Is this System as rare as I think it is ?

What interests me is that the planets have pristine reserves. There are no rings, so is that a hint for planetary mining in the future?

Nice system as well.
 
Outside bubble all systems are pristine.

I think the question was: planets without rings didn't used to have their "reserves" status listed; now they do. And yes, it was introduced back in 2.2, I think. And yes, it is presumably a prelude to some kind of surface mining.
 
It's a very good system, in my many hundreds of thousands of light years of exploring, I'd say it's rather rare indeed.
 
> 3 WW, 1 ELW, plenty of terraformable HMCs.

It's pretty good, in the "unusual" category. Not quite into the "holy crap" category.
 
I think the question was: planets without rings didn't used to have their "reserves" status listed; now they do. And yes, it was introduced back in 2.2, I think. And yes, it is presumably a prelude to some kind of surface mining.
IIRC it was mentioned that the planet's reserves status has some effect on material prospecting too, like outcrops & such spawn rate and how many fragments they spawn when shot.
 
I had one system with 4 Water Worlds and a total of 7 TC
It was a neutron with an M and an L star
It had 7 High Mets
It had 1 Metal rich
& 2 ammonia worlds
pretty sure it was pre 2.3 though

CMDR Tootiny
 
I just found an undiscovered Earthlike 975ly from Sol. Is it common to find them this close nowadays?

Given the number of stars even inside 1000 ly from Sol, I wouldn't be surprised if there are still some out there. 1000 ly radius is (4/3)*pi*(1000^3) is 4.19×10^9 ly^3. Assuming an average density of 1 star per 1000 ly^3 (that's 10 ly x 10 ly x 10 ly), you'll have about 4.19x10^6 stars, or around 4.19 million stars.

If this seems like a lot, remember that there are ~ 400 billion stars in the galaxy.
 
That many TFCs in one system that also has WWs and an ELW is very rare in my experience.. nice one.

I wish the Sol system would be like that in reality... just imagine how much more interest there would be in space exploration!... :)
 
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