Trivia
Contrary to many peoples beliefs and circulating rumours, the Thargoids (the superior alien race from the first Elite game) and their ships do NOT exist in Frontier: Elite II, and it is not possible to get the Thargoid ship.
David Braben didn't exactly help killing this rumour when he claimed that there indeed was a Thargoid ship to be found somewhere in the galaxy. No-one has ever found the ship however, and it is believed that this was just a trick by Braben to keep people playing the game.
Frontier: Elite II has been both hacked and modified since it's release by players, programmers and hackers, and even the game program code lacks any trace of a Thargoid race or ship, so it's pretty safe to say that there simply doesn't exist one.
The PC version featured added texture-mapping on some polygons for enhanced graphical details, something which did not exist in the original Amiga version.
It took David Braben 5 years to develop Frontier: Elite II. He started programming it on Commodore 64 but eventually continued the development on Amiga computers instead, as the C64 was not only becoming out of fashion, but had way too many technical limitations for this type of game.
The PC version had a huge star map and a coupon for a Frontier: Elite 2 T-shirt.
Contributed by
Imajica (153) on Oct 02, 2004.
The CD-ROM version of this game was totally bogus. They just took the disk version (700kb), decompressed it (to then 900kb :) and pressed it on a CD. Nothing else. No intro cinematics, simply NO bonus material whatsoever - just the 900kb .exe file on a whole CD!
If this wasn't stupid enough: they even "forgot" to add the contents of the second floppy which included five or so savegames which could help beginners a lot :)
Contributed by
phlux
(4164) on Dec 06, 2001.
The PC version of
"Frontier: Elite 2" contained a reference to the upcoming
Transport Tycoon back in 1993.
Some of the advertising hoardings in space ports announced "Coming
soon... Chris Sawyer's Transport Game" !
Why the connection? Well, Chris Sawyer did the PC conversion of
Frontier: Elite 2 back in 1992/3.
-Source: ChrisSawyer.com
In addition to the docking sequence at the space stations. Some of the planet bases are identical to the Moon base in 2001.
Contributed by
woods01 (156) on Mar 08, 2001.
The docking sequence for spaceships in this game is a near perfect imitation of the one showed in the movie "2001 - A Space Odyssey". The "medium"-sized space station (that is: the "circle" or "ring") is nearly identical to the 2001-Station. You may also listen to the same music ("Blue Danube" waltz) while docking. Very nice feature!
Contributed by
NGC 5194 (17422) on Jan 31, 2001.