Mining in Middle of Nowhere - NPC Presence Makes No Sense!!!
So, I get in my car, drive to the airport - get on a plane and head to North Africa. I then take another car to a small town with an airfield and take a private plane out over the Sahara Desert. I wait a random amount of time, and jump out at a random point in the Desert with a parachute. After a nice decent, I land in a completely isolated spot - chances are no one has stood in the exact spot before - and if they have it will have been a significant amount of time since. As I am packing up my parachute a car arrives, and out jumps 2 people who set up tents and make a camp. A few seconds later a truck drives up and out gets a man who proceeds to fill the truck up with sand...
...I stand there totally gob-smacked. I went to great lengths to find this extremely isolated spot - yet as soon as I am here it fills up with human activity. I've no idea how to even calculate the chances of this occurring in this exact spot, considering how far away I am from civilisation. I fully expect others to be in this desert somewhere, but these people finding almost the exact same grain of sand as me seems incalculable!!!
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This is exactly how I feel every time I drop into a ring system at a random point. I have travelled 400ly from Earth, OK NPC's are going to be all over the galaxy, it only takes 10seconds to travel from system to system...so chances of being alone here in this system might be remote. So I head to a gas giant, and drop off at a random spot in the rings. The area of these rings is many, many times greater than that of the land mass on Earth. Yet here I am, expecting to be alone - only to find some NPCs. This happens
every time I drop into a ring. What gives!?
(NOTE: To those of you that like analogies - please don't take mine too seriously, it doesn't need to be de-constructed...in fact I will actually sit here and laugh at anyone wastes any time doing so...

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