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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.
RSI Constellation Phoenix Standalone Ship Gameplay Guide
The RSI Constellation Phoenix is a luxury touring ship built for Star Citizen players who want premium travel, VIP transport, useful multi-role utility, and the proven reliability of the Constellation platform. Designed by Roberts Space Industries, the Phoenix is not just a prettier Constellation. It is the luxury-focused variant of the Connie family, combining comfort, status, cargo flexibility, defensive firepower, and included support vehicles into one premium package.
Unlike the Taurus, which focuses on cargo, or the Andromeda, which leans more toward combat and general-purpose operations, the Phoenix is built around private travel and high-end presence. Its redesigned luxury interior, onboard lounge, VIP cabin space, hidden sensor-dampened cargo area, P-72 Archimedes snub fighter, and Lynx Rover make it one of the more distinctive large ships in the Constellation series.
Build Your Luxury RSI Fleet with the Constellation Phoenix
The Constellation Phoenix remains a recognizable premium touring ship in Star Citizen. If you are looking to acquire this RSI luxury ship, you can explore our available options in the Star Citizen Ships and Vehicles Collection.
Constellation Phoenix Key Specifications
The Phoenix combines luxury touring with practical Constellation utility. Its specifications show why it is valued not as a pure cargo ship or dedicated warship, but as a premium multi-role ship for players who want comfort, status, and daily-use flexibility.
| Specification | Constellation Phoenix | Gameplay Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Roberts Space Industries / RSI | A classic human manufacturer known for practical multi-crew ships and the iconic Constellation line. |
| Role | Luxury Touring / VIP Transport | Built for premium passenger travel, private ownership, and high-end organization use. |
| Status | Flight Ready | Available as a playable Constellation variant in the current Star Citizen environment. |
| Crew | 3–4 reference crew range | Works best with a small crew, but remains more approachable than large capital or sub-capital ships. |
| Cargo Capacity | Around 80 SCU reference cargo | Useful for supplies, vehicle support, mission cargo, and limited trading, but not a pure hauler like the Taurus. |
| Dimensions | Large Constellation-class frame | More compact than capital ships while still offering strong interior space and onboard utility. |
| Luxury Interior | VIP lounge and premium cabin layout | Gives the ship a private-yacht identity rather than a basic utility-ship feel. |
| Included Snub Ship | P-72 Archimedes | Adds short-range support, scouting, and luxury-performance flavor. |
| Included Ground Vehicle | Lynx Rover | Supports premium ground travel and surface exploration. |
| Special Utility | Sensor-dampened cargo pocket | Adds a unique protected-storage identity for valuable or sensitive goods. |
Note: Star Citizen ship specifications are subject to balance changes by Cloud Imperium Games. Treat cargo, components, and performance figures as gameplay-reference information rather than permanent final values.
What Makes the Constellation Phoenix Valuable?
The Constellation Phoenix is valuable because it offers something different from most practical large ships: it combines luxury identity with real utility. Many premium ships look good but sacrifice too much functionality. The Phoenix keeps the core strengths of the Constellation platform while adding a more exclusive interior and VIP-focused purpose.
Its strongest appeal comes from the balance between style and practicality. You get a luxury cabin experience, but you also keep cargo space, weapons, missiles, a snub fighter, and a rover. That makes the Phoenix more usable than a purely cosmetic luxury ship and more stylish than a normal cargo or combat ship.
For players who care about roleplay, organization leadership, private transport, screenshots, luxury fleet themes, or high-end ownership, the Phoenix feels much more special than a standard Connie. It is not only a ship you use for missions. It is a ship that can represent status, roleplay style, and fleet personality inside your Star Citizen fleet.
Luxury Touring and VIP Transport Role
The Phoenix’s main role is luxury touring. It is built for players who want to move important passengers, host a small group, travel in comfort, or operate as a premium personal transport ship.
In future passenger and VIP gameplay, this role may become more meaningful. A ship like the Phoenix is not just about moving from point A to point B. It is about offering a higher-class travel experience. The lounge, private cabin areas, and premium interior help the Phoenix stand apart from industrial ships and military transports.
This also makes the Phoenix attractive for organization leaders. It can act as a personal command shuttle, VIP transport, executive ship, or event vessel. While it is not a full command capital ship, it has enough presence to feel important without becoming difficult to operate.
Practical Multi-Role Gameplay
The Phoenix is still a Constellation, which means it keeps a useful general-purpose foundation. It can handle travel, light cargo, vehicle support, combat defense, and group missions. This makes it much more practical than many players expect from a luxury ship.
It is not the best pure cargo ship in the Connie lineup. The Taurus is better for cargo profit. It is not the most combat-focused Connie either. The Andromeda has a more straightforward gunship identity. But the Phoenix gives you a more premium version of the platform with enough utility to remain useful in everyday gameplay.
For many players, this is the main reason to choose the Phoenix. It feels special, but it does not feel useless. You can take it out for missions, events, travel, screenshots, small group play, and light trading while still enjoying one of the most unique interiors in the Constellation family.
