Qbah
Diamond Member
- Oct 18, 2005
- 3,754
- 10
- 81
I only scanned when I needed resources for an upgrade, then I only scanned rich planets. I did visit every planet to see if there was an anomaly, but I didn't even come close to scanning even half the planets for resources.
That's what I was doing too. I was flying around looking for rich planets and only when I found an upgrade and did't have resources. Why would you look for them otherwise? Nothing else needs them, just researching the upgrades you find on missions or unlock (the ones from shops are added automatically). When I found one with EZ, I was scanning it "fully" though (as it's rare) - so I was pretty sure I didn't miss a spot. The other ones, when it went to poor I was flying away to find me a new one. And I know you could find big reserves even when it says depleted, but why bother? Plenty of other planets in the available systems.
And what I did was using both left and right sticks to the right and running circles parallel to the equator. When the scanning pointer is on the edge and you use both sticks (to rotate the planet and the pointer), it goes faster for some reason. You can notice it because the planet starts to turn faster (or I guess the upgraded scanner moves faster than turning the planet in scanning mode so the game just compensates for that). When I did a full circle (perhaps mark the first point or look for a deposit and then mark it to have a reference point), just move the scanner two blocks down and repeat. Also, it doesn't matter in which part of the deposit you fire the probe to, so even if it hits on a small part of of a huge one, the whole deposit is given to you - no need to wander off to find "a better spot" - that's something I found out empirically though - it's not written anywhere. When I found a huge spike on the scanner, I moved the scanner a bit to point to an edge when the graph is low but still from the same deposit and shot a probe - bam, 2500+ units added anyway. That's also the reason you are given other resources too when finding one spot - as there's some more attached to it that's not within the current scanning range.