Perhaps among the few remaining lights in the sky, is the Blackrock System where most of the remaining Nomai clans are... knowing them, probably doing their best to find a way to last a little longer, to venture a little further, around a light which has yet to go out in an increasingly dark universe. But here, after this star sets on itself, a ship-propulsion candle burns brightly for one moment more, and a computer dreams of home. ...felt poetic I guess :p
I love how supernova surfing, including all the research and measuring, would be something Hatchling would 100% canonically do, given that we know they have a good memory, like to write things down, are pretty intelligent but also are a confirmed idiot (
i think these videos recommended another to me where someone showed the flame from the super nova will burn your marshmallows if you have one out at the camp fire when its approaching.
Haha yes I love that detail. I remember I actually noticed it fairly early on in my playthrough of the base game. I had an idea where I could do this at every campfire and measure how long it takes after the marshmallow catches fire for me to die. The idea being that the longer it takes to die the more painful the death. I assume the time is exactly the same no matter which planet you’re on, but I’ve never spent the time confirming.
Fun fact, all those stars off in the distance are actually just a few meters away from you at all times. The stars are actually incredibly small stars that surround you in the shape of a sphere. This sphere of stars just happen to match your speed at all times, so you're always in the center. They are also designed to not draw if any objects are behind them, so it gives the appearance as if they are behind objects in front of you. If in theory there was an external observer watching the player, the entire sky/space would be starless, and they'd see a small sphere of stars that are always surrounding the player.
It would probably make sense for the sun to be the last star in the universe since it’s the one the eye is orbiting around, my theory is just that the lights we still see at the very end are actually dead stars that are just far away enough from us for light to take some time to reach us and thus still appear alive a bit after our star has exploded
If you go to the Eye and wait around for a little bit, you can see the Hearthian sun isn't the last light to go out. At the same time, given how small-scale everything in the game is (in time as well as space), it seems entirely plausible that the nearest stars are only light-seconds or minutes away, rather than light-years. So maybe the Hearthian sun isn't the last to go out (that we can see). It's not like we have any reason to assume it holds any cosmic significance, outside of the Eye orbiting it.
you see: the eye went to the last solar system in the universe with life a lot of stars out there devoid of living beings, uninhabitable the outer wilds (literally the name of the solar system the hearthians came up with) is to me just the last one with life
@@tbotalpha8133 yeah honestly the fact that everything is so small in the game is a good argument against my theory, it’s cool to think that the eye chose the last solar system in the universe to maximise the odds of being found but it honestly isn’t backed up my any actual game element
@@GoldenBeans it didn't go to the last solar system with life. there's no real evidence to hint the idea the eye moved anywhere even if it did, its call attracted two different alien species, who were alive at the time of its call, and are assumedly still alive (if you consider the strangers alive). we can see seemingly recent transmissions by the nomai outside the hearthian system in the vessel
Honestly, its incredible to think that the devs would put an end screen for one specific way to not die, by escaping the super nova! Would have never found it myself!
It doesn't seem too far fetched that a player might enter the ATP and remove the warp core before knowing where to go with it but realizing it will break the loop and trying to flee for their life. Still love the attention to detail!
Sick ride on that supernova bro 🤙 I did something similar but, with a different goal. Get as close to the center of the sun as possible, and survive (since the sun only shrinks during the supernova that's the only real time to do it). I got much closer that 3000 meters by flying off for about 1/3 of a loop slowing down for the next 1/3 and plunging headlong into the sun as it collapses. I swear it's so surreal to go from feeling like you could reach out and touch the supernova to kilometers away within a fraction of a second. Very much a felspar style adventure. The funny thing is it's very nearly 1 second to cross the solar system at that speed. 😆 defiantly recommend using a timer to know when to activate the autopilot at the end of the first leg (also do note it's not exactly 1/3 for each leg the last leg is longer just dial it in until you get it right)
Seeing that you like stunts, I challenge you to deorbit the satellite that provides us with the map and landing it into a planet (any of them). Good luck! :)
You could get the best precision if you managed to ask the devs and get an answer how fast it goes. But figuring it out for yourself is more impressive.
