Yes - install a huge frag canon on a Sidey. And size 8 boosters. A competent engineer could absolutely make that work!What - like this?
Yes - install a huge frag canon on a Sidey. And size 8 boosters. A competent engineer could absolutely make that work!What - like this?
After doing some more credit massing via missions (which I enjoy as they are quick and I never know how long I'll be playing), I decided to take a look at my Courier again and see how fast I could get her to go. I may be able to squeeze a little bit more, but here's what I have so far:
I think that the way engineers let you personalize your ship is actually the best thing about engineering overall. It makes the ship really "yours".
It makes me miss the 80s and 90s when car modding was a thing. It's not, anymore, and it makes me sad.
Jeepers!! My (admittedly unfinished) Beluga barely gasps its way past 300 when boosting. Its biggest disadvantage versus the Orca.After doing some more credit massing via missions (which I enjoy as they are quick and I never know how long I'll be playing), I decided to take a look at my Courier again and see how fast I could get her to go. I may be able to squeeze a little bit more, but here's what I have so far:
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You're petty close to the max. The fly in the oinment is that the iCourier's speed is extremely sensitive to the total mass going over the thruster's minimum mass.
Hahah, yeah. I've got an iEagle like that. Great fun in Ariel's valleys but otherwise the sip is unusable for anything else. There definitely IS something like too much engineering.I've halved the fuel tank size but I'm thinking one size down. The PP and PD need a strip down, as does the FSD. Not sure what else I can reduce.
The thing is, if you fart in it's general direction, the ship will crumble into tachyon particles.
And how do you combat space madness?
I may make that journey myself one day but being away from a station for so long fills me with trepidation.
And how do you combat space madness?
I can’t help with the Space Madness.
I viewed being "out there" as a peaceful escape from everything, and spent a year traversing the black, so I didn't suffer from Space Madness
I'd still be out there, but there were some aspects of the last update that rendered it less enjoyable, so I've come back to the bubble to play the BGS and make shizz go boom.![]()
Doing 1000+ jumps with a destination is slightly maddening because you have a target, it begins to feel like a race. Like you did though, I think I’m going to just disappear into the black for a long time. Just float.
Not really looked at this BGS stuff. It seems a lot of work.
Yeah, I'd certainly agree about the destination effect! I did have an ultimate destination in mind for my first "leg", but I didn't need to get there in a hurry, so I just ambled along, picking out some systems of interest to visit along the way. After that, I just went where the mood took me, using EDDiscovery's rather marvellous 3D map with galactic POIs to inform my route.
At one point, I "found" an NGC cluster that was some way out towards the rim and way below the galactic plane. It took some careful jumponium plots to get into it, but it was well worth it for the immense views and the feeling of utter isolation in amongst the cluster. Also, I did a comprehensive survey of it, so every object is discovered now(And this was when you actually had to fly to the objects to scan them, so it took a while
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I really like visiting real stars and clusters, it brings the whole thing alive a bit more.
And having written all of that, I'm getting itchy to get my FSD booster fitted to Hecla and go back out there again, into the wild....
The BGS is rather intriguing, and not enormously difficult to get the basics of in the end. I'm pursuing the idea of restoring a minor faction to control of an Empire backwater location that I am currently in, and it's quite entertaining to take missions and perform actions that increase their influence and watch the changes![]()
And again, like you, BGS is something I may explore after I’ve done a lot more, er, exploring.
2 things I love about this game. The solitude. It is to me what space and space travel would be all about. The other thing is, having done one thing for some time, trading, exploring, whatever, there is something else to move onto, BGS, Codex, engineering.
Then if you haven't been out into the black yet, you will find it compelling. There is something infinitely peaceful about being many thousands of light years from the bubble, with the panoply of creation all around, it's celestial mechanics performing just as expected whether or not there is anyone there.
I would always land somewhere at the end of a session, so that I knew my ship was going to be exactly where I left it. I'd always try and find somewhere scenic, and those last moments when touchdown was completed, the engines ran down to a gentle stop, and I was left staring at strange suns over a new world in silence were deeply peaceful. Occasioanlly, Elite would time things really well and start playing the gentle piano-based exploration music after landing, which just added to the atmosphere
Just remember to take an AFMU and a mining laser with you at the least
I've been playing for 18 months now, and there is still so much left that I want to do. It isn't going to get old easily.
She has the same unlock as Prof Palin so take Sensor Fragments.I think, sir, you have a poet in you! Very eloquent!
I've just looked aty that latest engineer to pop her head up from the, I think, Witchead Nebula so I may do a jaunt over there - only 16 jumps too!