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Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Skill Training 2 - Intermediate

So I have given an overview of skill training but I would like to expand a little more on what else I have learnt in my time in EvE. This post will break down the skill training into 3 different categories to give you a better grounding to work from.

Core Skills: These skills I would consider are essential that you at least research and understand as they are the grounding for future endeavours and can have a significant impact on your ability to pursue a particular career path. They have an effect on various core components of your ship no matter which ship you choose to fly or career path you take. They are also skills that you will be "required" to have in the future as you progress through into flying more advanced ships. These are the skills I research and prioritise early once I have the essential skills I need to pursue my intended career path. I will also ignore some of these initially where it will have no impact on my future plans. ie. specialising in Caldari shield tanking ships may mean I never choose to pursue Repair Systems or at least delay this until needed.

Capacitor Systems Operation: Reduced recharge time for capacitor (significantly affects your stability)
Capacitor Management: Additional capacitor capacity (significantly affects your stability)
Navigation: Opens up various other navigational skills
Jury Rigging: Opens up various other specialised rigging skills
Science: Opens up various other specialised science capabilities
Spaceship Command: Opens up various specialised spaceship skills
Shield Operation: Basic shield repair skills (you may want to skip this initially if you are focused on armor repair)
Mechanics: Opens up various specialised skills and adds additional structure hit points
Repair Systems: Basic Armor repair skills (you may want to skip this initially if you are focused on shield repair)
Drones: Basic Drone use capability and enable the specialisation of drone types.
Corporation Management: Allows the basic control of a corporation
Gunnery: Basic Gunnery skills for turrets
Leadership: Basic Leadership skills for leading fleets
Missile Launcher operation: Basic Missile launcher operation
Cybernetics: Allows the use of Implants
Industry: Basic Industry Skills for those interested in and industry career path
Mining: Basic Mining capability
Astrometrics: Basic exploration or scanning capability
Social: Increases your standing with NPCs
Target Management: Allows multiple targets to be selected
Trade: Increases your ability to have additional Buy and Sell orders

Fitting Skills: These skills have a significant effect on what you are able to fit on your ship. Again do your research as some may specifically relate to fitting bonuses that you may never need. You may not need to consider this if you never intend to get in a fight or don't need to maximise what you utilise in your ships and are pursuing other career paths first but at least understand what these are.

Powergrid Management: Increased powergrid availability
CPU Management: Increased cpu availability
Specialised Rigging: Carefully review your rigs and ensure that you understand the drawbacks associated with them. Each level of Launcher Rigging for example reduces the drawbacks by 10%. When you look at adding rigs to your ship that increase missile damage they typically have a drawback that increases the cpu usage of your fitted missile launchers!
Weapon Upgrades: Reduced CPU requirement for weapons.
Advanced Weapon Upgrades: This is often overlooked early on but should be considered particulary if you are trying to fit the best offensive modules on your ship Reduces the powergrid needs by up to 10% at level 5.
Energy Grid Upgrades: Reduces the CPU cost of modules that require this skill
Electronics Upgrades: Reduces the CPU cost of modules that require this skill
Shield Upgrades: Reduces the Powergrid cost of modules that require this skill

Hopefully I haven't missed anything glaringly obvious but I am writing most of these off the top of my head and by looking at my own characters.

Other Skills: There are many more skills and these will really specialise on your intended career path. You may want to miss a lot of what I have listed above if you only intend to trade in a station but at least you have a little more direction and clarity around some of the more ship orientated skill requirements.

PS: This is based on my experience and I generally like to fly around and shoot things efficiently.

Remember, fly dangerous, I can see my house from here!



Sunday, 28 September 2014

Skill Training in EvE

One of the first questions people ask about EvE is "What Skills do I Train?". There are a few things you should know initially that will help you train faster and give you some confidence that you at least have a basic idea of how it works. This is a complex topic when you understand how it all works and you should spend some time researching this further when you get a chance.

Can I train the wrong skills from the start? NO
First of all let me start with this. If you have chosen to pursue a particular skill at the start of the game or even a particular skill path that you suddenly decide to change then don't restart and create a new character. There is no need and it will not be any faster to create a new character and start again. Keep those skills you have trained and just switch to the new ones you wish to pursue. My first character has skills all over the place but when I look to pursue different paths during my time in game the skills I trained early on have had a definitive impact on shortening some of the requirements at a later date!

