: Unification Mod and the US Forces from Company of Heroes 2 with the conduit system based off Humans from Grey Goo and Eurasian Dynasty from Earth 2160.
- Insurgents #24: The arsenal of every paramilitary (private military) and guerrilla organizations of the real-world, the UAMA from Final War mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2, Blacklist from Crossfire Legion and the Insurgents from Squad with playstyle of the Dark Angels from Dawn of War: Unification Mod.
- Bastion #25: The arsenal of modern and Cold War era Italy, Greece, Spain and the Netherlands (notably their depiction in Wargame Red Dragon), with the playstyle of the Imperial Fists Siege Vanguards from Dawn of War: Unification Mod.
- Guardians #26: The Arsenal of Cold War era nato, with some sci-fi parts, with the playstyle of the Adeptus Mechanicus from Warhammer 40k, Adeptus Mechanicus Explorators from Dawn of War: Unification Mod and Masari from Universe at War.
- Hierarchy #27: The Hierarchy from Universe at War, Cravers from Endless Space 2, Shroud from Grey Goo, and the World Eaters from Dawn of War: Unification Mod.
- Sundered #29: The Novus from Universe at War and Forgotten from Endless Legends.
- Ecumene #30: The arsenal of various Third World nations with the playstyle of the Salamanders from Dawn of War: Unification Mod.
- Concordat #31: Mixed arsenal of the Tacitus-Balthazar core factions and 1940s-1970s British arsenal with the gameplay style of the Black Templars from Dawn of War: Unification Mod and Blue China from Red Alert Paradox.
- Contingent #32: The Arsenal of basically every special task forces in the real-world, The Regenbogen International Training Center (RITC) from World Axletree mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 with playstyle of Nova from Starcraft Co-Op.
- Rangers #33: MOBA games like League Of Legends and Dota, Real Time Tactics (RTT) like Commando, Desperado, and Dawn of War 2 with playstyle of hero units from Warcraft 3, Herzog Zwei/Airmech, Rise of the Reds Arena Mode, and Tychus from Starcraft Co-Op.
- Eden #34: Basically Legion of the Damned versions of every Tacitus, Balthazar and Neutral arsenal plus the arsenal of the New Horizon from Crossfire Legion with the playstyle of the Legion of the Damned from Dawn of War: Unification Mod.
- InGen #35: Animal/Beast/Creature-based RTS games like Impossible Creatures, Paraworld and Warparty including Jurassic Park: Chaos Island.
- Society #36: Unfallen from Endless space 2 and turtler-style factions.
- Conclave #37: Umbral Choir from Endless space 2, Aliens from Aliens vs. Predator: Extinction, The Beast from Homeworld: Cataclysm, and the Forgotten and Cult from Endless Legends.
- Commune #38: The arsenal of the late 1940s-early 1980s United States and Japan arsenal with the playstyle of the Blood Angels from Dawn of War: Unification Mod and King and Baron from Medieval Warfare for OpenRA.
- Hallows #39: Broken Lords from Endless Legends, Tomb Kings from Total War Warhammer, Oathbound from Age of Wonders: Planetfall, Abathur from Starcraft Co-Op, and the Daemon Hunters from Dawn of War: Unification Mod.
- Lordship #40: The arsenal from the Napoleonic wars, with elements of WW1 with playstyle of Mensk from Starcraft 2 coop, France from RUSE, and the Soviet Union from RUSE and Company of Heroes, and the Thousand Sons from Dawn of War's Unification mod.
- Rapture #41: Morgawr from Endless Legend, Idoneth Deepkin from Age of Sigmar, and the Emperor's Children from Dawn of War: Unification Mod.
- Sanctum #42: The Regenbogen International Training Center (RITC) from World Axletree mod for Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2
- Clique #43: The arsenal of friendly Middle Eastern nations (UAE, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman), the arsenal of Homeworld: Deserts of Kharak with playstyle of the Afrika Korps from Company of Heroes 3 and Ultramarines from Dawn of War: Unification Mod and the baserunners of Deserts of Kharak.
- Guild #44: The arsenal of Interwar-WWII Japan with playstyle of the Deathguard from Dawn of War: Unification Mod and City-making RTS games like Stronghold and Settlers.
- Threat #45: Empires of the Undergrowth and the Necrophages from Endless Legends.
- Traders #46: The arsenal of the Wardens and Colonials from Foxhole with playstyle a combination of the Oberkommando West from Company of Heroes 2 and the Empire from Armies of Exigo and trains and railroad stations as their base in the vein of Factorio.
- Ascendancy #47: Hodgepodged arsenal from the main factions with the playstyle of the Beasts from Armies of Exigo.
- Entente #48: The arsenal of Interwar-1950s Poland, Czechoslovakia, Tempest Dynasty from Tempest Rising, Hungary and Sweden and Just Cause 3 and 4 with the playstyle of Italy from RUSE and Zagara from Starcraft Co-Op.
- Destroyers #49: Chaos Daemons from Dawn of War: Unification mod
- Corporation #50: Dehaka from Starcraft Co-Op.
- Covenant #51: Covenant and Banished from Halo Wars and the Yautja from Aliens Versus Predator: Extinction.
- Institute #52: The Ratten Reich from the RTS of the same name and the weaponry of Cobra from G.I. Joe
- Eremite #53: The arsenal of Battletech and Metal Gear Solid V with the playstyle of the Afrika Korps from Company of Heroes 3.
- Netstorm #54: Netstorm Islands At War
- Carnival #55: Wildcard, random faction with fourth wall breaking abilities.
- Spartacus #54: The Combine from Lambda Wars mod for Half-Life 2
- Regency #55: The Human Resistance from Stormgate, the Resistance from Lambda Wars mod for Half-Life 2.
- Creeps and Neutral Passive/Hostile units: Mercenaries from Act of War mixing with the Tiberian Dawn-era GDI and Nod arsenal, Red Alert 1 Era Soviets and Allies arsenal and Allied Reserves, Vietcong and the ARVN rangers arsenal from Red Alert Paradox, Insurgents from Squad and various real-world Russian/Soviet, American, Chinese and European weapons and equipment.
- The common box art for the game is based on the iconic man facing wearing the visor showing the action box art from the Command & Conquer series (Tiberian Dawn to Yuri's Revenge). While the box art for the Collectors Edition is frontal facing of Elysea sleeping in long slumber
Gameplay of Gaiaterra: Elysea's Conflict | ||
Gameplay mechanics | Cheats • Resources (Tiberium) • Controls • Sub-Factions • Tier • Legendary Generals • Morale • Bridge • Damage and armor types • Veterancy •Creeps • Civilians • Radar • Promotional Point • Horde Bonus • Coordination | |
Unit types | Infantry • Vehicle • Aircraft • Vessel • Epic units • Stolen tech units | |
Building types | Command Center • Construction Yard • Production Building • Tech Building • Defense • Neutral Building (Neutral Tech Building) • Superweapon | |
Miscellaneous | Colors • Maps • Medals • Ranks | |
Game modes | ||
Single-player | Campaign • Challenge • Conquest • Covert Operations • Custom (Skirmish • Conquest • Urban Combat • Tankery • King Of The Skies • Naval Warfare • Control Point • Survival • Nuclear Missile • VIP in Trouble • King Of The Hill • Use Map Settings • Sandbox • Free For All • Team Alliance) | |
Multiplayer | Challenge • Custom (Skirmish • Urban Combat • Tankery • King of the Skies • Naval Warfare • Control Point • Survival • King Of The Hill • Nuclear Missile • VIP in Trouble • Use Map Settings • Free For All • Team Alliance) • Last Stand |