Max. I'm not telling you you're wrong to like the thing. We did this at length in the thread back when they announced it.
Please do me the courtesy of not telling me I'm '
doing it wrong' or '
failing to adapt'.
How many duds did I discover with the old system? Plenty. The difference was that it took less than a minute to discover them. What you never seem to have grasped is that like you, I play games for enjoyment. An entire play session discovering nothing of any interest to me is not enjoyable, or at least significantly less enjoyable than it used to be and it is the significant reduction in the number of systems it's possible to get an overview of that is the cause of that for me. There is nothing at all that I can do to increase that number.
I don't care how many planets
you have found fascinating because it should be clear by now that maybe we just don't find the same things interesting. I'm happy that you're having such a great time with it, really I am, but stop talking about '
adaping to new mechanics' as if there's something I can do to change the issue that I have explained very clearly on more occasions than I care to remember. There isn't - the game has changed and I'm well aware of that. I can't suddenly start to find things interesting that I don't
actually find interesting just because of that though.
I have no idea how much time you spend exploring, if you did DW2 I imagine it's quite a lot. I don't care in the slightest how my stats stack up against yours for exploration but I'm coming up on 20,000 systems visited, have just gone over a million light years travelled and have earned just over a billion credits from exploration (with about another 500m of data to sell as of today), the vast majority of it earned
before exploration payouts got increased
and before passenger missions gave exploration rank. I already had my Elite rank by then. I'm not some noob at it, nor am I someone whose opinion deserves to be invalidated just because it doesn't happen to coincidce with yours.
I'm sick to the back teeth of condescending replies from people about this. If that's all you have, do me a favour and don't bother responding because believe me, I already know what you have to say about it. I remember it freom the month or two that you and a few others spent pouring scorn on those of us who had our gamplay experience destroyed by it, not to mention the gloating that followed it. I wish I could take such satisfaction from knowing other people's game experience had been ruined but I'm not really wired up like that.
Oh, I almost forgot. In case you missed it, the only reason I replied to your post was that you answered a question from someone who had not experienced exploration prior to the FSS with a
deliberately disingenuous answer, since you failed to note that the old 'honk' scan didn't actually reveal everything that the FSS does now. In fact, it used to reveal virtually nothing other than the system map, whereas your 'answer' would have left someone thinking that it was a five second shortcut to what the FSS now provides. It wasn't. You know that, the person you replied to would not have known that. Next time you get excited about a chance to parade your ssuperiority complex across the forum, at least temper it with a little honesty and openness.
Oh and...
That's just plain wrong. You still have to fly to each planet to DSS it if you are interested in tagging which was the only reason to do that in the old way too.
No it isn't. You need to fly to it and map it to get 'first
mapped' tags. You get a 'first
discovered' tag from just an FSS scan with a DSS equipped, without having to fly to the planet. Maybe you should pay a bit more attention. If you're going to dispute that let me know, I can send you screenshots of about 1,000 systems to prove it.
Edit: In fact here you go, I just cashed this in as a little treat for you.
Tell me, bearing in mind what I said above, do you imagine that I flew 4,000 ls into that utterly unremarkable system to detail scan the most distant planet? Yet amazingly enough it has a first discovered tag.