Everyone knows the first thing you should do when you spawn your first station is to homebase it. What if someone was stalking you to blow you up? Maybe try scanning first and trying to lose a follower by making sharp turns around suns or going for a wormhole ride. Or just play on a PvE server and stop trying to break open world PvP because you can't deal with the potential of someone blowing you up.
Oh yes, because dodging works so great against a lock on missile attack that can vaporize half a moon, when you're in starter blocks trying to actually get into unclaimed space so you can even START setting up.
Also, most server admins will gladly wipe your player file and let you start from scratch or have free thruster stick kit[/quote]This is the essence of what on the old WotC boards we called the Oberronni Fallacy.
In D&D 3e there was something called Rule 0 that basically said the DM could change any rule at any time. Lot of people would respond any time an exploit was pointed out that it was okay, you could just Rule 0 it. User by the name of Oberronni pointed out "Just because the DM can fix it doesn't mean it wasn't broken in the first place."
The very fact that this happens and the only way to fix it is to have an admin on to use admin commands or wipe your player file out of the database for you to be able to continue playing simply reinforces the point that the problem exists to start with.
Again, if you are not interested in the open world PvP aspect of an open world PvP game, then maybe you should play on a PvE or RP server?
I don't like RP, don't do those. And if there *WAS* a vanilla setting PvE cooperative server, I'll be damned if I've been able to find it.
Seriously, show me ONE server that isn't creative, that doesn't have a bunch of alterations to things like mining rates, that is an actual coop PvE that doesn't allow non-consensual PvP and I'll go there in a heartbeat.
Until then, I'm limited to only single player or putting up with tin pot tyrants that think they're god's gift to gaming and I have to pay tribute to them just for the privilege of existing.