I debated if I wanted to remain in my WH for more than 90 days, but decided to take a little break – not from EVE, but just from the stress of leaving the Orca in a wormhole. It’s an expensive ship – and I rarely ever logged it in unless I absolutely had to, but that came with pros and cons (as does anything in EVE).
Overall, I absolutely loved my time living in jspace. I’d (ideally) like something more permanent – but nothing in EVE is permanent, and if you go at it solo (as is my way) you tend to get picked off fairly quickly. The goal with this challenge was to live in jspace using as small of a footprint as possible so that I wouldn’t draw attention to myself.
I made a LOT of ISK. Most of my ISK came from gas huffing and exploration (relic/data sites). A little bit of it came from running combat sites (I stuck to C1-C3), and a good portion came from PI. I’m not sure if PI counts because even though it IS in jspace, I’m using a wormlife freeport with a few alts rather than doing PI in the system I was living in. Once a week I’d collect my goods and move them to highsec, and then pick them up with the squall I eventually purchased.
I made a few friends out there – I joined up with a community of like-minded nomads, and watched a lot of videos and learned some things that I didn’t know before. I also figured out that living in jspace is absolutely my favourite place to be. I loved everything about it.
Taking my Orca home was rough, but not the part where I was moving it through jspace, the part that was rough was when I was trying to get back to my home system, in highsec. There were three gate camps going on when I initially wanted to move, so I had to wait those out and find a better time. It took days before I finally found a window to make the 35 jumps it would take to get back home. Ideally I should have just been patient and waited for a closer connection, but I was eager to move on to the next adventure.
The best thing I saw? Probably shattered wormholes. They’re beautiful. The scariest? Any time anyone showed up on d-scan. There were a few times I would leave my relic/data sites because I felt a weird feeling of being watched, even though I honestly didn’t know if someone was or not. I always used a perch to do my sites so that I spent as little time at the cans as possible. Oh, my favourite system is the one in the screenshot. It looked like an ocean in space, and it was beautiful.
Things I’d do differently if I were to do it again (which I might, I haven’t decided yet) – I THINK I’d like to anchor a small structure, or a POS. I know that it leaves a bigger footprint, but maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. I know lots of corporations live in jspace, but I’m really not interested in joining up with a whole bunch of people that I may or may not get along with. In any case, it was a fun 90 days, and it went by VERY quickly. I can’t wait for the next adventure.
As always, fly your way! o7
Hey,
I read almost all of your 90-day suitcase challenge. Cool stuff! I don’t have the ISK for an Orca, but am training covert ops ships at least. Like you I started playing back before 2010, but unfortunately I lost the login for that account. Just recently wandered out of high sec as well, into wormholes, which is probably how I stumbled across your blog. Not much for PvP either.
I feel like there are a lot of abandoned stations in wormhole space – often I poke around corp info when I see a customs office etc and many look like vanity corps or dead corps. I’m no expert but you’d probably blend right in as a corp of one with a structure anchored in a wh.
Anyway, I’ve enjoyed your posts. I don’t think I’ve ever left a blog comment before so excuse the anonymity. Thanks, and keep it up!
Sorry for the late reply, took me forever to figure out where comments were hidden (I rarely get any, lol).
I agree re: abandoned stations. I think I might save up for a few months and then I’ll start a challenge where I anchor a structure and see how long it can last – under the assumption that it will probably get blown up before I make any ISK back. Could be fun!
No worries re: anonymity, and welcome to the blog :)