Logbook entry

Exotic sectors from far far away

10 Mar 2023Diedericque
Many stars at one small place or very few stars within a large void.
There are sectors within sectors, like districts in a city.
And once you zoom in on the sector you often recognize some type of star variety. This week I found a rather unique composition of different stars and celestial bodies.
Unfortunately I can't share the name of the region where I'm at, only to make sure the discoveries are truly mine!

To describe, I find myself in space surrounded by red giants, hypergiants, neutron stars and black holes.
I jump from one specialty to the next. On one rare occurrence I see a system with dead stars orbiting a black hole and in turn the dead stars are being orbited by several gas giants. Trust me, it is surprising to see a system map like that.
So yeah, I was (again) amazed to see this for the first time, or maybe I forgot that I ever saw it. There is so much to see!
Almost every day in space I get surprised by the absolutely unknowingly great diversity of stars, planets and it's sizes or colors.

The same sector I now pass through also revealed the first Electricae Pluma for my collection.
I typically found those around black holes and neutron stars. That makes sense, exotic stars have exotic plants. Although Electricae Pluma probably isn't a plant.

I can't say that it is worth the search for valuable exobiologic samples, so I now continue further to regions with a lower star density.
Things that I keep finding more regularly are these thargoid sensors, not worth taking (especially since they will kill you), but it does worry me sometimes.
What did the thargoids do before they got here? By that I mean what was their primary goal in the Milky Way?
It's becoming less of a coincidence to find a thargoid sensor. But that is positively cancelled by what there is that's yet to find...



- CMDR Diedericque -
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