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Elite Dangerous

Elite Dangerous
P

Well this is a question.

I never really played Elite (1984) or any of the franchise, I instead would watch my brother play and sit in the back bored and wanting to put Skool Daze on. I tried them and while the concept sparked my imagination, I really didnt have the concentration to get into it deep enough.

Fast forward 40 years, and I have months of play time in the game and that really asks the question why?

From the end of the kickstarter I was hooked, not by gameplay, not by the promises or plans set out. Instead I was hooked on the community of the forum. I had made a lot of friends we had all been letting our imaginations run wild, making artwork, mugs, podcasts... you name it.

Then the game came out.

So clearly the community was the hook and the collective imaginations made this game something special before it was even released... How could it possibly live up to that hype?

First release was combat scenarios, and a few choices to get into a ship.

The flight systems were amazing, it felt right. The ship felt responsive and combat just was naturally satisfying.

Then we had stations. Flying through the slot was magical the first few times, gut wrenching in vr.

Then we had the bubble. This was the start of how the jumps worked, supercruise and trading.

And missions...

THEN IT OPENED UP...

So I have through many iterations of gameplay seen the bits I love and hate change over the years.

FIrst I LOVED the grind of trading, flying in wings.. collecting trade dividends and playing with friends for hours and hours. Back and forth for weeks/ months until finally I got my type 9.

Tried Mining... didnt like it. And We couldnt land on planets. So Combat didnt excite me much.. it was something you had to do to keep NPC Pirates off you but it was simple enough.

Then Deep Core Mining came out... wasn't particularly interested. Tried it. ABSOLUTELTY LOVED it... it was AMAZING. The BOOM, the fragments...

I also found exploration to be very relaxing... and spend months and months scanning through systems and trying to find the elusive Earth Likes.

With Netflix on, I could spend days just building up the amount of data I could lose with a single hilarious docking incident.

Then Elite Feet came out, well horizons... on foot stuff. Wasn't really interested. Then I tried it and love it.

So I think the thing that keeps me playing elite is the amount of choice of activities you can do when the whim takes you and its always changing and trying to improve bits so you can do them again as if they were new.

That is a huge way Elite stays fresh, Ok Xenobiology is my current hate.. scanning plants is fine... hunting for them on foot drives me bonkers, losing an entire afternoons scans because my returning anaconda landed on me was priceless... but I was sooooo angry.

The Community and players I've met and played with along the way from the BS news crew, Lave Radio Crew, the Hutton Truckers and Mobius and so many groups I've been privelidged to play along side and with. Lavecon, ECM, Fantasticon all the Real world meet ups I've been able to cement those friendships at. And though they are not the game they had a huge impact on me playing.

So that aside... the game has stunning visuals, from the planet-scape varieties, the Ice plannets can be stunning and not all planets are beige potatoes. The frustration of SRV ground driving, the joy of on foot combat and rocket launchers.

The Blowing up of Asteroids to collect their hidden valuables... the mind numbing supercruise back and forth for missions and trade.

I love it all.

It is a game of facets to suit your mood... the issue is always "what are you going to do in Elite today?"

I didn't really thargoid much... in case you're wondering why its not mentioned... I did one day help with a few friends to kite a thargoid to the nearest Coriolis …. that was fun... Died about 100 times on that little carry on.

You not installed it yet??? Well watch videos, join groups and ask for help because there is so much in it, it can be daunting to navigate and find what you want to do... not to mention the customising your controls.. it's worth it though.

Fly safe

RicardosGaming's avatar

👍 Elite Dangerous is a game that captures the immensity of space like nothing else. But it’s not just about size; it’s about freedom. You can be a trader hauling precious cargo, a bounty hunter chasing the galaxy’s most wanted, a miner delving into asteroid fields, or an explorer scanning uncharted planets. Why do you still play it? 🚀 This Video : ➤Link:

https://www.youtube.com/embed/Pfirt6Y2Eug?feature=oembed

#elitedangerous #spacegames #killergame @JustAbout__ RicardosGaming

GreybeardSeawolf's avatar

I've been playing in the Elite Universe since 1986. I remember hunching over a 12 inch Black & White portable TV mashing the rubber keys of my beloved Spectrum computer trying to dock with a spinning wireframe Coriolis station like it was just yesterday and I have been hooked ever since.

I've played Elite, Frontier: Elite II and Frontier: First Encounters. I continued playing them through much of the wilderness years when rumour after rumour of a new Elite game always seemed to end in disappointment. Shortly after 2010 my life took a turn and I spent several years without a computer or console and was out of touch with gaming and so missed the Kickstarter announcement of Elite Dangerous.

In 2018 I bought an Xbox and discovered the game, I will never forget my first flight, guiding my little Sidewinder GSS Crimson Waltz out through the letterbox and past the toast rack, the roar of other players ships arriving and departing, the feeling of being a part of a living breathing galaxy. After 2 years on the Xbox I bought a PC and the first game I bought was another copy of Elite Dangerous.

After 6 years and over 7500 hours of gameplay I still play virtually every day and have no plans on stopping there are over 400 billion stars to explore and only a fraction of them have been visited even after 10 years. My Fleet Carrier GSS Mildly Amused Roger has a lot of work yet to do. Why do I play it? Elite Dangerous is my second home, my refuge from the pressures of real life. When people ask I tell them I have 2 jobs and my second one is a space ship Commander.

Alex Sinclair's avatar

I love this. Thanks for sharing!

ayebawl's avatar

1984 Elite was not the first game I played on the Commodore 64, but it was the first one I remember fully immersing myself in. It was a mail order purchase and I recall setting on it like a frenzied chimp when it finally arrived after what felt like weeks of waiting. I didn't have a lot of games at that time, hence the high excitement. Space Pilot and Skramble was the extent of my library back then, and they were both pretty basic gaming affairs. As basic as they were they did feed my enthusiasm for a certain genre...

I shredded the post packaging in record time and was probably lucky I didnt shred the game box in my haste to get it out. The first thing I remember was that box, it was much bigger than the other simple plastic cassette boxes that my other mail order games arrived in. It was cardboard and it felt fancy. It was mostly black with a big gold Elite logo on the front. The whole front of the box pulled off with a satisfying shhhoooooff to reveal the cassette nestled within, an instruction book, an overlay for the keyboard and even a novella! I think I managed to finish half of the novella before the game even loaded. It had a very cool loading screen, but boy were those datasettes sloooow.

So started my teenage love affair with Elite. The first thing I remember struggling with when it eventually loaded was trying to settle on a Cmdr name. It had to be cool. It had to inspire fear. It had to command respect. After much reflection and typing and retyping I eventually settled on the impressive moniker of... Commander Panda. The next day at school I excitedly babbled to anyone who'd listen about my exciting night of Elite... and got roundly ridiculed for my choice of name. That night when I loaded up the game I abandoned Commander Panda and restarted as... Commander Eyeball. Much cool, much fear, much respect. I also decided to keep my Elite adventures a bit more to myself from then on.

