Low altitude, high speed flying optional |
Mach 22 ought to be enough for everyone |
The moon named "Mitterand Hollow" is a bit of glitch in the game. For generating the celestial bodies inside the game a system named the "Stellar Forge" is used. It tries to generate objects in space that would also be possible in the real universe. Sometimes it fails.
Mitterand Hollow is such a case: The moon is placed so close to the planet it is orbiting, that one circulation only takes ninety seconds. The moon is racing around the planet and that makes for an interesting landing on it.
Another glitch has to be used: The system changes the reference system of speed when getting close to stellar objects. So you can actually sit at speed zero (relative to the central planet) on the orbit line of Mitterand hollow and wait for the moon to crash into you - once it is close enough the reference system changes and you now have speed zero relative to the moon itself.
I have made a little howto video for those who wish to try it themselves. Pardon my bad video editing skills.
The last tourist spot was to be visited afterwards: Planet 3A in the Nervi system has the highest mountain within the known Elite:Dangerous galaxy: Mount Nerverest goes up 50km into the sky. Us meeting at a high plateau quickly turned into an involuntary study on the effect of gravity on surface vehicles.
Most of the evening was spent trying to fish commanders in their space buggies out of the mess they had driven themselves into. Turns out it is not easy to use three spaceships to push a small vehicle back up a cliff - who would have thought?
Some call it rescue - some call it malicious damage. |
The grand finale (for those that had not already destroyed their car beforehand) was a base jump off Mount Neverest. Falling for minutes and enjoying the view we were a bit sad: The Pit Trip has ended. I will miss the weekly sunday evening madness this trip has brought - we had a lot of fun in playing the game in a way the developer surely had not intended.
I actually wonder, if Frontier Development team has a monitoring that shows "statistically unlikely events" ... and the operator staring at the monitoring by now ignores sunday evening, closing the monitoring event with the comment: "It's just those stupid Buurboons again".
Thank you to all participants of the trip: You are a marvelous crowd, it is great being part of this friendly, positive and helpful community.
Cmdrs Rheeney and Buur have not only organized these events, they also have released the first part of their Pit Trip documentary, making my video editing skills look even worse. So, open in full screen, turn up the sound and watch this video (made by someone who knows how to do this).
You wrote a perfect description.
ReplyDeleteSome months after the Distant Worlds Expedition 2 it was great to explore again.
It was a great adventure, with lots of fun and laughing. The Buur group is intense and made me feel good among them. And as you said: "It's just those stupid Buurboons again" :-)
The waypoints were very well chosen, with lots of excellent spots in the bubble and not so far, that deserve a visit.
The best of all is that I also made some friends.
The Pit Trip was an unforgettable event, congrats to all, especially the main crew.
And also to you for the blog and texts about it.
(sign Cmdr Giant Hamster)