P-72 Archimedes and Lynx Rover Utility
The Phoenix’s included support craft make the ship more complete. The P-72 Archimedes gives the Phoenix a fast snub fighter that fits the luxury-performance theme, while the Lynx Rover adds premium ground mobility. RSI’s support page lists the Constellation Phoenix with both the P-72 Archimedes and Lynx Rover as included vessels.
The P-72 is useful for short-range movement, local scouting, and style-focused companion gameplay. It also gives the Phoenix a more complete “private yacht with performance craft” feeling.
The Lynx Rover supports ground travel, surface exploration, and VIP landing-zone roleplay. Compared with a basic Ursa-style utility rover, the Lynx fits the Phoenix’s luxury identity better. Together, these included vehicles make the Phoenix feel like a full travel package rather than just a standalone ship.
Multi-Crew Gameplay
The Constellation Phoenix can be flown by one player, but it becomes more enjoyable with a small crew. A practical crew may include a pilot, co-pilot, turret operator, snub pilot, and passengers.
A practical Phoenix crew usually starts with one pilot, one turret or co-pilot support player, and one player using the P-72 or helping with ground travel through the Lynx Rover. With only one player, the Phoenix can still work well as a stylish personal ship, but most of its social value comes from having passengers, support crew, or friends using the snub, rover, lounge, and mission space together.
This is one of the Phoenix’s useful qualities. It does not require the large crew commitment of a Hammerhead, Polaris, or Carrack, but it still gives friends meaningful things to do. One player can fly the main ship, another can use turrets, another can take the P-72, and others can travel as passengers or support mission tasks.
For small groups, the Phoenix offers a comfortable middle ground. It feels larger and more premium than a daily driver, but it is not so demanding that you need a full organization online just to enjoy it.
Explore Constellation Phoenix Upgrade Paths
If you prefer to build toward the Constellation Phoenix from an existing ship, you can view our Star Citizen Constellation Phoenix CCU Upgrades and plan a more flexible fleet upgrade path over time.
Constellation Phoenix vs Other Star Citizen Ships
The Phoenix occupies a unique position among large Star Citizen ships. It is more luxurious than the Taurus or Andromeda, more practical than many pure luxury ships, and more approachable than massive vessels like the 890 Jump.
| Ship Fleet Option | Primary Core Role | Compared with Constellation Phoenix |
|---|---|---|
| Constellation Taurus | Cargo / Freight | The Taurus is better for cargo profit and hauling efficiency. The Phoenix sacrifices cargo focus for luxury interior, VIP role, P-72, and Lynx Rover. |
| Constellation Andromeda | Multi-Role Gunship | The Andromeda is more combat-oriented and straightforward. The Phoenix feels more premium and better suited for luxury travel or organization leadership. |
| Constellation Aquila | Exploration | The Aquila is better for exploration themes and scanning identity. The Phoenix is better for comfort, private transport, and luxury fleet ownership. |
| 400i | Luxury Touring / Exploration | The 400i is sleeker and easier to handle for smaller luxury exploration crews. The Constellation Phoenix feels more classic and utility-focused, with stronger Connie-style firepower, a snub fighter, a rover, and more group presence. |
| 600i Touring | Luxury Large Ship | The 600i Touring feels more upscale and spacious, but the Phoenix is more compact, practical, and easier to use as a daily luxury ship. |
| 890 Jump | Capital Luxury Yacht | The 890 Jump is much larger and more prestigious, but far more expensive and demanding. The Phoenix is a more manageable luxury ship for regular use. |
Constellation Phoenix vs Taurus
The Constellation Taurus is better for cargo profit and practical hauling. The Phoenix gives up some cargo focus in exchange for luxury interior space, VIP travel identity, the P-72 Archimedes, the Lynx Rover, and a more premium ownership feel. If your goal is trading efficiency, the Taurus is the stronger choice. If you want a luxury Connie with useful multi-role gameplay, the Phoenix has the clearer appeal.
Constellation Phoenix vs Andromeda
The Constellation Andromeda is the more straightforward combat and general-purpose Connie. The Phoenix keeps useful Constellation firepower, but its focus is more on luxury travel, small-group missions, VIP transport, and premium fleet identity. If you want a combat-first Connie, the Andromeda is more practical. If you want a more refined Constellation with included support vehicles, the Phoenix is the better fit.
Constellation Phoenix vs 400i
The Origin 400i is sleeker, easier to handle, and better suited for smaller luxury exploration crews. The Constellation Phoenix feels more classic and utility-focused, with stronger Connie-style firepower, a snub fighter, a rover, and more group presence. If you want a stylish personal explorer, the 400i makes sense. If you want luxury touring with more multi-role utility, the Phoenix has the stronger role.