Every day after school I'd patiently wait for it to load before diving into a galaxy wide adventure of trade and combat. I made a headset with a microphone out of old headphones, wire and a blob of blutack so I really felt the part of a space faring Commander. I slowly upgraded my Cobra until I had military lasers installed on every view port. I never hit a single thing with the side mounted lasers but it was my first ingame flex - I was so rich I could afford top end gear just for the look of it, even though no-one else actually saw them. I gathered trumbles. I fought Thargoids. And then of course eventually all that was left was the grind to Elite.

I remember. A lot. Of grinding... The wiki says it took 6400 kills to get there, and I remember the chore of chasing what seemed like an endless pursuit of pirates. The feeling of elation and relief when the rating eventually ticked over from Deadly to Elite is something that I still remember distinctly.

40 years later and here I am again. I was not an early adopter of Elite Dangerous, quite the opposite, but I do feel I've joined at a great time and Im thoroughly enjoying reliving the adventure once again. o7 Cmdrs!

Alex Sinclair's avatar

This was such a great read! That those memories sound so fresh shows how impactful they were.

Boomer - I nominate this for Member Monday!

LiquidMorkite's avatar

It's gonna be a long introduction into my text.

I am the type of gamer that play different genres of games, with different themes, spanning from fantasy/medieval to modern, post apocalyptic to hyperfuturistic. I have unexplainable passion and curiosity about space, having read a lot of different things about space, planets, galaxies, and so on. I enjoy different media works about space, with the Star Wars franchise (and its spin-off) and the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey being my most favorite. I like Star Wars about how it's more focused as a space opera/fantasy than being some heavy sci-fi work. The galaxies are vast, crowded but empty, the ships and stations are dusty and rustic, they look rough, but have a charm in them. I love 2001: A Space Odyssey about how close it gets to reality in space traveling, the ships, the fear of machination, the fear of an unknown entity that might have the power to control us humans, and it transmit the true feelings of how is space: vast, empty, but still mysterious and fearful.

For some reasons I never knew about Elite: Dangerous, or the whole game series, until last year's July. I always wanted to play a space game, having known about such games like Kerbal's Space Program, or No Man's Sky. KSP doesn't look attractive enough to me, and NMS is a bit too sci-fi for my taste. Don't get me wrong, they are both very great game which you should give a try at some point, I have recently gotten into NMS again and am loving it, it's a very well made game with passionate and responsible developers. They had the worst release flop possible in gaming history, yet they've made the best comeback ever.

Now, back to Elite, I asked a friend about which game should I get during Steam Summer Sale, he sent me a list of different genres of game, Elite was one of it. Of course it's gonna be Elite! It's a space game! I said, bought it and installed it. The Odyssey/on foot intro-tutorial felt like Mass Effect (which is a good thing), I kept on with the tutorial, having no idea what is the game about, yes, it's about space, but what are you supposed to do? "You can do anything, be anything", my friend said. Tutorial is done, I found myself at the concourse of a surface station, I never knew where I was until recently, I was able to find the station and dock on it and get to the bar again, because I remembered the station's name, somehow the game never spawned me inside a new pilot system, which is why I could go back to it. Everything looked so good, I love how the station looked, outside the big window I could see the other part of the buildings.

As there was nothing to discover in the station, I got on pilot training half an hour later, the inside of the Sidewinder looked so good, so detailed, it's dusty, full of equiments and cables, of course, it's a budget ship loaned to every pilot, thanks to our Pilots Federation. Finished the tutorial, as I set my throttle to 0 to engage auto docking, the Blue Danube Waltz started playing on my ship's sound system. I found myself smiling as I'm looking at the mail slot getting closer to closer, listening to the song, as I knew it was a direct reference to my favorite movie.

After my first night of joining my friend to shoot some pirates in order to get myself a better ship, I kept coming back and back every day to continue what I left the other night, either finishing a mission I was doing the other day, new weapons, new activities. On the second night I found myself flying in a new Cobra Mk III trying to shoot some pirates, mining some minerals, or participating in a war (I barely killed anyone in the conflict zone), two weeks later I found myself hauling some commodities to get some credits, not counting sitting on my friend's ship's turret control to shoot Titan Indra's core on my second week, the other week I found myself flying around Guardian's Ruins doing Ram Tah's mission (credits, of course). Today, 1000 hours later, I am still flying around engineering a new ship, while polishing my flying skills in combat, beside doing regular power play activities, while getting excited for this weekend's short expedition organized by an allied squadron. The fun just never ends! And we're at the best time, new ships still incoming, and new types of activities.

As if there wasn't enough fun, I found myself getting into a squadron, there we do things together, get credits together, fight the Thargoids together, expand our supported faction, share our experience, and most of all help out new cmdrs.

The community is great, after a long time I'm able to see a game with such great community, when players instead of different preferences and factions, get to work together against the Thargoid, I never got the chance to participate in Distant World 1 & 2, but looking forward to its third edition.

It's a never-ending fun to me, as long as the servers are up :)

It's one of the few games I love, great community, good art direction, complicated but addictive mechanics and gameplay. It portraits greatly the vision of a future when humans have dominated a small portion of our galaxy, it paints a accurate picture of a space opera: vast and empty, but you'll never be alone.

R

Why do I play Elite?

Good question and long answer.

First of all, I love science fiction, I've always loved playing sci-fi games and reading books about it.

As games I would probably have to name Homeworld, Freespace 1 & 2, Mass Effect and Dead Space, there are so many but these were always special to me too.

There are also countless books, but The Lost Fleet dominates here.

Elite combines all of these!

If you find encrypted messages, you can come across dark secrets and sometimes it's very scary, which reminds me a bit of Dead Space.

In the fight against Thargoids you join forces with so many player factions to fight a common enemy and/or save civilians, almost like in Freespace.

Just to make a few small comparisons.

But in the end you are your own “Lost Fleet” and have to find or create your own home and that's what fascinates me the most!

Find a squadron and/or people you like to play with and explore the endless expanses and possibilities of Elite.

I came across Elite at some point, played a bit for myself and didn't get very far.

Later, the game lured me back in and I played it again for a while, which is definitely several hundred hours.

But I really fell in love with Elite shortly before Odyssey.

I met a streamer and his squadron, which I joined on 01.06.2021.

I knew so little about Elite at the beginning.

Thanks to the squadron and the many players I got to know over the years, my interest in Elite grew and I fell more and more in love with the game.

I became enthusiastic about the BGS and, as the most important key event, I met Esme Wyrd!

We have managed the BGS department of the squadron together for years and have celebrated many successes together!
Together we explored abandoned settlements and their history ...

... have set off together to explore the galaxy ...

... have visited the Guardian ruins and recovered some technology ...

... together wrote German language guides for BGS, Guardians-Ruinen and On-Foot Mats for the site https://cia-gaming.de ...

... and now founded our own little squadron together with two other friends!

All the people I was able to get to know and the successes and defeats we shared. All the great things we've experienced together and the friendships that have developed are the reason why I play Elite and why I want to keep playing!

There is still so much to discover and so many things I haven't done yet, all together with friends or alone, it's just fun and it never ends!

