We’re not alone. We’re just usually solo.
No one really remembers who started Out of Friends. It might’ve been a lone gun runner who finally got tired of answering distress calls that never got answered back. Or a hauler who realized all their “contacts” only called when they needed something moved. What’s clear is that the name wasn’t a joke—it was a description.
Over time, the group grew. Not fast, not loud. Just one quiet, capable loner at a time. Folks who didn’t want to be part of something big, just something there when it mattered. Most of us fly solo by habit or by design. Doesn’t mean we’re on our own.
Because we’re not alone—we’re just usually solo.
OOOF became a kind of accidental home for outcasts, irregulars, and independent pilots with itchy triggers and long memories. No loyalty tests. No speeches. Just a simple truth:
Out of friends doesn’t mean out of firepower.t.
We’re not lawful. We’re not criminal. We’re practical. Morality costs extra.
1. Membership
Anyone can join. No expectations. No activity checks. No roleplay about ranks or chain of command.
2. Autonomy
You play how you want, when you want. No required loadouts, no op rosters, no drama.
3. Ops
When we run group ops, you can jump in or skip out. Missions may be messy, improvised, or dumb. That’s fine.
4. Behavior
Don’t grief orgmates. Don’t act like a cop. Don’t start fights unless you’re ready to finish them.
5. Other Orgs
OOOF is a side org. You can have a main org, or five. No exclusivity, no judgment.