Hi folks, just pulling up a seat at the Brass Test-i-bar and ordering a drink or two. How is everyone doing? I hope most of you are well! Any new or fun space-fish stories?
yeah, stupid real life gets in the way of all the fun.Doing great. Haven't been in SC much except I'm starting to get some weekend time.
Sipping margaritas and the occasional tequila straight.What are you drinking, sailor?
You need some real Dutch Courage for that kind of work, trust me - if you ever do it line your stomach with some nebula alcohol... but not too much. It's probably the reason why 50% of those ships went missing in the first place. A delicate balance between courage and bravado is about two sips between the two, and bravado leads to mistakes, and a mistake down there under all that pressure... Mistakes'll kill ya.
Skimming Giants like Crusader 'ain't like picking those meager scraps out of deep space nebula or the atmo of a moon like Ita, that's for sure! The rewards are high and the consentrations so rich you don't have to stay under too long to fill your tanks if you are not too picky, but every meter you drop is another inch closer to the big sleep - but the denser gasses are deeper down, too.a finger or two of really good tequila, none of that crappy mixing stuff, and its smooth sailing! Gas skimmers are a special kind of person! Good for you!
Skimming Giants like Crusader 'ain't like picking those meager scraps out of deep space nebula or the atmo of a moon like Ita, that's for sure! The rewards are high and the consentrations so rich you don't have to stay under too long to fill your tanks if you are not too picky, but every meter you drop is another inch closer to the big sleep - but the denser gasses are deeper down, too.
The kind of people who go down there either resent themselves so much they don't care enough about their own personal safety, or are very stupid, or are drunk. I'm a little from column A, B and C. I suppose it's why I've survived alive so long. I can see from your face you've never heared that term before? Surviving alive is us who have taken one look at a situation down there, turned around walked away and lived - the only people telling stories about us is ourselves... Survived dead are those captains who dove right in, lost it all but went down in legend. Yeah they died, but the number of people telling stories about them counts in the tens of thousands.
It's kinda tranquil down there until you realise the nearest population of people to you are the dead who failed and sank to the depths. Every so often you'll find a buoyancy-neutral wreck just hanging there in the denser more stable pockets of gas. If you are ever unlucky enough to stumble across one, don't be tempted to go srcumpin' for parts and be wary of that pocket too - if you imagine tar pits and dinosaurs it's similar, one Dino dies which attracts another carrion feeder which gets stuck and attracts another and another... I've seen my fair share of wrecks over the years and too many of them were groups of two or three ships all just floating there - you know at one point, there was just that one unlucky one who lost a pressure seal or who's generator or engines crapped out... I guarantee you the others walked in there willingly with their eyes open and didn't even survive dead, they just died anonymous. You want to survive alive scan their reg for the UEE records and move along. Meddling with floating graveyards is a ticket to skipping to the end... and if for some reason you wake up one day wanting to survive dead, make sure you have a launch capable drone to send a copy of your Black Box back to the rest of us.
Gonna catch me one of them Space Whales one day and ride it to the stars!Skimming Giants like Crusader 'ain't like picking those meager scraps out of deep space nebula or the atmo of a moon like Ita, that's for sure! The rewards are high and the consentrations so rich you don't have to stay under too long to fill your tanks if you are not too picky, but every meter you drop is another inch closer to the big sleep - but the denser gasses are deeper down, too.