Contact our Discord live support; we are online 24/7.
Por qué los jugadores eligen LTI Hangar
Entrega rápida de naves, soporte real y un proceso claro mediante RSI Gift — diseñado para jugadores de Star Citizen que quieren comprar de forma más fácil, segura y sin complicaciones.
Entrega media en 20–30 minutos
Soporte en Discord 24/7
Equipo gamer con más de 10 años de experiencia
Compra segura: stock propio, sin vendedores externos
Soporte posventa fiable
Seguimiento del pedido en tiempo real
Preguntas frecuentes
¿Cuánto suele tardar la entrega?
Los pedidos de naves, CCU, pinturas e items de Star Citizen normalmente se entregan en 20–30 minutos.
En casos raros, la entrega puede tardar hasta 12 horas por alta demanda, límites de RSI Gift, estado de la cuenta o verificaciones manuales.
Normalmente, no permitimos que la entrega de una nave supere las 12 horas, salvo que haya un problema excepcional, como limitaciones del sistema de RSI, restricciones de la cuenta o una verificación pendiente del cliente.
¿Mi pedido de nave está protegido?
Sí. La seguridad y la fiabilidad son nuestra prioridad.
Todas las naves de LTI Hangar salen de nuestro propio stock. No trabajamos con vendedores externos ni con proveedores terceros desconocidos.
Cada entrega queda registrada de forma clara, para que el proceso pueda revisarse y rastrearse si necesitas soporte. También ofrecemos 6 meses de protección posventa para problemas elegibles relacionados con la entrega.
Este control de stock propio, entrega trazable y protección posventa no es algo habitual en muchos marketplaces de terceros. Por eso, muchos jugadores eligen LTI Hangar para comprar naves de Star Citizen de forma más segura y con mayor tranquilidad.
¿Qué es la protección posventa de 6 meses?
Si ocurre algún problema con un item durante la entrega o dentro de los 6 meses posteriores a la entrega completada, investigaremos el caso.
Si confirmamos que el problema fue responsabilidad nuestra, te ofreceremos un reemplazo o un reembolso.
Para revisar el caso, puede que necesitemos pruebas como capturas de tu RSI Hangar, detalles del pedido o registros del RSI Hangar Log.
El RSI Hangar Log nos ayuda a comprobar el historial de la nave, por ejemplo si fue reclamada, melted, transferida, intercambiada o modificada después de la entrega.
¿Por qué otros marketplaces no suelen ofrecer esto?
Muchos marketplaces dependen de vendedores externos o de inventario mezclado, lo que dificulta rastrear cada entrega con claridad.
En LTI Hangar, todas las naves salen de nuestro propio stock y cada pedido tiene registros claros de entrega. Por eso podemos ofrecer un soporte más seguro, fiable y con protección posventa de hasta 6 meses.
¿Puedo pedir un reembolso después de reclamar la nave, CCU, pintura o item?
Una vez reclamado el RSI Gift, la nave, CCU, pintura o item queda vinculado a la cuenta RSI que lo ha aceptado.
Por las limitaciones del sistema de regalos de Star Citizen, un item reclamado normalmente no puede volver a enviarse, devolverse, revertirse ni transferirse a otra cuenta. Por eso, los items ya reclamados normalmente no pueden cancelarse ni reembolsarse.
Solo podremos ofrecer una corrección, reemplazo o reembolso si confirmamos que el problema fue responsabilidad nuestra, por ejemplo si se envió un item incorrecto, hubo un error de entrega o existe otro problema de entrega verificado causado por nosotros.
Antes de hacer clic en “Claim Gift”, asegúrate de estar conectado a la cuenta RSI correcta. Si el regalo se reclama en una cuenta equivocada, normalmente no podrá moverse a otra cuenta.
¿Qué pasa si recibo una nave, CCU, pintura o item equivocado?
Si comprobamos que el item incorrecto fue entregado por un error nuestro, revisaremos el caso y te ofreceremos una solución: corrección, reemplazo o reembolso, según corresponda.
Para poder revisarlo, contáctanos con tu número de pedido, el email usado al finalizar la compra y capturas claras de tu RSI Hangar.
Why are the names of the Star Citizen ships I received different?
Una nave o vehículo Standalone CCU’ed es una nave o vehículo completo. ¡No es una mejora!
CCU’ed simplemente significa que se creó mejorando una nave o vehículo más pequeño hasta convertirlo en el modelo que estás comprando.
