Indeed, the center of the galaxy is the ending. Getting there is a major discomfort in the posterior if you've managed to piss of the Grox, though (is there even a way not to piss them off?). Seeing as they occupy every single star within a solid 100-star radius of the core, getting to it hurts *a lot*.
All in all it is a fun game, and even though I've "finished" it, I suspect I'll get quite a few hours of fun out of it before I get tired of it. I have yet to create my grand armada of armpits with legs!
I work for Microsoft, so I'm really getting a kick out of these replies.
No seriously, I do. And there's no way this SR would be allowed to run 10 years past the day it was created: 5 days and you have your team leader on your back. 10 days and the quality team starts making hell. Et cetera et cetera.
The oldest case I ever handled ran up to three months, and I had to give daily updates on the progress. I shudder to think of what would happen with a 10 year old case.
What *is* possible is that a tech was reopening a case by case number, and simply got a number wrong then (case/SR numbers include the date the case was opened). It's the only explanation I can think of that is the slightest bit plausible.
Indeed, the center of the galaxy is the ending. Getting there is a major discomfort in the posterior if you've managed to piss of the Grox, though (is there even a way not to piss them off?). Seeing as they occupy every single star within a solid 100-star radius of the core, getting to it hurts *a lot*.
All in all it is a fun game, and even though I've "finished" it, I suspect I'll get quite a few hours of fun out of it before I get tired of it. I have yet to create my grand armada of armpits with legs!
I work for Microsoft, so I'm really getting a kick out of these replies.
No seriously, I do. And there's no way this SR would be allowed to run 10 years past the day it was created: 5 days and you have your team leader on your back. 10 days and the quality team starts making hell. Et cetera et cetera.
The oldest case I ever handled ran up to three months, and I had to give daily updates on the progress. I shudder to think of what would happen with a 10 year old case.
What *is* possible is that a tech was reopening a case by case number, and simply got a number wrong then (case/SR numbers include the date the case was opened). It's the only explanation I can think of that is the slightest bit plausible.