Ship Naming Overhaul: What’s Changing for Idris, Polaris & Capital Ships
Ship naming is one of the most personal forms of ownership in Star Citizen. As larger vessels like the Idris, Javelin, Polaris, and Perseus move toward broader availability and gameplay support, the naming system has become increasingly strained. The current implementation, originally designed years ago, has grown inflexible, labour-intensive, and unable to adapt to the new wave of capital-class ships entering development.
During Star Citizen Live – Lots of Ship Talk, the developers spoke candidly about the state of ship naming and what needs to change. While not a feature reveal, the discussion offered the clearest insight yet into the future of nameplates, typography, and how capital ship identity will be managed going forward.
This article compiles every confirmed detail and establishes a factual baseline for what players can expect.
The Limits of the Current Naming System
The developers explained that the existing naming framework is far too rigid to support the scale and diversity of ships now entering Star Citizen. The system was described as:
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Manual
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Difficult to update
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Dependent on hand-crafted layouts
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Unable to adapt to different hull shapes
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Inflexible from a design and technical standpoint
Ships like the Idris and Polaris, with their expansive hulls and large geometric surfaces, highlight these limitations. Nameplates often require unique adjustments to look correct, and those adjustments are not scalable when dealing with dozens of capital-class ships.
The team described the system as something that “needs a redesign,” not an iteration.
A Fresh Approach for Modern Capital Ships
While no release timeline was provided, the discussion made the intent clear: the naming system must be rebuilt in a way that:
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Supports a wide variety of hull shapes
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Allows consistent, readable typography
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Reduces reliance on manual asset creation
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Enables ships of different sizes to follow coherent naming rules
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Makes future capital ships easier to implement
The Idris, Polaris, and Galaxy were all discussed in the broader context of modernizing capital ship support. Nameplates are a fundamental part of that modernization.
The developers stressed that the current approach is not sustainable and that the new system must be robust enough to handle the capital ship ecosystem Star Citizen is now entering.
How the Upcoming Changes Affect Existing Ships
The most immediate examples revolve around the Idris and Polaris.
For the Idris, which recently entered flight-ready status, naming is being rolled out gradually based on pledge timing. However, this rollout uses the existing naming system — the one the team acknowledges must be replaced.
For the Polaris, which is nearing release, the team emphasized that feedback from this ship has already informed improvements in signage, labeling, and interior visual clarity. The naming overhaul ties directly into that push for clearer, more functional presentation across all large RSI ships.
While the developers did not confirm whether older nameplates will be retrofitted, the tone of the conversation suggests that the overhaul is intended to be future-proof, improving both new and legacy ships over time.
What Players Should Expect Going Forward
To remain strictly factual, here is what is confirmed:
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The current naming system is outdated.
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It is too manual, inflexible, and inconsistent.
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The developers intend to redesign it.
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Large ships like the Idris and Polaris expose its limitations.
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New naming tech will support readability, scalability, and design consistency.
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No timeline has been announced.
Everything beyond this — such as potential customization options, player-defined placements, new fonts, or dynamic systems — remains unconfirmed.
Why Naming Is Becoming a Higher Priority
Capital ships are becoming a central focus of Star Citizen’s next development phase. With engineering, resource networks, multicrew progression, and upcoming mission refactors, these vessels are transitioning from concept pieces to fully functional platforms.
For ships of this scale:
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Names identify ownership
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Names signal allegiance and reputation
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Names define a ship’s presence in fleet operations
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Names become tied to crew identity
As capital ships take on larger roles across combat, exploration, logistics, and future events, a reliable naming system becomes essential.
The developers’ open acknowledgement of the problem suggests that ship naming is no longer a cosmetic afterthought — it is a core part of the capital-class gameplay environment being built for the next era of Star Citizen.