i thought this was going to be some random video of a guy going close to the supernova but consider me surprised ! these kind of videos are why i'm studying math 😂
The planets orbits are roughly circular, the interloper is the only elliptical one as far as i know I did something similar by measuring the rotation rate of all the planets the fact that timber Hearth's siderial day is 314.15 s long is ... suspicious (timed with a stopwatch and a guide star)
you're hilarious. I love your content. may I suggest a stunt? I'm not sure of it's feasible, as I've never seen anybody do it the concept is "saving brittle hollow": by destroying the lava meteors before they hit the surface (at least as many as possible) to keep the planet as intact as possible
@@KingAdamXVII they explode when in contact with many things, including your character and your ship, but don't always deal damage. Finding something that reliably destroys meteors without getting hurt (at least not too fast) doesn't get damaged is the only way for this challenge to be viable. Maybe a scout launch can work? I know meteors that fall through the black hole cease to be active, but I don't know about other conditions.
i surfed the supernova once, i saw the supernova, slammed reverse got hit with the ash project after the blue filled my whole screen for like 6 seconds
This is something feldspar would do
The game would be chaos if feldspar connected to the ATP.
@@Solscalr I think the next universe would be pretty crazy if Feldspar observed the Eye
@@Nathan55411the speed of light wouldn’t be a constant. It would be a suggestion
Perhaps among the few remaining lights in the sky, is the Blackrock System where most of the remaining Nomai clans are... knowing them, probably doing their best to find a way to last a little longer, to venture a little further, around a light which has yet to go out in an increasingly dark universe.
But here, after this star sets on itself, a ship-propulsion candle burns brightly for one moment more, and a computer dreams of home.
...felt poetic I guess :p
The Nomai could probably find a way to farm black holes for energy and live until proton decay
I love how supernova surfing, including all the research and measuring, would be something Hatchling would 100% canonically do, given that we know they have a good memory, like to write things down, are pretty intelligent but also are a confirmed idiot (
i think these videos recommended another to me where someone showed the flame from the super nova will burn your marshmallows if you have one out at the camp fire when its approaching.
Haha yes I love that detail. I remember I actually noticed it fairly early on in my playthrough of the base game.
I had an idea where I could do this at every campfire and measure how long it takes after the marshmallow catches fire for me to die. The idea being that the longer it takes to die the more painful the death. I assume the time is exactly the same no matter which planet you’re on, but I’ve never spent the time confirming.
Fun fact, all those stars off in the distance are actually just a few meters away from you at all times. The stars are actually incredibly small stars that surround you in the shape of a sphere. This sphere of stars just happen to match your speed at all times, so you're always in the center. They are also designed to not draw if any objects are behind them, so it gives the appearance as if they are behind objects in front of you. If in theory there was an external observer watching the player, the entire sky/space would be starless, and they'd see a small sphere of stars that are always surrounding the player.
Like the sky in Ocarina of Time
"I start abandoning all pretense of planning this thing."
Very relatable
It would probably make sense for the sun to be the last star in the universe since it’s the one the eye is orbiting around, my theory is just that the lights we still see at the very end are actually dead stars that are just far away enough from us for light to take some time to reach us and thus still appear alive a bit after our star has exploded
If you go to the Eye and wait around for a little bit, you can see the Hearthian sun isn't the last light to go out.
At the same time, given how small-scale everything in the game is (in time as well as space), it seems entirely plausible that the nearest stars are only light-seconds or minutes away, rather than light-years. So maybe the Hearthian sun isn't the last to go out (that we can see). It's not like we have any reason to assume it holds any cosmic significance, outside of the Eye orbiting it.
