1: huh?, FDL is one of the fastest ships, it is the fastest medium ship, so this seems an odd statement? yes small ships are faster, but that's kinda the point?1. The Fer De Lance, aka tip of the spear, which arrives at the battle roughly 30% slower than most ships.
2. A ship named a Corvette, with a top boosting speed sub 300 m/s.
3. A SRV Hagar that can automatically repair your SRV, but, cannot refuel it.
Just some things that me scratch my head.
What are yours?
4. Where does my character go to the bathroom?
Let's say (in our present day world) some guy robs a liquor store. As he is fleeing the scene, a witness takes note of the license plate number of his beat up Pinto and reports it to the police.
The police then put a bounty on this man's head, which can be claimed by just about any citizen with a license to drive a car.
One day, Citizen Goodman, driving along the freeway in his Prius, randomly scans the robber's vehicle and notices he has a bounty on his head.
Goodman proceeds to ram the perpetrator off the freeway.
As the beat up Pinto goes flying into a layby, Goodman wastes no time riddling the perp's vehicle with high caliber bullets from the machine guns that pop out of the hood of his Prius.
With the final blow punctuated by the shrieking flight of a heat seeking missile, the criminal's Pinto explodes in a glowing fireball of angry death.
Citizen Goodman is immediately awarded a 600 dollar voucher, which can be redeemed at the nearest police station.
This scenario sounds absolutely insane when viewed from the perspective of someone who isn't a total nutter, but it is standard operating procedure in the universe of Elite: Dangerous.
Let's say (in our present day world) some guy robs a liquor store. As he is fleeing the scene, a witness takes note of the license plate number of his beat up Pinto and reports it to the police.
The police then put a bounty on this man's head, which can be claimed by just about any citizen with a license to drive a car.
One day, Citizen Goodman, driving along the freeway in his Prius, randomly scans the robber's vehicle and notices he has a bounty on his head.
Goodman proceeds to ram the perpetrator off the freeway.
As the beat up Pinto goes flying into a layby, Goodman wastes no time riddling the perp's vehicle with high caliber bullets from the machine guns that pop out of the hood of his Prius.
With the final blow punctuated by the shrieking flight of a heat seeking missile, the criminal's Pinto explodes in a glowing fireball of angry death.
Citizen Goodman is immediately awarded a 600 dollar voucher, which can be redeemed at the nearest police station.
This scenario sounds absolutely insane when viewed from the perspective of someone who isn't a total nutter, but it is standard operating procedure in the universe of Elite: Dangerous.
Taken in isolation I don't have a problem retconning that. The larger sensors are for larger ships, and given that the sensors have a 360 degree field of view that would require covering the whole hull with detectors. More hull equals more detectors equals more mass.- 1A sensor weighs 1.3t, has a range of 6km and costs 20K
- 6C sensor weighs 40t, has a range of 6km and costs 556K
- 8C sensor weighs 160t, has a range of 6.4km and costs 4,359K
Theoretically projectile weapons should all have infinite range, and energy weapons significant (but not infinite due to dispersal) range. It's been clipped down to "ww2 fighter plane" type ranges for playability... and so you don't get wiped out by a random rail blast from a firefight several lightseconds away.
Let's say (in our present day world) some guy robs a liquor store. As he is fleeing the scene, a witness takes note of the license plate number of his beat up Pinto and reports it to the police.
The police then put a bounty on this man's head, which can be claimed by just about any citizen with a license to drive a car.
One day, Citizen Goodman, driving along the freeway in his Prius, randomly scans the robber's vehicle and notices he has a bounty on his head.
Goodman proceeds to ram the perpetrator off the freeway.
As the beat up Pinto goes flying into a layby, Goodman wastes no time riddling the perp's vehicle with high caliber bullets from the machine guns that pop out of the hood of his Prius.
With the final blow punctuated by the shrieking flight of a heat seeking missile, the criminal's Pinto explodes in a glowing fireball of angry death.
Citizen Goodman is immediately awarded a 600 dollar voucher, which can be redeemed at the nearest police station.
This scenario sounds absolutely insane when viewed from the perspective of someone who isn't a total nutter, but it is standard operating procedure in the universe of Elite: Dangerous.
Robigo must have some sort of cloning facility because I'm sure people have moved more slaves and biowaste than that whole population by now.
I have a feeling Robigo slaves look a bit like this... which would explain their prices...
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/5dNGU772_cI/hqdefault.jpg
The Cutter did some cutting, and the Clipper got clippedI have often wondered why the Cutter is bigger than the Clipper.
How did this happen?
Sensors. How is it that:
- 1A sensor weighs 1.3t, has a range of 6km and costs 20K
- 6C sensor weighs 40t, has a range of 6km and costs 556K
- 8C sensor weighs 160t, has a range of 6.4km and costs 4,359K
I'm constantly baffled.
Robigo must have some sort of cloning facility because I'm sure people have moved more slaves and biowaste than that whole population by now.
I've always thought Robigo Mines is a prison facility. The law enforcement ships criminals there to serve their sentences and the dodgy officials sell the them as slaves.
What is the point of all these ships when you only need a Cobra MKIII?