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Pourquoi les joueurs choisissent LTI Hangar
Livraison rapide de Ships, vrai support client, et processus de RSI Gift clair — pensé pour les joueurs Star Citizen qui veulent une expérience d’achat plus simple et plus fluide.
Livraison moyenne en 20 à 30 min
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Équipe de gamers avec plus de 10 ans d’expérience
Achat sécurisé · Stock propre · Aucun vendeur tiers
Support après-vente fiable
Suivi de commande en temps réel
FAQ — Questions fréquentes
Combien de temps prend généralement la livraison ?
Les commandes de Ships, CCU, Paints et Items Star Citizen sont généralement livrées sous 20 à 30 minutes.
Dans de rares cas, la livraison peut prendre jusqu’à 12 heures en raison du volume de commandes, des limites de gifting RSI, du statut du compte ou d’une vérification manuelle nécessaire.
Dans la plupart des cas, nous ne laissons pas les livraisons de Ships dépasser 12 heures, sauf en cas de problème exceptionnel, comme une limitation du système RSI, une restriction de compte ou une vérification client requise.
Ma commande de Ship est-elle protégée ?
Oui. La sécurité et la fiabilité sont nos priorités absolues.
Tous les Ships vendus par LTI Hangar viennent de notre propre stock. Aucun vendeur externe ni fournisseur tiers inconnu n’intervient dans la commande.
Chaque commande de Ship est traitée avec un suivi clair de la livraison, afin que le processus puisse être vérifié et retracé si notre support doit intervenir.
Nous offrons également une protection après-vente de 6 mois pour les problèmes éligibles liés à la livraison.
Grâce à notre propre stock, à une livraison traçable et à notre protection après-vente, l’achat est plus sûr que sur de nombreuses marketplaces tierces. C’est l’une des raisons pour lesquelles de nombreux joueurs choisissent LTI Hangar pour acheter leurs Ships Star Citizen.
Qu’est-ce que la protection après-vente de 6 mois ?Pourquoi les autres marketplaces ne peuvent-elles pas proposer cela ?
Dans le cas extrêmement rare où un problème survient avec un item pendant la livraison, ou jusqu’à 6 mois après la livraison, nous mènerons une vérification.
Si le problème est confirmé comme étant de notre responsabilité, nous vous proposerons soit un remplacement, soit un remboursement.
Pour nous aider à examiner le cas avec précision, il pourra vous être demandé de nous fournir des preuves pertinentes, comme des screenshots de votre RSI Hangar, les détails de commande ou les logs du RSI Hangar.
Le RSI Hangar Log permet de suivre l’état et l’historique de chaque Ship, notamment si l’item a été claim, échangé, melt, transféré ou modifié d’une autre manière après la livraison.
Nous examinerons les preuves fournies afin de déterminer la cause du problème.
Ce niveau de protection n’est pas courant sur de nombreuses marketplaces tierces, car elles dépendent souvent de vendeurs externes ou de sources de stock mélangées.
Chez LTI Hangar, tous les Ships proviennent de notre propre stock, et chaque commande dispose de records de livraison clairs. Cela nous permet d’offrir un support plus sûr, plus fiable et plus transparent.
Puis-je demander un remboursement après avoir claim le Ship, CCU, Paint ou Item ?
Une fois le RSI Gift claim, le Ship, CCU, Paint ou Item est lié au compte RSI qui l’a reçu.
En raison des limites du système de gifting de Star Citizen, un item déjà claim ne peut normalement pas être gift à nouveau, retourné, annulé ou relivré. Pour cette raison, les items déjà claim ne sont généralement pas éligibles à une annulation ou à un remboursement.
Une correction, un remplacement ou un remboursement ne peut être proposé que si nous confirmons que le problème vient de notre côté, par exemple si un mauvais item a été envoyé, s’il y a eu une erreur de livraison de commande, ou un autre problème de livraison vérifié causé par nous.
Avant de claim le RSI Gift, veuillez vous assurer que vous êtes connecté au bon compte RSI. Une fois le gift claim sur le mauvais compte, il ne peut normalement pas être transféré vers un autre compte.
Que se passe-t-il si le mauvais Ship, CCU, Paint ou Item est livré ?
Si nous confirmons qu’un mauvais item a été livré à cause d’une erreur de notre côté, nous examinerons le cas et proposerons une correction, un remplacement ou un remboursement lorsque cela est applicable.