you see:
the eye went to the last solar system in the universe with life
a lot of stars out there devoid of living beings, uninhabitable
the outer wilds (literally the name of the solar system the hearthians came up with) is to me just the last one with life
@@tbotalpha8133 yeah honestly the fact that everything is so small in the game is a good argument against my theory, it’s cool to think that the eye chose the last solar system in the universe to maximise the odds of being found but it honestly isn’t backed up my any actual game element
@GoldenBeans Yeah that’s plausible too, tho that’s assuming the eye can predict the futur somehow which... maybe ? But we’re not sure of that
@@GoldenBeans it didn't go to the last solar system with life. there's no real evidence to hint the idea the eye moved anywhere
even if it did, its call attracted two different alien species, who were alive at the time of its call, and are assumedly still alive (if you consider the strangers alive). we can see seemingly recent transmissions by the nomai outside the hearthian system in the vessel
Honestly, its incredible to think that the devs would put an end screen for one specific way to not die, by escaping the super nova! Would have never found it myself!
It doesn't seem too far fetched that a player might enter the ATP and remove the warp core before knowing where to go with it but realizing it will break the loop and trying to flee for their life. Still love the attention to detail!
So THIS is what Neem must have done when the triple suns of the Bright Spark star system exploded on them
Man, the second half after the warp core was taken out definitely gives me chills
This game is really beautiful
Sick ride on that supernova bro 🤙
I did something similar but, with a different goal. Get as close to the center of the sun as possible, and survive (since the sun only shrinks during the supernova that's the only real time to do it). I got much closer that 3000 meters by flying off for about 1/3 of a loop slowing down for the next 1/3 and plunging headlong into the sun as it collapses. I swear it's so surreal to go from feeling like you could reach out and touch the supernova to kilometers away within a fraction of a second. Very much a felspar style adventure. The funny thing is it's very nearly 1 second to cross the solar system at that speed. 😆
defiantly recommend using a timer to know when to activate the autopilot at the end of the first leg (also do note it's not exactly 1/3 for each leg the last leg is longer just dial it in until you get it right)
Haha I actually made some other videos that sound similar.
After escaping the supernova outside the solar system, you can still use the map screen to look around
Legit felt like a 2 minute video. I was entranced.
That’s really great to hear! Part of me felt like I should have been able to cut it down shorter if only I was a better editor.
After multiple years, we finally got to see those animators' work up close. Just like the rest of the game, it was, truly, beautiful
Seeing that you like stunts, I challenge you to deorbit the satellite that provides us with the map and landing it into a planet (any of them). Good luck! :)
Holy soccer
This is such a hearthian thing to do
You could get the best precision if you managed to ask the devs and get an answer how fast it goes. But figuring it out for yourself is more impressive.
I was instantly reminded of when I willingly jumped into a super nova in one cycle and looked outwards. It was freakin beautiful! 😂
No way im here with only 1.8k views, good to be here at the start of your career
i thought this was going to be some random video of a guy going close to the supernova but consider me surprised ! these kind of videos are why i'm studying math 😂
The planets orbits are roughly circular, the interloper is the only elliptical one as far as i know
I did something similar by measuring the rotation rate of all the planets
the fact that timber Hearth's siderial day is 314.15 s long is ... suspicious (timed with a stopwatch and a guide star)
Omg YES!!! I was SO waiting for you to do that
you're hilarious. I love your content.
may I suggest a stunt? I'm not sure of it's feasible, as I've never seen anybody do it
the concept is "saving brittle hollow": by destroying the lava meteors before they hit the surface (at least as many as possible) to keep the planet as intact as possible
Lol that’s hilarious. I’m not sure I even know how to destroy the lava meteors?
@@KingAdamXVII they explode when in contact with many things, including your character and your ship, but don't always deal damage.
Finding something that reliably destroys meteors without getting hurt (at least not too fast) doesn't get damaged is the only way for this challenge to be viable.
Maybe a scout launch can work?
I know meteors that fall through the black hole cease to be active, but I don't know about other conditions.
Feldspar would approve
i surfed the supernova once, i saw the supernova, slammed reverse got hit with the ash project after the blue filled my whole screen for like 6 seconds
Feldspar activities
This video is amazing! But at some parts the background music is a bit too loud 😅
Beautiful!
Village error ::(
3:33 👍
The true Hearthian way 👍
i did it on my second try 0 math required