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The book series We are legion (we are bob). They encounter two or three less advanced races. Great series, I just finished the fourth book.
Stanislav lem has a couple books about it.
I have seen some recommending Star Trek but you should know that the humans there have about as much in common with modern humanity as the other races. I wouldn't count it even though I love Star Trek and watched all of it.
The video game X3. Of the races in the game, two of them are human. One is the Argon, descendants of a group of humans flung across the galaxy hundreds of years ago and developed into their own little niche. And then the actual Terrans, who somehow managed to develop technology much more advanced than the Commonwealth (what the collection of Argon, Split, Paranid and Teladi are called, since they mostly all work together peacefully) without even having the ability for warp travel, only making contact with the rest of populated space because of a disaster that linked one of their catapults with the network of ancient gates that have been the primary means of exploration.
While they have better shielding, faster thrusters, and devastating weaponry, they are completely lacking in economy, having control of just a single star system against factions that have control of most of known space. The game's actual economy ends up reflecting this quite hard, and the terrans are usually bankrupt super quickly unless you mod the game to give them some support.
!hfy@lemmy.world
Oh damn, I didn't know there was an hfy on lemmy. Sadly it doesn't look like my instance is mirroring it properly though; not sure why. Might be due to the ongoing csam attack.
In Strata Humans are basically god level advanced.
All humans are immortal and they terraform planets, and entire star systems, on an industrial scale.
There are quite a few series where humans are on about the same level as most of the other aliens except for one specific race that's way more advanced but driven by some weird internal logic that keeps them from lording it over everyone - John Scalzi's "Old Man's War" and Adrian Tchaikovsky's "Architects" e.g.
Uplift novels. Been years since I read them. All I remember is humans uplifting other species to sentience. Guess it is time for a reread.
Edit, clearly I remember wrong how this one went. Sorry
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