Compare Hyperspeed Key prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by MicroProse Software, Inc. Published by Retroism, Nightdive Studios. Released on 4/1/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, RPG, Simulation, Strategy.

A classic MicroProse space sim where you race across star systems hunting humanity's next homeworld. Decisions come fast and bad ones cost everything.

Hyperspeed Key is a reissue of MicroProse's old-school space exploration and combat sim, published here by Retroism and Nightdive Studios. The premise is blunt: humanity needs a new planet, you are the pilot-captain sent to find it, and the galaxy is not remotely interested in helping you succeed. You manage a ship pushing toward the limits of faster-than-light travel, encounter alien civilisations, fight off threats, and make resource calls under constant time pressure. It sits somewhere at the intersection of space sim, light RPG, and strategic resource management, which is either its strength or its confusion depending on your tolerance for genre hybrids from the early 1990s. From a decision-depth standpoint, the game has genuine bones. Combat requires you to juggle weapon loadouts, shield management, and positioning in a way that rewards pre-planning over reflexes alone. The diplomatic encounters with alien races carry real consequences, and reading a species correctly before committing to a hostile or friendly stance can be the difference between a smooth run and a resource death spiral. The underlying systems are tight by the standards of their era, and players who enjoy working out optimal routes and encounter strategies will find something worth unpacking here. The AI is what it is, a product of its time, so veteran sim players should calibrate expectations accordingly. The honest difficulty is the entry barrier. There is no hand-holding tutorial of any modern substance. The documentation that would have shipped in the original box is absent from a quick play session, and the Steam release does little to compensate. New players will almost certainly need to seek out community guides or archived manuals to understand what the interface is actually asking of them. That is a real friction cost in 2024, and it is the main reason the Steam review count sits as low as it does. The game is not broken, it is just uncompromising about expecting you to do homework. For strategy-minded players who have a soft spot for MicroProse's design philosophy, where complexity was assumed and tutorials were for people who did not read manuals, there is a rewarding loop buried here. The sense of momentum as you chart a route, optimise fuel stops, and survive an unexpected first-contact skirmish with hull damage still intact has a specific satisfaction. Mod support and community activity are minimal given the niche audience, so do not come in expecting a living ecosystem of content updates. What is here is what shipped, and it is a time capsule as much as a game. If you already know you like vintage MicroProse titles or you are working through a personal library of classic space sims, Hyperspeed Key earns its place in that collection. If you are new to the lineage, budget time for external documentation and accept that the learning curve is vertical by design rather than by neglect. Diego, Scout Team

Hyperspeed Key
AdventureRPGSimulationStrategy

Hyperspeed Key

Apr 1, 2015MicroProse Software, IncRetroism, Nightdive Studios
GamerScout Says

A classic MicroProse space sim where you race across star systems hunting humanity's next homeworld. Decisions come fast and bad ones cost everything.

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About Hyperspeed Key

Hyperspeed Key is a reissue of MicroProse's old-school space exploration and combat sim, published here by Retroism and Nightdive Studios. The premise is blunt: humanity needs a new planet, you are the pilot-captain sent to find it, and the galaxy is not remotely interested in helping you succeed. You manage a ship pushing toward the limits of faster-than-light travel, encounter alien civilisations, fight off threats, and make resource calls under constant time pressure. It sits somewhere at the intersection of space sim, light RPG, and strategic resource management, which is either its strength or its confusion depending on your tolerance for genre hybrids from the early 1990s. From a decision-depth standpoint, the game has genuine bones. Combat requires you to juggle weapon loadouts, shield management, and positioning in a way that rewards pre-planning over reflexes alone. The diplomatic encounters with alien races carry real consequences, and reading a species correctly before committing to a hostile or friendly stance can be the difference between a smooth run and a resource death spiral. The underlying systems are tight by the standards of their era, and players who enjoy working out optimal routes and encounter strategies will find something worth unpacking here. The AI is what it is, a product of its time, so veteran sim players should calibrate expectations accordingly. The honest difficulty is the entry barrier. There is no hand-holding tutorial of any modern substance. The documentation that would have shipped in the original box is absent from a quick play session, and the Steam release does little to compensate. New players will almost certainly need to seek out community guides or archived manuals to understand what the interface is actually asking of them. That is a real friction cost in 2024, and it is the main reason the Steam review count sits as low as it does. The game is not broken, it is just uncompromising about expecting you to do homework. For strategy-minded players who have a soft spot for MicroProse's design philosophy, where complexity was assumed and tutorials were for people who did not read manuals, there is a rewarding loop buried here. The sense of momentum as you chart a route, optimise fuel stops, and survive an unexpected first-contact skirmish with hull damage still intact has a specific satisfaction. Mod support and community activity are minimal given the niche audience, so do not come in expecting a living ecosystem of content updates. What is here is what shipped, and it is a time capsule as much as a game. If you already know you like vintage MicroProse titles or you are working through a personal library of classic space sims, Hyperspeed Key earns its place in that collection. If you are new to the lineage, budget time for external documentation and accept that the learning curve is vertical by design rather than by neglect. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamClassic MicroProseSpace ExplorationResource ManagementFirst Contact DiplomacyTime Pressure StrategyRetro SimManual-Required Learning Curve

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
76%(25)

Game Info

Developer
MicroProse Software, Inc
Publisher
Retroism, Nightdive Studios
Release Date
Apr 1, 2015

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