What should I train from the start?
There is no skill you should train from the start unless you have already decided which path you wish to pursue. There used to be a skill that improved training time but this no longer exists so train what you wish to train. Follow the introduction and pickup the skill books it provides and train those as needed would be my best suggestion. Get a taste for what the game involves and what interests you and then pursue a particular skill path from there. You CAN'T go wrong, any skill you train will be useful to you at some point further down the track. I would also suggest that maybe you should not pursue training any skills to level 5 unless you require it for a particular path you have chosen. At least not in the first 3 months.

Skill training looks like it will take a long time, how can I speed this up? 
There are effectively 2 ways to do this, both of which relate to your basic stats and utilising both can significantly reduce your training times. Both of these have their risks though much like everything in EvE. These stats are recorded on your character sheet and are listed as follows, Intelligence, Wisdom, Memory, Perception and Charisma. All skills have a primary and secondary stat that has an effect on how quickly you can train that skill. If you increase the stats related to the skill you are training then your training time will be reduced.
Method 1: Stat Remap. Firstly you need to know that these are limited. Be careful in choosing a particular remap because from memory you start with 2 free remaps and you get a new remap every 12 months. You may want to hold off on this until you have a clear direction that you wish to pursue, so I would suggest utilising this facility only once you have decided on at least 6 months worth of training. You could end up with no remaps available and very LONG training times if you have reduced stats in something you need to train!
Method 2: Implants. These can be bought off the in game market and depending on the level of implant they increase your individual stats according to the implant slot they are associated with. You can only have one implant per slot and each slot relates to a specific stat. These are also found on your character sheet. If your pod is destroyed then your implants are destroyed with it and you will need to replace them if your clone is activated. So be careful in the utilisation of these particularly if you are inserting the most expensive bonus stats to your character. You must also train cybernetics to implant these and the higher the bonus the higher the training required.



I want to fly the biggest baddest ship in game as quickly as possible because then I can just explode everything that moves!
Training Battleships to 5 may not be the best start. I respect your decision but there is no easy mode to this game. You will quickly learn that flying a battleship, for example, is not always going to be the most effective way to win a battle. You might consider that a frigate, if flown well and correctly built, can evade the attacks of a battleship indefinitely. The said frigate can also stop you from moving effectively and "hold" you in place until assistance arrives. Bigger is not necessarily better if you can't fit the battleship properly and don't have an understanding of how the game mechanics work. I would suggest that you don't try to push past cruiser in the first 3 months but hey, it is a sandbox, go nuts!

Are there any tools out there to assist? YES and use them!
There are various tools that use the EvE API (allows 3rd party applications to access some of you account details but NOT those that would allow them to actually access your account or make any changes). Please do your research until you are confident that providing an application with your specific API key is safe. Basically your API allows these applications usually built by players to access the character details and only DISPLAY them. You cannot change the skills you are training without logging into EvE for example but by the use of your API an application can display what you are currently are training or have trained.
So here are a couple that I use - again please do your research as to where you are downloading these from and utilise them at your own risk, I have no affiliation with them!

EFT (on my PC) - assists in building new ships as it allows you to identify what modules you can fit on a ship and what requirements you need to train in skills for a specific fit of modules.
EvEMon (on my PC) - Displays what you are currently training and can definitely assist in creating training plans!
Neocom (on my iPad) - I haven't found any other "apps" out there but I do like this one. It is well thought out and easy to use. Kind of a combination of the first two.

There are likely many more out there so don't just stick to these.


Remember, fly dangerous, it doesn't affect your skill queue, or does it!



Thursday, 25 September 2014

What is Eve?

This may be an extended post as I tend to waffle on a little and get into a little too much detail at times. I will try, in this post, to summarise my view on what Eve is for a person who may just be wondering what the hell I have been waffling on about.

What type of game is Eve: Eve is an MMO (Massively Multiplayer Online) game. Players can roleplay (basically assume the characteristics of the type of player they wish to play) or as most people I have interacted with they just form a community of like minded people and have fun enjoying the game. Some people prefer to play it solo.

You pay a fee of approx. $15-$20 per month for access to your account but there are not, well not that I have been made aware of, any additional fees required to enjoy the experience.

You also need a stable internet connection to play.

