This proposal is nowhere as striking visually as many of the other offers, but I believe this deserves a spot due to the sheer
number of views, rings and scientific oddities found in a single system - Making this close-to-the bubble star a great choice for scientific tourism. And it's still a decent sight thanks to the number of ringed bodies.
Cmdr Lance 'Spacecat' D. introduces...
Hip 101504, the ten-ringed wonder!
Located a scant hundred or so light-years from the bubble, this is easily reachable in an Orca and holds points of interest besides being home to ten ringed stellar bodies. Both visual and scientific...
The first three planets are HMCs with rings, all landable. #4 is a ringed gas giant dancing with a terraforming candidate.
'Of water and ice' - Planet 6 is the jewel of the system, a large waterworld with extensive rings. Most noteworthy and curious is how it is an airless waterworld. Planet 7 is a rocky ice world boasting tremendous atmospheric pressure.
'The ammonia mysteries' - Planet 8 is a beautiful gem in its own right, a ringed pastel-colored jovian. But 9 and 10 are of more scientific interest: an ammonia world, and a gas giant with ammonia-based lifeforms within the atmosphere.
The next planet is a class IV gas giant boasting a fairly large ring system, and the last two stellar bodies happen to be class Y dwarves. But the real visual interest lies in moon 12h, its ring system showing sharp delineations and a large gap for reasons unknown.