Or the oceans could just be really salty, decreasing the freezing point... EDIT: A bit of evidence comes from the KSP Wiki. In reference to Laythe, it states that "The air however does have a strange smell about it. It is therefore possible that there are also high concentrations of salt in the air, as well as on the surface, assuming that the salt is sodium chloride."
That only explains the water on Laythe, it would still be so cold that when a kerbal would take its helmet off, it would freeze to death, my personal theory is that Jool's gravity causes enough friction to heat up Laythe to the point life can exist on it.
It could be the radiation from the van allen belts of jool warming it, or the fact that laythe is in an orbital resonance with vall and tylo, which has a very slight pull on them, "crunching" the surface, warming it. This is one of the reasons europa has large cracks
And the Nobel Everything Prize goes to... Kyle Garrick of TH-cam, for their suggestion of the name “solar bears” over “space polar bears” on September 26th, 2020.
@@tropicalvikingcreations Yes. And when the Space Force get their hands into this project, it'll be called 'Surface-to-space-to-surface transportation system for tactical surveillance of troublesome states'. (STSTSTSTSTS)
Life on Laythe: Laythe has very Kerbin attributes, so we can build life on it! So it has volcanic islands... And those volcanic islands have a chance to explode, causing the atmosphere to be poisonous... The water could be toxic as well... And the atmosphere... And there is pretty much no sunlight there *Perfect!* Let's send Kerbals there!
I'm sure he's done it. You only need 1200 - 1500 m/s to get from LKO to Laythe if you use an Eve flyby. Just finished my Mk3 Laythe refuelling SSTO and its fun to island hop round laythe. Definitely my favorite destination.
Matt talking about his station rings: "I believe I went with 36 way symmetry" -realizes his mistake and makes correction to *16 way symmetry -actual symmetry: 32 you tried lol
2:46 my guess would be the missive gravity changes from Jool producing heat from the friction as Laythe stretches and compresses and/or nuclear activity in Laythe's core
30:56 the reason that there's liquid water on laythe is because of the tidal forces caused by the gravitational attraction of jool and the other satellites (moons) behind laythe. Tidal force, means the difference in gravity of two bodies, like how the moon is responsible for the waves in the ocean (it's not actually the moon only, it's the sun and the moon, because they have different masses and distance from the earth, this is also responsible for the heating of the earth's core, and tectonic plate movement). This tidal force(kinda like stretching and squeezing a ball of play dough) creates friction at the core of the planet, therefore heating it up. Because the different satellites orbit at different speeds, therefore creating a tidal force.. Same reason why Europa (one of the moons of Jupiter) has liquid water, although under a few layers of ice. The atmosphere on laythe also contributes to the reason why there is liquid water on it, by trapping all the heat, preventing it from escaping. The reason Europa doesn't have liquid water on its surface is because it's too cold, if it had a thick atmosphere,it most probably would.
I don't know what is more impressive, the fact that Matt is building such a big space station and sending it in one go, or the fact that I understand everything that is going on... I remember when I was a noob at this game and stumbled on this channel and I didn't understand anything that was going on... at least now I'm still a noob but when I somehow manage to build something that works, I can definitely get it where I wanted to
I had to search the Kraken up at some point. The official unofficial name is Deep Space Kraken, and it a bug that destroys ships with a lot of part clipping in early versions.
Matt you need a resource scanner for the laythe analysis and since it would be a smallish probe you could also set up a relay network around laythe or jool in the same mission
What I think would be a really cool mission, would be to send a space station to jool, but have one rocket attached to it for each of its moons, and just send them all down to each moon
What likely causes the favorable conditions on Laythe are a result of tidal forces from Jool and Tylo. The resultant tectonic stresses warm the moon and provide a liquid core that in turn provides a magnetic field to protect it from Jool's radiation. Either that, or an abundance of snacks. Something like that.
There is something called "tidal warming" which warms moons have enough gravity. How it works: a moon with high gravity resisit planet orbital pulling force and make it warm.
if you use the servos you can make the ring spin at lower than 5 rpm. you use a controller and set it to continuous playback and do a linear progression from 0 degrees to 359 degrees and just set the time longer or shorter to adjust the RPM
Hey, suggestion. Place time markers for the sections in the video description so that TH-cam shows the markers on the video tracker. Wx: 00:00 - construction 13:07 - launch 21:20 - capture 27:40 - orbit adjustments
Had the trouble of dipping into the atmosphere a little bit on my Eve mega station, my 10 minute burn turned to a 20 minute burn with panic. Looked really cool though I have the screen shots!
