Solus Frontier Industrial Collective / SFIC

  • Organization
  • Casual
  • Role play
  • Resources
    Resources
  • Exploration
    Exploration

An independent industrial collective at the edge of known space — mining, salvaging, refining, manufacturing, building, transporting and exploring.

We work the frontier. We explore the unknown.

One day, we’ll find an unnamed star and call it Solus.

Casual pace. RP-friendly.

[UEX:751883]



History

The founder of Solus Frontier Industrial Collective, Regovero Solus spent his career at the intersection of technology and industrial development — an executive who understood, better than most, that civilization is not built by heroes. It is built by infrastructure.

When the frontier opened, others saw opportunity. He saw something else: a vacuum. Vast, indifferent space expanding faster than any government, any corporation, any military force could meaningfully reach. And in that vacuum, he saw what happens when humanity pushes outward without laying its foundations first — exposed colonies, fragile supply lines, settlements that burn because no one built the walls.

He had no interest in being a conqueror. He had every interest in being the reason a civilization could survive one.

Solus Frontier Industrial Collective was established with a single conviction: that the true backbone of human expansion into the stars is not firepower alone — but the mine shaft, the refinery, the fabrication plant, the supply chain, the outpost that stands when everything else fails. Warships need fuel. Armies need equipment. Colonies need food, shelter, and infrastructure. SFIC exists to build what sustains all of it — military, industrial, and civilian alike — piece by piece, at the edge of known space.

The collective commands the tools and resources to raise what the frontier demands: space stations, planetary outposts, production facilities. It operates not as a corporation with shareholders, but as a collective of operators bound by a common purpose: push further, build deeper, open the frontier to those who follow.

The goal is not fame. It is not dominance.

It is to find the system no one has reached yet, raise something lasting within it, and leave a name on the star charts that was not there before — Solus.

Manifesto

The age of exploration did not begin with warships. It began with the people who built the ports.

Humanity stands at the threshold of something unprecedented — a universe vast beyond comprehension, waiting not to be conquered, but to be understood, inhabited, and sustained. Every jump point crossed, every uncharted system entered, every colony planted in hostile soil demands one thing above all else: a foundation.

Solus Frontier Industrial Collective exists to lay that foundation.

We believe that the frontier belongs not to the most powerful, but to those willing to work it. That true security comes not from the size of your fleet, but from the depth of your supply lines, the strength of your infrastructure, the resilience of what you have built. Firepower protects. Industry endures.

We mine the raw materials that fuel civilization. We salvage what others abandon. We venture where supply chains don’t reach, recover what others leave behind, and claim the blueprints and resources that build the next outpost. We refine, manufacture, and construct — stations, outposts, equipment, and the countless components that keep humanity alive and expanding at the edge of known space. What we produce serves all purposes: military, industrial, civilian. We build for the warship and the colony alike, because both are expressions of the same ambition — to survive out there, and to thrive.

We do not seek dominion. We seek permanence.

Somewhere beyond the current charts, there are so many systems waiting to be found. We intend to find one — and build within it. To raise a home at the edge of the known, and to leave a name on the star charts that was not there before. Not a conquest. A milestone. Proof that a small collective of operators, with enough will and enough steel, can shape the course of human expansion.

We will call that star Solus.

This is not a dream. It is a plan without a completion date — patient, deliberate, and inevitable. SFIC moves at the pace of the frontier: steady, purposeful, and always forward.

The stars are not waiting for the brave. They are waiting for the builders.

We are the builders.

Charter

Solus Frontier Industrial Collective operates as a collective — not a hierarchy. There are no ranks of superiority, no class of operators above another. Those who take on administrative responsibilities do so in service of the collective, not in authority over it. Decisions are made with common sense and shared purpose as the guide.

We ask little of our members. We ask that they remember what SFIC stands for.

I. Conduct

Members of SFIC are expected to act with integrity — toward each other, and toward the broader community. Fraud, deception, and exploitation of fellow operators are incompatible with the spirit of this collective. We build. We do not steal from those who build beside us.

II. Solidarity

Deliberate harm to fellow members — whether through hostile action, sabotage, or betrayal of trust — will not be tolerated. We may operate independently, but we do not turn against our own.

III. Fair Play

SFIC expects all members to engage with the game as it is meant to be played. Advantages obtained through illegitimate means are a disservice to every operator who earns their place the hard way.

IV. Conflict

SFIC is not a combat organization, but combat is not foreign to us. Members are encouraged to engage in PvE operations — from defending the worksite to taking contracts in hostile space. PvP remains a personal choice; there are no mandatory engagements and no expectations. Fight when you want to. Stand down when you don’t.

V. Language

SFIC operates primarily in Traditional Chinese and English. Members are welcome regardless of language background, provided they are comfortable operating in an environment where communications may be in either or both. No one will be turned away for their language — only for their conduct.

VI. Activity

Real life comes first. There are no activity requirements, no contribution quotas, no penalties for absence. The frontier will still be there when you get back. When you do log in, make it yours — whether that means a full day of mining runs, a cargo haul across multiple systems, a hard-fought battle in contested space, or simply landing somewhere beautiful and taking in the view. This is your frontier too. Enjoy it.

VII. Membership

Prospective members are asked to provide a brief introduction before joining. Tell us who you are and what brings you to the frontier. That is all we need.

The rules are few because the expectations are simple: show up, do honest work, and don’t make things harder for the people beside you.

The rest is frontier.