Security Officer

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Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.
Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.
Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.
File:ClarionSecurity.png
Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.
Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.
Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.
Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.
File:OshanSecurity.png
Your main base. This is where you spawn and all of your equipment is stored.

A Security Officer is an agent employed by Nanotrasen to act as law enforcement aboard its stations. While many restrictions, laws, and customs surrounding due process may be relaxed in space, Security is still expected to maintain the base minimum of Space Law, act within the boundaries of their authority, answer to the station's chain of command, and generally avoid purposefully murdering innocents, brigging them forever, etc. A person who starts the round as a Security Officer cannot be a traitor, though the antagonist selection process happens before jobs are assigned, meaning that putting security officer in your preferred jobs will not preclude you from your fair chance at getting an antag round.

The Basics

Security is responsible for maintaining safety and order on the station and as such is one of the most important departments around and also the most hopelessly overtasked. Due to the fact that you have the tools and legal support at your disposal to make any crew member's day a living hell, try not to overextend your authority. A good security officer is helpful, trustworthy, and ready to bravely defend the station from all kinds of evildoers.

As security is responsible for rooting out antagonists and taking them down, how you play will directly affect how difficult the round is for the antagonist players. Lackadaisical security is frankly pretty boring, so get out there and make the enemy get creative. Scan hacked airlocks for fingerprints. Try to figure out who bombed genetics and how, and go looking for them. Keep an eye out for people with concealed faces, ask people how they got blood on their hands--or better yet, scan them, check the database, and figure out who it came from. Quietly tail guys who seem suspicious. Go undercover as a quartermaster and bust that botanist for trying to sell weed. There's no need to be a hypercop every round, but it's definitely more fun to be a criminal when there are people out there who will actually bust you for it.

Some pushback from troublemakers is normal, but if you find yourself being excessively griefed just for being a security officer, adminhelp it.

Your Gear

Security gets a red-striped security headset capable of normal comms and a secure security channel. Type :g before the message to be sent to go through the secure channel. Command officers can coordinate security activity and conduct oversight, and in general, having a special channel that doesn't broadcast to every person on the station can be quite helpful.

You start with a couple handcuffs and armor. You will find the rest of your equipment in your locker or in the vending machine. You have three main tools for subduing suspects:

  • The flash is a melee weapon with a random amount of uses that can stun one person next to you if they don't have proper eye protection- sunglasses or a welding helmet. A good minimum force tool.
  • The stun baton is a melee weapon with 10 shots before it needs to be recharged. It has to be on to stun someone. When hitting someone with an active stun baton on the harm intent, you will instead stun yourself! If dropped, the baton can easily be turned against you, handle carefully.
  • The taser is a ranged stun weapon with 6 shots (13 if you swap it with the power cell in the security starter kit in your backpack) and must be recharged when depleted. You'll need to land two successive hits to stun somebody completely. When used point-blank on any intent except help, the taser will knock the target down instantly for a short amount of time.
  • The riot launcher launches smoke grenades that blur people's vision and make them cough, dropping whatever they're holding. The grenade hurts if it hits someone directly, so be careful.
  • The armory, which requires Head of Security clearance, contains riot shotguns that stun and do moderate damage to unarmoured personnel.
  • Your PDA keeps you in contact with securitrons, alerting you when someone has been detained, and lets you issue fines and tickets to offenders who don't merit arrest.
  • It's a good idea to refer frequently to Space Law as a set of guidelines so you'll know how to react in any given situation.

Use handcuffs on a downed suspect to restrain them. Once you start pulling a cuffed suspect (no need to use grab intent), they are incapable of running away, but bumping into someone else may break the hold. The port-a-brig is the safest way to transport prisoners.

The security records computer has records for every member of the crew. If you login and set someone to Arrest, they will be pursued by Officer Beepsky and other securitrons. If you're wearing the security HUDs, this will allow you to co-ordinate who to arrest, and keep things in check.

Tickets to the Prom

Ticketing people is an important and amusing alternative to more serious punishment. Your security PDA is your key to this system, known as Ticket Master. To access ticket master: Boot up your PDA and go to file browser, click into Ticket Master. You have two options: Ticket or Fine.

Ticketing is regarded as a mild punishment, fit for clowns and drunks alike. It's also fit for inanimate objects, if you feel like ticketing the janitor's mop instead of the janitor himself. Feel free to give whatever reason you feel like.

