Yesterday, I was the luckiest guy north of the 65k line.
Through the waypoints, I'd gradually built up a small stack jumpoinium, with the intention of leaping off the edge of the galaxy, out to distant stars beyond the reach of casual explorers. I had chosen a point, made sure to manually note my route and distances for safe backtracking purposes, and took the first few jumps.... Into systems already tagged. While the casual explorer might be hesitant to burn jumponium, apparently the most intrepid ones have been hard at work mapping the local 1k ly or so around Beagle Point. But surely even they can't have infinite resources to visit every star 70+ lightyears from its closest neighbour.
And indeed not! I decided to stay my path, undeterred that others had already been here, and burn the last few J3 availible in a nothing-to-lose leap of faith. I was rewarded!
At the very edge of the galaxy, with no star in range of even our most formidably boosted FSDs, and with my entire supply of jumponium spent.
An ELW, so isolated from anything that my conda had to use several units of J2 and J3 to reach there, was discovered! I might even name it, should the opportunity arise.
It's also a moon, which is a first time for me. I've already found the binay ELWs, a ringed one, ones with landable moons and so forth. I need something new to look for, again.
For me, this is the perfect culmination of Distant Worlds, as I've been submitting ELWs to the public list since the start of my journeys.
It will take something spectacular to top this, and I'm eager to try my luck again, next year.
So, here it is, the reclusive ELW, our galaxy, and a battered but optimistic, formerly yellow conda for scale!

Many thanks to the Rockrats and their invaluable
Prospecting Public Service, and the Distant World expediton for providing an incredible atmosphere to make this happen!
See you next mission. [heart]
http://i.imgur.com/sEKDia9.jpg