Matt, there's a green "Warp to burn start" button on the navball when you have a maneuver planned, right next to the readout for remaining delta-v in the maneuver. That way you won't miss burn start times anymore.
Just try and try I yust started 6 months ago I know what you are experiencing, but you will learn yust keep taking little steps... First get a rocket to launch, Then get a rocket to orbit, Get to minmus with a rocket (direct aproch) Get to minmus (Apollo style) Do those things with the mun Get to duna (only going no return) Get to duna (return) Get to duna (manned return) Get to eve (don’t be crazy no return afcourse) Moho Jool Gilly Vall Ike Laythe Eve (return) Jool 5 (all jool moons in one launch Only a few people can do the last 2 and this will take years of practice but believe and don’t give up! Good luck kerbonauts and remember The universe is a hologram, everything is an illusion, buy gold bye! - some one who has only done a duna return mission.
Every time I rush to watch your videos, I cannot express enough to anyone how amazing you are at this! I started off with the easier parts of the science program of it and got as far as the science on the Minmus biomes. (And yes, your video helped me do this) So, yesterday I did something insane for me. I build a huge ship, launched it, and went for Minmus. I built a Mining Refinery! I used rockets above the refinery to land it but the rockets would keep going without the extra weight and destroy themselves. So now I have a Minmus Mining Refinery!
23:22 that’s kind of what I did on my first interplanetary transfer, I just sat there for awhile trying and then finally it just worked (I didn’t use any sort of transfer window so it was super inifecient but I was happy)
Hey Matt, did you know that rather than manually timewarping to your next manoeuvre, you can click on the yellow dotted line AHEAD of where your node is and have the game warp you nice and precisely to the next node? Super handy. Noticed it looked like you were manually warping to each one in the video...
Gonna be honest with you it sounds like laythe either has really good magnetic fields or there’s something incredibly dense and hot in the core of laythe, warrants a big drill like vehicle
cool video! I think there is a way to get less than 5rpm on the rotors. You can use the Kal-1000 control unit which lets you set it down to 1 rpm when you type the number in manually.
My theory for the Laythe mystery is that Jool, like Jupiter, is made of Hydrogen and Helium. Perhaps in Kerbal scale, Jool is large enough that it isn’t quite a star, but it can do things like warm Laythe, or boost the geological activity on Vall.
I think because of the size of Jool to compared to Laythe the tidal forces that Jool causes increases the surface temperature causing the water to melt and thus creating oxygen in the atmosphere
I finally made it to duna today for the first time, however I may or may not have not had enough fuel to get back. I made a bluffed-mammals mission to save them (they are safe now)
My theory for why Laythe is inhabitable even though it is so far out in the solar system is that Jool's gravity causes so much friction on Laythe (due to Laythe going away from Jool and Jool pulling Laythe towards since that's how orbits work) that it creates enough heat on laythe to have a warm atmosphere.
Hey Matt I know proboly won’t see this butt your videos are amazing. You are amazing talker I would think you would be a talk show host and your videos always make me more happy. I just landed a rover own duna last day for the first time and then I realized I did not have a sattalite to control it so I sent a sattalite only to relize I use the wrong sattalite dish.
Hey Matt Lowne, you should build a Tintin Rocket and go to the Mun! This would be a really interesting idea to see how much fuel you would need for a spacecraft like that! It would be an awesome idea and I would love to see it done. Thanks!
Great episode Matt!, nice to see a return to lfife on laythe, I've got a little bit of a weird question, how do you stay so enthusiastic about publishing a new ksp video every week, with all the stresses and strains of everyday life ? it can't be easy coming up with new content on such a regular basis (I know I struggle with it), anyway keep it up mate, stay safe. 🚀
Love your videos, just too much to absorb at once so I watched this whole presentation at 0.75 speed. Wonderful to understand everything you're saying and doing.