Constellation Phoenix Strengths and Limitations
| Strategic Strengths | Operational Limitations |
|---|---|
| Luxury interior gives the Phoenix a premium identity within the Connie lineup. | Not as cargo-efficient as the Taurus. |
| Included P-72 Archimedes adds snub fighter utility and style. | Not as combat-focused as the Andromeda. |
| Included Lynx Rover supports premium ground travel and exploration. | Luxury features are partly roleplay-focused until passenger/VIP gameplay expands. |
| Sensor-dampened cargo pocket gives it a unique protected-storage concept. | Larger and less agile than smaller daily drivers. |
| Still keeps practical Constellation firepower and multi-role usefulness. | Requires a small crew to make the most of turrets, snub, and group gameplay. |
| Useful choice for players who want status without capital-ship scale. | Limited availability can make it harder to acquire than standard ships. |
Who Should Buy the Constellation Phoenix?
The Constellation Phoenix is best for players who want a luxury ship that still has real gameplay value. It is especially suitable for collectors, organization leaders, roleplay players, small groups, VIP transport fans, and players who like the Constellation platform but want something more premium than the standard variants.
It is also a useful choice for players who want a ship that feels personal. The Phoenix works well as a private yacht, executive transport, small-group mission ship, or stylish daily cruiser. It is not the most efficient ship in one single category, but its combination of luxury, utility, included vehicles, and classic RSI design makes it very appealing.
Players who only care about cargo profit should usually choose the Taurus. Players who only care about combat should consider the Andromeda, Corsair, or dedicated gunships. But for players who want a refined Connie with strong fleet personality, the Phoenix remains one of the more desirable ships in Star Citizen.
Constellation Phoenix FAQ
Is the Constellation Phoenix worth buying in Star Citizen?
The Constellation Phoenix is worth buying if you want a luxury touring ship that still has practical multi-role utility. It offers a premium interior, VIP transport identity, included P-72 Archimedes, Lynx Rover, cargo space, and Constellation-class firepower. It is not the best choice for pure cargo profit or pure combat, but it is one of the better options for players who want style and usefulness in one ship.
Can the Constellation Phoenix be used solo?
Yes, the Phoenix can be flown solo for basic travel, light cargo, and general use. However, it becomes much more effective with a small crew. Turrets, snub fighter support, passenger gameplay, and mission coordination all work better when more players are involved. It is more solo-friendly than larger ships like the Carrack or Hammerhead, but it is still designed as a multi-crew vessel.
What is the main role of the Constellation Phoenix?
The main role of the Phoenix is luxury touring and VIP transport. It is designed to carry passengers in comfort while still retaining the practical utility of the Constellation platform. This makes it useful for private travel, organization leadership, roleplay, small-group missions, and premium fleet ownership.
What makes the Phoenix different from the Taurus?
The Taurus is the cargo-focused Constellation variant. It has much stronger freight value and is better for players who want trading efficiency. The Phoenix is more luxury-focused, with a premium interior, VIP travel identity, P-72 Archimedes, Lynx Rover, and special protected-storage concept. Choose the Taurus for profit hauling. Choose the Phoenix for luxury and status.
Is the Phoenix better than the Andromeda?
The Phoenix is not simply better than the Andromeda because they serve different needs. The Andromeda is more combat-focused and works well as a general-purpose gunship. The Phoenix is more premium and passenger-oriented. If you want a practical combat Connie, the Andromeda may be better. If you want luxury touring with useful firepower, the Phoenix is the stronger choice.
Does the Constellation Phoenix include a snub fighter?
Yes. The Constellation Phoenix is associated with the P-72 Archimedes snub fighter. RSI’s included-vessels support page lists the Constellation Phoenix with the P-72 Archimedes and Lynx Rover.
Does the Constellation Phoenix include a rover?
Yes. The Phoenix includes the Lynx Rover as part of its luxury travel package. The Lynx fits the Phoenix’s premium identity and gives the ship better ground-travel utility for planetary visits, events, and roleplay.
Is the Phoenix good for cargo?
The Phoenix can carry cargo, but it is not the best Constellation for cargo gameplay. Its cargo space is useful for supplies, mission goods, and light trading, but the Taurus is the better choice for serious hauling. The Phoenix should be viewed as a luxury multi-role ship with cargo utility, not a dedicated freighter.
Is the Phoenix good for combat?
The Phoenix has strong enough firepower to defend itself and participate in general combat, but it is not a dedicated warship. Its weapons are useful for defense and deterrence, especially with crew, but players who want a combat-first ship may prefer the Andromeda, Corsair, Redeemer, Hammerhead, or Polaris. The Phoenix’s strength is balanced utility with luxury identity.
Does the Constellation Phoenix have good long-term value?
Yes, the Phoenix has useful long-term value for players who care about luxury touring, VIP transport, roleplay, and premium fleet identity. As passenger transport, reputation, organization events, and social gameplay expand, ships like the Phoenix may become more meaningful. Even now, it remains one of the more desirable Constellation variants because it combines style, included vehicles, and practical utility.



