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Spcae is too Safe

First post
Author
Bootleg Jack
ACME Mineral and Gas
#1 - 2012-05-30 01:57:15 UTC
When you think about it space is really safe, not from other players, but space itself.

We need more random destruction.

At least 2-3 super novas a year.

At least 3-4 planets, and everything in orbit around them destroyed by impacts with commets/etc, in fact mining should increase the risk of nearby destruction.

There should be a 1 in 100,000 chance you will be hit by space junk and be destroyed, pod and all. The odds increase in systems where ships have been destoryed.

I'm an American, English is my second language...

Roll Sizzle Beef
Space Mutiny
#2 - 2012-05-30 02:05:48 UTC
On average, the Milky Way produces a naked eye supernova roughly once per century.
And we can warp though planets...
Case closed.
Morganta
The Greater Goon
#3 - 2012-05-30 02:06:22 UTC
Bootleg Jack wrote:
When you think about it space is really safe, not from other players, but space itself.

We need more random destruction.

At least 2-3 super novas a year.

At least 3-4 planets, and everything in orbit around them destroyed by impacts with commets/etc, in fact mining should increase the risk of nearby destruction.

There should be a 1 in 100,000 chance you will be hit by space junk and be destroyed, pod and all. The odds increase in systems where ships have been destoryed.


so a thermonuclear tipped cruise missile will only dent my shields but an old toaster will destroy my pod?

I donno about this plan
Wilma Lawson
Hedion University
Amarr Empire
#4 - 2012-05-30 02:06:36 UTC
What's "spcae"? Roll
Ituhata Saken
Killboard Padding Services
#5 - 2012-05-30 02:09:46 UTC
Morganta wrote:


so a thermonuclear tipped cruise missile will only dent my shields but an old toaster will destroy my pod?

I donno about this plan


Momentary fluctuation in shield modulation frequency allowing space junk to pass through to the hull.

So close...

Karn Dulake
Doomheim
#6 - 2012-05-30 02:16:40 UTC
Quote:
Spcae



I am starting to notice that the quality of the General Discussion threads have gone down hill of late.

Is it just me?
I dont normally troll, but when i do i do it on General Discussion.
Richard Desturned
Royal Amarr Institute
Amarr Empire
#7 - 2012-05-30 02:26:33 UTC
Roll Sizzle Beef wrote:
On average, the Milky Way produces a naked eye supernova roughly once per century.


The last Milky Way supernova visible to the naked eye was observed in 1604, hardly "once per century"

npc alts have no opinions worth consideration

Ituhata Saken
Killboard Padding Services
#8 - 2012-05-30 02:32:15 UTC
Richard Desturned wrote:
Roll Sizzle Beef wrote:
On average, the Milky Way produces a naked eye supernova roughly once per century.


The last Milky Way supernova visible to the naked eye was observed in 1604, hardly "once per century"


Pretty sure a star supernovas in our galaxy once every 50 years, whether they are observable or not with the naked eye is a different matter. Last supernova that could be observed by the naked eye was in 1987 in the southern hemisphere. Smile

So close...

Bootleg Jack
ACME Mineral and Gas
#9 - 2012-05-30 02:34:56 UTC
Roll Sizzle Beef wrote:
On average, the Milky Way produces a naked eye supernova roughly once per century.
And we can warp though planets...
Case closed.

I'm more interested in the destruction than seeing it, how many happen that are not visible? P

I'm an American, English is my second language...

Bernie Nator
Seal Club Six
Plug N Play
#10 - 2012-05-30 02:36:41 UTC
Bootleg Jack wrote:
Roll Sizzle Beef wrote:
On average, the Milky Way produces a naked eye supernova roughly once per century.
And we can warp though planets...
Case closed.

I'm more interested in the destruction than seeing it, how many happen that are not visible? P

Go find a shattered planet. Hug the shattered planet.

Warp to the shattered planet's moon.
ModeratedToSilence
Republic Military School
Minmatar Republic
#11 - 2012-05-30 02:43:16 UTC
Karn Dulake wrote:
Quote:
Spcae



I am starting to notice that the quality of the General Discussion threads have gone down hill of late.

Is it just me?


GD has always been poor.
Bootleg Jack
ACME Mineral and Gas
#12 - 2012-05-30 02:46:22 UTC
Man it's a typo, you guys must be hard up for entertainment...

I'm an American, English is my second language...

Alavaria Fera
GoonWaffe
#13 - 2012-05-30 03:41:06 UTC  |  Edited by: Alavaria Fera
Bernie Nator wrote:
Bootleg Jack wrote:
Roll Sizzle Beef wrote:
On average, the Milky Way produces a naked eye supernova roughly once per century.
And we can warp though planets...
Case closed.

I'm more interested in the destruction than seeing it, how many happen that are not visible? P

Go find a shattered planet. Hug the shattered planet.

Warp to the shattered planet's moon.

You can't PI the planet or mine the moon, can you?

Triggered by: Wars of Sovless Agression, Bending the Knee, Twisting the Knife, Eating Sov Wheaties, Bombless Bombers, Fizzlesov, Interceptor Fleets, Running Away, GhostTime Vuln, Renters, Bombs, Bubbles ?

Vyl Vit
#14 - 2012-05-30 04:21:15 UTC
When I think of people misspelling words in their titles, I cringe. But, "space" for a space game?
That's a little too much. Just a tad.

Paradise is like where you are right now, only much, much better.

Serene Repose
#15 - 2012-05-30 04:27:36 UTC
Vyl Vit wrote:
When I think of people misspelling words in their titles, I cringe. But, "space" for a space game?
That's a little too much. Just a tad.

Vyl. Spcae is a new bacteria that infests the brain and eats the reasoning lobes.

We must accommodate the idiocracy.

Richard Desturned
Royal Amarr Institute
Amarr Empire
#16 - 2012-05-30 04:33:48 UTC
Ituhata Saken wrote:
Richard Desturned wrote:
Roll Sizzle Beef wrote:
On average, the Milky Way produces a naked eye supernova roughly once per century.


The last Milky Way supernova visible to the naked eye was observed in 1604, hardly "once per century"


Pretty sure a star supernovas in our galaxy once every 50 years, whether they are observable or not with the naked eye is a different matter. Last supernova that could be observed by the naked eye was in 1987 in the southern hemisphere. Smile


He did mention "supernovas in the Milky Way visible to the unaided eye." The 1987 supernova did not occur in the Milky Way.

npc alts have no opinions worth consideration

Ituhata Saken
Killboard Padding Services
#17 - 2012-05-30 04:34:25 UTC
Touche, good sir.

So close...

Pok Nibin
Doomheim
#18 - 2012-05-30 04:36:13 UTC
And...oddly enough it didn't occur in '87. That was several lightyears ago.

The right to free speech doesn't automatically carry with it the right to be taken seriously.

General Freight
GIRLFRIEND SURF TEAM
#19 - 2012-05-30 04:37:23 UTC  |  Edited by: General Freight
What?
Ituhata Saken
Killboard Padding Services
#20 - 2012-05-30 04:40:43 UTC
About 168,000 light years if wikipedia is telling me the truth. P Isn't it a little mind-bending to know when you look up at the night sky, you're staring deep into the past?

So close...

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