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Perché i player scelgono LTI Hangar
Consegna rapida delle navi, supporto reale e una procedura RSI Gift chiara — pensato per i player di Star Citizen che vogliono un’esperienza d’acquisto più semplice e fluida.
Consegna media 20–30 min
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Un team di gamer con oltre 10 anni di esperienza nel settore.
Acquisto sicuro, Vendiamo solo dal nostro stock, senza seller esterni o inserzioni di terze parti.
Supporto post-vendita affidabile
Segui il tuo ordine in tempo reale.
Domande frequenti
Quanto tempo richiede di solito la consegna?
Gli ordini di navi, CCU, paint e item di Star Citizen vengono solitamente consegnati entro 20–30 minuti.
In rari casi, la consegna può richiedere fino a 12 ore a causa del volume degli ordini, dei limiti RSI per l’invio dei gift, dello stato dell’account o di eventuali verifiche manuali necessarie.
Nella maggior parte dei casi, cerchiamo di non superare le 12 ore per la consegna delle navi, salvo problemi eccezionali come limitazioni del sistema RSI, restrizioni dell’account o verifiche richieste al cliente.
Il mio ordine della nave è protetto?
Sì. Sicurezza e affidabilità sono tra le nostre priorità principali.
Tutte le navi vendute da LTI Hangar provengono dal nostro stock diretto, senza seller esterni o fornitori terzi sconosciuti.
Ogni ordine viene gestito con registri di consegna chiari, così il processo può essere verificato e tracciato in caso di bisogno di supporto.
Offriamo inoltre una protezione post-vendita di 6 mesi per eventuali problemi idonei legati alla consegna.
Questo controllo tramite stock diretto, insieme alla consegna tracciabile e alla protezione post-vendita, è uno dei motivi per cui molti clienti scelgono LTI Hangar per acquistare navi Star Citizen in modo più sicuro.
Che cos’è la protezione post-vendita di 6 mesi? Perché altri marketplace non possono offrirla?
Nel rarissimo caso in cui si verifichi un problema con un item durante la consegna o entro 6 mesi dal completamento della consegna, effettueremo una verifica.
Se dalla verifica risulta che il problema è stato causato da un nostro errore, forniremo una sostituzione oppure un rimborso.
Per aiutarci a controllare il caso in modo accurato, potremmo chiederti di fornirci prove rilevanti, come screenshot del tuo RSI Hangar, dettagli dell’ordine e registri dell’RSI Hangar Log.
L’RSI Hangar Log può aiutare a tracciare lo stato e la cronologia di ogni nave, incluso se l’item è stato riscattato, scambiato, meltato, trasferito o modificato in altro modo dopo la consegna.
Esamineremo le prove fornite per determinare la causa del problema.
Questo livello di protezione non è comunemente offerto da molti marketplace di terze parti, perché spesso si affidano a seller esterni o a fonti di stock miste.
Su LTI Hangar, invece, tutte le navi provengono dal nostro stock diretto e ogni ordine dispone di registri di consegna chiari. Questo ci permette di offrire un supporto più sicuro, tracciabile e affidabile.
Posso richiedere un rimborso dopo aver riscattato una nave, CCU, paint o item?
Una volta che l’RSI Gift è stato riscattato, la nave, CCU, paint o item viene collegato all’account RSI che lo ha ricevuto.
A causa delle limitazioni del sistema di gifting di Star Citizen, un item già riscattato normalmente non può essere regalato di nuovo, restituito, annullato o riconsegnato.
Per questo motivo, gli item già riscattati normalmente non sono idonei alla cancellazione o al rimborso.
Una correzione, sostituzione o rimborso può essere fornito solo se confermiamo che il problema è stato causato da noi, ad esempio l’invio di un item sbagliato, un errore nella consegna dell’ordine o un altro problema di consegna verificato e causato dal nostro lato.
Prima di riscattare l’RSI Gift, assicurati di essere connesso all’account RSI corretto.
Una volta che il gift viene riscattato sull’account sbagliato, normalmente non può essere spostato su un altro account.
Cosa succede se viene consegnata la nave, CCU, paint o item sbagliato?
Se confermiamo che l’item sbagliato è stato consegnato a causa di un nostro errore, esamineremo il caso e forniremo una correzione, una sostituzione o un rimborso, ove applicabile.
