So how was the trip? Is England as pretty as they say?
Most of the time, I saw it through a canopy covered in rain and fog.
So how was the trip? Is England as pretty as they say?
OK +1 and make it so.No need for artificial gravity. The Remlok suit simulates gravity with automated directional air thrusters that are synchronised with the orientation of the crew member in relation to the floor of the ship.
These thrusters work in combination with accelerometers and location trackers in the suit to apply "downward" pressure relative to velocity away from the established ship floor.
FDEV has all of the inertia.I have artificial inertia.
I can prove my ships have AG - just look at the passenger cabins in the outfitting screen. It's obvious they are designed with gravity in mind!
So is the FSD, and shields, if you want magic. Not totally frying in stellar corona's might be another case.![]()
There's no reason why the idea of AG couldn't coexist with the the idea of centrifugal gravity, with one being suitable for use on large structures and the other being more suitable for small ships and platforms.
If it'll help develop space-legs, go for it.
Yeah pretty much. Nobody cares about what David Braben said would/wouldn't be in the game; Frontier least of all. They've already got artificial gravity working in-game for human hair and coffee cups, I'm sure it'll be ready for entire people soon enough.This.
People always resort to pointing out that gravity, in ED, is generated by having stations spin.
Presumably, they point this out because they think spinning Coriolis stations are an iconic part of ED lore.
I agree.
Spinning Coriolis stations ARE an iconic part of ED lore.
Thing is, artificial gravity wouldn't negate this.
If you've got a gigantic space-station, with hundreds of decks and thousands of people aboard, powering some thrusters in order to make it spin probably is the most efficient way to generate gravity.
That needn't be the case on our ships though.
There's no reason why the idea of AG couldn't coexist with the the idea of centrifugal gravity, with one being suitable for use on large structures and the other being more suitable for small ships and platforms.
I get that DB has declared that "there is no artificial gravity in the ED universe" but he's the same guy who also said that "Combat should always be meaningful" too, so there's no particular reason to give his opinions special credence.
If it'll help develop space-legs, go for it.
Sure they could coexist, but I see exactly zero need for that type of AG. I actually think it would harm the game.
It won't. Thruster packs and magnetic boots will work fine.
Ever play Crysis?
Artificial Gravity.![]()
This is what I've been saying, and it actually is less "magic" than all the silly explanations we get about how humans survive the extreme variations in forces CMDRs would be exposed to in ED (especially with G5 DDs). We don't just survive, we thrive! (Our avatars are more physically fit than I am.) I'm not sure why people are okay with magic drugs / nanites / instant evolution / [insert magical description about how my pilot can live in zero G for months and then land on an 8 G world with no side effects], but they are not okay with AG from our physics-defying, space-bending FSD.I'm convinced that the same technology that makes frame shift drive possible would be able to generate artificial gravity on a shipwide scale, and this would be absolutely necessary in order to pull the kind of Gs that we do in game without feeling them.
Isn't this just gravity?It's actually easy to achieve. You only need to build an object of enough mass to create the amount of gravity that you want. Ta-da! Artificial gravity.
I write my own Lore, so I don't care what you yahoos or even Braben himself says, MY ships have AG when in supercruise. Period, end-of-story, I win!Artificial gravity would be on par with telepresence sucking the fun out of the lore.
I write my own Lore, so I don't care what you yahoos or even Braben himself says, MY ships have AG when in supercruise. Period, end-of-story, I win!
ps - this is why passengers are willing to pay so much money to fly on my ships.
No, you have gravity during supercruise. There is nothing artificial about it. If it pulls you down such you can walk around, it is gravity. Gravity has two states. Present and absent. If it's present, it's gravity, if it's not present then it is zero gravity. Since there is absolutely no difference between naturally occurring gravity and gravity that is artificially produced, it is simply gravity. You can call it what you want, it doesn't change anything. You can call the thing you sit on a door instead of a chair, but the function of the device remains the same so it is a chair no matter what you or I say. Same with gravity. You can say it's artificial gravity but the function and results remain the same. So why waste 4 syllables when you don't need to?I write my own Lore, so I don't care what you yahoos or even Braben himself says, MY ships have AG when in supercruise. Period, end-of-story, I win!
ps - this is why passengers are willing to pay so much money to fly on my ships.