Go there and land in VR, you'll lose your lunch.
So what seems weird to me is that the background stars don't seem to move, but the parent world moves in the sky. So the world seems to be tidally locked.... to the parent star, but not the parent planet, and I guess the planet's year is too slow to see stars moving?
This doesn't seem right.
Now I’m trying not to handwavium it away by saying it’s ancient alien technology on its parent planet that also probably makes Édouarde Roche do a grave-spin at a similar rate, but, yeah:...phenomena that in-game pseudo-science still needs to explain.
This is easy.Now I’m trying not to handwavium it away by saying it’s ancient alien technology on its parent planet that also probably makes Édouarde Roche do a grave-spin at a similar rate, but, yeah:
”aLiEnS”
also: supernovas aren’t a natural phenomenon, they’re industrial accidents...![]()
A few years back I remember reading some maths calculations people had done - although Mitterand Hollow is about 2000km outside of the Roche limit, for the moon to be orbiting at that speed and not flying off into space, New Africa would require a mass of about 100 Jupiters which would mean a bigger Roche limit and rubble-time for our speedy moon.This is easy.
Whatever unusual circumstances lead to the formation of such a close, fast moon also gave it a retrograde spin that happens to be exactly the same as the orbital period... OF THE PLANET/STAR!!!! What an amazing coincidence!
The galaxy is a big place; almost everything is bound to happen at least once.
(and just pretend the tidal forces wouldn't quickly fix that spin into tidal lock... or more likely rip the thing into a ring.)
Nice video... I keep meaning to go there, that and Pomeche 2c are on my bucket list. Out of curiosity, what was the paint job on the cobra - it looks sweet!