if i scan the whole center of the galaxy how much money will i get?

As i said up how much money will i make?Experienced explorers needed!!!

thanks for all info you can give me cheers

Cola_BH
 
Define "the whole center of the galaxy"

Your answer could probably range from 50.000 credits to a few billions.
 
How many systems do you consider to be in "the whole center of the galaxy".

If you scan everything in a system, you can expect to average around 30,000 cr per system. This will take you a very long time though...

-- Pete.
 
As i said up how much money will i make?Experienced explorers needed!!!

thanks for all info you can give me cheers

Cola_BH

The whole center of the galaxy lol :) you'll make a lot of cash, once you are done your great grandchildren will be able to afford a few maxed out Anaconda's ;)

Fastest way to make money exploring is to head to a Neutron field, around 80,000c per star. Honestly, you shouldn't explore for the cash, the money is just a bonus. You are better of trading, RES hunting if you need cash
 
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The whole center of the galaxy lol :) you'll make a lot of cash, once you are done your great grandchildren will be able to afford a few maxed out Anaconda's ;)
And how exactly is he going to GET great-grandchildren if he spends his life out there? They would require grandchildren first, and more importantly children... ;)

-- Pete.
 

Philip Coutts

Volunteer Moderator
I have cut a piece of string, how long is it? As others have pointed out you need to define exactly what you mean. I would imagine you would be a billionaire a few times over but depending on your definition the centre of the galaxy is huuuuugggeeeeee.
 
If you cut a piece of string the length always remains unchanged.
The length of a piece of string.
Except now you have two of them.
It's a way of creating something from nothing. An infinity engine so to speak.
It explains time machines, warp drives and 1960's hemlines.
What surprises me most is how scientists haven't realised this yet.
Scientists are sooo stoopid!!
 
Is there anywhere we can see how much of the galaxy has now been explored. I'm guessing the galactic centre has been claimed within a few hundred lightyears of Sag. A.
IIRC less than 1% of the galaxy was explored in Frontier.
I wonder how much we are at now?
 
You might break the game as it won't be able to handle the [literally] astronomically ginormous number that your bank balance would become. Good luck on cashing it in. A couple of months doing nothing but selling pages of data might do it, but you'd not have to waste any time on real life events.

Let us know if you plan on doing this as you'd make a great target on your way back to inhabited space, you know, just for the hell of it...
 
Is there anywhere we can see how much of the galaxy has now been explored. I'm guessing the galactic centre has been claimed within a few hundred lightyears of Sag. A.
IIRC less than 1% of the galaxy was explored in Frontier.
I wonder how much we are at now?

Hardly any of it except around the home bubble and the more touristy nebulae.

I've been heading roughly towards the centre and am about 21,000ly from Sol and I haven't entered a system that has been previously visited for around 15,000ly and that was just the odd isolated system.

From memory on this trip so far I've visited about 900 systems and probably 850 to 875 were virgin systems (until I deflowered them).

I doubt if the hub has been hugely explored beyond Sag A itself and a few systems leading in and out, I'd be really surprised if the vast majority of systems around Sag A were not still undiscovered.


It's very dark and lonely out here and if it wasn't for the company and friendship of Cedric the talking potato I'd have gone quite mad.
 
Ok didnt really define all this well,but i seen here some reply like find a neutron star field anyone know a system name thats near a neutron star field?And not to forget the better definition of my whole center is like 100LY circle around sag A exploring everything in every system i jump in.
 
It's so dense in that area that you're probably talking at least 100,000+ stars in a 100Ly sphere around Sgr. A

I haven't been there, but I'm on my way and just zooming in via the galaxy map and having a look reveals ridiculous numbers of stars.

Elite Dangerous could be live for 50 years and I still don't think 10% of the galaxy as a whole would be mapped.
 
A 100 LY sphere around Sag A* has volume of 4/3 * pi * 100^3 =~ 424413 cubic light years. The stars in the core are very dense. Think about how many stars you are talking about.
 
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