As a complete new explorer and just finished my first expedition (actually cut short for reasons that will become clear), I learned a whole set of things that might help someone else in the same position.
So here is the top 10 things I learned during that first eventful journey:
1. This exploration thing can be a whole lot of fun, but also quite lonely. The destination is important, but it's mostly about the journey
2. The bubble seems huge when you're in it, but when you're outside of it you realise just how amazingly tiny it is
3. For finding unscanned systems it's good advice to go vertical, but not too far as there are a lot less systems up there
4. The galaxy is huge, like incomprehensively huge. I made it 1500ly from home before I had to divert to Quince, which felt like a long way but the galaxy map shows what a baby step this actually is
5. Don't spend literally the whole day in a VR headset flying around the galaxy and then go to bed about 3 hours after you meant to with a huge headache (not really exploration related, but good advice anyway!)
6. Learn about and practice SRV mining before you go and not when you're 1500ly away from home
7. The supercruise music really gets boring after the 100th time of hearing it, so bring along all your best music and plug in
8. Get long range scanning capability. Really.
9. It's super exciting when you first find an empty system and a planet or moon with no tag and you are the first person to scan it, and land on it
10. Don't spend all your time in your SRV having fun as you drive around your own planet (now permanently named Kim's World) and then suddenly find you ran out of SRV fuel because you never needed to worry about this before and you're stranded and won't be able to drive around any more planets in the rest of your trip. See also items 6 and 9!
There are loads more little things that you can learn and don't realise you don't know until you're out there and nobody is nearby to restock, or help. Accidentally firing off a heat sink is not exactly critical, but it happened and just shows what mistakes can be made! I learned about ship integrity when I made it home as a result of that, something I never even knew about.
But it was a lot of fun, and not as difficult as I expected although it did create a huge feeling of how empty of life the galaxy actually is. I'm so used to flying around and cycling through every target in a system, but I did not see anyone else once I went vertical and left the bubble.
For some reason my route either had close to 100% of the systems as scoopable stars, or I hit amazingly lucky. Is this normal? It was not because I had those systems filtered on my map - every star type was available to me. But it was not until I headed towards Quince that I came across a non-scoopable Tauri star, and even then I was close to Quince when it happened.
Ok too long of a post now, lots of fun to be had, hope everyone enjoys their own first time, and some experienced folk can confirm the fun continues when you're 10x as far out as I made it!
Fly safe and enjoy the journey [smile]
So here is the top 10 things I learned during that first eventful journey:
1. This exploration thing can be a whole lot of fun, but also quite lonely. The destination is important, but it's mostly about the journey
2. The bubble seems huge when you're in it, but when you're outside of it you realise just how amazingly tiny it is
3. For finding unscanned systems it's good advice to go vertical, but not too far as there are a lot less systems up there
4. The galaxy is huge, like incomprehensively huge. I made it 1500ly from home before I had to divert to Quince, which felt like a long way but the galaxy map shows what a baby step this actually is
5. Don't spend literally the whole day in a VR headset flying around the galaxy and then go to bed about 3 hours after you meant to with a huge headache (not really exploration related, but good advice anyway!)
6. Learn about and practice SRV mining before you go and not when you're 1500ly away from home
7. The supercruise music really gets boring after the 100th time of hearing it, so bring along all your best music and plug in
8. Get long range scanning capability. Really.
9. It's super exciting when you first find an empty system and a planet or moon with no tag and you are the first person to scan it, and land on it
10. Don't spend all your time in your SRV having fun as you drive around your own planet (now permanently named Kim's World) and then suddenly find you ran out of SRV fuel because you never needed to worry about this before and you're stranded and won't be able to drive around any more planets in the rest of your trip. See also items 6 and 9!
There are loads more little things that you can learn and don't realise you don't know until you're out there and nobody is nearby to restock, or help. Accidentally firing off a heat sink is not exactly critical, but it happened and just shows what mistakes can be made! I learned about ship integrity when I made it home as a result of that, something I never even knew about.
But it was a lot of fun, and not as difficult as I expected although it did create a huge feeling of how empty of life the galaxy actually is. I'm so used to flying around and cycling through every target in a system, but I did not see anyone else once I went vertical and left the bubble.
For some reason my route either had close to 100% of the systems as scoopable stars, or I hit amazingly lucky. Is this normal? It was not because I had those systems filtered on my map - every star type was available to me. But it was not until I headed towards Quince that I came across a non-scoopable Tauri star, and even then I was close to Quince when it happened.
Ok too long of a post now, lots of fun to be had, hope everyone enjoys their own first time, and some experienced folk can confirm the fun continues when you're 10x as far out as I made it!
Fly safe and enjoy the journey [smile]