Why Not Every Ship Will Be Sold in UEC Shops
Ship ownership in Star Citizen has always walked a line between accessibility and aspiration. Starter ships are readily available through in-game currency, mid-tier vessels can be earned through focused gameplay loops, and industrial or combat specialists gradually work their way toward larger platforms. However, during Star Citizen Live – Lots of Ship Talk, the developers emphasised an important design philosophy:
Not every ship will be available for purchase with UEC in shops.
This was not a new idea, but the livestream offered the clearest explanation yet of why certain ships will remain outside traditional in-game storefronts, and how that decision supports the broader shape of the game’s economy, progression, and worldbuilding.
This article compiles the confirmed logic behind this approach and explains what it means for players navigating the future Persistent Universe.
The Purpose of UEC Sales Is Not 1:1 Parity With Real-Money Pledges
The developers clarified that the in-game ship roster is not designed to mirror the pledge store. The pledge store exists to fund development; the in-game economy exists to create progression, scarcity, and identity within the universe.
From the developer’s comments, several principles are clear:
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UEC shops will never contain the full breadth of pledge ships.
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Some vessels will be accessible through gameplay only in the long term.
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The game’s economy relies on tiers of accessibility to create meaningful goals.
Capital ships, rare alien craft, time-limited vessels, and highly specialised platforms represent long-term objectives — not items to be casually purchased on day one.
Large Ships Are Intended to Be Earned Through Gameplay Depth
One of the reasons given was that large ships create economic pressure. Their scale introduces new considerations:
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Crew requirements
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Operating costs
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Fuel consumption
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Maintenance cycles
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Strategic logistics
If these ships were universally purchasable through UEC, the early game would collapse under the weight of oversized assets. The developers described large ships as something that will be acquired through:
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Reputation
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Supply chains
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Orchestrated missions
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Community events
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Secondary systems like crafting or salvage
UEC shops are not designed to support this level of complexity.
Alternative Acquisition Paths Are a Core Design Feature
Rather than a single method of ownership, the team outlined multiple systems that will eventually grant access to rare or powerful ships:
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Loot discovery
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Crafting and assembly
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Persistent mission chains
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Reputation-locked contracts
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Faction alignment
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Industrial production pathways
These systems produce a wider variety of experiences than simply purchasing a ship from a terminal.
During the livestream, the developers made it clear that ship acquisition will become far more diverse over time, and UEC vendors are only one part of that ecosystem.
UEC Shops Will Focus on Common, Practical, Everyday Ships
Much like modern aviation or maritime markets, most ship dealers are not selling battleships or deep-space exploration vessels. They sell practical, common ships designed for:
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Patrol
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Cargo
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Entry-level mining
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Personal transport
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Local industry
This is the direction Star Citizen intends for its UEC shops.
High-end vessels will remain outside the standard catalogue to preserve:
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Economic stability
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Role progression
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Universe credibility
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Long-term goals for players and organisations
This is not a matter of exclusivity — it is a matter of structural balance.
Rare Ships Maintain Identity Through Limited Access
Alien ships, unique variants, military prototypes, and event-tied craft carry identity and lore weight. Making them universally purchasable would dilute their place in the universe.
By limiting access, the game maintains:
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Cultural significance of alien manufacturers
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Distinctions between human and non-human engineering
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Prestige around experimental designs
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Narrative meaning behind military hulls
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The value of exploration, diplomacy, and mission progress
These concepts are central to Star Citizen’s long-term worldbuilding, and UEC storefront parity would undermine them.
Economy Balance Requires Controlled Distribution
Star Citizen’s economy is not built on abstract numbers — it is a simulation of supply, infrastructure, and resource flow. Larger ships have an outsized impact on:
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Cargo capacity
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Commodity inflation
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Combat scaling
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Market throughput
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Risk and reward curves
If every player could buy a galaxy-shifting ship with enough grinding, the economy would destabilise. The developers are preventing this by ensuring:
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Some ships must be assembled
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Some ships require group effort
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Some ships are faction-locked
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Some ships are earned, not purchased
This ensures that the universe has structure and pacing rather than instant saturation.
How This Shapes the Future of Ship Progression
What the livestream made clear is that Star Citizen’s ship progression will be far more intricate than “save enough UEC and buy the next upgrade.”
Players will instead engage in:
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Reputation loops
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Long-haul logistics
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Mission chains
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Salvage and recovery
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Crafting and construction
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Faction alignment
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Industry-based progression
As these systems mature, they will create natural pathways to larger and more specialised ships — paths intended to be earned, not simply purchased.