Starfield Players Discover That You Can Actually Manually Fly to Other Planets in Your Ship

One of many absolute strangest issues about Starfield is that area journey is generally carried out by menus and clicking buttons. You’ve got an entire ass ship! You need to have the ability to fly round in area and do cool issues with it! As an alternative, ship gameplay is generally reserved for fight. In the event you attempt to fly your ship from one planet to a different, you’ll discover that it’s just about not possible.

Besides… it’s not.

Two Starfield gamers have found that it’s certainly doable to fly from one planet or moon to a different. It simply takes a hell of a very long time. Reddit person u/RiddleMeThis– and YouTuber/gaming character Alanah Pearce tried flying to a different planet within the ship, and yeah it really works. Pearce uploaded a video to her YouTube channel final month displaying that it takes about seven hours to get to a different planetary floor, which you’ll try down under:

u/RiddleMeThis did the identical factor, although they did use a console command to extend the sport velocity.

When you truly attain the planetary floor, you’ll be able to scan it and work together with it such as you would another planet within the sport, although you do nonetheless have to make use of the menus to land on it correctly, which is a bummer.

It’s value noting that Starfield’s area exploration side was clearly impressed by No Man’s Sky, Good day Video games’ now-excellent area exploration sport that revolves closely round your ship and the way you navigate your environment with it. No Man’s Sky lacks within the narrative and quest division, positive, but it surely’s plain that its exploration side is now high notch. Starfield nonetheless has a little bit of a strategy to go earlier than it may well match Good day Video games’ area effort, however hey, possibly we’ll see it within the sequel?

Starfield is now obtainable on consoles and PC.

In regards to the writer

Zhiqing Wan

Zhiqing is the Opinions Editor for Twinfinite, and a Historical past graduate from Singapore. She’s been within the video games media trade for 9 years, trawling by showfloors, conferences, and spending a ridiculous period of time making in-depth spreadsheets for min-max-y RPGs. When she’s not singing the praises of Amazon’s Kindle as the best technological invention of the previous 20 years, you’ll be able to in all probability discover her in a FromSoft rabbit gap.

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