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Dextro Xur-pattern Spirit

From Halopedia, the Halo wiki

Were you looking for the Phantom-class dropship, which was introduced in Halo 2?

Template:Ship Class Infobox The Type-25 Troop Carrier[1][2] (Covenant designation DX-class dropship[3]), commonly known as the Spirit,[1][2] is a Covenant infantry and logistical transport craft.[3]

Design details

The Spirit is a moderately large craft, similar in size to the D77-TC Pelican dropship. Capable of powered flight and hovering, the dropship appears quite cumbersome and awkward to pilots based on battlefield observations but has been known to reach speeds of 350 kilometers per hour while cruising and has a suspected maximum speed of 1,100 kph. Spirits are angular, tuning fork shaped spacecraft with two parallel personnel bays along the exterior of each "prong." The Spirits are dedicated transports for infantry and vehicles. Each of these personnel bays has two doors that open and close vertically; however, they do not close fully and leave a small opening along the length of the bay. Between these extended personnel bays, an energy field fluctuates visibly as it generates the ship's anti-gravity propulsion, similar in appearance to the energy pulse of the gravity lifts the Covenant use to commute between the ground and the hovering ships. This same gravity-beam is used to ferry Shades, Ghosts, and other ground vehicles to their destinations.

Type-25 Troop Carriers often ferry Covenant vehicles within the blue-colored energy field between their prongs, usually Ghosts and Wraiths, or other small objects such as supply canisters for ground troops.

While these dropships have life support for use in the vacuum of space, they do not have a slipspace drive. During Operation: FIRST STRIKE, a Spirit was modified with reinforced metal so it could be launched out of a ship already in Slipspace. Even with this modification, the Spirit became severely damaged after the exit and was still unable to travel into the Slipstream on its own accord.[4]

Although it is not common to all Spirits, some are equipped with gravity lifts.[5]

Known units

Gameplay

Halo: Combat Evolved

As well as being able to drop of a rather large amount of Covenant troops on the battlefield, the Spirit is also capable of providing heavy support in combat thanks to the turret that lies underneath its belly. When dropping off troops, the Spirit will be stationary in mid-air for a few seconds, before descending and opening its troop bay doors. In rarer cases, the Spirit may stay suspended in midair; the troops that disembark may actually die from the fall.[6] Spirits can also deploy Ghosts and Wraiths into the battlefield. Like Pelicans, Spirits follow a set path: they appear from around the background, arrive at the battlefield, deploy troops, take off and disappear around the corner.

The Spirit is indestructible. In addition, its heavy, bulky armor can protect those resting within the troop bay doors.

The best tactic, if on lower difficulty levels, is to attack the vulnerable infantry (shoot or toss a grenade) as they disembark from the Spirit. On higher difficulties, this would be unwise; hiding behind cover until the ship leaves is often the best course of action in this situation. Without cover or good tactics, a careless player might die quickly.

Halo Wars

In Halo Wars, the Spirit only appears on the campaign and cannot be used in multiplayer or Skirmish. It is a fast dropship used to deliver quite large amounts of troops on the battlefield. Unlike Halo: Combat Evolved, the Spirit is not indestructible: it is advisable that players should eliminate it before the troops it carries disembark. Once the troops are on the ground, it cannot be destroyed.

The preferred units for taking down an airborne Spirit are Wolverines, Hornets, and Hawks. Spirits in Halo Wars do not engage enemy targets and are only seen in the campaign, mainly on the mission "Dome of Light." Spirits in Halo Wars utilize gravity lifts to deploy and pick up troops, rather than the side-mounted troop bay doors as in Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo: Reach.

Halo: Reach

The Spirit in Halo: Reach behaves similarly to its Halo: Combat Evolved incarnation. One significant change, however, is that of its firing operation, which now matches the behavior of the Phantom's plasma auto-cannon. Instead of simultaneously firing three bolts of plasma, it now sports a weapon similar to the Concussion Rifle, which is significantly more powerful but fires only one bolt at a time and at half the speed. It remains indestructible, but its turret can be shot off with enough firepower. In Firefight mode, destroying the turret grants the player who did so a two credit bonus.

Trivia

  • In Halo: Combat Evolved, the Spirit is only referred to as a "Covenant Dropship".
  • With the exception of Halo Wars, the Spirit is the only Covenant aircraft that cannot be destroyed.
  • The Spirit is jokingly known as the "tuning fork" among Bungie employees due to its shape.[7]
  • Lorraine McLees described the Spirit as "having the coolest rear-end of all the Covenant ships".[8]
  • The Marathon logo can be seen on the front of the cockpit.
  • The Spirit dropship was erroneously designated as Type-28 Troop Carrier during the development of Halo: Reach; this was soon corrected following the release of the game. This error, however, persist in a Waypoint's article of the vehicle.[2]
  • The Spirit Dropships only appear in three Halo Games, Halo Wars, Halo: Reach and Halo: Combat Evolved.

Gallery

List of appearances

Sources

  1. ^ a b Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Reach
  2. ^ a b c Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named waypoint
  3. ^ a b Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, page 286
  4. ^ Halo: First Strike, pages 295-296
  5. ^ Halo Wars, campaign level Anders' Signal
  6. ^ Halo: Combat Evolved, campaign level Keyes
  7. ^ Halo: Reach, Legendary Developer Commentary
  8. ^ The Art of Halo, page 131

Template:CovenantShips Template:Covenant Vehicles