Ti invitiamo a contattarci fornendo il numero d’ordine, l’email usata al checkout e screenshot chiari del tuo RSI Hangar.
Perché la nave Star Citizen che ho ricevuto mostra un nome diverso?
Una Standalone CCU’ed è una nave o un veicolo completo. Non è un upgrade!
“CCU’ed” significa semplicemente che la nave o il veicolo è stato creato partendo da un modello più piccolo e facendo upgrade fino a quello che stai acquistando.
Tieni presente che, nell’email regalo RSI, potrebbe comparire solo il nome della nave usata come base per l’upgrade. È normale, non devi preoccuparti: la nave effettiva che vedrai nel tuo hangar sarà esattamente quella che hai ordinato.
Ad esempio, ecco come appare una Polaris CCU’ed nell’hangar sul sito RSI.

COME FUNZIONA
Veloce, semplice e sicuro: scopri come funziona!
Star Citizen RSI Perseus Standalone Ship Overview
The Star Citizen RSI Perseus Standalone Ship is a heavy gunship built for players and organizations that want focused large-target firepower, armored fleet presence, and a practical multi-crew combat role. With dual Size 8 manned turrets, Size 5 torpedo support, and point-defense coverage, the Perseus is designed for patrol duty, escort operations, convoy defense, and anti-large-ship pressure.
Unlike larger capital ships that depend on hangars, medical bays, and full command infrastructure, the Perseus focuses on one core idea: bring heavy guns to the fight, hold formation, and punish large or slow targets with decisive direct fire. Its compact 100-meter frame, powerful manned turrets, torpedo support, and point-defense coverage make it a practical warship for organized crews that want serious firepower without managing a much larger fleet asset.
For players looking to buy the RSI Perseus as a long-term Star Citizen fleet asset, this standalone ship is best suited for organized crews that want heavy direct-fire pressure without stepping into full capital-ship operation.
Build Your Heavy Gunship Fleet with the Perseus
The RSI Perseus remains one of the most attractive large combat ships for players building a dedicated Star Citizen fleet. If you are looking to acquire this RSI heavy gunship, you can explore our available options in the Star Citizen Ships and Vehicles Collection.
Perseus Key Specifications
The Perseus combines heavy-gun firepower with a more compact large-ship footprint. Its specifications show why it is valued not as a general-purpose daily driver, but as a dedicated patrol gunship for organized combat and fleet support.
| Specification | Perseus | Gameplay Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Roberts Space Industries / RSI | A premium RSI military-style vessel with a clean, armored, fleet-ready identity. |
| Role | Heavy Gunship / Patrol Ship | Built for fleet defense, patrol operations, escort missions, and anti-large-ship combat. |
| Status | Flyable / Current Star Citizen Environment | Available as a playable large combat ship in the current game environment. |
| Crew | 7 | Designed around coordinated crew gameplay rather than solo efficiency. |
| Cargo Capacity | 50 SCU* | Limited utility cargo space for supplies, equipment, and support items rather than trade-focused hauling. |
| Dimensions | Length: 100m / Width: 56m / Height: 22m | Large enough to feel like a warship, but smaller and more manageable than true capital-class vessels. |
| Main Firepower | 2x manned turrets with dual Size 8 guns | Provides heavy direct-fire pressure against large ships, sub-capitals, and hardened targets. |
| Secondary Weapons | 2x remote turrets with dual Size 3 guns | Adds flexible defensive coverage against smaller threats and supporting targets. |
| Torpedoes | 2x 10 Size 5 torpedoes | Gives the Perseus extra strike capability beyond turret fire. |
| Point Defense | 6 PDTs | Helps defend against incoming ordnance and improves survivability in fleet combat. |
Note: Star Citizen ship specifications are subject to balance changes by Cloud Imperium Games during ongoing development. Cargo and component details should always be treated as gameplay-reference information rather than final permanent values.
What Makes the Perseus Valuable?
The Perseus is valuable because it offers one of the easiest-to-understand combat roles among large Star Citizen ships. It is not trying to be a carrier, cargo hauler, exploration vessel, dropship, or mobile base. Its job is simple: bring oversized direct-fire weapons into a fight and make larger enemies respect its firing arcs.