Great commentary as always. I love a mission with way too much 'useless' weight. If your a new player playing around with maneuver nodes, Mechjeb or Precise Node made this alot easier for me. I do love the keyboard shortcuts Precise node gives you, and mechjeb - execute maneuver makes getting super precise maneuvers a breeze, even if it is a bit cheaty.
one thing that scares me about intensive quick saving is loading one is like making a deal with the devil. if it does not work you cant revert flight anymore
also fro each of the missions I have reverted flight at LEAST 10 times before completing them also yesterday I did not have enough tech to attempt a kerbal landing on eve but for my career, the quest I had to do was the forced one so I decided ill try it the normal way. it failed so I reverted. the next rocket i built was could (goodbye jerend Kerman we will miss you) he was the new recruit only had 1 start skill and he was an engineer. he was prob the second-best engineer i had behind bob an lv 4
Or the oceans could just be really salty, decreasing the freezing point...
EDIT: A bit of evidence comes from the KSP Wiki. In reference to Laythe, it states that "The air however does have a strange smell about it. It is therefore possible that there are also high concentrations of salt in the air, as well as on the surface, assuming that the salt is sodium chloride."
🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
That only explains the water on Laythe, it would still be so cold that when a kerbal would take its helmet off, it would freeze to death, my personal theory is that Jool's gravity causes enough friction to heat up Laythe to the point life can exist on it.
@@JoshuaC34 yea, tidally locked moons are warmer (i thiiiiinkkkkkk, dont quote me on that)
@@KaneSoulbreaker "tidally locked moons are warmer"
-Kane Soulbreaker, 2020
It could be the radiation from the van allen belts of jool warming it, or the fact that laythe is in an orbital resonance with vall and tylo, which has a very slight pull on them, "crunching" the surface, warming it. This is one of the reasons europa has large cracks
Funny thing is: I landed an SSTO on Laythe for the first time today
good job!
congrats!
Amazing
Did it come back???
I could do that to, but everyone would die.
Matt: *OH NO THE SPACE POLAR BEARS*
Also Matt when the first stage re-enters and wipes out life on the arctic: eh
Space polar bears
-In space
-Immune to radiation
-Good friends to kerbals
Polar bears
-Not in space
-Dies from radiation
-Eats kerbals
lol true
Instead of calling them “space polar bears” Call them Solar Bears.
YES!
And the Nobel Everything Prize goes to... Kyle Garrick of TH-cam, for their suggestion of the name “solar bears” over “space polar bears” on September 26th, 2020.
Matt needs to see this.
LMAO YES
I will give you the highest honor I can give.... The Golden Like.
Matt Lowne: "We're going to need a surface-to-space transportation system."
NASA's acronym maker: "STSTS"
... This might become a real thing... Are you foreshadowing?!
@@tropicalvikingcreations Yes.
And when the Space Force get their hands into this project, it'll be called 'Surface-to-space-to-surface transportation system for tactical surveillance of troublesome states'. (STSTSTSTSTS)
@@InventorZahran holy sh-
I found this right when he said it
@@InventorZahran space to surface to space to surface space to surface to space to surface space to surface to space to surface
Life on Laythe:
Laythe has very Kerbin attributes, so we can build life on it!
So it has volcanic islands...
And those volcanic islands have a chance to explode, causing the atmosphere to be poisonous...
The water could be toxic as well...
And the atmosphere...
And there is pretty much no sunlight there
*Perfect!* Let's send Kerbals there!
water is probably packed full of salt and is only heated by tidal forces, meaning it’s most likely fucking freezing. still though water is water.
“The gravity inside those rings is a bit too high”
The kerbals, months later: 💪
Prepares them for Eve.
I imagine it's like the 'gravitron' rides at fairs, or they're training a la Goku. They'll be ready to defeat Frieza before long.
they will be looking like bodybuilder will be able to just assemble rockets by hand no tools required.
15:27 That was the chunkiest Korolev cross I've ever seen. Also I love the build sequences and I'm glad you kept the whole thing!
Cool. *Now make it an SSTO.*
Jk amazing design!
Stratzenblitz: Good idea, will try.
Nah, he is gonna do it.
I'm sure he's done it. You only need 1200 - 1500 m/s to get from LKO to Laythe if you use an Eve flyby. Just finished my Mk3 Laythe refuelling SSTO and its fun to island hop round laythe. Definitely my favorite destination.
bruh
@@40watt53 Oh god
Matt talking about his station rings:
"I believe I went with 36 way symmetry"
-realizes his mistake and makes correction to *16 way symmetry
-actual symmetry: 32
you tried lol
He tried. That’s all that counts
Finally after weeks of Spamming in the comments
*Life On Laythe IS Back*
Edit: Who thinks that Matt Should send a submarine to Laythe
Me
Matt should definitely send a submarine
Yes
@@varminx9763 yes please
Yes
Video suggestion, Give a moon a moon using an asteroid
YES
wait do orbital mechanics work in KSP with celestial bodies?