Ten en cuenta también que, en el correo de regalo, solo aparecerá el nombre de la nave utilizada como base para la mejora. No te preocupes: la nave real que verás en tu hangar será exactamente la que has pedido.
Por ejemplo, así es como se ve una Polaris CCU’ed en el hangar del sitio web de RSI.
CÓMO FUNCIONA
Rápido, sencillo y seguro. Descubre cómo funciona.
Anvil Liberator Standalone Ship Gameplay Guide
The Anvil Liberator is a light carrier built for Star Citizen players who want to transport ships, vehicles, supplies, and small strike teams across long distances. Designed by Anvil Aerospace, the Liberator is not a traditional cargo ship, warship, or exploration vessel. It is a dedicated ship-and-vehicle transport platform made for players who want to move smaller assets into position without relying on every pilot to travel separately.
Unlike capital carriers such as the Kraken, the Liberator is more compact and practical. It does not try to be a full fleet command center or a complete mobile station. Instead, it focuses on a clear job: carry small ships, carry ground vehicles, move support cargo, and help a fleet deploy assets closer to the action.
Build Your Light Carrier Fleet with the Liberator
The Liberator remains a useful long-term support ship for players building a logistics, combat, racing, or organization fleet. If you are looking to acquire this Anvil light carrier, you can explore our available options in the Star Citizen Ships and Vehicles Collection.
Liberator Key Specifications
The Liberator combines carrier-style transport with cargo and vehicle support. Its specifications show why it is valued not as a main combat ship, but as a deployment platform for small ships, vehicles, supplies, and group operations.
| Specification | Anvil Liberator | Gameplay Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Anvil Aerospace | A military-grade manufacturer known for practical, durable, mission-focused ship design. |
| Role | Light Carrier / Ship Transport / Vehicle Transport | Built to move small ships, ground vehicles, cargo, and support teams into position. |
| Status | Concept / Not Flight Ready | Not currently flyable; final gameplay and specifications may change before release. |
| Crew | 2 | Designed to be more manageable than large capital carriers, while still benefiting from crew support. |
| Cargo Capacity | 400 SCU | Useful for supplies, spare parts, mission cargo, vehicle equipment, and manual support operations. |
| Dimensions | Length: 122m / Width: 68m / Height: 24m | Large enough to carry multiple assets, but smaller than true capital carriers. |
| External Landing Pads | 3 | Allows the Liberator to transport several small ships on top of the hull. |
| Internal Vehicle Bays | 2 | Supports ground vehicles, smaller support vehicles, and mission deployment. |
| Support Utility | Basic manual refuel / repair / rearm support | Useful for field operations, but not a full dedicated carrier service system. |
Note: The Liberator is a concept ship, and Star Citizen ship specifications are subject to balance and design changes by Cloud Imperium Games. Treat all figures as gameplay-reference information rather than final permanent values.
What Makes the Liberator Valuable?
The Liberator is valuable because it solves a very practical fleet problem: moving smaller ships and vehicles together. In Star Citizen, travel time, fuel range, hostile space, and deployment logistics can matter just as much as combat power. The Liberator gives a group one platform that can carry several assets and deliver them closer to the mission area.
Its main appeal is flexibility. A combat group can use it to move fighters. A racing group can use it as an event support ship. A ground team can use it to transport vehicles. A logistics crew can use its cargo space for supplies and support materials. This makes the Liberator useful across many different gameplay styles.
The Liberator also fills a gap between normal transport ships and massive carriers. It is more carrier-like than a C2 Hercules, but much easier to understand than a Kraken. For many organizations, that middle-ground identity is exactly what makes it attractive.
Light Carrier Gameplay Role
The Liberator’s core role is deployment. It is designed to bring ships and vehicles to the right place, not to win battles by itself. This makes it especially useful for operations where smaller craft need to be staged near a combat zone, racing route, mining area, salvage site, or ground mission.
A Liberator can support a fleet by acting as a forward transport platform. Instead of every small ship flying a long route alone, they can ride on the Liberator and launch closer to the objective. This can save time, reduce fuel concerns, and make group operations feel more organized.
However, the Liberator should not be treated like a full carrier. It does not provide the same level of protection, command infrastructure, or dedicated service facilities as much larger vessels. Its strength is practical transport, not capital-ship dominance.
Ship and Vehicle Transport Utility
The Liberator’s 3 external pads and 2 internal vehicle bays are its main selling points. This layout allows it to move a mix of small ships and ground assets, which makes it useful for organizations that run varied operations.