Here's to another year and many exciting stories and achievements, especially with the upcoming Trailblazer update.

T0Nejy's avatar

I started playing Elite Dangerous after watching a video about the Fuel Rats rescue expedition on the Polish YouTube channel TvGry. What captivated me was the incredible community of players who selflessly help others in the most challenging situations, embodying the true spirit of exploration and cooperation. I was also fascinated by the sheer scale of the game world, which allows for unrestricted travel and the discovery of uncharted star systems and breathtaking landscapes. As a huge fan of airplanes and spacecraft, I was thrilled to see the vast selection of ships available in Elite Dangerous. It felt like being a kid in a toy store. The ability to customize and upgrade my own ship makes it possible for everyone to find something that suits them, whether they want to be an explorer, trader, or bounty hunter. Moreover, I was amazed by the game’s realistic physics. Interstellar travel, maneuvering in the vastness of space, planetary gravity, and the way ships respond to different conditions all of it makes flying in Elite Dangerous incredibly satisfying. On top of that, the game’s visuals are simply stunning, majestic nebulae, planetary rings, and distant galaxies make every journey an unforgettable experience.

("Translated with DeepL")

Osiliran's avatar

I love space. I think Elite does space 'right'. I've played a lot of space games and each developer has their own take on how space should be travelled and what to fill this space with. I appreciate Elite tries to balance the vastness of space while also letting players traverse it in a reasonable amount of time, with places to visit sprinkled in here and there. I'd love to see more interesting destinations or things like wormholes to interact with but I think the way space is presented feels good.

I keep coming back to Elite because it fires up my imagination. I think about the stories from other players and articles on galnet and imagine those stories becoming something more. The novels made for Elite by several authors are exactly the kind of adventures Elite makes me think about. I've love more of a toolbox in-game to create stories for other players with real assets to interact with.

Space combat is also the absolute bomb in Elite, great fun. Hard to master (I'm not great at it) but it's an activity that can be as deep as you want it to be. It's a good activity with plenty of difficulties for all pilots. Nothing like zooming around a combat zone with a beautiful planetary backdrop.

One of my favourite ships pictured below infront of some cool sights... I wish the very best for this game and its community.

M

I first became interested in playing Elite Dangerous because I had played the original Elite (1984) game on the Commodore 64. I watched the previews for Elite Dangerous when they first came out and really liked what I saw.

There are a number of reasons why I still play the game to this day:

  1. The representation of our galaxy, the milky way

There aren't many games that have our entire galaxy available to explore like Elite Dangerous does. You soon learn how enormous the galaxy is and how much there is that hasn't been previously explored.

  1. Freedom to do what you want

In Elite Dangerous you aren't stuck having to do one thing or participate in a story, you can do whatever you want to. There are many different things you can do and there are plenty of YouTube videos or helpful people in the forums to show you how if you get stuck. You can do combat (ship or foot), mining, exploring, trading, passenger missions, salvaging, and other things. A good place to go when you're starting out is the missions board. You can outfit your ships however you like and make them better or stand out by visiting different engineers. You can do the same with your on foot suits and weapons.

  1. The accurate flight model

Although not perfect, the flight model used in Elite Dangerous appears to be pretty accurate in terms of physics, much more than some other popular space games out there. There are some limits put on the physics model for game purposes, ie. your top speed is limited, but I don't think this retracts from how good it is.

  1. The power and heat model

When I first started playing I would sometimes get too close to a star and soon discovered what damage heat can do to your spaceship. Each module in your ship can experience damage because of it. You also soon learn how to manage your power usage so it doesn't get overloaded.

  1. The background simulation

I know a lot of work has gone into the background simulation (or BGS) and keeping it together. Without it there wouldn't be the change in system states and price variations. Not something I personally get excited about like some people but I understand the importance and reliance of it. It can be thought of as the glue that holds the whole game together.

S

An eye opening game!!

Why wouldn’t you want to explore the whole universe, in a spaceship loaded with cargo, with space pirates waiting to ruin 4 hours of work…

Now that might sound dreadful to most gamers who probably want to sit back and relax, but trust me that’s just one aspect of a game that is quite literally impossible to “complete”.

the sheer brevity of the game is mind blowing, with around 400 billion star systems, a 1:1 scale of the Milky Way. And yes that means hours spent travelling between, but for any space fans it’s the dream!

It can be quite the grind, hours spent buying and selling materials, or searching for never seen before star systems you get a fantastic mix of space adventure and crazy combat!

Niceygy's avatar

Why play Elite.....

Why not I suppose?

I personally love it for the cool apps and projects you can make with it (including a few myself!), and the time it gives me to unwind and do something fun at the end of a long day.

Then there's the community: What other game do you know of that has such a tight-knit, awesome community? I could work out this fiddly little thing in-game (and its usually possible!), but most of the time I can just ask someone and have a bajillion useful tips and guides sent my way! Or, I could make an app to read the game data and tell me how instead.

Its Options.

You have a choice! Fight, trade, explore, document (although maybe not at the same time...). Make a spreadsheet so big it won't even load!

Oh, and spaceships are cooool

D

I love to play Elite Dangerous for a multitude of reasons. Even though I'm a newbean, with my best ship being an adder, I love this game. It's my favorite game of all time. I love how realistic the sci-fi aspect of this game is, I love the animation and high definition graphics, and I love the excellent progression system, it's something I'm excited to use. ED is an awesome game, I'm so excited to continue playing, and to rise among the ranks of the Elite.

L

It is a great game where you can do whatever you want (from all activities available) and nobody would say anything. Also playing in VR gives so much vibe like you would really be inside a ship and travel to places that normally you'd never imagine.
Adding all the real data that were used from open sources (and some licences probably) that is a huge universe you might go and look around.

GoJapan's avatar

I have been playing Elite Dangerous for several months and I must say that it surprised me not only for the vastness of the map but also for the various activities that a player can do, the player can either do space exploration by exploring the systems and some moons aboard rovers or on foot (if he also has the DLC), be a bounty hunter, a seller of goods between stations, participate in space battles and war with aliens, can decide whether to ally with one of the game's power plays and much more.

I play elite dangerous mainly to relax in game I do a bit of everything, thanks also to its light graphics it also allows me to enjoy the game at its best. The only flaw however is that once the game starts it is difficult to detach and you would like to play it endlessly.

Elite's strong points are:

a large map

light graphics

totally relaxing

you can also play on steamdeck even if the interface is not perfect

its weak points are:

complex because the tutorial at the beginning only explains the essential things

needs third-party apps to fully enjoy the game

needs an initial grind to have better ships

projectazone's avatar

I like playing Elite Dangerous because it is a huge game, also in the game it allows me to play with other players and be part of a squadron and go to face other players in PVP and Pirates which are my favorite activities that I love to do in the game especially with friends.

my main activities are the bounties and the PVP combat which I also find a bit lucrative.

also the game is always continuously updated except for the console versions in which development has been finished for a couple of years, I can't wait to try the new big update that should arrive in 2025 as part of Odyssey

Vivisector's avatar

Why do I play Elite Dangerous? Good question! I have to start by making a premise: I have never been a big fan of space games, especially those that involve long-term travel and strategy. The fact is that I have friends who have been playing them for a while now, they had to insist a little to convince me to play Elite Dangerous and after many refusals from me, convinced that it was not a game that was right for me, in the end I accepted.

