As an aside, Ravenfield Patch's entry on EDSM lacks the location of the fungus. best to show where they can find it 
Planet: 1 A
Coordinates: 66.3917, 84.1447
Planet: 1 A
Coordinates: 66.3917, 84.1447
As an aside, Ravenfield Patch's entry on EDSM lacks the location of the fungus. best to show where they can find it
Planet: 1 A
Coordinates: 66.3917, 84.1447
A neutron star system that also contains an ammonia world and an ELW is not so rare to be a POI right?
I would say it depends on where in the galaxy it is located. If it is in an area of the map with few preexisting POIs, then we might consider it.
As always - a good writeup and impressive screenshot is points in favor...
Name: | Shrouded Nebula |
Game map search ref: | Eor Auscs XV-K D9-2074 |
Description: | An average sized nebula in the Near 3kpc Arm, its Sol-facing half is covered by a thick dark region that hides it from view, resulting in any viewer from that side seeing only a small portion of the nebula and a large black patch of stars that looks somewhat like a hole in the galactic core. Through to the opposite side, however, it is illuminated in brilliant hues of rust and violet. It also contains many neutron stars and white dwarf stars. |
Screenshot reference: | ![]() I realize you only need the one image of the nebula, but I wanted to share the contrasting views from both sides. Facing Sol (or more directly The Gallipolis): ![]() It looks like a hole in the galaxy But in through you get: ![]() Pretty colours! |
Before I make a formal report on this, how unusual or noteworthy is it to find a ELW orbiting a Neutron Star?
Before I make a formal report on this, how unusual or noteworthy is it to find a ELW orbiting a Neutron Star?
https://imgur.com/NH1f1E9https://imgur.com/NH1f1E9.png
Bah! Thought I was on to something...
Funny though, after travelling thousands of LYs and only finding one other (round a more normal star), imagine my glee to have found my second one around a neutron star!![]()