Fining is a step further, invoking angry reactions of various degrees. Unlike ticketing, this requires the full name (i.e: Joe Mc Scrubs) of the recipient, as it will drain the bank account of those you fine. Obviously you can't fine George the dog as he doesn't have a bank account. Fining requires confirmation from a Head of Staff, unless of course you are a Head.

Whats even cooler about this is that it will go onto an online stat. Be creative!

Due Process

As a security officer, you may find yourself having to make arrests several times per round. If you're quick and efficient, this is a painless process. If you're not, it can turn into a giant headache for everyone involved.

Processing badguys:

  • Detain the suspect with minimum force.
  • Handcuff the suspect and restrain them by pulling them. If their crime requires a brig time, bring them into the office, preferably via Port-a-brig.
  • In the office, tell them you're going to search them before doing so. Empty their pockets and remove their backpack. Look through everything. Be sure to open containers inside containers, such as boxes inside backpacks. Be sure to replace all items in the containers when you're done. Don't strip them in the hallways
  • If you need to brig them you can feed them into the little chute next to the brig. Remember to set the timer!

Security roles (sec officer, vice officer, detective) and their superiors (HoS, HoP, captain) can read the Miranda warning to suspects by using the Recite Miranda Rights verb or *miranda emote. The wording is also customizable via Set Miranda Rights.

A Security Officer does not have the authority to assign sentences any more severe than confiscation of stolen items and 5 minutes in the brig. Execution, permabrigging, poisoning with Discount Dan's, or anything, anything, ANYTHING else requires the okay of the Head in command. In order of preference, that is: the Head of Security, the Captain, and the Head of Personnel. If the Captain tells you to execute someone and the Head of Security says no, listen to the Head of Security.

Good Officer Checklist

A Security Officer should always be able to:

  • Justify any lives you need to take during duty. This applies between you and your colleagues and heads, the general populace, and lastly to the admins if they are looking into something.
  • Attempt to respond to things happening. You are a good guy after all, do your job and change how people view security.
  • Keep your cool! This is the biggest thing, losing your cool and having access to all those weapons will quickly go south.
  • Mind your surroundings. Don't strip a guy in front of everyone else, do it where troublemakers can't disrupt you and potentially become a bigger threat than the guy you caught.
  • Be careful not to leave prisoners trapped forever, most people do not need to be imprisoned for more than 5 minutes. If you need to keep someone locked away longer, be able to defend your judgment.
  • Finally, be fun! If you're a good and robust cop, you have nothing to fear from the bad guys and would come out on top anyway right?

"Alright so who can I arrest?"

Space Law is the definitive guideline here, but you may find yourself running up against situations that don't neatly fit into it. For instance, if the chaplain throws holy water in an otherwise peaceful guy's face and reveals him to be a vampire, which one do you arrest?

How to Deal with Threats

A good security officer should know that there's more enemies to the station than just the criminals. Be sure to prioritize. For example if there's a space yeti eating the entire medical staff, it'd probably better to deal with that first than the wizard spawning THC golems and debutting people, and perhaps better to deal with that than the guy who's breaking windows. Keep in mind though that with changelings, wizards, syndicate operatives and other horribly overpowering shit you should seek the help of the crew, you're not alone in this fight, chief.

Name Attention Mugshot Description


Garbage Security Medium
Sec64.gif
Appearance: Looks a lot like you

Crime: Treating prisoners like animals. Being a bloodthirsty nutjob. Possibly an actual antagonist who got a security job.

Notes: Weed bad security out asap. One bad egg spoils the bunch. It doesn't have to be sec either, the Captain, HoP, Detective or any acting sec may also be awful. Power corrupts. People can get the security officer job from the HoP/HoS/Captain so don't assume they couldn't be an antagonist!

Rogue Silicons Medium
File:AI64.png
Appearance: Takes the shape of a once friendly metallic buddy or an ominous AI

Crime: Not following their laws, murdering, bolting and shocking doors, calling you meatbag repeatedly.

Notes: Just like humans, try to use non-lethal force: rogue AIs and borgs can be fixed by resetting their laws. This does not apply to emagged borgs or Syndicate robots!