The credit does not only go to them, but also to this site. In fact, for me this site has become not only a source of income thanks to my main passions, but also the possibility of discovering new games. In fact, I started this space adventure also thanks to the desire to want to complete the challenges of this site. So the most correct answer to the main question is a mix between friends and just about.

I admit that I have not yet fully entered into the development of the game, but discovering that it is not a simplistic space game but that it contains a depth and an infinity of possibilities has been truly exciting for me. I also learned to collaborate with friends and go to battle with them in the same spaceship is what consolidated my desire to play this title. I still have a long way to go to understand, I know it will take time, but for now the will to play it is solid and with the help of the people who pushed me to play it I am sure I will make it.

Alex Sinclair's avatar

This is lovely to hear. I'm really glad you're enjoying the platform!

AndyRice's avatar

I’ve always had a deep fascination with the universe since I was a young boy. I remember when I registered my Steam account in 2015 (back when I was in middle school), the first two games I bought were Kerbal Space Program and Space Engineers. Around the same time, I also discovered the concept of Star Citizen. It perfectly embodied my dream of being a citizen in the Space Age. However, a ship package was far too expensive for a middle school kid, and on top of that, I didn’t have a powerful enough PC to run the game. So, all I could do was search for alternatives.

At first, I tried No Man’s Sky. I even pre-ordered it, expecting it to be a great game. As you all know, the release was disappointing—though NMS is a fantastic game now, it was terrible when it first launched. It didn’t satisfy my space fantasy at all. Then, in 2017, I discovered Elite Dangerous on Steam. The game was quite expensive at the time, and it also required a decent level of English proficiency (English isn’t my first language). But wow, the concept of the game was incredible. You could pilot your own ship in a hardcore, real-time simulated universe. You could venture into the void, exploring the unknown, and engage in all kinds of thrilling activities. Even though you couldn’t leave your ship and walk on foot back then, the game still fulfilled my space fantasy. I bought it without hesitation.

And it truly is an amazing game. It has almost everything I could ask for in a space simulator. I’ve been playing Elite Dangerous since 2017—for eight years now—and I’m still not tired of it.

L

Because it is a safe place from the real world and I can play the adventure just the way I want to.

AlvarZ4's avatar

Why I play Elite Dangerous? Thats, a very good question, I play it for a lot of reasons. This story starts with a young Alvar that was a huge fan of Star Wars and of the space in general.

When I was younger I never found a game that gave me freedom to discover an universe like the Star Wars universe or the Star Trek Universe and suddenly I found the 2014 trailer of the game. I started watching videos of the game, over and over and over again. I fell in love with what I was seeing. Finally I made a decision, I bought the game.

I started playing and again I fell in love with the graphics, the universe, the factions and specifically the federation(I'll talk about it later).

I started being a space trucker, carrying a lot of cargo across the stars, that was't the funniest way to play but the most profitable, so much so that it was my first Elite rank.

All the lore of the game took me to join the federation, not only because was the most similar power to the republic in Star Wars and the federation of Star Trek, also because this power has "The Farragut Battlecruiser" that was so similar to the Venator Class Cruiser. Later Frontier created the Federal Corvette, that reaffirmed my love for the federation and I creater a Corvette like a venator with a fighter similar to the Anakin Skywalker's fighter in the Episode III.

Later I discovered the exploration, that brought me the freedom and gave me the feeling to be an explorer like the crew of the USS Enterprise and "to boldly go where no man has gone before".

In short, Elite Dangerous gave me everything I asked for since I was little: space battles, discovering new worlds, a huge universe and a lot of lore to enjoy like the classic science fiction sagas of the 80s.

Thank you Elite Dangerous for these 10 years.🫶🏻

Stormseeker's avatar

The first time I saw the description of the game, the first thing it said was:

Recreation of the galaxy on a 1:1 scale… something like that XD
The rest was just better: It's a mmo where you are the pilot of the ship

Add to cart, buy, pay, play XD
When I started streaming in Spanish in 2016, there was no content at all from this game, no guides or tutorials, nothing, and no streamers to show the game as the great and fun that it is.
So at firs I just stream it once day a week, answering questions and having fun with the people coming to see it, and slowly more people were buying it and joining.
Today I'm an official partner and I keep sharing my flight time with everybody on my twitch and YouTube every day at 18h, answering questions, having fun, and sharing the love of flight with your ship on our galaxy.
Maybe is my love for sci-fi? Possibly my love to talk to people and sharing the things I like.
Almost 9 years and 26k hours of playing and streaming later I keep coming, sharing, having fun, doing guides, tutorials, building ships, and so much more to come.
Where some people only sees balls in space and ships, I see a world of opportunities and the greatest of communities.

A

Hi My hame is Luis, i have 2,600 hrs in Elite Dangerous, it became my favorite game as i was aware of it and started playing it. The reason i play ED is because it gives me this sense of continuous progression in your career as a commander. You can become what ever kind of comander you want to be. Its also very interesting that every action you make has consequences. The vast exploration is definetly amazing. o7 CMDRs may the endless black be kind to you.

Doc's avatar

I don't remember how I discovered Elite Dangerous, but I was really impressed about the opportunity to explore deep space freely. I remember starting the game and realizing that it was a simulation of our galaxy, which was really impressing to me at the time. Then the process to learn how to fly the ship and where to go to grind and find better stuff was really hard at the time, but I liked it and I evolved so it became easy. Nowadays I play Elite to explore and find new planets, reach far locations, and break my personal records. There is literally a whole galaxy to explore, and that is why I play this game.

Mistymeooww's avatar

I started playing Elite Dangerous after seeing it as a category here on Just About.

The game sucked me in right away and it has been a blast to learn. This is not an easy game to say the least. Seriously. It has been a rollercoaster of emotion. I LOVE IT. From the very first day playing it I had to overcome the urge to rage quit and the community on Twitch has gleefully explained that they are aggressively helpful multiple times and I believe that more than you know. So many people have offered to explain the game to me and have wanted to jump into voice chat just to dump their thoughts about what I should do or learn next. I have been told that this game didn't have any kind of tutorial before and the tutorial that is in the dash board to your right in your ship is new to the game. This game DOES NOT hold your hand. People rely heavily on the community YouTube videos and how tos for advancing in the game and for tips and tricks.

I have had a good time trying to remember all of the things I've learned and have made a few YouTube edits of my longer content from Twitch, I have 20 hours in the game so far.

Right now I am taking data delivery missions and just trying to jump from one place to another. I figured out how to use the frame shift drive, super cruise assist and auto docking. Now that I am getting the hang of that and feel pretty comfortable getting around I have looked at doing other things. I learned how to use the scanner on my ship too.