For combat groups, it can deliver light fighters, support craft, or small utility ships. For ground-focused players, it can carry vehicles into position for surface missions. For racing communities, it can work as a mobile staging platform. For industrial groups, it can help move smaller support assets around mining or salvage operations.
This type of utility is different from normal cargo hauling. The Liberator is not just moving goods. It is moving capability. Every ship or vehicle it carries can become part of the mission once deployed.
Manual Support and Field Operations
One important point is that the Liberator is not a full-service carrier. Official Q&A information explains that refueling, repairing, and rearming will only be supported at a basic level and handled manually by players using supplies stored in the cargo bay. It does not have dedicated repair facilities or separate stores for those services.
This means the Liberator is better understood as a transport and staging platform, not a complete mobile base. It can help keep carried craft active in the field, but it will still rely on planning, supplies, and player work.
For gameplay, this actually makes the ship more interesting. A Liberator crew may need to manage inventory, spare parts, fuel supplies, weapons, vehicles, and launch timing. It creates logistics gameplay instead of simply acting as a magical repair station.
Multi-Crew Gameplay
The Liberator has a low listed crew requirement, but it becomes more useful with a coordinated team. A practical crew may include a pilot, cargo manager, vehicle handler, deck coordinator, security support, and the pilots of the carried ships.
A practical Liberator operation would usually start with one pilot, one player managing deck or vehicle loading, and the pilots of the carried ships waiting for launch. In a real group event, the ship is most useful when someone is coordinating which craft launches first, where vehicles are staged, what supplies are loaded, and when the Liberator should stay back instead of entering the fight.
This makes the Liberator especially attractive for small organizations. It does not require the huge crew count of a capital ship, but it still creates meaningful group gameplay. One player can fly the carrier, others can load vehicles, prepare ships, manage supplies, or launch when the operation begins.
For solo players, the Liberator may still be appealing as a long-term fleet asset, but its real value comes from group operations. A carrier is most useful when there are other ships and players to carry.
Explore Liberator Upgrade Paths
If you prefer to build toward the Liberator from an existing ship, you can view our Star Citizen Liberator CCU Upgrades and plan a more flexible fleet upgrade path over time.
Liberator vs Other Star Citizen Ships
The Liberator occupies a very specific position among large Star Citizen ships. It is more carrier-focused than the C2, smaller and more practical than the Kraken, and more deployment-oriented than general cargo or combat ships.
| Ship Fleet Option | Primary Core Role | Compared with Anvil Liberator |
|---|---|---|
| Kraken | Capital Carrier | The Kraken is much larger and more powerful as a true carrier platform. The Liberator is smaller, more practical, and easier for smaller groups to understand. |
| Kraken Privateer | Capital Retail / Carrier Platform | The Privateer is more focused on shops and large-scale mobile commerce. The Liberator is focused on transporting ships and vehicles. |
| C2 Hercules | Heavy Cargo / Vehicle Transport | The C2 is better for current cargo and vehicle hauling. The Liberator adds external ship transport and stronger carrier-style deployment value. |
| Ironclad Assault | Heavy Vehicle Assault Transport | The Ironclad Assault focuses more on armored vehicle delivery and battlefield support. The Liberator is more flexible for moving ships and vehicles together. |
| Valkyrie | Dropship / Troop Transport | The Valkyrie is better for infantry drops and direct combat insertion. The Liberator is better for moving vehicles and smaller ships over longer distances. |
| Polaris | Corvette / Torpedo Capital Ship | The Polaris is a combat-focused corvette with torpedoes and hangar utility. The Liberator is a logistics carrier, not a frontline warship. |
Liberator vs Kraken
The Kraken is a much larger carrier with stronger fleet presence, broader landing-pad utility, and a more serious capital-ship identity. The Liberator is smaller, simpler, and easier for smaller groups to plan around. If you want a major fleet centerpiece, the Kraken has the bigger role. If you want a lighter ship-and-vehicle transport platform without managing a full capital carrier, the Liberator is more practical.
Liberator vs C2 Hercules
The C2 Hercules is better for current cargo hauling and enclosed vehicle transport. The Liberator is different because it can carry small ships on external pads while still offering cargo and vehicle space. If your goal is trading or protected vehicle transport today, the C2 is more useful. If your goal is future carrier-style deployment for fighters, vehicles, and support craft, the Liberator has the clearer role.