What is Eve about: In Eve you are a space pilot. You have been made immortal via the use of clones and as such your character can never completely die. You utilise a pod to insert yourself into various types of ships. If your ship is destroyed you can obtain a new one by purchasing a new ship with in game currency and you can store a multitude of ships in various locations throughout space. When your ship is destroyed your pod is ejected. The pod can also be destroyed and if this occurs your clone is activated and you start from wherever this is stored. Your clone carries over all your skills and your in game currency + stored items and ships.

What can I do in Eve: This is where Eve differs from most other games. It is a "sandbox". In essence it is one playing field with everyone able to interact with anyone else who is online. You can trade, you can fight, you can run missions, you can mine for ore, you can manufacture, you can "invent" items (you don't discover anything new, just invent from basic items to more advanced items, more like upgrading!), you can commit piracy, you can "own" space, you can hunt other players down, act as a mercenary, the choices are endless. For example, one particular player created a gambling site in Eve that was so successful he had enough in game currency to support other entities within the game with their in game funds and essentially help them to continue to operate the services they were operating.

You can do practically anything in game that the game mechanics allow that does not reasonably affect a person in their normal life. This can be a little fuzzy and is a point for discussion that I am not going to enter into here so let me give you an example of what is likely considered ok vs what would likely get you banned. If you choose to enter a corporation and build their trust to a point that they give you particular rights that enable you to control their assets you can then sell off those assets, disband the corporation, steal all their funds and there will be no penalty applied to you for these actions other then those applied by other characters in game such as hunting you down or putting a bounty on your head. On the other hand if you choose to hold the actual people behind the characters to ransom by such things as requiring them to video themselves performing the "ice bucket" challenge and provide the video to yourself for them to obtain their in game assets back then that likely steps over the line.

What areas are there in space: For the purpose of this overview I will keep this at a high level. There are 4 main "areas" of space. These are based around their "security" level with two types effectively having no security but with definitive differences that require a differentiation. I will be expanding on my explanations of these in future posts.

Highsec (High Security Space): This is where your character starts the game. The four main character races own and police this space. It is the safest place to operate in and is basically the "center" of the in game star systems. It is considered safe as it is unlikely you will be targeted and or destroyed except under specific circumstances. A lot of players rarely leave Highsec. If you choose to kill someone in Highsec you will be targeted and destroyed by the NPC (Non player Character) police force that operates and patrols these systems. This doesn't mean you can shoot another player it just means there are consequences for your actions that are more severe in this area of space then others.

Lowsec (Low Security Space): This is basically a ring of systems surrounding Highsec that have less security. There are no NPC police ships in these areas. There are NPC Police guns located at specific locations that will attack you for inappropriate actions. Pirates love this space. You are unable to own space in this area other then holding it by the fact you can control it through numbers and by effectively restricted people from operating within that space.

Nullsec (Null Security Space): This is the outer ring of systems that continue on until known space ends. There is no security in this space, unless it is player run security. Players can own and control this space, they can build their own stations, they can shoot anyone without fear of consequence and generally I would consider it a free for all!

WH Space (Wormhole Space): For the purpose of this I can going to say this is "random space". Basically when you travel from system to system in all other space you use a stargate. You know where this leads. For WH space you use a Wormhole which could be considered a temporary gate that only lasts a few days. With wormholes you do not know where they lead or even when they will start! They can only be tracked down via exploration and can appear anywhere within Highsec, Lowsec or Nullsec. I would consider there to be even less security in WH Space then Nullsec due to the fact that you don't definitively know who is in your system or when the next "connection" to your space will occur.

Skills: There is no "levelling" in the traditional MMO sense of the word in EvE. You don't gain points for killing things or for mining ore. You actually train in Real Time. There are a massive amount of skills in the game from more effective offensive and defensive capabilities to better exploration and mining skills. What this means is that you choose to train what you want to train and it is training even when you are not logged on to EvE. If you choose to train to shoot missiles more effectively this may take you 40 minutes in real time to train to level 1. To train to level 2 may take 2 hours and so on. You can queue these up to a certain point so aren't required to log in every time a skill is complete.

Politics: If you research EvE and look at how it has evolved over the 10+ years you will be amazed at how corporations within the game have risen and have fallen. There are ceasefires negotiated in Nullsec, there are rental agreements made between controlling corporations and those that would like to use the space they have under their control, there are corporations that join together to form alliances and all of these need to be managed from financial management right through to recruitment and diplomatic negotiation.

