
The famous opening of Star Trek calls space "the final frontier", which sounds less impressive when you realize that at one point St. Louis was the final frontier. This being the case, it stands to reason that after space got through being a frontier it would become a place like any other, full of countries and cities and a sea of individuals, each striving to ruin it all for everyone else. This is the universe envisioned by Infinite Space: one in which people went to the stars without becoming any more enlightened, noble, or sensible than they are now.

Space opera fans deserve a chance to experience the vastness of Infinite Space, and Sega needs to make up for its mistake.
I still go back to Infinite Space from time to time. Probably the most underrated game I ever played.

EDGE took a trip down memory lane with some of the staff at Platinum Games in its latest issue.
One of the games discussed was Infinite Space, the studio’s first and only handheld game.
I claim that it should have been a PSP if not a PS3 title.
Wonder if they can port it.

In a storyline-driven genre like role playing, a good setting can end up being a game's most important element.
yeah, having a game about pneumonia but taking place in South America would really get me immersed. :/
This piece mostly deals with RPGs, but has there been any recent setting as good as Rapture?
I honestly can't think of many that were *that* well realized/interesting.
Yep. Half the reason I game is to go to interesting places and do interesting things. Which usually means "kill a lotta things," but still.