I am having a good time interacting with the community. This game has been around a long time and it has a loyal following. Its cool to be a part of something like that. The game really is special among space games and I appreciate that I had the opportunity to learn about it. From its origins in 1984 to what the game is now, with the Odyssey DLC, the game has changed over time but it has just gotten better and better. Some people that didn't know about the Odyssey DLC have mentioned that they weren't aware of the ground battle and ground stations. I guess before you had to stay in your ship, or just use the little rover buggy thing.

I'm excited to keep playing this game and meeting members of the community. So far everyone has been really helpful and welcoming and that has kept me coming back. Its not easy to be vulnerable and play a game that is so complex, especially for people that have thousands of hours in it and multiple years of gameplay. They have been cool though, just happy to see someone enjoying a game they themselves have loved for years. I think this is the kind of game you can come back to over and over again, especially since its one of the best space games according to lovers of the genre.

I have upgraded from the Sidewinder to the Cobra MK III. More upgrades to follow!

LN

I can give you 400 Billion reasons why I play Elite Dangerous. It's that huge explorable Galaxy. I have travelled over 2 million light years in search of beautiful vistas and unrecorded biology.

It's extraordinary how it all works. None of it exists until you see it. There is no big database in Cambridge that catalogues the entire galaxy. It's all (mostly) generated algorithmically from a tiny numeric seed. It reminds me of my relationship with the cold uncaring universe. I am less than dust in the grand scheme of things. When I get tired of exploring there are lots of other activities I can do in the same galaxy before the wanderlust hits me again.

Another reason I enjoy Elite Dangerous is because of all the things I can do outside the game. I've written third party software used by thousands of players. I search through the player submitted catalogs to find cool places to visit. I taught myself python and other technologies to work with crowd sourced data. I've taught myself the basics of Kepler's Laws of Planetary motion just so I can predict when and where planets will collide. I catalog data, plan expeditions, make comedy sketches and music videos and have performed them live. I even had Norman Lovett autograph a script I co-wrote. I've been interviewed on live streams including Frontier's Elite Dangerous stream.

I've made friends online and then met them face to face at places like Lavcon, ECM and Pittcon.. yet unaccountably we are still friends! Its a huge creative outlet and I get to collaborate with wonderful people. I have received some of the most wonderful gifts from people, like some insults from John Delancy, a meter wide neon Canonn logo and a Hutton Mug.

Basically Elite is my life now.

B

I mean... Norman wasn't complimentary though was he? hahahahaha <3

Kethervir's avatar

Just About a Great Game

I love this game more than any other... and after the Odyssey, much more than ever!

I even prefer it to dayz or retrogames... which i love madly... but only Elite Dangerus can to give me truly special moments like no other game has gived to me yet..

i discovered Elite a lot of yearss ago, because i was looking for a good flight simulator, being very passionate about microsoft Flight Simulator, i was looking for an experience that from a simulation point of view could be rewarding realistic and less arcade than all the other space game titles i knew at that time..

So i bought it shortly after its release, even if i didn't know that 20 years before it already existed.. i had no idea what awaited me in the game. after a few minutes of gameplay it immediately became clear that the game itself hid more than it communicated at first glance, already from the flight mechanics you could understand that it could potentially be a larger and more complicated title... then i opened the star map..............and i thought:

"help... and now? what i have to do now???"

was it really as huge as it seemed? I couldn't believe that all those systems could be visited... so I started playing Trying to understand what I could do inside that vast and disconcerting world and... do you know how it went? today after I think 10 years, I didn't learn every aspect of the game at all, and i keep continue to learn new things and above all to do new activity that I had never done even after many years of playing.

This is the most beautiful thing that makes me really love this game so much..

Sometimes happen to have certain encounters that you'll never forget! for exemple I will Never forget the first time I saw a Targhoid scanning me, it was Really shocking and intense...especially with the poor ship that i had at that time... or the feeling of finally understanding, after many years of playing, how Powerplay works and, much more simply, the fact that factions existed... a whole new world opened up to me... or maybe, the first time i end my frameshift drive cruise in front of a Neutron Star (that i was called "Panic") just a couple of exemples of unforgettable moment that you can experiment ingame.. (if we can call a game a huge simulator like this)

Even when I discovered the many activities with the srv and the more recent ones on foot, I understood how the perception of the game changed and the world became even bigger than it already i tough was... truly incredible.

Elite Dangerous has continued to surprise me for many years and I especially love the fact that it is both a very relaxing game, but if you want, also very adrenaline. In fact, it has become a ritual for me, when I watch my favorite TV series, on another screen I always have Elite farming with delivery missions. In the other hand, if I want to put myself in danger and feel a bit of adrenaline, there are so many activities and missions to do, but you always have to be very careful... it's easy to take a little too far and find yourself in truly deadly... Dangerous!

And then, how can you not appreciate the incredible work and continuos support of the development team? even after many years it still seems like a game more alive than ever, and I also can't wait to know what will await us during 2025..

I am really fond of this title, like an old friend for me and it would be also nice to play it with more friends together. Unfortunately, the language of my country is not available and this, in addition to the fact that nowadays players prefer a faster and more user-friendly gaming experience, contributes to making it difficult to find new players willing to learn how this unparalleled great space simulator works.

From my point of view it is really a great challenge to try to always learn something new and study new approaches to the activities to be carried out. I find it, at the same time, so complicated and so easy, so complete and huge, compared to other games that, friendly and confidentially lately I like to say:

"Elite Dangerous does not have a learning curve. It has a learning ANGLE that starts in a straight line from the earth to the stars"

oh and i missed the last point.... it can be even a completely different game experience if you play with Hotas and with Vr...

Yes, maybe a lots of retrogames is always my heart... maybe metal slug and castlevania sotn keep continue to follow me... maybe dayz is like my shadow.... but Elite is just far above anything else.

:. CMDR :. Kethervir :.

M

My first encounter with Elite was in my childhood, although I don't remember the exact year, it was with the original 1984 release. Back then, I found it a difficult game to understand and master, but that didn't diminish my fascination. Years later, I returned to the Elite universe with Frontier: Elite II (1993). With greater knowledge of computing, I was deeply impressed by how they managed to encapsulate an entire galaxy on a 3 1/2 inch floppy disk. This discovery opened the doors to the fascinating world of mathematics and procedural generation, a concept that amazed me then and continues to do so today.

In early 2024, I discovered the existence of Elite Dangerous and, without hesitation, downloaded it. This is the extent of my personal history with the Elite saga. What attracts me to Elite Dangerous is the possibility of feeling like a pioneer exploring a pseudo-galaxy (procedurally generated, but based on some real data), with its star systems, stars, planets, moons, anomalies, extraterrestrial life, and much more. The level of detail, adjusted to the laws of physics (with the necessary licenses and fictional elements), is astonishing; nothing is placed randomly, everything has a reason for being. The game's lore is exceptional, starting with the novel "The Dark Wheel," which immerses you in an interactive cinematic experience. Furthermore, the ability to disembark from the ship and explore planets and space stations on foot was a pleasant surprise. Now, I eagerly await the next update.

