Getting Started in Stellaris
Stellaris is one of the most ambitious grand strategy games ever made — a living galaxy where your civilization can rise from a single planet to a sprawling interstellar empire. But its depth can be overwhelming for newcomers. This guide breaks down the essential first steps to set you on the path to galactic dominance.
Step 1: Choosing Your Species and Ethics
Before a single star is charted, you'll design your species. This isn't just cosmetic — your ethics, civics, and traits define your playstyle for the entire game.
- Militarist + Authoritarian: Great for conquest-focused runs. Strong early armies and war traditions.
- Pacifist + Egalitarian: Ideal for tall, peaceful empires that win through diplomacy and technology.
- Xenophobe + Materialist: A strong pick for isolationist science empires with powerful research bonuses.
For beginners, Fanatic Materialist is often recommended because the research speed advantage keeps your options open throughout the game.
Step 2: Your First 10 Years — The Exploration Rush
The early game is a race. You need to explore, survey, and colonize before rival empires claim territory. Here's your priority checklist:
- Build a second Construction Ship immediately.
- Queue up a Science Ship to begin surveying neighboring systems.
- Build Mining Stations on resource deposits as your science ships find them.
- Research Colonization technology as a priority.
- Establish your first colony on the highest-habitability planet within reach.
Step 3: Managing Your Home Planet
Your home world is your economic engine. Avoid the common mistake of ignoring planet management early on. Make sure you:
- Keep housing and amenities slightly above your population count.
- Build districts that match your resource bottlenecks — if you're low on minerals, build Mining Districts.
- Assign Governors with relevant traits to boost output.
Step 4: Diplomacy and Threat Management
Even if you plan to conquer the galaxy eventually, diplomacy buys you time. In the early-to-mid game:
- Join or form a Federation with neighbors who share your ethics.
- Establish Non-Aggression Pacts with stronger empires while you develop.
- Watch the Threat meter — rapid expansion makes neighbors nervous and can trigger early wars.
Step 5: Tech and Traditions — Where to Invest
Research is split into Physics, Society, and Engineering. For beginners, prioritize:
- Physics: Energy production and shields.
- Society: Population growth and colonization.
- Engineering: Alloy production and ship components.
For Traditions, the Expansion tree is excellent early on, followed by Discovery for the science bonus.
Key Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake | Why It Hurts | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Ignoring deficits | Negative resources stall everything | Check the budget screen weekly |
| Over-expanding too fast | Administrative capacity penalties tank research | Consolidate before colonizing more |
| Neglecting the fleet | Leaves you vulnerable to early wars | Maintain a fleet matching your threat level |
Final Thoughts
Stellaris rewards patience and curiosity. Don't panic if a crisis hits — every setback is a lesson. Start on a smaller galaxy with fewer AI empires to learn the systems, then scale up the difficulty as your confidence grows. The galaxy is yours to shape.