How to run Tachyon: The Fringe on Windows 7/8

Pixelboost Tachyon

Twice a month, Pixel Boost guides you through the hacks, tricks, and mods you'll need to run a classic PC game on Windows 7/8. Each guide comes with a free side of hi-res screenshots from the LPC celebrating the graphics of PC gaming's past. This week: Cracking wise on the outskirts of space.

Elite Dangerous , Star Citizen . While space sim diehards are fighting over which modern sim is the one true king, Pixel Boost turns its eyes back to one of the greats of the past: Novalogic's Tachyon: The Fringe. Bruce Campbell stars as sassy pilot Jake Logan, hanging out on the fringes of space and getting in all kinds of interstellar dogfights. Tachyon showed up on PC in 2000, right as the space sim genre peaked and started drifting into a black hole of obscurity, with a branching storyline and multiplayer that still lives today. The game is also easy to play at high resolutions on modern Windows. If you bought a flight stick for modern space sims, time to put it to use with a classic.

Install it

Tachyon: The Fringe is downloadable on Steam for $10 . You can also download it for $10 from developer NovaLogic.

If you still have a disc copy of Tachyon: The Fringe sitting around (we do!), you may want to patch the game to its latest version. Novalogic amazingly still hosts a patch for the game as of 2014. Download it from their FTP server here . Pretty great support for a game released in 2000.

Run it in high resolution

Tachyon: The Fringe should run just fine once you install it, but it needs a little help rendering at higher resolution than 1024x768. The solution is a wonderful tool called nGlide, a graphics wrapper for the old 3Dfx Voodoo Glide API. nGlide takes games like Tachyon and the classic Thief, designed for Glide, and makes them compatible with Direct3D.

Download nGlide here and install it . Now run the nGlide configurator from the start menu and set your desired resolution, like 1920x1080, and hit apply. That's it!

There's one more step necessary to get Tachyon and nGlide playing nice together. In the Tachyon: the Fringe install folder, open tachyon.cfg and apply these settings:

"HW_type=1"

"USE_HARDWARE" set to "1"

The above settings will tell the game to use the Glide API. Thanks to the Steam forums for the tip .

Because we're using nGlide to force a higher resolution, launching the game by its usual executable doesn't work. It brings up a video settings configuration launcher that messes things up. Instead, when you want to boot up Tachyon, launch it from the space.exe , not the tachyon.exe.

Note: if you want to go to 4K, as we often do with Pixel Boost, it gets a bit more complicated. You should be able to downsample the game at 4K resolution if your monitor is capable of downsampling. Durante's GeDoSaTo tool should also work, because nGlide converts Glide calls into DirectX calls. Unfortunately, when I set 4K and 8K resolution options in nGlide and GeDoSaTo, Tachyon: The Fringe would run, but didn't display any graphics. Your mileage may vary.

Mod it

There's a mod for Tachyon that patches its online lobby to support NovaLogic's game server, which is still online and moved to a new address in July 2014. You can download that patch from Fringespace here if you want to play online .

At the same link, you can also download a visual enhancements mod and the most popular Tachyon mod: the Service Bay. It fixes issues with playing and hosting online matches and adds new maps. Space maps. Grab it, especially if you plan to check out the Tachyon multiplayer scenes. I hear there are still dogfights on Sundays, way out there on the Fringe...

Tachyon: the Fringe at 1440p on the LPC

These screenshots were taken on the Large Pixel Collider by PC Gamer superintern Tom Marks, with Tachyon running with original textures at 2560x1440.

Wes Fenlon
Senior Editor

Wes has been covering games and hardware for more than 10 years, first at tech sites like The Wirecutter and Tested before joining the PC Gamer team in 2014. Wes plays a little bit of everything, but he'll always jump at the chance to cover emulation and Japanese games.


When he's not obsessively optimizing and re-optimizing a tangle of conveyor belts in Satisfactory (it's really becoming a problem), he's probably playing a 20-year-old Final Fantasy or some opaque ASCII roguelike. With a focus on writing and editing features, he seeks out personal stories and in-depth histories from the corners of PC gaming and its niche communities. 50% pizza by volume (deep dish, to be specific).