Never spent so much time just taking photos in a game.
Last night I realised I still had a mission marker to activate a portal - about 5 systems back where I'd travelled from ages ago. And since they nerfed the farming somewhat, I fuelled up, and warped all the way back to see if I could progress the storyline. So glad that I did, as since Next, the universe has reset, so it's all new again.
Along the way, I found my first 'doomed' planet - made up of glassy hexagons, with weird geometric tree like structures.
The next system had the battle set piece, so I saved the freighter, and was offered it for free - but since I had already bought a freighter for 6 million or so, I was unable to take this A-class destroyer type for free! (I could have bought it for a mere 130 million, if I'd had the units, but it sucks a bit that I would have got it for free if it was my first one, and now I can't afford it). They'll be more anyway.
Onto next system. Found the planet with the mission portal. Its basically a Stargate; so I geared up and went through. To the most beautiful, mountainous landscape, with giant megafauna, dragonlike creatures circling above; just breathtaking. Up until now I was naming planets on an Iain Banks theme, but now I think I'll start naming planets after Warrens, beginning with Starvald Demelain.
I'd been totally happy messing about in my own system, with a base and familiarity, but a few jumps and you realise again how fun exploration is, and how vast the universe. This planet alone was worth the trip, it's like nowhere I've visited before. The updated scanner picks out every point of interest in the landscape too, from buried tech to monuments, so just running and jetpacking across the landscape is absorbing. The wildlife is so much better now too - beetles, giant crabs, the weirdest flying monsters, and 'sentient flora'. The descriptions on the scanner are all worth reading too as there are some great trait combos.
I feel like spaceman spiff.
This post has been edited by Traveller: 14 August 2018 - 08:54 AM
So that's the story. And what was the real lesson? Don't leave things in the fridge.