Psycho Killer High
EliteSecurity64.png
Appearance: Covered in the blood of innocents, boasting about how they murdered someone. Possibly saying they're not a traitor.

Crime: Person outright murdering others they suspect to be antagonist, often stealing security items and hurting innocents in the process. More than likely using stolen traitor gear, HINT THIS MEANS THEY'RE POSSIBLY A TRAITOR, CONFIRM IT MAYBE.

Notes: Sometimes called vigilantes. It's often hard to distinguish between who's a traitor and who's a non-traitor just abusing traitor gear. Use some evidence and keep in mind a traitor isn't obligated to tell you they're a traitor, and as long as you actually have a good reason to believe they deserve execution no admin would stop you.

Traitor High
Jobtrait.png
Appearance: Frequently well disguised, a dead give-away is their nefarious tools

Crime: Murder. Arson. Grievous bodily harm. You name it, they've done it.

Notes: It's not particularly necessary to always murder a traitor, especially if they're just goofing around, however, don't feel obligated to let them off the hook easy, feel free to confiscate their contraband and arrest them for crimes. Be creative with your punishments. See below for examples of certain situations.

Spy Thief High
Jobspythief2.png
Appearance: Frequently well-disguised, as a good spy should be. Their spy gear is a dead giveaway.

Crime: Grand theft. Breaking and entering. Being an unholy lovechild of traitors and greyshirts.

Notes: Spy Thieves can make potentially useful vigilantes/informants. A spy thief's PDA displays a list of items and machines to steal and their drop-off location, which means it's essentially a list of potential locations to stake out and people to bodyguard. Left to their own devices, a spy thief will eventually know the names and locations of IDs of other threats on the station.

Vampire High
Dracula.png
Appearance: More than likely invisible and lurking in the dark with their bats.

Crime: Biting. Noise Pollution with their screams. Spreading rabies with their pet bats.

Notes: Vampires weaknesses are strong lights, holy water and space (even if they're shielding themselves from the cold!)

A vampire can and will resist one of your first stuns you inflict.

Wraith High
Wraith64.png
Appearance: Invisible mostly. Tangible if they crossed salt lines like an idiot or chosen to be for the spooks. Possessed items are a dead give away, such as the lone frosted donut in security yelling for the blood of innocents.

Crime: Invasion of privacy. Weaponizing station property. Flagrant abuse of spooking.

Notes: The wraith will strike when people are weakest, often targeting security HQ and medbay. They'll turn your baton and beepsky against you. Laying salt lines is your only defense, so consider visiting chemistry or the bar. Keep corpses out of sight, whether it be in a coffin, body-bag or a crate as they'll absorb it or worse.

Wizard Very High
Wizard64.png
Appearance: Comes in blue, red, black, green, and purple. Smells like moth balls and urine.

Crime: Flinging spells. Conjuring mayhem. Being hipster.

Notes: Wizards are a mixed bag. Be sure to study what spells they are using before making the assault. Wizards are just wrinkly dorks without their robes, and severely weakened if you manage to disarm them! Consider recruiting the ignoble chaplain to your cause if things get too tough.

Revolutionary Very High
Jobrev.png
Appearance: Sporting the trophies of dead Heads of Staff and fellow officers. Often wandering with lots of friends.

Crime: Conspiracy. High treason. Light and noise pollution via their flashes.

Notes: Kill, brig, and/or Debris Field/Adventure Zone-exile the Head (Revolutionaries), and the body will die. A brainwashed underling can be brought back to your cause with a variety of methods, but to fully stamp out the revolution, you'll need time, effort, and the entire crew working together.

Changeling Very High
Changeling.png
Appearance: So deadly as they can look like anyone, but their twisted fleshy abomination form makes no mistake what they are.

Crime: Making husks. Making people hallucinate dragons and monkeys. Looking ugly as heck.

Notes: Do not go alone when fighting a changeling. They thrive in 1-on-1 fights. They're susceptible to fire. Unless you're armed to the teeth and have a death-wish, it's advised to run against an abomination. They are vulnerable when returning back to their human state.

Blob Very High
BlobOvermind64.png
Appearance: Obese gelatinous goop of varying color

Crime: Consuming all in its path of ever hunger. Clogging up disposals. Making the station look even more shit that usual.