CI

Greetings pilots

I play Elite Dangerous, because I love space and everything that is connected with it, and this is my favorite game allows me to fly to places where the foot of man will not soon set foot, to see the phenomena, striking with its beauty and power able to not leave behind you even dust, celestial bodies striking with their colors and sizes, to land on a small, distant planet and enjoy the sunrises and sunsets of the majestic star, it is quite meditative.

Though I've played for hours (though I think some have played dozens of times more), I haven't visited even a hundredth of all the places, if not more, that I can reach.

Elite Dangerous gives a lot of opportunities to find your favorite thing to do, of course not everyone can understand and accept these opportunities, but the one who found, knows the joy of this event, staying for many hours in the vast emptiness illuminated by the stars for the sake of achieving the goal that is beyond the horizon.

That's what I like about Elite Dangerous, because it gives you the opportunity to get what you can't get in other games, and I'm glad for it.

A

I remember being enraptured by Kubrik's film 2001 when I first saw it on television as a child, which led me to Clarke's novel of the same (and others–Clarke is still my favourite SF author). In college, I was introduced to Frontier: Elite II (though it was half a decade past its release) and instantly falling love with this game that let you experience the vastness of space and interact with a civilisation spread among the stars. When Elite: Dangerous was gathering funding via Kickstarter, I was thrilled, and naturally contributed. Here, then, is a game that does what few others have attempted: it merges the awe and wonder of real astronomy with a dynamic, populated game world, and doesn't tie you to a specific activity. More than that, it has the courage to represent full-size planets that, when you wander their surface, convey even more the sense of vastness and subtlety of variation that is found in reality.

Block9's avatar

To start, the game is massive, and for someone like me who loves exploring open-world games like Elite Dangerous, it’s perfect. I’m really into astronomy and space travel, and this game delivers that in the most realistic way possible—with accurate gravity and realistic distances. The game is absolutely incredible. I never get tired of taking trips in my Fleet Carrier and then flying over planets with stunning views. Some have dunes and mountains under a slightly blue sky, while others are covered in ice, with gorgeous glaciers and icy mountains that have this subtle reflection on the surface.

What keeps me coming back is the sheer thrill of exploring the universe. Everyone loves a good road trip or plane ride around the world, and for me, playing Elite Dangerous gives me that same feeling—but across the galaxy. It’s the closest I’ll ever get to seeing a star up close or a planet thousands of light-years away from Earth.

The graphics and the characters are so realistic... I could honestly write a whole book about how amazing Elite Dangerous is and how perfectly it maps out our galaxy.

If you’re into space and the universe, like something straight out of the movies, Elite Dangerous really stands out. The addition of aliens (Thargoids) makes the game even more amazing. The sounds and audio effects still give me chills—it’s such an incredible adrenaline rush. I’m pretty sure I’m not the only one who feels this way when playing.

Anyway, even though these words are translated, they’re written with all the passion I have for this incredible game. <3

*this text was translated by an AI translator

FEBRIAN_574H's avatar

It's feel so fun when you on dashboard and image like a space pilot and also you can fight with enemy like a modern space wars

K03y's avatar

After joining justabout.com I noticed this game by accident.

At first I wasn't interested in it but after taking a closer look at it, I came to the conclusion that it might be worth playing and taking a closer look at it.

Ever since I was a kid I've been interested in extraterrestrial life. Maybe that's why I decided to try it.

I've never looked for games of this type, only after seeing this community here, I decide to check it out.

At first I thought I'd have to spend a lot of money to buy it, but it turned out to be quite the opposite.

After buying it and launching it on my laptop, I got a little embarrassed that I wouldn't be able to handle it and understand it (my English isn't very good).

I spent a few hours playing it. It's probably not much, but I think I will spend many more hours in it because it looks amazing...

I like a few things about it:

The sounds are nicely chosen and matched together.
A very extensive system/planets/maps.
The ability to modify the spaceship and characters.
Several career modes.
Graphics and effects.
Overall, the whole game looks very elaborate!

While slowly traveling in a spaceship, I feel incredibly good. This game really stimulates the imagination of what our life looks like. There, high above us...💫

USCSS's avatar

Hello Commanders

I have always been curious about space and everything up there. When I first discovered this game, I was struck by the fact that it has the galaxy in 1:1 scale. When I first started playing Elite Dangerous, I found it to be a fascinating game, but at the same time very complicated because of the mechanics it had. That led me to stop playing the game and uninstall it. Then, when the Odyssey DLC came out, it caught my attention and I reinstalled it and gave it a second chance. I started watching tutorials on YouTube to learn the game mechanics. Once I started learning the game mechanics, I realized that this game is so beautiful that I have spent over 1800 hours playing it. I have even traveled the galaxy from end to end.

The feeling of freedom it offers is unmatched. There is no fixed path. I can choose to be a peaceful trader, a lone explorer, a bounty hunter, or even a pirate feared by all. That freedom of choice is what makes every session unique and personal.

From the most intense space combat to the silent exploration of remote nebulas, every moment is a new adventure.

Plus, the developers continually add content and improvements, meaning there's always something new to discover and do.

Another thing I really like about this game is its community. The Elite Dangerous community is one of the most passionate and supportive I've ever met. In the Spanish-speaking community I'm in, many of the players are older, married, and have children. That makes the community characterized by respect and solidarity. There's always someone willing to help you, share advice, or just enjoy the company while you explore space.

I definitely found Elite Dangerous to be a unique game that I can enjoy with a community that shares the same passion for space.

(Translate with Google Translate)

XCezor's avatar

Sci-Fi content is something unique in current times. Sometimes I just feel bad that we cannot go into space like we go outside every day to the shop but that's when space simulators come into place.

Elite Dangerous is one of those unique games where we can see pretty reasonable development of advanced technology (if Frame Shift Drive even counts as a possible to research technology). We don't have too much fantasy stuff here and deep lore really adds more depth into this whole universe.

Every aspect of the game, from simple bounty hunting through exploration, politics, asteroid mining and many other things makes Elite feel very realistic, where ships have hard-set limits and aren't simple powerful destruction tools.

Many people find this kind of realism kinda boring, I have some friends that have that feeling but this is exactly what attracts me to this game. It's a great sandbox where you can affect develop of the humanity with trade, missions and participating in wars/elections/community goals and in the nearby future, also by colonizing whole new systems by yourself or with your squadron.

So I think that's why I really like this game. It's not over complicated when you learn the basic activities and mechanics, and the fact that, even with this realism, nothing here forces you to play any specific role makes you feel really free in this almost infinity amount of space to travel. And I can enjoy the sci-fi I would like to encounter in my life and which I can only dream about.

TrialByStory's avatar

Everybody needs a game to just kind of, as I put it, 'zen out' to. For a lot of folks, that ends up being some kind of stereotypical cozy game, often a farming sim like Stardew Valley or a life sim like Animal Crossing. The specific game doesn't matter, just the mental state it gets you into where you're relaxed and able to focus on your tasks without any external pressure or time constraints beyond what you place on yourself. I bounce around a lot of games to fill that niche, including the afforementioned Stardew Valley as well as Satisfactory and No Man's Sky, but one that I found myself coming back to over and over is Elite Dangerous.