Its main appeal comes from the dual manned heavy turrets. These weapons give the Perseus a very different combat feel from missile boats, torpedo bombers, or anti-fighter screens. Instead of relying only on burst ordnance, the Perseus applies repeated pressure through large ballistic firepower, making positioning, target selection, and turret coordination extremely important.
The Perseus also benefits from its relatively practical size. At 100 meters, it is still a large ship, but it does not demand the same level of logistics, crew count, or planning as a Polaris, Idris, or Javelin. For many organizations, that makes the Perseus easier to bring into regular fleet events, escort missions, and patrol operations.
Heavy Gunship Combat Role
In combat, the Perseus performs best as a coordinated heavy gunship. It is designed to sit within a fleet formation, use its armored profile to absorb pressure, and let its turret crews focus on larger, more valuable targets.
The ship is especially useful when fighting vessels that are too tough for standard fighters to remove quickly. Its heavy guns allow it to threaten large ships, armored targets, and support vessels, while its torpedoes give it additional strike options when timing and positioning are favorable.
However, the Perseus should not be treated like a Hammerhead replacement. The Hammerhead is an anti-fighter screen, while the Perseus is more of an anti-large-ship gun platform. Against swarms of agile fighters, the Perseus needs escorts, formation support, and smart positioning. Its strength is not chasing small ships; its strength is punishing bigger targets that stay within its firing lanes.
Multi-Crew Gameplay
The Perseus is not designed to reach its full potential as a solo ship. While one player may be able to move it from place to place, the real value of the ship comes from coordinated crew roles.
A practical Perseus crew should usually include a pilot, two main turret gunners, at least one remote turret operator, and someone watching systems, repairs, scanning, or communication during fleet operations. With only one or two players, the ship can move, but most of its combat value stays unused.
A strong Perseus crew usually needs a pilot, turret gunners, remote turret operators, and players who can manage ship systems, scanning, repairs, or communication during fleet operations. This makes the ship especially attractive for small organizations or groups of friends who want a combat ship where every crew member has a meaningful job.
Unlike some large ships where extra crew members feel optional, the Perseus depends heavily on people actually using its weapons and systems. A well-crewed Perseus feels focused, aggressive, and dangerous. An under-crewed Perseus can feel slow, exposed, and unable to make full use of its firepower.
Explore Perseus Upgrade Paths
If you prefer to build toward the Perseus from an existing ship, you can view our Star Citizen Perseus CCU Upgrades and plan a more flexible fleet upgrade path over time.
Perseus vs Other Large Star Citizen Ships
The Perseus occupies a very specific place among large Star Citizen ships. It is smaller and more direct than a Polaris, more anti-large focused than a Hammerhead, and more combat-specialized than general-purpose large ships.
| Ship Fleet Option | Primary Core Role | Compared with RSI Perseus |
|---|---|---|
| Polaris | Corvette / Torpedo Capital Ship | The Polaris offers Size 10 torpedoes, hangar utility, higher crew demand, and broader fleet support. The Perseus is smaller, more direct, and easier to field as a heavy gunship. |
| Hammerhead | Anti-Fighter Gunship | The Hammerhead is specialized for fighter screening. The Perseus trades that anti-fighter saturation for heavier guns aimed at larger targets. |
| Retaliator | Torpedo Bomber | The Retaliator focuses on torpedo strikes and modular gameplay. The Perseus offers stronger sustained gun pressure and a more armored gunship identity. |
| Idris | Military Frigate | The Idris is much larger, more expensive, and more demanding to operate. The Perseus gives smaller groups a more practical large-combat option. |
| Corsair | Exploration Gunship | The Corsair is easier to operate and more flexible for daily use, but the Perseus brings a much heavier fleet-combat role and stronger large-target pressure. |
Perseus vs Polaris
The Polaris is the larger and more flexible fleet asset, with Size 10 torpedoes, hangar utility, and broader capital-style support. The Perseus is more focused. It is easier to understand, easier to crew, and better suited for groups that want heavy direct-fire gunship gameplay without managing a full corvette.
Perseus vs Hammerhead
The Hammerhead is built to protect space around a fleet by dealing with fighters and smaller threats. The Perseus has a different job. It gives up some anti-fighter coverage in exchange for much heavier guns that are better suited for large ships, armored targets, and slower fleet assets.
