You forgot the Moon.maybe like this
mercury : nothing(but heat)
venus : sour rain(can hurt you)
mars : sandstorm(tiny sight)
jupiter : heavy storms all the time(tiny sight cant stay to long)
saturn : heavy storms all the time(tiny sight)
uranus : heavy storms all the time(wierd gravity cant stay to long)
neptune : ehm you know what to go here(same as jupiter and uranus)
pluto : meteor showers(can hurt you if hit)
Sounds like that could work!Some weather ideas:
Acid rain: rain that hurts
Sandstorms: very low visibility (like void-fog), choking (you'll get the bubble timer like when you're underwater if you're without a suit).
Snowstorm: very low visibility, decreased speed (slowness I)
Heavy storms: like normal storms except the wind is so strong it slowly pushes/pulls you.
Meteor showers: rain that hurts a lot!
Asteroid showers: multiple impacts that explode on impact.
Solar bursts: Increased light level, electronic machines stop working.
I Think It Already Has some kind of "weather" when the meteors shoot down every once in a while (its where you get meteoric iron from)You forgot the Moon.
you would also need a pressure suit that could withstand extreme pressure and heat and you would have to bring food an pretty much stay in your probedoesn't Jupiter have a liquid nitrogen sea? and you just make a specially designed lander with a nitrogen resistant raft and splash down on the sea?
Liquid Nitrogen? Haha, the "sea" your referring to is Metallic Hydrogen, and that stuff is some weird shiz. We know very little about it because the pressures grow so great before you reach it that any sort of modern-day space-faring machinery will be destroyed before it reaches it. Not to mention to incredible heat and poisonous gases that inhabit Jupiter.doesn't Jupiter have a liquid nitrogen sea? and you just make a specially designed lander with a nitrogen resistant raft and splash down on the sea?
thank you for saying that^^Liquid Nitrogen? Haha, the "sea" your referring to is Metallic Hydrogen, and that stuff is some weird shiz. We know very little about it because the pressures grow so great before you reach it that any sort of modern-day space-faring machinery will be destroyed before it reaches it. Not to mention to incredible heat and poisonous gases that inhabit Jupiter.
That doesn't mean it couldn't work though.
or you could have like one piece of amour that does each thing like lighting protection or heat protection.Perhaps you need special weather protection suits, for example, one that will protect you from lightning storms on jupiter, or extreme thermal suits to protect from the heat on mercury.
thats what where hear forsorry about my mistake, I didn't read much into Jupiter, thanks for correcting me though
THERE IS NO SPACESUIT
I really wish there is a proper spacesuit that looks cool, just like the NASA ones. Having oxygen tank is is fine, but having skin exposed is seriously unrealistic
Perhaps the suit has to be different depending on where you are going, for example Venus, it has to withstand immense heat, where as Jupiter, it has to be able to support the player against the strong gravity.
If the player takes the suit off in these harsh condition they would die, probably instantly
Possible, but that would be too extreme. You can go pretty far, but I think destroying entire planets (aka maps) is going too far.
Maybe it's because you're an alien to them.What I think of water in the Moon:
Joking apart, it would make more sense if the player had to bring water to the Moon. The first time I saw those tree farms there that was sort of "whattaheck" moment.
Liquid water is possible only if there is enough pressure at certain temperature (Clausius–Clapeyron relation). Since Moon has no air, water would be either solid or gaseous, depending on the temperature. This means that, during the day, water would evaporate (like in the Nether) and freeze during the night. Liquid water would be possible inside pressured rooms.
(speaking of the Nether, discovered that beds explode in the Moon... ;0) )
What I think of water in the Moon:
Joking apart, it would make more sense if the player had to bring water to the Moon. The first time I saw those tree farms there that was sort of "whattaheck" moment.
Liquid water is possible only if there is enough pressure at certain temperature (Clausius–Clapeyron relation). Since Moon has no air, water would be either solid or gaseous, depending on the temperature. This means that, during the day, water would evaporate (like in the Nether) and freeze during the night. Liquid water would be possible inside pressured rooms.
(speaking of the Nether, discovered that beds explode in the Moon... ;0) )