In essence Eve is an amazing game in which you do what you want to do, just be careful everyone else is doing what they want to do!

Come join us if you haven't tried it already and if you have, come back if you can!

Free Trial: Enjoy Eve for 21 days for free 

This is just a summary of what Eve is about, do some research and you will find there is a whole lot out there that both CCP (Eve Creators) and the players have created to give you an understanding of the game.

Remember, fly dangerous, don't stay in Highsec!

Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Longinius Spear

I was disappointed just the other day to see one of my favourite podcasters choose to leave EvE. I can only hope that he hasn't gone forever but I do fully respect his choice to leave the game for whatever reason that may be. I wanted to put this out there so that he can see that the effort he put in to the game of Eve when not griefing other Wormholers had a positive effect on the game as a whole. To be honest I think his playstyle added much to the risk vs reward element of Eve online and I had no issues whatsoever with how he interacted with other players online.

I may be biased as he is a fellow Aussie but I just liked his eternal optimism (hmmmm, probably wasn't quite so eternal!) and the fact that he took all the changes on board with generally good humour. He had a very unique view on how he played Eve, he was pretty evil in game on occassion, but I just got the feeling he was a good bloke.

I was a bit taken aback by his recent posts on his blog invadingyourhole.blogspot.com and his choice to take things personally but I also respect his choice to take a stand on something he feels so strongly about.

What I take from this relates somewhat to my previous post. People invest so much in this game it can almost become a job, For some they may actually spend more time on Eve then working. If I have invested 10 years in a company, given and continue to give my all, and then all of a sudden been treated with disrespect I will lose my %^#*. I think Spear invested a lot in Eve. Communication over the internet is a very subjective medium. You have to be very careful about what you say as it can be taken in many different ways depending on how that reader perceives what you have put forward. For example, IF I WAS TO TYPE IN ALL CAPS most people would presume I am shouting but maybe I just have an eyesight problem and this is how I am required to effectively communicate.

It doesn't take much for someone to be pushed over the edge if they are only a meter away, with EvE it is my opinion that for a component of the player base the longer you play the closer to the edge you get until all of a sudden there is just ..... space (pun not intended).

Eve is a game you invest in so much, it is difficult to enjoy without investing time and effort so it actually becomes part of your life for the majority of players. I love it, but I have taken a couple of extended breaks. This game just keeps drawing people back in. I hope it draws Longinius Spear back to the fold. You will be missed mate.

Remember, fly dangerous, Eve is real!

Tuesday, 23 September 2014

CCP - EvE is a Great Game

This post was not originally planned for my initial run of 10 posts but I am feeling the need to put in my 2 cents.

I am an avid podcast listener and as I travel an hour to and from work every day I get a good opportunity to listen to various opinions on Eve from Wormhole PvP through to Highsec Carebears and Nullsec Alliances. I also read a few blogs when I get a chance.

What concerns me, and this is no way "across the board", is that there are a lot of people out there that are extremely critical of CCP. I struggle to comprehend this general consensus that CCP is badly run and are constantly making critical mistakes. It is easy to be critical of someone when you don't walk in their shoes.

Now I am not looking to get free game time or become a member of the CSM for all those conspiracy theorists out there but what I wanted to put out for discussion is the reasoning behind this public negative attitude towards CCP. I am well aware of some glaringly obvious scenarios such as the failure of World of Darkness and peoples also general view that Dust 514 did not meet the expectations of the community upon release. I personally see both of these as learnings for CCP as an organisation and as I wasn't involved in the actual decisions around how these were produced or why they were shut down after a rather large investment I don't feel the need to judge CCP for their decisions.

One of my previous managers once said to me "There will always be whinging, it's the level of whinging that you need to pay attention to". This comment was one of those moments in my life in which I had an epiphany about the psychology of us as humans and I see this quite evident in the psychology of EvE players as well.

For example, if people in an office are whinging about the colour of the carpet then that is not really a major concern for management. It is likely noted and when the time comes for new carpet it may well be considered that engaging with the staff about colour choice might be good for morale. But when the whinging relates to a virus in the computer system that is changing everyone's password 12 times a day and having a detrimental effect on their ability to do their jobs then this needs to be dealt with straight away. These are extreme examples of both ends of the spectrum and there needs to be someone or a group of someones that determine what priorities need to be met first. CCP are those someones where it relates to EvE.