Liberator vs Ironclad Assault
The Ironclad Assault is more focused on armored vehicle delivery, battlefield support, and direct ground-operation logistics. The Liberator is more flexible for moving both small ships and ground vehicles over longer distances. If your group mainly wants protected vehicle assault transport, the Ironclad Assault may fit better. If your group wants a light carrier that can stage ships and vehicles together, the Liberator has the stronger deployment identity.
Liberator Strengths and Limitations
| Strategic Strengths | Operational Limitations |
|---|---|
| 3 external landing pads give the Liberator useful small-ship transport value. | Not currently Flight Ready, so buyers must accept concept-ship waiting risk. |
| 2 internal vehicle bays support ground operations and mixed deployment. | Not a full capital carrier like the Kraken. |
| 400 SCU cargo capacity gives it useful supply and logistics support. | Refuel, repair, and rearm support is basic and manual, not fully dedicated. |
| More practical and manageable than larger carrier platforms. | Needs carried ships and vehicles to fully justify its role. |
| Useful for organizations, racing groups, combat teams, and logistics fleets. | Not designed as a main combat ship or daily driver. |
| Clear future role as a deployment and staging platform. | Full value depends on future carrier, logistics, repair, and field-support gameplay loops. |
Who Should Buy the Liberator?
The Liberator is best for players who want a practical light carrier rather than a massive capital ship. It is especially suitable for organizations, small fleet commanders, racing teams, ground-operation groups, combat support teams, and players who enjoy logistics gameplay.
It is also a useful choice for players who own several smaller ships and want a way to move them together. If your fleet includes fighters, ground vehicles, snub ships, utility craft, or support vehicles, the Liberator gives those assets more mission value.
Players who mainly want solo combat, cargo profit, or immediate gameplay may find the Liberator too specialized and too future-dependent. But for players building a fleet around deployment, transport, and group operations, the Liberator remains one of the more useful concept ships in Star Citizen.
Liberator FAQ
Is the Liberator worth buying in Star Citizen?
The Liberator is worth buying if you want a light carrier that can transport small ships, vehicles, cargo, and support supplies. Its value comes from deployment logistics, group operations, and future field-support gameplay. It is not ideal for players who want an immediately flyable ship, a solo daily driver, or a pure combat vessel.
Can the Liberator be used solo?
The Liberator may be manageable by a small crew, but it is not best understood as a solo ship. Its value depends on carrying other ships, vehicles, and players. A solo owner may use it as a long-term fleet platform, but practical carrier gameplay will be much stronger with a group.
What is the main role of the Liberator?
The Liberator’s main role is ship and vehicle transport. It is designed to move smaller craft, ground vehicles, supplies, and teams into position. It works best as a staging platform for operations rather than a frontline combat ship.
Is the Liberator Flight Ready?
No, the Liberator is not currently Flight Ready. It remains a concept ship, and final gameplay details may change before release. Buyers should treat it as a long-term fleet asset rather than a ship for immediate use.
What makes the Liberator different from the Kraken?
The Kraken is a much larger capital carrier with broader fleet presence and stronger carrier identity. The Liberator is smaller, simpler, and more practical for groups that want ship transport without managing a full capital carrier. The Kraken is a fleet centerpiece, while the Liberator is more of a light deployment platform.
Can the Liberator refuel, repair, and rearm ships?
The Liberator supports only basic manual refueling, repairing, and rearming. According to official Q&A information, these actions are handled by players using supplies stored in the cargo bay, and the ship does not have dedicated facilities or separate stores for those services.
How many ships can the Liberator carry?
The official technical breakdown lists the Liberator with 3 external landing pads and 2 internal vehicle spaces. In practical terms, this means it is designed to carry multiple small ships and vehicles, but exact compatibility will depend on final implementation, pad size, vehicle dimensions, and release balance.
Is the Liberator good for cargo?
The Liberator has 400 SCU of cargo capacity, which gives it useful logistics value. However, it is not a pure cargo hauler. Ships like the C2 Hercules, Hull C, or Merchantman are more cargo-focused. The Liberator’s cargo is best understood as support space for supplies, spare parts, mission equipment, and carrier operations.
Is the Liberator good for combat?
The Liberator should not be viewed as a dedicated combat ship. Its main value is transporting and staging other ships and vehicles. In dangerous space, it will likely need escorts and careful planning. Its strength is enabling other assets to fight or operate, not replacing dedicated warships.
Does the Liberator have good long-term value?
Yes, the Liberator has useful long-term value for players and organizations that care about logistics, deployment, racing support, vehicle transport, and small-ship carrier gameplay. Its role is clear and hard to replace. The main risk is that it remains a concept ship, so its final implementation may still change.