Veuillez nous contacter avec votre numéro de commande, l’e-mail utilisé lors du paiement, ainsi que des screenshots clairs de votre RSI Hangar.
Pourquoi les noms des Ships Star Citizen que j’ai reçus sont-ils différents ?
Un Standalone CCU’ed est un vaisseau ou un véhicule complet. Ce n’est pas une amélioration à appliquer !
CCU’ed signifie simplement que le vaisseau ou véhicule a été obtenu en améliorant un modèle plus petit vers celui que vous achetez.
Veuillez également noter que, dans l’e-mail cadeau, seul le vaisseau utilisé comme base de l’upgrade sera indiqué. Pas d’inquiétude : le vaisseau qui apparaîtra réellement dans votre hangar sera bien celui que vous avez commandé.
Par exemple, voici à quoi ressemble un Polaris CCU’ed dans le hangar sur le site RSI.
COMMENT ÇA FONCTIONNE
Simple, rapide et sécurisé : découvrez comment ça fonctionne !
RSI Orion Standalone Ship Gameplay Guide
The RSI Orion is a capital-class mining platform built for Star Citizen players who want large-scale industrial gameplay, long-duration mining operations, and organization-level resource extraction. Designed by Roberts Space Industries, the Orion is not a small mining ship, daily driver, or simple cargo hauler. It is a dedicated deep-space mining vessel created for crews that want to locate, extract, process, and transport valuable resources on a much larger scale.
Unlike the Prospector or MOLE, which focus on smaller mining sessions, the Orion is designed as a true industrial centerpiece. Its onboard refinery, external ore storage system, tractor beam arrays, mining tools, and crew-based workflow make it one of the largest dedicated mining platforms in Star Citizen.
Build Your Industrial Mining Fleet with the Orion
The RSI Orion remains one of the most useful long-term ships for players building a serious industrial Star Citizen fleet. If you are looking to acquire this capital mining platform, you can explore our available options in the Star Citizen Ships and Vehicles Collection.
Orion Key Specifications
The Orion combines capital-ship size with specialized mining systems. Its specifications show why it is valued not as a casual mining ship, but as a dedicated industrial platform for organizations, resource teams, and long-term economy-focused gameplay.
| Specification | Orion | Gameplay Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Roberts Space Industries / RSI | A premium RSI industrial platform with a large-scale civilian mining identity. |
| Role | Capital Mining Platform / Heavy Mining Ship | Built for large-scale resource extraction, onboard processing, and industrial fleet operations. |
| Status | Concept / Not Flight Ready | The Orion is not currently flyable and should be treated as a future industrial fleet asset. |
| Crew | 4–7 | Designed around coordinated crew roles rather than solo mining efficiency. |
| Cargo Capacity | 384 SCU | Dedicated cargo room capacity; mined material storage may be handled separately through external storage systems. |
| Dimensions | Length: 170m / Width: 50m / Height: 50m | Capital-size industrial profile with major operational and logistical requirements. |
| Mining Utility | Mining laser / mining platform systems | Built for extracting resources at a much larger scale than smaller mining ships. |
| Resource Handling | Tractor beam arrays / ore storage saddlebags | Supports asteroid handling, material movement, and large-volume mining operations. |
| Industrial Utility | Onboard refinery | Allows the Orion to support extended mining operations without depending entirely on station-based processing. |
Note: The Orion is still a concept ship, and Star Citizen ship specifications are subject to balance and design changes by Cloud Imperium Games during ongoing development. The information above should be used as gameplay-reference information rather than final permanent values.
What Makes the Orion Valuable?
The Orion is valuable because it represents a much larger scale of mining gameplay. A Prospector is excellent for solo mining. A MOLE is strong for smaller multi-crew mining sessions. The Orion, however, is designed for industrial-scale extraction where mining becomes a full crew operation instead of a simple one-player activity.
Its biggest value comes from the full mining chain built into the ship. The Orion is designed to locate resources, extract ore, manage material storage, and process materials through an onboard refinery. That makes it more than a mining laser attached to a hull. It is meant to function as a mobile industrial platform for players who want mining to become their main career path.
