Unless the Thargoids sucked out huge swathes of the milky way with their cosmic square-nozzled space vacuum...
then something terribly wrong happened with the stellar forge:
[video=youtube_share;fXH0EjhxPts]https://youtu.be/fXH0EjhxPts[/video]
These strange square shaped holes might explain why some people have found places near the galactic core that appear to have half the stars missing from the sky. This is not a video card glitch. These stars are actually NOT there, and somehow failed to render when the galaxy was created through PG. If you look at the galaxy map with just the main sequence (OBAFGKM) stars checked, then these "square holes" are invisible. However if you remove all of the OBAFGKM stars and just leave the smaller brown dwarfs and look at -50 to -35 altitude, then the missing gaps becomes quite visble.
To verify this on your own Galaxy Map, go to (0, -45, 16100), and subtract all of the main sequence stars while leaving all the other star types visible.
[video=youtube_share;xnMAxANavKY]https://youtu.be/xnMAxANavKY[/video]
then something terribly wrong happened with the stellar forge:
[video=youtube_share;fXH0EjhxPts]https://youtu.be/fXH0EjhxPts[/video]
These strange square shaped holes might explain why some people have found places near the galactic core that appear to have half the stars missing from the sky. This is not a video card glitch. These stars are actually NOT there, and somehow failed to render when the galaxy was created through PG. If you look at the galaxy map with just the main sequence (OBAFGKM) stars checked, then these "square holes" are invisible. However if you remove all of the OBAFGKM stars and just leave the smaller brown dwarfs and look at -50 to -35 altitude, then the missing gaps becomes quite visble.
To verify this on your own Galaxy Map, go to (0, -45, 16100), and subtract all of the main sequence stars while leaving all the other star types visible.
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