I can't even fathom people being happy with the FSS as an experience, and from what I can see most people aren't happy with the experience but love the "rewards".
Link to that poll? Some sort of empirical evidence that shows 'most'?
I can't even fathom people being happy with the FSS as an experience, and from what I can see most people aren't happy with the experience but love the "rewards".
I'd say it's this thread about the FSS which is monotonous
Which would be odd, since you're the 5th person with more posts in this thread.
Link to that poll? Some sort of empirical evidence that shows 'most'?
Which would be odd, since you're the 5th person with more posts in this thread.
This is the issue, it forces you out of your 3D high resolution cockpit with 1:1 skydrop, headtracking and quality textures SPACEFLIGHT SIMULATOR. Into an ugly, clunky, 2D, low resolution telescope simulator. It's not even phone app quality. And this is where exploreres are expected to spend most of their time.
I can't even fathom people being happy with the FSS as an experience, and from what I can see most people aren't happy with the experience but love the "rewards".
You could respond to this with a snippy little comment
Then how would one display the information exactly, if there's no location for it? Randomly in the system map / orrery? In a probability cloud? Telepathy?
Just seems to create more problems for FDEV to solve, without almost any upside for them and most of the community.
Edit: also, how would that solve the problem the ADS crowd is complaining about? Mainly the issue of not being able to honk and see list of stellar bodies in Nav panel / System map that they can select and navigate to using the regular "nav mechanics"?
How about you address some of the issues I posted and not nitpick.
The FSS already holds information about the types on planets in a system and their positions.
Honestly, I don't see any reason why that information couldn't be displayed in the Navigation HUD.
Even so, if people were opposed to that being implemented, the sysmap could still provide a generic depiction of a system without providing distances or populating the Nav' HUD.
Instead, a player could simply honk, open the sysmap, look to see if there was anything in a system they find interesting, target it and then exit the sysmap and turn their ship to face it to establish it's distance and then decide if they want to travel toward it or not.
Honking already displays a list of every USS in a system to the Nav HUD.
A player can then either open the FSS and play the "mini-game" to identify each USS or they can look at their Nav' HUD, select a USS and then turn their ship to face the USS in order to identify it.
I see no reason why this functionality could not be extended to planets as well.
And, in terms of "realism" it seems a bit silly to suggest that our ships' sensors can locate a tiny debris field 300,000Ls away and allow us to identify it simply by pointing our ship's nose at it but isn't capable of allowing us to identify entire planets in a similar manner.
It is hardly nitpicking to pull you up for saying "most people aren't happy with the experience".
If you sat back and collated the number of people complaining you would find there were not actually that many in the grand scheme of things. Many people have posted that they quite like the FSS - see the thread in Exploration for example - so your "most people" is without foundation.
Or I could simply not give a fart about it.
The important part of my post was explaining why the FSS wasobjectivelysubjectively garbage, but you can ignore that and complain about my statistical analysis which i actually prefaced with "FROM WHAT I CAN SEE" if you like.
Or I could simply not give a fart about it.
So essentially you're suggesting FDEV bring bag old-school god-honk exploration, with extra steps. Not gonna happen.
Edit: and while yes, the FSS does contain the position information on stellar bodies, it makes you put a modicum to extract the information and be able to use it. What you're suggesting is basically bypassing the entire effort part, straight into the rewards.
Don't see why it couldn't happen.
If you need to use the FSS to scan planets then the incentive to use it would be to complete the scans and gather the information.
Conversely, the opportunity to just locate and visit interesting-looking stuff without using the FSS would appeal to players with different priorities.
Also, you seem to be ignoring the fact that what I'm proposing, for planets, IS already possible with regard to USS's.
I see no reason why it coudn't also apply to planets.
You proposal is basically the same as everyone who wants to bring back ADS - to remove the need of using FSS from exploration.
USS are not "Exploration".
Since when was the ADS/FSS solely provided for use in exploration?
And how does what I suggest prevent it from being used for exploration?
When did I ever say anything like that?
I merely pointed out your suggestion is simply a "bring back ADS" disguised as something else.
Edit: I also pointed out that resolving USSes is not an integral part of exploration, and the reveal of their position in the nav panel does not in any form "spoil" the discovery process that exploration now entails.
the incentive to use [the FSS] would be to complete the scans and gather the information.
Conversely, the opportunity to just locate and visit interesting-looking stuff without using the FSS would appeal to players with different priorities.
So, why would applying the same thing to planets "spoil" the process of exploration?
If we're saying that, when presented with the choice, people would abandon the FSS and go back to just honking, looking at the sysmap and then manually going to look at interesting-looking stuff that's a poor reflection on the usefulness of the FSS.
In fact, it rather sounds like you're worried that people would really rather not use the FSS at all if they had the choice.
The resolution of USS in the navmap doesn't spoil the positions of unexplored stellar bodies. That's the part of the new system that actually makes Exploration feel like you're discovering previously uncharted territories.
Besides, having an effort-free alternative to anything that requires effort (no matter how small) will indubitably lead most people to take the path of least resistance, it's basic human nature.
IE: https://sparq.stanford.edu/solutions/opt-out-policies-increase-organ-donation
"In countries such as Austria, laws make organ donation the default option at the time of death, and so people must explicitly “opt out” of organ donation. In these so-called opt-out countries, more than 90% of people donate their organs. Yet in countries such as U.S. and Germany, people must explicitly “opt in” if they want to donate their organs when they die. In these opt-in countries,fewer than 15% of people donate their organs at death."