The Orion also has useful long-term industrial value for organizations that want to build around resources, mining support, and future economy systems. As Star Citizen’s resource, crafting, base-building, repair, and industrial loops expand, large-scale mineral extraction should become more important for organizations. A ship like the Orion gives a fleet the ability to generate resources instead of only buying or transporting them.
Capital Mining Role
In gameplay terms, the Orion should be understood as a capital mining platform rather than a normal mining ship. Its purpose is not to quickly scan a rock, break it, sell the ore, and leave. Instead, it is built for planned mining operations where a crew selects a resource area, secures the site, extracts material, and coordinates logistics around the operation.
The Orion will likely perform best when supported by scouts, escorts, cargo ships, and smaller mining vessels. A large mining platform working in valuable space will naturally become a high-value target. This means the Orion’s best use case is not isolated solo mining, but protected industrial operations with organization support.
Its size also matters. At 170 meters, the Orion is not a ship you casually land anywhere or move through dangerous space without planning. It needs route awareness, protection, crew preparation, and a clear reason to deploy. That makes it less flexible than smaller miners, but much more meaningful when used correctly.
Industrial Crew Gameplay
The Orion is one of the strongest examples of future industrial multi-crew gameplay in Star Citizen. A proper Orion crew will likely need players handling piloting, scanning, mining systems, tractor beam operation, refinery management, engineering, storage, and defensive coordination.
A practical Orion operation would likely start with a pilot, a mining-system operator, a tractor or material-handling operator, and someone watching refinery, engineering, or scanning tasks. With only one player, the Orion may exist as a long-term fleet goal, but most of its real value comes from having a crew manage extraction, storage, processing, route safety, and support ships during a planned mining run.
This is what makes the ship attractive to industrial organizations. Instead of every player flying their own small ship, the Orion allows several crew members to work together inside one large resource platform. Each role can contribute to the success of the operation, from finding the right asteroid field to keeping the ship running during extraction.
For players who enjoy slower, planned industrial gameplay, the Orion has strong appeal. It is not about fast combat or quick missions. It is about planning, teamwork, production, and turning industrial activity into a fleet-level advantage.
Explore Orion Upgrade Paths
If you prefer to build toward the Orion from an existing ship, you can view our Star Citizen Orion CCU Upgrades and plan a more flexible industrial fleet upgrade path over time.
Orion vs Other Star Citizen Mining and Industrial Ships
The Orion occupies a very specific position among Star Citizen industrial ships. It is much larger than the Prospector and MOLE, more specialized than general cargo ships, and more directly focused on resource extraction than transport-focused vessels.
| Ship Fleet Option | Primary Core Role | Compared with RSI Orion |
|---|---|---|
| Prospector | Solo Mining | The Prospector is easier to operate, more practical for solo players, and better for quick mining sessions. The Orion is much larger and designed for crew-based industrial mining. |
| MOLE | Multi-Crew Mining | The MOLE offers practical group mining with a smaller footprint. The Orion scales the mining role upward into capital industrial operations with refinery and storage utility. |
| Arrastra | Heavy Mining / Refining | The Arrastra is a large mining ship with a more modern heavy-industrial role. The Orion is positioned as a much larger capital mining platform for organization-level extraction. |
| Reclaimer | Salvage / Industrial Recovery | The Reclaimer is focused on salvage and ship-breaking. The Orion focuses on asteroid mining, ore handling, and mineral extraction. |
| Hull C | Bulk Cargo Transport | The Hull C is built to move massive cargo volumes. The Orion is built to generate resources through mining, not simply transport finished cargo. |
| Galaxy | Modular Industrial Platform | The Galaxy can shift roles through modules, including industrial support depending on configuration. The Orion is less flexible but much more specialized as a dedicated mining platform. |
Orion vs Prospector
The Prospector is the better choice for solo mining and quick resource runs. The Orion is much larger and is built for planned industrial operations with crew, support ships, and longer mining sessions. If you want simple mining gameplay, the Prospector is more practical. If you want capital-scale extraction as a future fleet goal, the Orion has the stronger long-term role.
Orion vs MOLE
The MOLE is a practical multi-crew mining ship for smaller groups. It is easier to deploy, easier to manage, and better suited for regular mining sessions. The Orion scales that idea into a much larger industrial platform with onboard refining, larger storage systems, and a stronger organization-level mining role.
