Why are Class II Gas Giant scans worth so much more?

Why are Class II Gas Giant scans worth so much more? Just that really - I have done searches but can find no real explanation for their increased value. Yes I know they are "rarer" and what they consist of but is rarity the only decider? It can't be the water as there are lots of sources of water further outside the gravity well.

Anybody know the real reason?

[where is it]
 
Why are Class II Gas Giant scans worth so much more? Just that really - I have done searches but can find no real explanation for their increased value. Yes I know they are "rarer" and what they consist of but is rarity the only decider? It can't be the water as there are lots of sources of water further outside the gravity well.

Anybody know the real reason?

[where is it]

Makes absolutely no sense to me either - surely water giants, Helium rice and Life bearing GGs should be worth more for their rareity value? :S
 
Same reason why the insanely numerous neutron stars are worth a lot more than the much rarer Wolf-Rayets or supergiants.
 
Yeah, the payouts across the board don't make much sense that I have been able to figure out. They are pretty clearly not related to rarity.
 
Yeah, the payouts across the board don't make much sense that I have been able to figure out. They are pretty clearly not related to rarity.

Some of them seem to be related to utility - although values should really fall away quite quickly from the bubble if that was the determining criterion. NS, BH, WD and Class II GG don't even have that excuse by any plausible measure.
 
Same reason why the insanely numerous neutron stars are worth a lot more than the much rarer Wolf-Rayets or supergiants.

The neutron stars actually make sense now although they didn't to start with. Payouts for finding neutron stars that can be used to make up neutron star highways make sense in a way. Personally I just scan what I am interested in, it doesn't always make for the best payout hut I have more fun. :D
 
Same reason why the insanely numerous neutron stars are worth a lot more than the much rarer Wolf-Rayets or supergiants.

Speaking of which, just found an untagged Wolf Rayet C and A class supergiant today on the way to Colonia as well as a couple of water giants.

Few more to add to the list on EDSM.
 
The only reason I can think of is that Class II gas giant clouds is in the temperature range like Earth. Why that would be important, I don't know, as the gravity/pressure on them are "a bit" high to make them suitable for living on. Maybe we'll get cloud bases on the class II types one day?
 
Because not Thargoids...

Maybe FD know something about their distribution, which we do not, and factored that in their calcs for their value?

It's very well saying there are a lot of NS, but are there a lot on a Galactic scale?
 
Because not Thargoids...

Maybe FD know something about their distribution, which we do not, and factored that in their calcs for their value?

It's very well saying there are a lot of NS, but are there a lot on a Galactic scale?

Nah, probably just the galactic intern that misplaced a dot somewhere ;)

Also, yes, there are.
 
.................
But what do you mean with "further outside the gravity well"? ..................

I mean that they could extract water from icy rings without having to go as deep into the gravity well as they would have to in order to extract / abstract water vapour from the gas giant's atmosphere.
 
So you think generally just from a point of view of mining? I had rather the search for alien life in mind. Maybe that's not a thing anymore in the years past 3300 but right now it certainly is.

I see what you were thinking, however, already in the game we have gas giants with ammonia-based life and water-based life - they are not worth anything like a class II is - hence my question.

The point is that the difference is huge not just a big difference, but a HUGELY BIG difference, say 30x approx {?} - there has to be a reason for that, surely?
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom