With TOURING’s focus on travel without dying, I’m going to be posting a few articles here and there on how to travel around New Eden without dying. Some articles have been done by me many years ago, but are still relevant today, so I’ll be reprinting or rewriting some of them. This is one of those articles.
It’s for those of you who want to travel in lowsec (low security space, between 0.1 and 0.4). I know there’s a few non-combat oriented pilots that read this blog, and most of TOURING’s members are non-combat pilots too. You might have never flown a ship in combat against another pilot, or if you have, you’ve lost because you didn’t know what you’re doing. So here’s a few tips (ok, a whole bunch of tips!) on how to survive out there.
If they save just one life, my job here is done. 🙂
- Don’t leave your ship out in space while away from the keyboard (AFK). You should never consider yourself safe while being away from your computer. If you have to quickly do something else, then dock at a station, or make sure you’re at a safe spot and cloaked.
- Enter space with security status 0.4 and below at your own risk. You can never expect to be safe in unsecure space, regardless of how safe you think you might be.
- Insure all ships you are using, especially the expensive ones. Make sure you buy the most expensive “platinum” type of insurance.
- Don’t rely on sentry guns to keep you safe. Especially not when travelling in lowsec space. There are several ways to avoid sentry gun fire that are not considered to be an exploit, like sniping from battleships outside of sentry gun range. There are a lot of ships that can also ‘tank’ the incoming fire from sentry guns.
- Use map filters such as “ships destroyed in the last hour” to spot possible player pirate camps and other dangerous areas. Also check ‘pilots in space in last 30 minutes’ to give you an idea of how many people are flying around in the system you want to go to. If there’s 10 in space in the last half hour and 4 ships destroyed, you can be guaranteed it’s not safe.
- Use the local chat channel to see what’s happening within the system when you have just jumped in. Checking ‘show info’ on each of the pilots in the local chat channel (if there aren’t too many people in local) can show you if there’s any ‘nasties’ in the system. They’re the ones with negative security status.
- If you’re intent on avoiding combat, use Warp Core Stabilizers (WCS or ‘stabs’) to help avoid being warp jammed, allowing you to warp away if they try to scramble you. Two stabs will be required to escape from one pilot trying to ‘tackle’ you.
- If you’re out ratting or looking for mischief in lowsec, remember that different types of ammo have different ranges. Right-click your gun and check it’s attributes to see the optimal range. Fit some ammo to it and re-check the range (only works when you’re undocked). By choosing long-range ammo, you can mostly stay clear of enemy fire (especially when up against rats). Make sure you try staying at your optimal range.
- Make sure you always have a clone available for when you need it, and always buy a clone (from a station with a medical facility) that is going to handle your skill points. Upgrade when your skill points get close to the limit of the clone. You never want a clone that is less than your character’s skill points, as that wastes all the time that you spent training.If you wake up in a new clone, buy a new one immediately! If you die again without upgrading, you will lose a percentage of skill points from your highest skill. Your screams will be heard even in space.
- If you’re in an asteroid belt killing rats (you should only be doing this when you’re alone in the system) and someone new jumps into the system, align to a celestial object, like the sun or a planet. Check their info and see if they have a negative status – they might be a pirate. Whether they are or not, as soon as someone arrives at your belt with you, activate your warp. Already aligned means you’ll go straight to warp.If they’re not actually a pirate, they won’t attack you or try to follow you. But never take that chance.
- When you’re flying anywhere and someone target locks you, do not fire (first). If they fire at you first, then they’re the ones that take the security hit, and they’re the ones that take the sentry gun fire if it’s near a gate or station, and they’re the ones that get attacked by CONCORD if it’s in high security space. Never start combat if someone target locks you first.Ignore this rule if you don’t care. (Don’t ignore this rule if you’re in TOURING!)
- If someone invites you to join their fleet and you don’t know them, decline the invitation. It’s likely that they’re a pirate. As soon as you accept a fleet invite, they can warp straight to your location and attack you.
- If someone attacks you and you defend yourself and actually destroy their ship, podding them (destroying their pod) in 0.1 space or higher will give you a huge security penalty, and make you a target for sentry guns. You can only pod kill in 0.0 space without any loss of security status. (TOURING members will not podkill.)
- Don’t buy that shiny new ship until you can afford the ship, the fittings, and the insurance without having to sell anything you currently own. That way, if you lose the ship, you’ve still got enough money or assets to afford a replacement (after the insurance payout, of course).Ideally, if you can afford to buy the ship and fittings and insurance 5 times over, then you can afford to buy one. Don’t do it with less.This is because you WILL lose it if you take it into lowsec or nullsec. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow. But you will lose it eventually. Don’t fly what you can’t afford to lose.