@TheSpaceEngineer yea you can get asteroids into orbit of celestial bodies
@@Tulin258 thanks, now I will make a ring of asteroids around kerbin cuz why not
Y e s
Life on Matt’s Europa
Makes sense :D
Insert the usual space odyssy 2010 joke here
2:46 my guess would be the missive gravity changes from Jool producing heat from the friction as Laythe stretches and compresses and/or nuclear activity in Laythe's core
I wouldn't even be able to launch this into LKO 😂
You'll get there buddy. I believe in you.
I don't think even my computer would be able to handle it
@@anunayy I play on ps4 I can barely make it to duna
@@republicofgamers9842 Thank you :)
I wouldn't even be able to build this
Matt: i want a base that can sink and also float on the water
Me: sooo you're building a submarine 😂😂
I was thinking of the city of Atlantis
30:56 the reason that there's liquid water on laythe is because of the tidal forces caused by the gravitational attraction of jool and the other satellites (moons) behind laythe. Tidal force, means the difference in gravity of two bodies, like how the moon is responsible for the waves in the ocean (it's not actually the moon only, it's the sun and the moon, because they have different masses and distance from the earth, this is also responsible for the heating of the earth's core, and tectonic plate movement). This tidal force(kinda like stretching and squeezing a ball of play dough) creates friction at the core of the planet, therefore heating it up. Because the different satellites orbit at different speeds, therefore creating a tidal force.. Same reason why Europa (one of the moons of Jupiter) has liquid water, although under a few layers of ice. The atmosphere on laythe also contributes to the reason why there is liquid water on it, by trapping all the heat, preventing it from escaping. The reason Europa doesn't have liquid water on its surface is because it's too cold, if it had a thick atmosphere,it most probably would.
Wat
From the discord server. Life on laythe is back now i'm happy
Matt, make your own futuristic space shuttle!
Hell yeah! Life on Laythe is BACK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I rate this an epic gamer moment also I’ve been able to reduce the kerbals I’ve lost in space down from 15 to about 7-8
Halfway there!
the rest are probably dead
Per mission?
X-37bNASA - SFS id say per 2 missions...
I don't know what is more impressive, the fact that Matt is building such a big space station and sending it in one go, or the fact that I understand everything that is going on... I remember when I was a noob at this game and stumbled on this channel and I didn't understand anything that was going on... at least now I'm still a noob but when I somehow manage to build something that works, I can definitely get it where I wanted to
4:55 "2001 - A Space Oddity"
Lol
@@KoiSpain0 this is the comment form a verified account with the lowest likes ever.
4:48
Your ship: "has a very very very large ring"
Kraken: n o
I had to search the Kraken up at some point. The official unofficial name is Deep Space Kraken, and it a bug that destroys ships with a lot of part clipping in early versions.
It’s almost daybreak in Australia, and yet I’m binging Matt Lowne
life on laythe is back woohoo
UwU
@@varminx9763 no dont uwu
thats just no
@@varminx9763 stop,no. Please no
I don't know why but I love laythe
Who doesn't bro? it's beautiful as hell after the new texture revamp
This is the definition of Underrated channel . We
Matt you need a resource scanner for the laythe analysis and since it would be a smallish probe you could also set up a relay network around laythe or jool in the same mission
I am so glad you had the little schematic for getting the 36-way symmetry. I can never follow the words when someone just says how to do it.
What I think would be a really cool mission, would be to send a space station to jool, but have one rocket attached to it for each of its moons, and just send them all down to each moon
As someone playing a career mode save right now, I definitely noticed your putting those RTGs there. It immediately took the craft from 500k.
For a slower gravity ring you can just use the controller and rotation servo then loop the sequence.
funny impossible idea :
fighter spaceship, like those clearly impossible ones you see in games and movies
Never stop showing the full build man! I enjoy it way to much :D.
Ridiculous build by the way, absolutely mindblowing.
What likely causes the favorable conditions on Laythe are a result of tidal forces from Jool and Tylo. The resultant tectonic stresses warm the moon and provide a liquid core that in turn provides a magnetic field to protect it from Jool's radiation. Either that, or an abundance of snacks. Something like that.
my Saturday morning coffee isn't complete without a Matt Lowne KSP video
Thanks for not cutting the build footage. Really enjoying it!