Which might seem like an odd choice, since Elite is a game that's pretty action-oriented, you fight pirates & other players, dodge system authorities to smuggle goods, and take a stand on the galactic stage for the super power you're willing to pledge yourself to. But Elite is a game that prides itself on having a variety of ways to interact with its world and forge your own story, as evidenced by this image I pulled from Reddit when I was trying (semi-successfully) to convince my friends to join me in the game:

My chosen way of enjoying Elite is via trade. I build up a high-cargo, long-range freighter, plan out and optimize my route, throw on some Deep Purple and go Space Truckin'. And the kind of flow state my mind gets into when I do is exactly what I"m looking for whenever I jump into the cockpit.

St4r_Lord's avatar

I was inspired by the stories about the Fuel Rats, especially the story when they delivered fuel to a pilot at the end of the galaxy who miscalculated the amount of fuel for the return trip, and also the stories about the Distant Worlds expedition. Personally, I love the freedom this game gives, I am an explorer myself and the sight of large clusters of plants on planets still makes me happy, even though there are often not that many of them, especially not as many as Frontier promised years ago, but looking at the last year it may change. . Of course, apart from the great views, I really like the quality of sound and music this game offers, using the boost on some ships is very satisfying. Colonization is also taking place and I can't wait until I can build the system with my squadron the way we want. I also really hope that they will allow us to build cities next to cities on planets to have such a large metropolis. I also love that you can build your ship however you want, you can have a balanced ship, but you can also build an Anaconda for fun to fly into other ships and destroy them. Playing alone doesn't have to be boring, but it must be admitted that bounty hunting in a group of four is a very cool and profitable activity, or that feeling when you, together with others, destroyed Hydra after 30 minutes. These are the main factors why I LOVE Elite and look forward to the next Frontier Unlocked.

MQC's avatar

When I was a kid, many of my fantasies about being a space pilot were fulfilled with some space games (hello Codename MAT) that I had on my Amstrad CPC. But even back then, I imagined how interesting and fun it would be to play in a big universe, without barriers, without obligations, where I could do, as a player, whatever I wanted, and not just shoot at enemy ships of another race. While that idea of gameplay was later realised by open-world sandbox games, at the time it seemed impossible to realise... until I discovered Elite. I think, for those who didn't experience it, it can be hard to understand what that masterpiece meant to many.

Subsequently, both Frontier: Elite II and Frontier: First Encounters further satisfied my longing for a space game set in an open world with no limits, but I think it's easy to understand what Elite Dangerous meant to that child, now an adult, but still with that same desire.

Being a bounty hunter, a pirate, or fighting for your power, is tremendously appealing. The fights in ED are challenging and fun, and configuring ships and engineering them to find setups that suit your needs is a rewarding challenge every time you do it. I certainly won't be the one to say otherwise.

But I'm the kind of player who really enjoys getting lost in the black for weeks at a time, visiting systems you know no other player has visited yet (and probably won't), mining asteroids in the middle of the milky way, or taking endless quiet routes as a galactic trucker between thousands of bubble stations.

The possibility of having such a huge universe, with so many places to visit, so much trade to do, so many socio-economic and political changes, with those rare commodities that can only be obtained in a hundred systems, with the generational ships and tourist beacons, the secrets of alien races, the infinite random events, the notable stellar phenomenas, the planetary surfaces and their exobiology, all this, makes ED that game that any sci-fi lover, who dreams of losing himself in his favourite entertainment, must forcibly adore.

And, as contradictory as it may sound, for me it is key to be able to experience all that gameplay without having the ‘obligation’ of sharing each session, and therefore being playably dependent on other human players. Although I know for a fact that it is a complex and controversial topic, personally, the option of being able to carry out game sessions in ‘Solo’ is the perfect icing on the immense cake that is this impressive game, which although some mistakenly think that it is now 10 years old, for many it is really a dream that came true 40 longs years ago.

Translated with DeepL.com

A

What originally drew me to Elite: Dangerous was simply the promise of a modern reworking of the original 1984 Elite (a game I adored and played obsessively on the BBC Micro back in 1984). What has kept me playing is the fact that Elite: Dangerous has more than lived up to that promise.

Two major factors are that it provides an accurate 1:1 simulation of our actual galaxy and a superbly well thought out flight model. The second in particular bears closer scrutiny.

At the galactic level we have a fantastic interactive map and route plotting facility with well thought out trade offs around weight, jump range and fuel which all go to make galactic travel something we have to actively participate in, both when building ships and when navigating vast interstellar distances.

At the intra-system level we have supercruise travel. The way this supports real time travel across a mind boggling range of scales (from hundreds of thousands of light seconds down to hundreds of kilometers) through a web of gravitational fields which mean that racing towards in-system destinations is something I've spent ten years mastering, that is a work of unsung genius!

And lastly, we have real space travel using a brilliantly implemented flight model that lends real weight and character to every single ship and, through the use of flight assist, provides both atmospheric and Newtonian styles of behaviour and control to suit all but the most demanding of tastes.

Combine all this with what is widely acknowledged to be some of the best sound design out there and you have a space flight simulation that's still unrivaled ten years after it was first created.

S

for me Elite Dangerous, represents something special, I love space games, and I like this not only for the vastness of the map, that is, the game represents the entire milky way, but also for various activities that a player can do, for example you can go around exploring the various systems and sell cartographic data to the various stations present in the bubble, you can land on some planets and explore them with a rover or on foot if you have the Odyssey expansion. other activities that can be done are Miner, the bounty Hunter, the merchant and the taxi driver in addition to Exobiology and espionage missions. furthermore the game allows you to share a persistent galaxy between all the modes for example it is possible to play in solo mode (without being able to meet other players) and have the galaxy shared between Open and Private players, and it is possible if you have Odyssey to land together with friends on the planets and explore them together obviously the Landable ones as long as they also have the expansion, it is possible to create Squadrons and much more.

A very interesting thing is the vast number of ships that you can have each with its own characteristics and design obviously the ships are customizable both in modules and aesthetics such as skins and objects for the cockpit.

Elite Dangerous is also a game that is always evolving, between wars with aliens and battles between factions and much more, apart from the difficulty at the beginning, but once the game takes you, you can't stop playing it, I've been playing it for several months and I must say that it has never bored me both for the fact that the map is immense over 400 billion systems and for the vastness of things to unlock such as bonuses if you are allied to a powerplay, I also like the fact that you can change powerplay at any time but losing the progress made with the one you had joined, in short, so much stuff. the game as already mentioned is constantly evolving and then on a graphic level the game does not weigh much.

The main things that drive me to play Elite are

  • huge maps

  • various game activities

  • graphically light and not too heavy

  • ability to walk down to landable planets and explore them alone or with friends

J/

Because it is closest as anyone living on Earth today will ever get to interstellar travel.

