' Wrote:Aware of it because of the idea of 800 years with sensors/telescopes/computers that started two hundred years ahead of our own. The idea that it has happened that Gaian and Rogue pilots have, at least once, been interrogated.
Yes so out of the countless systems in that area, they would be drawn to this empty system that has nothing to offer them. "Oh look, a pretty gas giant, that needs at least 10 bases around it, because we can!" It's no argument and you know it.
Quote:How would they get there? Bretonia is rather a lot larger than the Gaians and the rogues combined, and I'm not convinced the Rogues and the Gaians would try to take it out (and...they do take out bases all the time, perhaps this one slipped through?)
Wait, so they would commit a force larger than the Gaians and Rogues and Hackers in this region from the Leeds front in order to protect a development that holds absolutely no economic value whatsoever, and that has to pass supplies through a pirate infested asteroid field on both sides of the entrance, thus placing the supply lines to that system in constant jeopardy? The Gaians, Rogues and Hackers are not composed of an old man and his two cats, they are all large, extensive and organised groups.
And once again Inverness has nothing to offer to Bretonia.
Quote:We're thinking more in the vein of adding to what exists, rather than making new things. Theres tonnes of systems already, and a maximum player set of 200...the more systems we get, the less likely any of them are to be occupied. Making new systems really isn't the best way to expand while there are empty systems chilling.
You can't have every system occupied with a million bases. Check Liberty and how many empty systems it has around it. Bretonia needs some too, and Inverness is one of those. Just leave it alone already. It's perfect as it is, by adding more to it you will be ruining it.