Now as everyone knows CCP has limited resources. They need to monitor these types of issues closely and prioritise them appropriately. All I can say is before you be quite so critical and abuse CCP staff how about you consider all the hard work they have put into this game over the last 10 years. Take a step back and look what they have created as a whole and appreciate what it has become. Change is necessary for evolution and yes people and corporations make mistakes but how else would you learn? How else do you get better at what you do? Sometimes you need to go offtrack to realise you actually need to refocus.

Personally I love what CCP have created and I fully appreciate all the effort that has gone into the creation, maintenance and improvement of this game and will continue subscribing when time, funds and opportunity permit.

Constructive criticism can be so useful but how about suggesting a viable solution to the issues at hand along with your criticisms and providing this to CCP to allow them to assess and pursue those most critical to their current priorities. I have heard some awesome suggestions out there but more often then not it seems to be all about the negatives.

Lets make a change and push for the discussion of more positive aspects of the game, lets help CCP bring more subscribers to the game rather than give people an impression that maybe they shouldn't invest in this game like no other.

CCP keep up the good work.

Remember, fly dangerous, EvE is fun!


Monday, 22 September 2014

Most Devastating Time in EvE

Again so many to choose from, I will actually focus on two fail examples here in the same type of ship!

During my time in EvE I have lost many ships but two examples of how I lost these ships were rather more embarrassing then some others. I actually consider myself an efficient Pve'r and due to the enormous amount of resource out there this is not that difficult to achieve with a little research. You are going to lose ships in PvP, Pve on the other hand .....

Loss 1
Environment: Gallente Space Highsec
Activity: Exploration (Escalation)
Flying: Tengu (rather high cost fitting as I considered myself "safe")

Now Tengu's are the Caldari based Tech 3 Cruiser which are generally missile based dps and active shield tanked. I had a pretty standard fit which was pimped out so I could lazily explore and complete DED sites back before these got banned from entering the gates. All Tech 3 ships (one for each race) are arguably considered to be one of the most versatile ships in the game, to the point where some people actually won't use them as they consider them overpowered and "easy mode". They can also be rather *cough* expensive.

So I had been flying this for awhile now as I had built my skill set up to efficiently clear C3/C4 class wormhole sites with a few colleagues. When no one else was around I would do some exploration or Caldari Level 4 missions for some isk. These were extremely easy with my T3 and character's skill set.

So here I am clearing a few DED exploration sites in Caldari space and as experienced explorers would know sometimes you get yourself an escalation. This is where you clear a site and once cleared you are advised that another mission has been identified in which you are the only person that can complete it. These are also easy given the ship I was using. They give you a good chance of additional loot so they are worth doing.

An escalation generally takes you 5 jumps from where you currently are and may or may not escalate further. On this occasion I had completed the first escalation and was flying through highsec towards my second destination when without warning I jumped through a gate and a notification came up on my screen saying something like "Mhrdhr, you are not welcome in Gallente space, leave now or will will take action".

HOLY SHIT! what is going on. In about .3 of a second it all clicked. As I had been doing Caldari missions I had been killing Gallente ships which had in turn given me a negative rating with the Gallente race. The negative rating had become so bad that if I flew into Gallente space I was considered an enemy and would be shot by the NPC police.

Ok so this being my first time experiencing this issue I had to make a quick choice. I did not know the mechanics of how this worked and as such I really had 2 possibilities. I chose not to warp to somewhere else in the system as this would only put me "deeper" in Gallente space likely getting me killed for sure. So I made the choice to burn back to the gate and try to get back through into Caldari controlled space and safety.

As I quickly found out this was not the correct choice, I was about halfway back with absolutely all of my shields turned on and afterburner going flat out to get to the gate when the NPC police targeted me, webbed me to slow me down and absolutely smashed my poor T3 into dust. Given that my fit was set up to specifically defend against only 2 damage types I really had no chance.

Pro tip...... you can warp through "NPC enemy space" so long as you keep moving (DO NOT auto pilot!). In essence what I should have done was warp to another location in the system and warped back to the gate at 0 and jumped straight through.

My in game wallet and my internet feelings took a fair hit that day.

