All I know is that the universe economy is utterly broken. Not that is matters, really, but the prices are all over the place
Starfield
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Agreed. Ships are way too cheap for so few people to have one. Not being a captain in starfield would be comparable to not being able to drive a car today.
Personally I'd like to see some changes that balance economy better for a survival mode alongside some other gameplay changes ala Fallout 4
Ship depreciation is a killer. The moment you fly it off the lot it loses about 90% of it's value!
Yeah. It might make sense that people living in the cities wouldn't bother with a ship, but all of the settlers living on a moon alone would absolutely have a starship parked outside their habs given the price tags. Also would definitely have some kind of Rover to get around.
The entire economy needs a reboot. Food is almost useless as a healing item, and niche for other players. But food costs more than, and sell for more than, resources. Resources are heavy and worth almost nothing.
Maybe buying a ship should be a few million. Ships in space could have a self destruction mini game or something. But making ships much more rare would give the impression that the frontier is actually a ln amazing gift.
For the love of God, I'm going to mod most of this but give the vendors more money. The trade authority should not have as much money as skyrim merchants.
The physical scale of this game is amazing, slap a few zeros and the world will feel more Alice. Things will feel like rewards.
I also wondered about this. I guess it involves their era's trending cryptographic standards implemented as an easy to carry local device with enough processing power. It's 200 years in the future, so that shouldn't be an issue.
It also made me laugh a bit when the video Supra et Ultra showed the Vanguard volunteer getting compensated with increasing amount of credits, shown as a pile of credsticks - it's all digital, so why bother piling up?
I suppose some in-game explanations are possible. If such devices have a "storage limit", then it simply becomes a math problem. Or, the UC being infatuated with regulations, they could have come up with rules like "multiples of standard fiscal unit (e.g. 1000) each stored in standard credit-storage devices are to be used as method of monetary compensation".