There is something called "tidal warming" which warms moons have enough gravity. How it works: a moon with high gravity resisit planet orbital pulling force and make it warm.
Yes! Life on Laythe is finally back! i loved this series and i am happy it's back!
if you use the servos you can make the ring spin at lower than 5 rpm. you use a controller and set it to continuous playback and do a linear progression from 0 degrees to 359 degrees and just set the time longer or shorter to adjust the RPM
4:23 you can actually go to infinite symmetrie by just Repeating the steps
No the limit is your pc
Challenge: de-orbit a space station (on any planet except kerbin) and turn it into a ground station
Matt lowne:life on layfe is back
Everyone in this community :finally inner peace
Took me a bit to realise this was the new one, I was slighly confused as to why it had
This video looks fantastic Matt! I especially liked the polar shots of laythe and the jool rise as you were finalizing your orbit.
Hey, suggestion. Place time markers for the sections in the video description so that TH-cam shows the markers on the video tracker.
Wx:
00:00 - construction
13:07 - launch
21:20 - capture
27:40 - orbit adjustments
You are able to orbit laythe and you make it seem so easy here I can't even orbit the mun
Had the trouble of dipping into the atmosphere a little bit on my Eve mega station, my 10 minute burn turned to a 20 minute burn with panic.
Looked really cool though I have the screen shots!
I hope you can launch from Laythe in KSP 2 since it it's already habitable and in a great location for interstellar travel.
Yes... Solid Rocket *motors*
Matt, there's a green "Warp to burn start" button on the navball when you have a maneuver planned, right next to the readout for remaining delta-v in the maneuver. That way you won't miss burn start times anymore.
Wow! This game is really deep. I had no idea. Great video with excellent narration. Thanks.
As a noob on KSP, thanks for the vids, my first Mun lander was a Lowne Aerospace design, just downloaded the Craft file for this!
It’s nice that I can’t even get to the moon when you are launching huge colonies to layth
Same, I can barely get a rocket to orbit 😂
Just try and try I yust started 6 months ago I know what you are experiencing, but you will learn yust keep taking little steps...
First get a rocket to launch,
Then get a rocket to orbit,
Get to minmus with a rocket (direct aproch)
Get to minmus (Apollo style)
Do those things with the mun
Get to duna (only going no return)
Get to duna (return)
Get to duna (manned return)
Get to eve (don’t be crazy no return afcourse)
Moho
Jool
Gilly
Vall
Ike
Laythe
Eve (return)
Jool 5 (all jool moons in one launch
Only a few people can do the last 2
and this will take years of practice but believe and don’t give up!
Good luck kerbonauts and remember
The universe is a hologram, everything is an illusion, buy gold bye!
- some one who has only done a duna return mission.
O I forgot SSTO’s well u understand what I mean
Me too man I always stick back to planes when I try because I can't get it
Install mecjeb.
Let it run a few probes and watch and learn how it does it then you can repeat on your own.
Every time I rush to watch your videos, I cannot express enough to anyone how amazing you are at this! I started off with the easier parts of the science program of it and got as far as the science on the Minmus biomes. (And yes, your video helped me do this) So, yesterday I did something insane for me. I build a huge ship, launched it, and went for Minmus. I built a Mining Refinery! I used rockets above the refinery to land it but the rockets would keep going without the extra weight and destroy themselves. So now I have a Minmus Mining Refinery!
23:22 that’s kind of what I did on my first interplanetary transfer, I just sat there for awhile trying and then finally it just worked (I didn’t use any sort of transfer window so it was super inifecient but I was happy)
Hey Matt, did you know that rather than manually timewarping to your next manoeuvre, you can click on the yellow dotted line AHEAD of where your node is and have the game warp you nice and precisely to the next node? Super handy. Noticed it looked like you were manually warping to each one in the video...
Yes this is my favourite series of yours and what a build! Nice job Matt
To prevent wobbling, try autostrut and rigid attachment. It might fix the problem!
you gotta use RealPlume. it says that it's for like 1.9 or something, but i tested it and it works for 1.10. make sure to install the stock configs
I’ve got my nice routine of getting home from work and eating my lunch while watching Matt Lowne.
great job! it s really cool
Gonna be honest with you it sounds like laythe either has really good magnetic fields or there’s something incredibly dense and hot in the core of laythe, warrants a big drill like vehicle
Whoop woop life on Laythe again
cool video! I think there is a way to get less than 5rpm on the rotors. You can use the Kal-1000 control unit which lets you set it down to 1 rpm when you type the number in manually.