Perseus vs Retaliator
The Retaliator is a torpedo-focused bomber with modular flexibility, while the Perseus is a more direct armored gunship. If you want burst torpedo strikes, the Retaliator makes sense. If you want sustained heavy turret pressure with a stronger patrol-ship identity, the Perseus is the better fit.
Perseus Strengths and Limitations
| Strategic Strengths | Operational Limitations |
|---|---|
| Dual heavy manned turrets give the Perseus serious large-target firepower. | Not ideal for players who mainly want a simple solo daily-driver ship. |
| Compact 100m size makes it more practical than larger capital or sub-capital ships. | Requires active crew coordination to reach full combat effectiveness. |
| Torpedo support give the ship additional strike flexibility. | Fighter swarms can be a major threat without escort support. |
| Point-defense coverage improves protection against incoming ordnance. | Not a full carrier, medical platform, or exploration base. |
| Strong patrol and fleet-defense identity makes it valuable for organizations. | Operating costs, repairs, and crew requirements are higher than standard combat ships. |
| Clear combat role makes it easier to understand and use in fleet planning. | Less flexible than multi-role ships when outside combat-focused gameplay loops. |
Who Should Buy the Perseus?
The Perseus is a strong choice for players who want a serious large combat ship with a focused role. It is best suited for organization leaders, small fleet commanders, turret crews, escort groups, and players who enjoy group combat where every player has a job.
It is also a smart option for players who want something heavier than a Corsair, Redeemer, or Retaliator, but who do not want the scale, cost, and crew pressure of a Polaris or Idris. The Perseus sits in a useful middle ground: big enough to matter in fleet combat, but not so large that it becomes difficult to use regularly.
Players who mostly want solo cargo runs, casual exploration, or daily bunker missions may find the Perseus too specialized. But for players focused on patrols, combat events, convoy defense, and large-ship engagements, the Perseus is a useful ship for org patrols and large-target fights.
Perseus FAQ
Is the Perseus worth buying in Star Citizen?
The Perseus is worth buying if you want a dedicated heavy gunship with strong large-target firepower and a clear fleet-combat role. It is not a general-purpose daily driver, and it is not designed for casual solo gameplay. Its value comes from multi-crew coordination, heavy turret damage, torpedo support, and armored presence in organized combat. For players or organizations that regularly run patrols, escorts, convoy defense, or fleet battles, the Perseus can be a highly valuable combat asset.
Can the Perseus be used solo?
The Perseus can likely be moved or managed by a solo player at a basic level, but it is not designed to perform well solo. Its strongest weapons are tied to crewed turret gameplay, and its defensive value depends on multiple stations working together. A solo pilot will not be able to fully use the ship’s heavy firepower, remote turrets, and tactical potential at the same time. To get real value from the Perseus, a coordinated crew is strongly recommended.
What is the main role of the Perseus?
The main role of the Perseus is heavy gunship combat. It is built for patrol duty, fleet defense, escort operations, and direct-fire pressure against larger ships. Unlike the Hammerhead, which is mainly an anti-fighter platform, the Perseus is better understood as an anti-large-ship gunboat. Its heavy turrets and torpedoes allow it to threaten bigger targets while operating as part of a larger fleet or organized combat group.
What makes the Perseus different from the Polaris?
The Polaris is a larger corvette with Size 10 torpedoes, broader fleet utility, a hangar, and more capital-style support features. The Perseus is smaller and more focused. It does not try to function as a command ship or mini-carrier. Instead, it concentrates on heavy direct-fire gunship gameplay. The Polaris is better for players who want a larger fleet centerpiece, while the Perseus is better for groups that want a more practical heavy combat vessel.
Is the Perseus better than the Hammerhead?
The Perseus is not simply better than the Hammerhead because the two ships are designed for different jobs. The Hammerhead specializes in anti-fighter defense, using multiple turrets to cover space around the ship. The Perseus focuses more on heavy firepower against larger targets. If your main threat is a fighter swarm, the Hammerhead is usually the more specialized answer. If your goal is to pressure large ships, the Perseus has the stronger role.
Does the Perseus have good long-term value?
Yes, the Perseus has strong long-term value for players who enjoy organized combat. Its role is easy to understand, its crew requirement is more manageable than larger capital ships, and its heavy gunship identity gives it a useful place in many fleet compositions. It may not be the best ship for every player, but for organizations that need patrol strength, escort power, and large-target pressure, the Perseus should remain a highly relevant fleet asset.