Loss 2
Environment: C4 Wormhole - connected to our home C3
Activity: PvE farming clearing anomalies
Flying: Tengu (rather high cost fitting as I had made a lot of isk and was showing off to my corpmates)

Its as simple as this. When you are flying with corpmates and take your most expensive ship out of the corp hanger in dangerous space to do PvE don't fall asleep at the keyboard!

For whatever reason (from memory something appeared on D-Scan, indicating a possible hostile force) our team clearing the last site for the night decided to get out of the wormhole we were in and dock up. Now it was roughly 1:30am local time and I had had a long week with more than a few late nights. There were plenty of NPC sleepers in the site we were clearing but at the point of our leader calling out to head home I had face planted on the keyboard and was out cold, headset still on. I woke to people screaming over the voice coms that I needed to get out, all a little too late, my Tengu was capped out, warp scrambled and into armour with heavy dps incoming. In the 5 seconds it took me to assess the situation I had lost another Tengu. I was so excited by this I said only two things over coms. Firstly I stated in a monotone voice "I  *^#&$  fell asleep" and secondly I stated that "I am done for the evening" and promptly logged off (after warping my pod back to our home). Yes there were some tears that night but I was just tired OK. For my corpmates it was a funny end to the evenings adventures.

A big shout out to Ward who went back and salvaged what was left of my ship and gave me 500mill worth of goodies back that had luckily survived the explosion.

There you go, two of my best failures for all to see, please learn from them as I have.

Remember, fly dangerous, PvE is hard!


Sunday, 21 September 2014

Most Exciting Time in EvE

So many exciting times, so many choices but I will just start with one.

Environment: Null Sec
Activity: Exploration - Relic and Data sites
Flying: Covops Frigate

A few weeks ago I decided to go Null sec exploring. I had decided on this occasion that I needed to get out and visit this scary place in which I had been killed more often then not. I had heard about the riches to be made out there and wanted a piece of the action.

I set myself up in a covops frigate and headed out. I successfully navigated through lowsec, got through the first gate into Null, hit the second gate and found a gate camp. Now I was a bit rusty after coming back from an extended break and managed to double click my cloak, get pointed and blown up in all of about three seconds. Not the best start. Additionally I copped some abuse in local for exposing the camp but hey, it was content wasn't it. I convo'd the guy that was abusing me and tried to have a conversation and a laugh but it seemed I had upset him so he wasn't interested in chatting at the time. In essence I had achieved two things, made someone cry and noted that maybe remaining calm and not double clicking was a better strategy for escaping gate camps! Pro tip.......

So back to Jita, new covops frigate built and off with a pocket full of confidence into Nullsec with all my new experience. This time I successfully made it more than two jumps into Nullsec, scanned down and completed numerous sites, was about three quarters through loading my ship up with isk making loot when I got noticed by some locals. I had my route set and started jumping quickly through various gates and managed to leave the pursuers behind. That had been exciting, little did I know it wasn't over yet!

So I start scanning for sites and about a minute later I notice that the pursuers had found me again. I stay cloaked up, quickly pull in my probes so as not to make it obvious I am exploring and watch local closely and they move on quickly. Sweet I had outmaneuvered them and they had obviously given up. I would be careful jumping into the next system and if they weren't there I was good to continue on about my business.

No sites in this system so I carefully bounce off a planet and enter the next system cautiously. Yep, they aren't in here so I am all good. I scan the system, nothing of value here and jump through the next gate. As soon as I appear on the other side I note that I am in a warp bubble. I also note that there is an interceptor and cruiser about 50 clicks off the gate. Hmmm those names look familiar, yep, my pursuers had set a trap. Welcome to Nullsec Mhrdhr!

Alright, what do I do here, I know interceptors are fast and I can't sit here as they would have seen the gate fire, they know someone is here. So I break the gate cloak start moving to the edge of the warp bubble, recloak very quickly, change direction now that I am cloaked and start praying. The interceptor is on its way, 40,000 , 30,000 , 20,000 damn this thing is quick. 10,000 , 5,000 , 3,000 I am so going to get decloaked and turned into dust again.

Still too far away from the edge of the bubble to escape 2,800 , 2,500 , 2,200 , 2,100 yep I am done. I look down at my keyboard already thinking about how I could have survived this and starting to analyse how I can combat this type of trap in the future. So maybe if I backtrack next time, make sure my path is not as obvious, or hunt down a Wormhole and take my chances through WH space and hide in there for awhile.

