Highest Score

Highest Score is a 1996 Star Trek: Deep Space Nine novel by Kevin J. Anderson and Rebecca Moesta. It is the eighth novel in the DS9 novel series for young adults.

Description[]

Playing for keeps
Jake and Nog have hit the jackpot playing holo videogames in the Amusement Arcade. An alien named Kwiltek has offered them jobs helping him run remote-controlled mining operations on a distant planet where dull mining is turned into a thrilling video game. In the "gaming room", teams of kids work together monitoring the operations by remote control, loading cargo and defending against the most frightening "threats" they've ever seen on-screen. Now Jake and Nog can show their stuff! Soon they're competing with other alien kids to see who can haul the most ore.
It's the ultimate game—with pay! Until the night Jake and Nog slip into the command center and see a roomful of screens displaying real-life images of a devastated world where desperate natives are under attack by fighters that look very familiar! Suddenly the game is over—and the nightmare begins…

Summary[]

Kwiltek, the head of a mining consortium, arrives on Deep Space 9 and notes Jake and Nog have the highest scores in the simulator in the arcade. He offers them jobs controlling mining machines on a planet in the Gamma Quadrant and it is agreed they will try out with him during their school holidays.

Jake and Nog are taken to the station orbiting the planet Citra. They control excavators and flyers that seek out precious minerals and gather them. The graphics include simulated attacks to make things more interesting and the team with the highest score gets a bonus. However, the pair become suspicious when they first see the damage done by the "simulated" attacks and then a graphic that suggests the planet is lush and inhabited rather than a barren wasteland.

Jake beams down to investigate but Nog is captured before he can beam them back. Jake finds the natives fighting a desperate battle to stop the machines killing them and destroying their homes. He uses his knowledge of the machines to help them fight, while Nog is able to alert the other gamers of the true situation, causing them to down tools. Sisko, Quark and Rom arrive on the station and inform Kwiltek that the Federation and the Ferengi will stop anyone doing business with him unless he makes reparations to Citra and agrees to a Federation inspector keeping an eye on him in future.

References[]

Characters[]

DobbKreeKwiltekNogQuarkRomBenjamin SiskoJake SiskoTandonTani
Referenced only
RuxVesta

Locations[]

Amusement ArcadeCitraDeep Space 9Gamma QuadrantQuark's
Referenced only
BajorBajoran wormhole

Races and cultures[]

AndorianBajoranBenziteCitraneseFerengiGornHumanKlingon
Referenced only
CardassianOrion

Starships[]

USS Mekong (runabout)

States and organizations[]

Bajoran MilitiaStarfleetUnited Federation of Planets
Referenced only
Federation Miners Guild and Trading Commission

Science and technology[]

aliendilithiumimpulse engineore haulerphaserremote controltelepresenceuniversal translatorvideo gamewarp nacelle

Ranks and titles[]

commandercommanding officer

Other references[]

aardaAntarian shakebangadaboduraniumEscape Through the WormholeFerengi Rules of AcquisitionGaranian bolitegoldgold-pressed latinumilluriumindiumlatinumminingplanetPrime DirectiveSaurian brandyselenium fizzstarbasesyntheholtitanium

Appendices[]

Images[]

Connections[]

Timeline[]

published order
Previous novel:
Gypsy World
DS9 books Next novel:
Cardassian Imps
chronological order
Previous Adventure:
Lapse
Memory Beta Chronology Next Adventure:
Genesis
Previous Adventure:
Playing God
Pocket Next Adventure:
Genesis
Previous Adventure:
Lapse
Deep Space Nine Adventures Next Adventure:
Profit and Loss

External links[]