Is there a database of known Lagrange clouds?

The codex is a joke and EDSM does not seem to be showing then yet, any other 3rd party database that has a searchable list?
 
I'm confused about these tools and such. I've seen images people have posted with their routes mapped all throughout the galaxy, lists of places and resources and such (like the link you've provided), but all of these tools are external to the game itself? Doesn't the game keep history of my travels when exploring? I thought it did. I think maybe I'm missing something here... I'm still very new. :confused:
 
136283

Just going for a Drive, and minding my own business.
 

dxm55

Banned
The codex is a joke

Indeed.

That's why my recent fast progression in the game has been a result of using Inara, Canonn Research, and YouTube videos to meta, and to discover stuff that was previously unknown or hidden to me.

As what Captain America said in The Winter Soldier.
"The Internet. So Helpful".


Heh. The ED Codex. Not so.
 

dxm55

Banned
Would be great if there was one of the storms less then 5k from sol! I want some B-roll in it but dont have the time to jump to colonia

I think the Devs intentionally put all these things far out of the bubble to torture us before seeing them.

We have to endure 99% Windows Starfield screensaver, just to see that wondrous 1%. 🙄
 
I'm confused about these tools and such. I've seen images people have posted with their routes mapped all throughout the galaxy, lists of places and resources and such (like the link you've provided), but all of these tools are external to the game itself? Doesn't the game keep history of my travels when exploring? I thought it did. I think maybe I'm missing something here... I'm still very new. :confused:
Most tools are external, yes. The game tracks only if you visited a system or not and can show it to you in the galaxy map.

If you want to track places you visited, install ED Market Connector, create an account on ED Star Map and all your travels will be kept on EDSM.

Regarding the link I've provided, here's a nice tutorial from CDMR Exigeous that explains how to find amazing sights. He has many other tutorials for beginners and I suggest you to explore his channel.

If you have any other questions, don't be shy. :)
 
What I want to know is if there's a hazrez in one.
Implausible, since you'd need the cloud to be at the L1 or L2 point, and the planet's rings to be that wide, which shouldn't be possible as their orbit wouldn't be stable.

But there's no reason there couldn't be an Installation inside one of them... an Unauthorised Installation would give a fairly similar experience to a Haz Res.
 
I think the Devs intentionally put all these things far out of the bubble to torture us before seeing them.

We have to endure 99% Windows Starfield screensaver, just to see that wondrous 1%. 🙄

Well I've jumped all the way to Beagle Point on DW2 and I'm still pootling around the other side of the galaxy.

Ever since I passed Sag A*, I haven't seen a single Lagrange Cloud.
I only found two of my own between the Bubble and Sag A* to start with (and they were exactly the same).

I have no idea how people are finding these things, and I refuse to just point my ship in the direction of one already in the Codex.
 
I have no idea how people are finding these things, and I refuse to just point my ship in the direction of one already in the Codex.
If the probability of finding one is 0.1% then the chance of 1000 CMDRs finding one is - 100%[2]

Since you are acting individually you would still have that 0.1%.

And the chances of finding a Storm Lagrange seems way less than 0.1% [1]

So I wonder why you haven't found any :ROFLMAO:

[1] edsm has 11 systems with Lagrange Storm Clouds out of around 30M, so the actual percentage is more like 0.000036%
[2] Assuming they're acting independently - which is probably a stretch ;)
 
If the probability of finding one is 0.1% then the chance of 1000 CMDRs finding one is - 100%[2]

[2] Assuming they're acting independently - which is probably a stretch ;)
If they're acting independently [1], the chance of at least one of the thousand finding one is 1-((1-0.001)^1000), or only about 63%

You need about 5000 explorers to get to 99% certain

[1] Strictly in this case I think what we're actually calculating is the probability assuming that they coordinate to avoid searching the same systems as each other, and if they're genuinely acting independently the odds of discovery go down a bit. But close enough once you're not considering "discovering stuff right next to Sol/Colonia" and the routes are highly unlikely to overlap.
 
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