I can see your point, let me submit my experience to you if I may.
I will arrive at Saggy tonight after 3 weeks of jumping and over 1500 neutron/black hole first-scans, then the long trek back begins (I came out 1000Ly above the plane and will go back 1000Ly below it, or below and above if you prefer), at times it has been grindy (oh I'm still not in scan range? REALLY?!), long (2000 jumps), tedious ("frame shift drive, charging"), boring (99 billion bottles of beer on the wall...), brilliant (my first B-class), terrifying (those first few neutrons...). I have longed to see another ship, to see the "Welcome to George Lucas" pop up, to feel safe. I am rolling around with over 100 million credits in data in my ship (by my estimate) and one lapse of concentration, one over zealous fuel scoop, one loopy moment in a planetary ring one slow reaction time as I jump into a close binary system and it all goes up in smoke as my computer cries "EJECT, EJECT!". I dread the threat of interdiction as I come back into civilized space, my palms sweat as I think about the delicate maneuver to re-enter a Coriolis after over a month in supercruise.
Now for all the boredom and tedium of this trip, the closer I get to Saggy (Sagittarius A, it's been a long trip, humanizing it with a nickname has become a necessity) the more imminent my return, the more excited, the more adrenaline filled, the more focused I become. No trader knows the intensity of hauling 8 figures of cargo in their hold with no shields, no weapons and no ship integrity. No bounty hunter has ever landed a bounty so juicy as the one my data banks hold, no pirate has ever seen the like of the booty I carry. I am out in the black, I am far from home, my only companion has been my faithful and trusty Asp.
I am an explorer, I have seen beautiful things, felt the thrill of an undiscovered earth like and terror of "emergency dropout, too close", the wash of relief after a panicked glance at my modules readout to see that everything is still functional.
The return trip awaits and that is where the fun begins. I would have it no other way.
I will arrive at Saggy tonight after 3 weeks of jumping and over 1500 neutron/black hole first-scans, then the long trek back begins (I came out 1000Ly above the plane and will go back 1000Ly below it, or below and above if you prefer), at times it has been grindy (oh I'm still not in scan range? REALLY?!), long (2000 jumps), tedious ("frame shift drive, charging"), boring (99 billion bottles of beer on the wall...), brilliant (my first B-class), terrifying (those first few neutrons...). I have longed to see another ship, to see the "Welcome to George Lucas" pop up, to feel safe. I am rolling around with over 100 million credits in data in my ship (by my estimate) and one lapse of concentration, one over zealous fuel scoop, one loopy moment in a planetary ring one slow reaction time as I jump into a close binary system and it all goes up in smoke as my computer cries "EJECT, EJECT!". I dread the threat of interdiction as I come back into civilized space, my palms sweat as I think about the delicate maneuver to re-enter a Coriolis after over a month in supercruise.
Now for all the boredom and tedium of this trip, the closer I get to Saggy (Sagittarius A, it's been a long trip, humanizing it with a nickname has become a necessity) the more imminent my return, the more excited, the more adrenaline filled, the more focused I become. No trader knows the intensity of hauling 8 figures of cargo in their hold with no shields, no weapons and no ship integrity. No bounty hunter has ever landed a bounty so juicy as the one my data banks hold, no pirate has ever seen the like of the booty I carry. I am out in the black, I am far from home, my only companion has been my faithful and trusty Asp.
I am an explorer, I have seen beautiful things, felt the thrill of an undiscovered earth like and terror of "emergency dropout, too close", the wash of relief after a panicked glance at my modules readout to see that everything is still functional.
The return trip awaits and that is where the fun begins. I would have it no other way.