Orion vs Arrastra
The Arrastra is a newer heavy mining and refining ship with a more modern industrial design direction. The Orion is larger and positioned more clearly as a capital mining platform. For players who want a heavy but more manageable mining ship, the Arrastra may be easier to fit into regular operations. For organizations planning around large-scale resource extraction, the Orion remains the bigger industrial centerpiece.
Orion Strengths and Limitations
| Strategic Strengths | Operational Limitations |
|---|---|
| Capital-scale mining platform gives the Orion large industrial value. | Not currently Flight Ready, so buyers must accept concept-ship waiting risk. |
| Onboard refinery supports longer mining operations away from stations. | Large size makes it harder to move, hide, and operate casually. |
| External ore storage and tractor systems support large-volume extraction. | Requires crew coordination to reach full gameplay value. |
| Useful long-term value for organizations focused on resources and economy. | Not useful as a daily driver, combat ship, or simple solo miner. |
| Clear industrial identity makes it easy to place in fleet planning. | Will likely need escorts and logistics support in dangerous space. |
| Can become the centerpiece of a mining fleet rather than just another utility ship. | Full value depends on future mining, refining, engineering, and economy systems. |
Who Should Buy the Orion?
The Orion is best for players who want mining to be a serious long-term profession in Star Citizen. It is especially suitable for industrial organizations, resource-focused fleets, economy players, and crews that enjoy large-scale planning instead of short solo sessions.
It is also a strong option for players who already own smaller mining ships and want a future upgrade path into capital industrial gameplay. The Prospector is better for solo mining. The MOLE is better for practical small-team mining. The Orion is for players who want mining to become a fleet operation.
Players who mainly want immediate gameplay, solo convenience, combat performance, or cargo trading may find the Orion too specialized and too future-dependent. But for players building an industrial fleet around resource control, the Orion remains one of the most important long-term ships in Star Citizen.
Orion FAQ
Is the Orion worth buying in Star Citizen?
The Orion is worth buying if you want a capital mining platform for long-term industrial gameplay. Its value comes from large-scale resource extraction, onboard refining, ore storage, and organization-level mining operations. It is not ideal for players who want an immediately flyable ship, a simple solo miner, or a general-purpose daily driver. For industrial fleets and resource-focused players, the Orion has useful long-term value.
Can the Orion be used solo?
The Orion should not be treated as a solo mining ship. Its size, crew requirements, mining workflow, refinery systems, and industrial role make far more sense with multiple players. A solo owner may keep it as a long-term fleet asset, but practical use will likely require a coordinated crew and support ships.
What is the main role of the Orion?
The main role of the Orion is capital-scale mining. It is designed to support large resource extraction operations with mining systems, tractor beam arrays, external storage, and onboard refining. Unlike the Prospector or MOLE, the Orion is not focused on short mining sessions. It is meant to become the centerpiece of a larger industrial operation.
What makes the Orion different from the MOLE?
The MOLE is a practical multi-crew mining ship for smaller teams. It is easier to deploy and better suited to regular mining sessions. The Orion is much larger and more specialized. It adds capital-scale storage, refinery utility, and a much bigger industrial footprint. The MOLE is a working group miner, while the Orion is an organization-level mining platform.
Is the Orion better than the Prospector?
The Orion is not simply better than the Prospector because they serve different players. The Prospector is the better choice for solo mining and quick resource runs. The Orion is for large-scale mining operations that require crew, planning, and support. If you want convenience, the Prospector is better. If you want industrial scale, the Orion is the stronger long-term goal.
Does the Orion have an onboard refinery?
Yes, the Orion is designed with an onboard refinery as part of its mining platform identity. This allows it to support longer mining operations and reduce dependence on station-based processing. The exact implementation may change before release, but refinery utility is one of the Orion’s core selling points.
Does the Orion need escorts?
In most serious gameplay situations, yes. A capital mining ship operating in valuable resource areas will likely attract attention. The Orion is not designed to be a frontline warship, so escorts, scouts, and logistics support will be important for safer operations. Industrial fleets should treat the Orion as a high-value asset that needs protection.
Does the Orion have good long-term value?
Yes, the Orion has useful long-term value for industrial players and organizations. As mining, refining, crafting, base-building, and resource logistics become more important, a capital mining platform can become an important industrial fleet asset. Its value depends on future industrial systems, but its role is clear and difficult to replace.



