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Thread Statistics | Show CCP posts - 0 post(s) |
Dead Bait
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Posted - 2011.08.03 15:29:00 -
[1]
Can anyone confirm the number of wormholes per constellation / region?
Will there always be X wormholes with Y area?
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Emperor Salazar
Caldari Remote Soviet Industries
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Posted - 2011.08.03 16:55:00 -
[2]
Do you mean in known space?
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Dead Bait
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Posted - 2011.08.03 17:06:00 -
[3]
Yes, like in some random area of 0.0 or low sec or empire.
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Mia Restolo
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Posted - 2011.08.03 17:37:00 -
[4]
Not impossible, but you would need a very dedicated team of scanners in each system in the area you want to check. Scan all WH sigs simultaneously and pretty constantly, tracking numbers, probably for at least 2-3 days. Manually closing them and observing changes might give you some additional information. You still won't have any idea how many incoming unopened wormholes there are because they don't show up until someone comes through from the other side.
I don't think anyone has been curious enough to do it. In the end you might find no pattern and that everything is tied to a RNG. |
Kel'Taran
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Posted - 2011.08.03 19:45:00 -
[5]
Originally by: Mia Restolo You still won't have any idea how many incoming unopened wormholes there are because they don't show up until someone comes through from the other side.
Just curious about this statement. Is there a post from a dev or something stating this is true? Just asking because I do a bit of scanning and if that statement were true I should only be finding k162's but i find a variety of sigs that lead to 0.0, lo, hi, and w-space that are not k162's but have the representative id for the system it goes to and once there the other end is indeed a k162. I thought the mechanic was, at least originally, that when a wormhole spawns both sides of the wormhole are generated thus the sigs being in both systems waiting to be scanned out, whichever side gets scanned out first and has someone go through it makes the other side become an exit k162.
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Tau Cabalander
Retirement Retreat
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Posted - 2011.08.03 19:55:00 -
[6]
Edited by: Tau Cabalander on 03/08/2011 19:55:57
Originally by: Kel'Taran Just curious about this statement. Is there a post from a dev or something stating this is true?
Try living in a wormhole for 2+ years and you will learn that you can control traffic into your system from outgoing wormholes, but not incoming ones (K162).
Heck, you might even learn that you can tell signatures apart by their relative signal strength,
For a similar experience, try to find a wormhole on the test server. It is extremely difficult because there are almost no K162, since almost nobody opens them.
No, their is no proof or dev explanation. Just years of player experience.
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Kel'Taran
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Posted - 2011.08.03 20:07:00 -
[7]
Interesting... So what your saying is there are essentially two "types" of wormholes, incoming and outgoing and you can control folks seeing the k162 by not warping to them from the originating system. So then the non k162 sigs i find are outgoing from the system i scanned them out in and the folks in the endpoint system wouldn't see the wh till someone in my system warps to it and likewise there could be a k162 in the same system i just scanned but i wouldnt see it unless someone warped to the sig in the connecting sytsem, essentially. That is good info.
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