Y0EMINENCE's avatar

Well I started on the launch of the Xbox version not knowing anything finding the starting information by myself, then finding the bubble screen and realizing that the game was in the infancy and thinking to myself this is boring I will need to wait couple years before it gets interesting. Finally got into coast to coast am and picked up the audio book “battlefield earth” and thinking of elite dangerous being inspired to play it again. As my journey parallels the book “And Here the Wheel” not knowingly I had joined a federation group I found. Knowing that starting my own would be massive task I decided to just help a leader out. The group was highly racist and exploited players, I trudged along getting drunk one night and wanting to hang out with them. The combined decided to make an example out of me and flaunted booting me. I broke out in rage over Xbox live chat telling them various things and they all shut up, to be fly on the wall…I vowed to start my own, not knowing about player created factions. I succeeded in making my real earth history player factions and reading the elite dangerous books to find out that “and here the wheel” predicted my factions and the events in the game being shocked! Also as young boy playing “Colony Wars”

Y0EMINENCE's avatar

Authentic true story how real player factions were created in Elite Dangerous, definitely more than a participant title.

DU

Elite Dangerous is interesting because in my opinion I think it is one of the most immersive and complete space simulators, constantly expanding, I mean there are billions of systems to explore, a lifetime wouldn't be enough to do it. As a space lover, as was the case with No Man's Sky, there is always something to discover and explore, the game never has an end.

The level of detail is fantastic, even with a medium/low PC in terms of requirements, the game shows off a significant graphics section, details for both the spaceship and the scenario. The really cool thing is that, as happens in reality, if there is an attributed discovery, it is possible to take credit for it.

And obviously a space simulator isn't a space simulator without black holes, galaxies and nebulae, you get lost in the immensity of Elite Dangerous, you spend more time exploring and admiring the cosmos than doing anything else, wondering if there is something to discover nearby , which perhaps no one else has seen. Even though it's winter, I think playing Elite in the middle of summer, with a beautiful starry sky outside and a cold drink, is really ideal.

However, I believe that it is a rather immense game and it is one of those games that you have to dedicate yourself to completely, consequently taking up a lot of time, you have to abandon other titles, but it's worth it.

Stormseeker's avatar

Thanks for using my screen on the post!! o7

Alex Sinclair's avatar

Thanks for sharing it with us! o7

mastercesspit's avatar

I started playing just after the new engineering came in,(luckily or i would've walked away with what I'd been told of the old system,)

i am an engineer IRL, (or was until i retired) so the game captured my imagination with the engineering grind, the progression of upgrades, and the results from such endeavours,

the graphics are secondary to me, the game mechanics are all, I've played a lot of games, and the penchant for ultra high def graphics by dev's is mind boggling, i mean the human eye is not capable of discerning anything above HD, the rest is the emperor's new clothes, but the easily confused when confronted with "the game mechanics are flawed" just answer with "but it's a beautiful game", so what if it doesn't work???????

although elite dangerous is flawed and the basic mechanics are a bit dodgy, (either that or the servers are inadequate) it actually works, (if you can put up with getting kicked constantly when server traffic is high during community goals or the WAR days of recent times) I've stuck with it for over 8 years, and amassed over 64 weeks of actual game time,

I'm pretty much a loner, very occasionally teaming up with friends to do combat, so the fact that wings are basically flawed, and it's hit and miss that you will actually sync with your friends, or that the wing will stay stable doesn't bother me, nor the massive lag spikes when in wing,

I've always loved space games, from star fury or battle zone a long time ago, through halo and many more, but ED is the most comprehensive engaging of them,

to tell you the truth, I DON'T know why I've stuck with the game for so long, considering the dev's mentality, and their behaviour to the majority of players and their penchant to appease the vocal minorities, mainstream players don't go vocal on social media, they walk away and find another game, as most intelligent people do when faced with woke minority vocalism, as is shown in the finances of companies that pander to woke minorities, it's true, go woke, go broke,

i think the saving grace with ED is "blaze your own trail", you can pretty much choose your own path, do what you want, although it is difficult to avoid being caught up in the latest "FAD", it is possible to minimise exposure and avoid the "crowd mentality"

all in all, i think the positives outweigh the negatives, although ED isn't my go to game anymore, i still enjoy the trail I've blazed, and the achievements I've gained, and I'll keep "blazing my own trail" and let the sheep be led by pretty lights and the promise of greener pastures in a drought, what can i say?, but that it's a love hate relationship with the game and the devs.

have fun 07

Alex Sinclair's avatar

Hi mastercesspit, thanks for entering this reward - that’s a mighty impressive amount of game time!

While you’ve mentioned a few reasons to play Elite, we've decided not to award this submission as we don't feel it properly meets the brief (in that it outlines several reasons not to play the game) or (in some of those reasons) the ethos of Just About.

mastercesspit's avatar

thanks alex, i understand, never expected for the sponsors to reward that, it would be counter productive.

ask a question, get an honest answer, my answers aren't financially influenced, just my opinion, based on, as you said, an impressive amount of experience, it is what it is.

have fun 07

F

Elite Dangerous is like stepping into the sci-fi dream I’ve had since I was a kid. The second I sit in my cockpit, fire up those engines, and hear that deep, satisfying hum, it’s like I’m actually there. The galaxy is massive—like, mind-blowingly huge—and it makes you feel so small, but in the best possible way.

I love the freedom it gives me. One day, I’m hauling rare goods across star systems, carefully plotting my routes to avoid pirates. The next, I’m out in the black, scanning undiscovered systems, naming planets, and soaking in those breathtaking views of nebulae and distant stars. And then, when I’m feeling a little wild, I’ll gear up my ship, turn off flight assist, and dive into the chaos of a dogfight, pulling off maneuvers that make me feel like the hero of my own space opera.

There’s just something so satisfying about mastering the controls, learning the systems, and realizing that this massive galaxy is yours to explore however you want. Every session feels like a personal adventure, and honestly? I don’t think I’ll ever get tired of it

J

There’s something about Elite Dangerous that keeps drawing me back, despite the years passing. It’s not just the vastness of the galaxy or the thrill of exploring uncharted space—it’s the freedom it offers. In no other game do I feel quite as immersed in the endless possibilities that space presents. Whether I’m cruising through the rings of an ice planet, engaging in intense dogfights with Thargoids, or trading my way through the economy, every moment feels like an adventure. One of the biggest appeals of Elite Dangerous is the sense of scale. The fact that the game’s universe is one-to-one with real space is both humbling and exhilarating. Every time I plot a course to a distant system, it feels like I’m actually traveling. And it’s not just about reaching a destination—it’s about the journey. The game doesn’t hold your hand, and there’s no clear path forward, which means every choice I make feels significant. But beyond the gameplay, there’s the community. Over the years, I’ve connected with fellow commanders who share the same passion for exploring, fighting, and building within this universe. We may be spread out across the galaxy, but there’s a camaraderie that makes Elite Dangerous more than just a game—it’s a shared experience, and that’s what keeps me coming back.

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Rewards (and other cool stuff) inside!

Not only are there great reward submissions to check out, but some of the best conversations on the internet are happening here - and our members are getting rewarded for having them. Don't miss out!

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