Notes: This antagonist is too fat to be arrested. It should be noted that most of the crew will be defending themselves against this creature as it takes over their department. The scientists are often better armed than you at fighting this thing, consider their support.

Nuclear Operative Very High
NewNukeOp64.png
Appearance: Have a very obvious name, stating their affiliation. Often sporting red. May be pulling a nuclear bomb through the hallways depending on how competent the crew is.

Crime: Blowing up absolutely everything you can imagine to hell and back, including the entire station.

Notes: Arm yourselves as much as you can. Some might consider arresting an operative valiant, others a stupid affair.

Other Threats ???
Jobspy.png
Appearance: Gangsters, Zombies, Werewolves, Predators or Critters to name but a few.

Crime: All of (or none of) the above

Notes: Threats don't have to be actual players. NPCs such as critters can just be equally bad. And asteroids. Or even the occasional omnipresent admin. Anything that is a danger to the crew should be noted. Don't forget: In space, nobody can hear you scream.


There are other aspects to consider, too. More often than not, the situation won't be as clear-cut, requiring security officers to think on their feet. You may find yourself pondering as to what extent the law should be applied, for instance, in which case these scenarios might provide useful orientation:

  • Traitor A is doing a gimmick, which doesn't really involve killing people unless in self defense. Traitor A's gimmick can be considered fun by most of the crew. You may want to either play along, provided doing so would make it more fun for everyone involved, or arrest the guy and run a little gimmick on your own (such as a public trial). Since traitor A is most likely still breaking the law and/or in possession of contraband, it's up to your discretion what to do, depending on circumstances.
  • Traitor B is just trying to complete his objectives in a stealthy way. B is killing people when necessary, or if they're an assassination target, but he isn't going on a rampage. In this case, B should be arrested and have his gear confiscated. Arresting may cut the traitor's fun short, but it may also make it more fun for B as he has another chance to try and succeed. It'd also give the traitor ways to come up with plans for whatever may happen if he gets caught. If B tries to gun down security, well, he can't expect you not to fight back! Consult with the HoS or captain and if they decide execution is the best way to handle this sort of traitor, that's fine! A public execution may be more fun for everyone than tossing them naked out an airlock, though, and gives a quick-thinking traitor the potential to escape.
  • Traitor C is going on a rampage! He is killing everyone he sees without compromise. You should do everything in your power to stop C; even lethal force may very well be justifiable in these kind of situations. While this cuts short the traitor's fun, mindless rampages aren't that exciting for the most part and tend to be less fun for the majority of players, too.

That said, these can only be guidelines and nothing more. Keep a clear head, use your best judgement and don't be afraid to ask colleagues or other players for advice!

Another Perspective

Speaking of which, here's such a colleague, who goes on BYOND by the name of Marsbar (although on the forums they are known as Hikurac.) If you're looking for more specific advice on things such as equipment to carry or particular tactics against certain people, check out Beesmark's Goon Guide to Robust Security.

Frontier Justice: A Treatise on Space Law is worth a read as well. Though it's written with the slow-burn, less violent rounds of Goon RP#1 in mind, its advice is still sound, and you only need to make a few minor adjustments to make its recommendations work for Goon #2.

Supplementary Video

Gallery


Jobs on Space Station 13
Command &
Security
Captain · Head of Security · Head of Personnel · Chief Engineer · Research Director · Medical Director · Security Officer · Detective · Security Assistant · Nanotrasen Security Consultant
Medical &
Research
Geneticist · Roboticist · Scientist · Medical Doctor
Engineering Quartermaster · Miner · Engineer
Civilian Chef · Bartender · Botanist · Rancher · Janitor · Chaplain · Staff Assistant · Radio Host · Clown · Gimmick jobs
Jobs of the Day Dungeoneer · Barber · Mail Courier · Lawyer · Tourist · Musician · Boxer
Antagonist Roles With own mode Arcfiend · Blob · Changeling · Gang Member · Flockmind · Nuclear Operative · Spy Thief · Traitor · Revolutionary · Vampire · Wizard
Others Grinch · Hunter · Krampus · Werewolf · Wraith · Wrestler · Zombie · Gimmick antagonist roles
Special Roles Artificial Intelligence · Battler · Cluwne · Critter · Cyborg · Ghost · Ghostdrone · Monkey · Santa Claus