I know that one of the stories in the booklet that came with Frontier describes a mis-jump where the ship still comes out in a system, just the wrong one and "a little further out than usual" (or words to that effect). However, I didn't think this was possible in the game and that mis-jumps always ended up in interstellar space.
In addition, I always thought that the "you are here" marker on the galactic map would always stay fixed in place no matter how far you travelled, only moving when you made a hyperspace jump.
Yesterday evening I was trying some forced mis-jumps and triggered one while jumping from Anquphi to Beexda, so I was quite surprised when I noticed that the bottom right of the screen showed "Relative to Beexda A,B". I had a look around the sky and found them. Clicking on the revealed they were about 37,000 AU away! The "you are here" marker on the galactic map was out in interstellar space and not on top of the Beexda system, which it said was 0.59 light years away. I haven't checked, but I suspect that is probably about 37,000 AU.
I did save the game and I'm interested to see if travelling into the system will actually move the marker on the galactic map, although of course if it's 0.59 light years away then it's going to take the best part of a year in game time anyway, which might take a while even with the stardreamer at the maximum.
But yes I'm really surprised that a mis-jump can actually get you into an actual system, and that such a range affects the galactic map.
In addition, I always thought that the "you are here" marker on the galactic map would always stay fixed in place no matter how far you travelled, only moving when you made a hyperspace jump.
Yesterday evening I was trying some forced mis-jumps and triggered one while jumping from Anquphi to Beexda, so I was quite surprised when I noticed that the bottom right of the screen showed "Relative to Beexda A,B". I had a look around the sky and found them. Clicking on the revealed they were about 37,000 AU away! The "you are here" marker on the galactic map was out in interstellar space and not on top of the Beexda system, which it said was 0.59 light years away. I haven't checked, but I suspect that is probably about 37,000 AU.
I did save the game and I'm interested to see if travelling into the system will actually move the marker on the galactic map, although of course if it's 0.59 light years away then it's going to take the best part of a year in game time anyway, which might take a while even with the stardreamer at the maximum.
But yes I'm really surprised that a mis-jump can actually get you into an actual system, and that such a range affects the galactic map.
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