Who is the best science-fiction hero from Star Trek, Star Wars, and Mass Effect? The Escapist has the definitive answer.
Space may be the final frontier, but in the realms of science fiction it certainly isn’t the least explored. For the better part of a century, our pop culture space heroes blazed a trail across the stars, fighting hostile aliens and expanding humanity’s knowledge of other worlds – usually while being incredibly dashing in the process. Whether you’re a rough-and-tumble captain who won’t back down from what’s right, or a magical space samurai with daddy issues, being a space hero is clearly a living pinnacle of human achievement.
And yet, with so many space heroes leaping from our screens, the question arises: Who is the greatest of them all? This is a difficult matter to settle. Objectively ranking these paragons is much like making the Kessel Run in twelve parsecs – commendable, but scientifically impossible. Notable scholars and forum commenters have been forced to rely on subjective opinions to make their cases, but it remains a challenging task – until friends of The Escapist Nick Hurwitch and Phil Hornshaw made the task easier with The Space Hero’s Guide to Glory.
Intended as a step-by-step guide to becoming a space hero in your own right, Guide to Glory has the additional benefit of outlining the characteristics of the most notable space heroes – the pros and cons of each vessel, which crewmates you want at your side, and which haircuts make the best first impressions. By using this guide to space heroes as a guide about space heroes, we’ve definitively settled the question once and for all… until The Force Awakens comes out and breaks our metrics once again.
Luke Skywalker
Jedi Master and Hero of the Rebellion, Luke Skywalker is absolutely one of the great space heroes. While some may discount his talents as being purely Force-based, remember – being chosen by destiny is adequate reason to become a space hero. From the destruction of the Death Star to the defeat of Emperor Palpatine, good could never have prevailed if Luke wasn’t at the right place at the right time, defeating Stormtroopers and Gamorrean guards with gusto. He also did a fantastic job considering that, technically, his father was supposed to be the chosen one.
True, his X-Wing spacecraft leaves much to be desired, from little room for emergency provisions to a distinct lack of bathroom facilities – crucial during long hyperspace flights. And he never did quite achieve the level of Force capability that any of his teachers or nemeses did. But in a genre dominated by roguish protagonists, he’s one of the few Space Heroes of Destiny to become a remarkable success story, making him a worthy addition to the list.
Jean Luc Picard
Far more sophisticated and cultured than the overtly badass heroes on this list, Jean Luc Picard is by far one of the most commendable space heroes around. His disposition belies an impressive will, capable of managing the enormous Enterprise-D crew and recovering from Borg assimilation. While a tendency to avoid getting his hands dirty during away missions is unusual among space heroes, his leadership and delegation qualities are top-notch, making him aware of exactly which personalities are suited to which operation.
Picard is one of the few space heroes most consistently able to resolve disputes through diplomacy. Sadly, this also enables a tendency to avoid the “Always Shoot First” rule crucial to space hero success, but at least when shooting does break out, he’s calm under fire.
Commander Shepard
Savior of the galaxy? Lover of alien species? Scourge of no fewer than three hostile armadas? Video game character or not, there’s a reason Commander Shepard’s exploits are prime space hero material. The fates of entire races – the whole galaxy in fact – changes simply by Shepard showing up, making a decision, then returning back to the Normandy with a stoic “I should go.”
Shepard isn’t just a remarkably capable combatant and leader – prime material for being a space hero – but also embodies three of the Space Hero’s Guide‘s tragic origin stories simultaneously. That’s not to say Shepard didn’t have flaws – the Commander was bizarrely extreme, switching schizophrenically from diplomatic calm to journalist-punching anger from moment to moment. But the Normandy Commander remains so compelling that even death – and a controversially tragic ending – can’t stop his legend.
Commander “FemShep” Shepard
Same as above, but better. I mean, any old Shepard can take down the Geth, Collectors, and Reapers. But building enough of a fan base to alter a game industry marketing campaign? Now that’s hard.
Han Solo
As the prime example of a “Bastard Antihero,” it’s no wonder Han Solo is among the most beloved sci-fi characters of all time. A rogue with a heart of gold, you can’t deny that he’s one of the good guys – an important characteristic for any space hero. But since he’s also capable of shooting down armed thugs, opportunistic bounty hunters, and entire Stormtrooper squads, we can revel in how awesomely badass he is too. And Solo knows it as well, breaking his roguishly icy exterior as often as he messes up his ravishing hair. Which is to say, never.
Solo is so charming and capable that even his failures (jettisoning lucrative cargo and getting captured by Vader) inevitably become part of his mythology. But he still can’t recover from failure nearly as smoothly as…
Captain James T. Kirk
Space hero greatness, refined to perfection and topped off with the ideal haircut (“The Tiberius.”) Few personalities ever achieved success in every aspect of a space hero’s career, but Captain James T. Kirk did so – usually while cheating, but so gracefully he was commended afterwards. Whether leading tactical ship operations from the captain’s chair, having hand-to-hand brawls during away missions, or (briefly) commanding the fleet as Admiral, Kirk succeeds at every mission he puts his mind to.
Go ahead and pit Kirk against any no-win Kobayashi Maru scenario you can think of. It won’t matter. Maroon him on a remote icy world of your choosing – in any timeline – he’ll find a way back to the action. Turn the crew against him, if you can – all you’ll do is prompt awkward apologies at the next officer’s meeting. No matter what happens, he still reappears to stop the assassin, blow up the enemy vessel, and earn the love of humanity at the last possible moment.
Although he clearly always goes where someone has gone before, his exploits are so memorable we forgive the detail. And that’s why Kirk is the Best Space Hero of any timeline.