My theory for the Laythe mystery is that Jool, like Jupiter, is made of Hydrogen and Helium. Perhaps in Kerbal scale, Jool is large enough that it isn’t quite a star, but it can do things like warm Laythe, or boost the geological activity on Vall.
thank you matt
very cool!
Finally this is back!!!!
IT'S BACK BABY
I think because of the size of Jool to compared to Laythe the tidal forces that Jool causes increases the surface temperature causing the water to melt and thus creating oxygen in the atmosphere
I finally made it to duna today for the first time, however I may or may not have not had enough fuel to get back. I made a bluffed-mammals mission to save them (they are safe now)
I have watched every planet coaster video and this is my first video watching ksp, it looks fun. Might have to check it out.
My theory for why Laythe is inhabitable even though it is so far out in the solar system is that Jool's gravity causes so much friction on Laythe (due to Laythe going away from Jool and Jool pulling Laythe towards since that's how orbits work) that it creates enough heat on laythe to have a warm atmosphere.
By the way, I am referring to 2:40 if you didn't know.
Hey Matt I know proboly won’t see this butt your videos are amazing. You are amazing talker I would think you would be a talk show host and your videos always make me more happy. I just landed a rover own duna last day for the first time and then I realized I did not have a sattalite to control it so I sent a sattalite only to relize I use the wrong sattalite dish.
Matt: There's no chance of the dragonfly being recovered.
Mark thrimm and Bradly wistance: Ho'l my drink.
Amazing video, and yes watching the build is literally the fun part.
HE DID IT
Excited to see the future episodes of Life On Laythe
I watched all your videos just waiting for you to release a new one. So happy one's finally out!
Great episode. Cant wait to see where this series goes.
YAY life on Laythe is back!!
Yo! Life on Laythe is back!
here's my KSP Luck. A piece of debree (Heat shield) from a Minmus orbit finally returned and Hit my plane blowing up the thing it was carrying
*O O F*
A LEGEND HAS BEEN REBORN
Excited about this series.
11:44 never have i ever seen, made nore even flown a ship big enough to make the VAB seem not big enough
This was the coolest launch I’ve seen in a while
Casual feats of amazing KSP skill.
Hey Matt Lowne, you should build a Tintin Rocket and go to the Mun! This would be a really interesting idea to see how much fuel you would need for a spacecraft like that! It would be an awesome idea and I would love to see it done. Thanks!
Build the Atlantis from stargate!!
Looks like you forgot to extend 2 of the boom arms. Thanks for bringing back the series.
Great episode Matt!, nice to see a return to lfife on laythe, I've got a little bit of a weird question, how do you stay so enthusiastic about publishing a new ksp video every week, with all the stresses and strains of everyday life ? it can't be easy coming up with new content on such a regular basis (I know I struggle with it), anyway keep it up mate, stay safe. 🚀
Life On Laythe is back! Exciting!
Love your videos, just too much to absorb at once so I watched this whole presentation at 0.75 speed. Wonderful to understand everything you're saying and doing.
For some reason I get extremely agitated watching you send these big stations into orbit in one piece rather than in sections.
Great video regardless
Great commentary as always. I love a mission with way too much 'useless' weight. If your a new player playing around with maneuver nodes, Mechjeb or Precise Node made this alot easier for me. I do love the keyboard shortcuts Precise node gives you, and mechjeb - execute maneuver makes getting super precise maneuvers a breeze, even if it is a bit cheaty.
one thing that scares me about intensive quick saving is loading one is like making a deal with the devil. if it does not work you cant revert flight anymore
also fro each of the missions I have reverted flight at LEAST 10 times before completing them also yesterday I did not have enough tech to attempt a kerbal landing on eve but for my career, the quest I had to do was the forced one so I decided ill try it the normal way. it failed so I reverted. the next rocket i built was could (goodbye jerend Kerman we will miss you) he was the new recruit only had 1 start skill and he was an engineer. he was prob the second-best engineer i had behind bob an lv 4
should i send a rescue mission later.
Laythe rhymes with life so yes
@Lovro Rukljic tru
Thx for the video