Got a firm reminder to pay attention my speed when landing on a planet.

Left Beagle Point a few hours ago heading towards Colonia, was landing on a planet to scan the life on it, I wasn't paying enough attention to my speed, slammed into the ground and died. Lost nearly 800 million credits base worth of biological data 😱😭
On a completely unrelated note, there is now unscanned Crystaline Shards in Plaa Chruia LN-B d21 if you happen to be in the area.
 
I have taken the approach that if I have a significant amount of uncollected exploration data, I don't do landings, because landing on a planet is about the only situation where you can accidentally destroy yourself. Pretty much everything else is safe. (Well, also avoid Thargoid-controlled systems, but that's easy.)
 
I have taken the approach that if I have a significant amount of uncollected exploration data, I don't do landings, because landing on a planet is about the only situation where you can accidentally destroy yourself. Pretty much everything else is safe. (Well, also avoid Thargoid-controlled systems, but that's easy.)
And if you DO land, don't drive an SRV.

Voice of Experience.
 
Shame you didn't sell your data to one of carriers that are located there. :(

No worries, though. You'll get it all back eventually. :cool:
I honestly thought about, but I was a bit greedy wanting it to help get elite exobiology rank. (Please don't tell me that restriction doesn't apply to exobiology at carriers)

I have taken the approach that if I have a significant amount of uncollected exploration data, I don't do landings, because landing on a planet is about the only situation where you can accidentally destroy yourself. Pretty much everything else is safe. (Well, also avoid Thargoid-controlled systems, but that's easy.)
I would normally do that too, but unfortunately it's required for what I was doing. I wanted to see how much exobiology I could do going to Beagle and back to the Bubble, I at least stopped at Explorer's Anchorage so it wasn't a completely lost trip.

And if you DO land, don't drive an SRV.

Voice of Experience.
Do you lose everything if you die in an SRV?
 
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Unlucky cmdr

Now you didnt do much exploration if you only got 800 mil from sol to beagle. You must have been in tourist mode :D

Exo bio is north of 8 billion

Do you lose everything if you die in an SRV?
Yes, I believe it is better to die on foot
 
Unlucky cmdr

Now you didnt do much exploration if you only got 800 mil from sol to beagle. You must have been in tourist mode :D

Exo bio is north of 8 billion


Yes, I believe it is better to die on foot
I think it's about the same on foot. I just lost a long-range gunfight with a NPC (he remembered his shields). I lost around 60M in Exo, but retained all cartographic data. It appears as though Exo data is stored in the suit, and Carto data is stored on the ship.
 
Unlucky cmdr

Now you didnt do much exploration if you only got 800 mil from sol to beagle. You must have been in tourist mode :D

Exo bio is north of 8 billion


Yes, I believe it is better to die on foot
I did skip a lot planets that only have low grade stuff like argon ice bodies that have something like bacterium vesicula, that is way to much time spent on way too little even with the pay buffs. And it wasn't from Sol to Beagle it was Sag A* to Beagle, I did sell at Explorer's
Is that 8 billion counting the x4 bonus or not counting?
 
HOW do you slam into a planet lol .havnt done for many a long time even if grav pull is high can happen i admit lapse of concertration np sry to laugh but but its a hell of a thing to lose youre data, sry for youre loss, better luck next time be more careful good luck.07
 
HOW do you slam into a planet lol .havnt done for many a long time even if grav pull is high can happen i admit lapse of concertration np sry to laugh but but its a hell of a thing to lose youre data, sry for youre loss, better luck next time be more careful good luck.07
Combination of steep angle, and being too used to low gravity planets, and just not paying attention to my speed
 
HOW do you slam into a planet lol .havnt done for many a long time even if grav pull is high can happen i admit lapse of concertration np sry to laugh but but its a hell of a thing to lose youre data, sry for youre loss, better luck next time be more careful good luck.07
It's very easy if you unwittingly place boost next to landing gear on a HOTAS. That's how I got to test the repair capabilities of my exploration Anaconda LOL
 
I did skip a lot planets that only have low grade stuff like argon ice bodies that have something like bacterium vesicula, that is way to much time spent on way too little even with the pay buffs. And it wasn't from Sol to Beagle it was Sag A* to Beagle, I did sell at Explorer's
Is that 8 billion counting the x4 bonus or not counting?

Sometimes you luck out, this was one system;

kXnxV3D.jpg


Should be x5 bonus not x4, 5 x base value. Anyway, you are right, spending a lot of time looking across planets for bacteria is a waste of time, but on a trip like that bio should fetch you in the multiple billions each way if you are set on exploring bio and collecting data.
 
It's very easy if you unwittingly place boost next to landing gear on a HOTAS.
I myself play with an Xbox Series X controller (which is quite great, btw) rather than a HOTAS. But it so happens that the default button mapping is such that B on its own is boost and B + something else is a combo for a bunch of other stuff... including deploying the landing gear.

Yes, I have accidentally boosted a couple of times when trying to deploy the landing gear (luckily so far it has not resulted in a crash). I have been thinking of moving the boost to some other button, but never got around doing it (muscle memory is hard to overcome when you have been playing the game for months).
 
This is the best reason to have strong shields, or at least decent ones, on an explorer ship. Most of the time, you lose something like 2% - 5% jump range, but it's better to limp away from a crash than it is to stare at the rebuy screen. Most of the time, the difference would only be a couple of jumps anyway.

For exobiology, the Imperial Courier can easily have a shield strong enough that the only way to be destroyed in a crash is to boost head on into the ground, with strong thrusters. (I tried. My standard procedure for a new exploration build involves crash testing.)

One time, my joystick failed just as I was flying at low altitude, and of course it didn't fail by disconnecting, but roll and pitch axes (perhaps yaw too) maxed out instead, and of course in such a direction that I went spinning into the ground. Or what happened to another explorer: they were leaving an NSP, and decided to boost away before jumping... but then a tiny mollusc decided to fly in front of their ship just then. They are invincible, we aren't. Cardboard build, rebuy screen.
So, accidents happen.

A couple of tips to help mitigate them: first, before crashing, put four pips to SYS, that'll strengthen your shield significantly. Better yet, always fly with four pips, because you might not have enough time for pip management.
Second, for shields, it's usually the best to put some E-rated shield boosters on your ship and engineer them with the Heavy Duty recipe, plus the Super Capacitors experimental if you have the mats. These have the best ratio between mass and shield strength added.
 
Well, yes, that restriction doesn't apply to exobiology at carriers. Sorry. o_O
💀

Sometimes you luck out, this was one system;

kXnxV3D.jpg


Should be x5 bonus not x4, 5 x base value. Anyway, you are right, spending a lot of time looking across planets for bacteria is a waste of time, but on a trip like that bio should fetch you in the multiple billions each way if you are set on exploring bio and collecting data.
ah, the 800 mil was the base, it's not counting what the bonuses could have been if I hadn't died.
 
actually majority of bacterias are possible to complete in 5 minutes.
And as first logs their min value is 5m. Meanwhile example nitrogen bacterias have narly 9m of BASE value.
Imo it is definetely worthy.
 
actually majority of bacterias are possible to complete in 5 minutes.
And as first logs their min value is 5m. Meanwhile example nitrogen bacterias have narly 9m of BASE value.
Imo it is definetely worthy.
Yes, if the area has plenty of bacterium mats, but I did run into a few where even in the areas that are supposed to be high rate of occurrence I'd find only 1 for several dozen kilometers, that's even going back to super cruise and going to a different part of the planet, though I think that there might be an issue of them not visually rendering.
 
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