I glance back at my screen and to my complete amazement I have reached the edge of the bubble, still cloaked with an interceptor flying around like some crazed zealot and still getting dangerously close as it zooms around at some astronomical speed looking for me. I will never actually know how close it came to decloaking me but I don't think you could get any closer.

The feeling of accomplishment as I warped off and the buzz from escaping this trap specifically setup to catch me by those pilots was, I must say, the most exciting time I have had in EvE to date. It wasn't an extreme PvP battle, It wasn't almost losing my ship in PvE and recovering with my amazing PvE skills. It was living, when I was the target, using the skills that I had and the experience I have developed over the years of playing on and off to effectively beat two players in their territory playing by their rules without their skills and intimate knowledge of the area. It involved a grand total of three players and no one lost a ship.

I was genuinely proud of that achievement. Yes it involved some luck I must admit but it couldn't get more exciting when piloting an exploration ship which was 3/4 full of loot. I made it back to Highsec by navigating through wormholes and successfully sold my loot to the highest bidders.

EvE is not all about PvP, although this was a component of that, there are many ways to have fun and sometimes its not about blowing someone else up.

Remember, fly dangerous, it creates content!






Introduction - Who is Mhrdhr!

Let me start with a little history about Mhrdhr as a player! I don't mean to bore you but hey this is all about me......

First MMO - Horizons (Basically a predecessor to WoW for those that aren't familiar)
         This is what hooked me on MMOs. It is also where the name Mhrdhr originated from! In this game you had the ability to play as a dragon as well as many human classes. I chose the dragon and decided on a colour which very closely resembled flesh to ensure I was different from everyone else. I also chose the name Mhrdhr as in my mind it was the way a dragon would say Murder.
         So I thought the name was cool but my flesh coloured dragon had its own issues. Let me expand on this a little. Horizons dragons achieved adulthood at a certain point in their development. I was so excited to reach this point as it opened up so many abilities and I almost couldn't contain myself when the time finally came. This was my first major let down in my MMO history. When my character transformed into an adult dragon the colouring changed to PINK! Not just pink but bloody HOT PINK. The shame was unbearable, particularly as my main off combat skill set was in picking herbs or some such.
Mhrdhr the hot pink, flower picking dragon. I nearly gave up on the spot. My manliness took a big hit that day!

Second MMO - WoW (I don't know too many gamers that have not delved into the depths of World of Warcraft)
         Not going to harp on about my WoW days but damn did I sink a lot of time into this before I found EvE. I actually still have an active account for my kids but I must say I look fondly back on my experience in this game and met some awesome people who have now become lifelong friends. I was a quality PVE'r in my day and really was lucky enough to experience some of the top level content offered in this game.
         Most importantly this is where I found out about EvE. A big shout out to Unreal Realities (our guild in WoW and additionally our corp in EvE) and a special mention to Vok, Ward, Rethel and Rum who are all awesome people some of whom remain in WoW and others have transitioned over to EvE.

Other MMOs - I have tried many others but they were really just not worth mentioning here, they didn't catch my long term attention.

Finally the subject at hand, EVE.
         This is what this blog is about. I have 10 posts planned initially and I will see how it performs from a public interest point of view and additionally how I perform from both a time and content value point of view.
         My oldest account is 2009 and I have had and extended break on two occasions. The first was due to the learning curve but the second was due to some issues at hand in the real world that required some attention. I am an experienced Caldari missioner (Highsec), explorer (Null, Low and Highsec), and lived in a WH with our corp for most of my time in EvE prior to my last break. I have an excellent Tengu pilot that makes up for my lack of skills with his own, and excellent scout, and a minimal sp character who is about to be focused on Caldari FW, now I don't want anyone to get to high an expectation, I can't win it all back alone! I will however, likely regularly take one for the team.
         I am now managing to get a little free time here and there to delve back in and as such have just been playing it safe for now and concentrating on exploration (yes I do visit Null sec) and LvL 4 missions again and enjoying playing skill queue online.

         My next Blog on this site will be titled - Most Exciting Time in EvE, stay tuned, it may be a little more interesting!
   
On a side note: This is my first attempt at a blog so constructive criticism is welcome (I have broad shoulders) and I look forward to interacting with the community. I am also learning exactly how blogs work so bare with me a little if there are issues with the site and how it is currently setup.
Remember, fly dangerous, it makes other people happy.