- If you’re mining in lowsec space, stay as far as you can from the asteroids, in case you need to warp away quickly. If you’re too close to an asteroid, you’ll crawl away from it before you can warp away.
- If you’re in 0.0 space, EVERYONE can be a pirate, even if they have positive security status. There are no security hits in 0.0 space. Do not trust anyone. Just think of them as rabid animals wanting to kill you if they find you. You’ll be mostly right.
- Do not take stuff from someone else’s cargo can, as you then become a ‘can thief’ and they can attack you without penalty, even in Empire space. If they’re offering stuff from their can for free, they’re probably setting you up. If they really want to give you something for free, then they can trade it with you while docked in a station.Never take from someone’s can unless they’re in your corp or fleet and you trust them.
- If you want to be attacked in Empire space then you can jettison something from your cargo hold that they can then take, which allows you to attack them without taking a security hit or being attacked by CONCORD. This is good if you know you have a good chance of defeating them in combat. Otherwise don’t do it, as you’re likely to be destroyed.
- When you jump into a low security system, DO NOT MOVE. Disengage the autopilot AS you jump, so that it’s inactive when you get to the other side of the jump gate. This is so that you don’t move when you get there.Why can’t you move? Because when you come out of a jump, you are cloaked and no one can see you. You will remain cloaked for 60 seconds or until you move, or until someone comes within 2 km of you. Being cloaked is good for you, as it gives you a bit of time to see who’s in local, and if there’s any bad pirates, you can either go back to the gate and jump back where you came from, or do something else.
- If you jump through a gate and find you’re in the middle of a gate camp and multiple ships are around you, as soon as you move and decloak they’re going to try and lock you and attack. Since they’ll be using warp scramblers, you won’t be able to warp away. Your best chance is to try and crawl back to the gate to jump back out, and hope that any shield or armour tank you have holds them off long enough for you to jump.Of course, if you think your ship is fast enough to go to warp before they get a lock on you, then good luck to you. See tip #21.
- If you are leaving a station and you need to get away FAST, then look straight ahead of your ship. Select a destination (asteroid belt, planet or jump gate) that is right in front of you and warp to it. You will go into warp a lot faster than if you had to to realign for a different direction. This is because you’re already moving at your maximum speed as you leave the station.If you’re at a jump gate though, and at a dead stop, there’s no difference between the time it takes to reach warp going straight ahead or turning to align.
- Make a safe spot in the lowsec system. This is a bookmark that you drop in the middle of nowhere, while you’re warping from one point to another. While warping, open People & Places and drop a bookmark. Click OK so that it has the default name, which you can change later so that you know it’s a ‘safe spot’. The advantage of this bookmark is that it’s literally in the middle of nowhere, allowing you to warp to it from anywhere in the system, when you need to escape from pirates and you don’t want them finding you.To make it harder for them to find you though, you need to warp from your safe spot to another location in the system, and drop another bookmark along the way. You need to try and drop this bookmark more than 5,000 km from any other object in the system, if you can, so studying your system map is essential.The first safe spot is along an established flight path and easy for probe scanners to find, but the second safe spot will be out of range of any scan probes that could find you.However, still do NOT think you’re safe. If they drop a scan probe at their own safe spot that’s within range of yours, they will find you. Try to bounce around between your safe spots if you can’t leave the system or you can’t dock, so that it’s harder for them to actually detect you in one location.
When you’re at a safe spot, remember – you’re still not safe. (Unless you have a cloak.)
- Whenever you’re sitting somewhere (like at a safe spot) and not actually traveling anywhere or doing anything, always align yourself with a distant object, like a jump gate or station. Preferably an object you can select in your overview. The reason for this is that aligning yourself to something has you traveling at your maximum normal speed towards it.In order to go to warp, you have to be at 75% of this speed, so if you’re already traveling at that speed, you’ll go into warp much faster than if you were standing still.So with the object selected in your overview, and you’re aligned to it, you can sit there with the knowledge that if someone turns up with your death on their mind, all you have to do is quickly press the ‘warp to’ button at the top of the overview and you will go to warp almost immediately, avoiding their attack.If you don’t do this, you will die as you try to align for the destination and gather speed.
I hope these tips help you find safety within EVE. Please add your own tips if you think they will be of value to others.