Agreed.Commander McLane wrote:So please, don't try too hard to bring RealLife™-sense into your favorite game. Instead--relax and remember: it's just a game!

Moderators: winston, another_commander
So notedCommander McLane wrote:All this has a very practical reason: Oolite is a game, not a simulation. If it was a correct sized simulation, it would be utterly boring as a game, because you never would find the tiny station orbiting the gigantic planet; and you would never ever meet another ship on any route, because in reality space is just waaaaaaay to huge to make encounters with anybody else likely.
etc.Simon B wrote:Of course, that sort of speed makes the game horrifyingly fast but posting real speeds would make the ships look puny. All you really need to know is that 350 is about twice as fast as 180.
Well... for one thing, the dynamics of galaxies works using local "laws".Alex wrote:Haven't noticed anyone noticing that the Ooniverse may very well have it's own set of physics only similar to the milkyway in small bits. In our own universe the milkyway is a tiny part of it, so who is to say that some of the laws of our physics aren't different in some of the other galaxies?
Perhaps you'd like to give an example? Physics worked quite well at around 4K last time I got my hands on some He-II.Did you know that our laws of physics go out the window when you get very near absolute zero ( O degrees Kelvin) And maybe that's just another barrier like light speed, thought to be impossible at the moment.
When was this? People were quite relaxed about the 66600mph or so speed of the Earth for quite some time I understand.But then there was a time not so long ago that everyone agreed that travelling at over 20mph would cause suffocation because the air pressure would stop you breathing out.
I have read that in the early days of the railway there were fears that people would suffocate if the train travelled faster than 30mph. If it is true that this story was current at the time, and it's not just a later "weren't our ancestors stupid" myth, I suspect it was an early 19th century version of "the Large Hadron Collider will destroy the earth!" fear-of-technology story. I don't think it was ever a serious scientific belief: apart from anything else, it's about the same speed as a galloping horse.Simon B wrote:When was this? People were quite relaxed about the 66600mph or so speed of the Earth for quite some time I understand.Alex wrote:But then there was a time not so long ago that everyone agreed that travelling at over 20mph would cause suffocation because the air pressure would stop you breathing out.
The "Rainhill Trials" saw a number of fast trains - the Rocket (winner) managed 30mph and the Novelty was reputed to be faster than this. Nobody suggested that the various drivers should use an air hose for fear of asphyxiation.Once the decision was taken to consider using steam locomotives on at least part of the line the parliamentary debates on the Liverpool and Manchester line became even more heated. Existing steam locomotives were inefficient, using a lot of coal and producing a lot of smoke and soot which people believed would poison the land and cause cows to stop giving milk. The first attempt to obtain an Act for the Liverpool to Manchester line failed largely because a certain Duke thought the line would upset his fox hunting (research in the 1940's showed that a steam railway actually had less impact on wildlife than a well used footpath).
Respected scientists testified that people would be unable to breath at the high speeds (perhaps more than thirty miles per hour) suggested by the engineers. Partly due to Stephenson's enthusiasm for steam locomotives the Liverpool and Manchester Railway company staged a series of competitive engine trials at Rainhill in 1829. One entry was horse powered and another was operated by two men and a hand-crank but all the rest were all variations on the new steam locomotives of the time.
Apart from the other problems with this (pointed out by the guys above), please note that Oolite does not take place in a different galaxy from ours. If you include the 'Frontier'-sequels to Elite in your personal canon, Earth is a mere 63 lightyears away from Lave.Alex wrote:Haven't noticed anyone noticing that the Ooniverse may very well have it's own set of physics only similar to the milkyway in small bits. In our own universe the milkyway is a tiny part of it, so who is to say that some of the laws of our physics aren't different in some of the other galaxies?
But of course you don't need to consider Frontier 'canon'. In that case Elite/Oolite could be located in a distant galaxy. However, that still wouldn't make different laws of physics likely.Selezen's excellent resources wrote:
- Lave is just over 63 light years from Earth
- The furthest system away from Lave in the direction of Earth is Orrira, which is 43.6 light years north east of Lave, right on the upper edge of the Galaxy 1 map...
A 2D galaxy, with different constellations...Commander McLane wrote:Well yes. The messed-up physics strongly suggest that the whole of Elite/Oolite/Frontier is set in sort of a parallel universe. However, Frontier contains Earth. Which means it is at least located in the same galaxy (in a parallel universe).