I am excited, like a native from a TL0 world having just found a TLF bit technology, knowing that is is "magic," may change my world, but having so stinking idea what to do with it!!
Here's the question: So-expletivedeleted-What for YOUR TU???
If these are going to be inserted into MTU, I would have to reverse-engineer the technology/physical reality so they do not change EVERYTHING.
So, some thoughts for putting these IMTU.
So the question is, why are these not on the "roadmaps?" The answer is that they are not used commonly, and are either secret, inconvenient, or perilous for use without special skills, equipment and knowledge.
I find analogies helpful for my little mind: One can drive across the U.S. using a roadmap. There are caves, bordellos, secret government installations and white water routes that do not appear on these maps, or in standard GPS data sets. These can be found, at various levels of detail and financial cost or government access, but finding them is not enough: there are various risks associated with them.
So this is my vision for these rogues:
All these (rougue brown dwarfs and GG's) would, quite probably be X starports. This would be a HUGE task for the IISS to survey, and such surveys would likely be classified for strategic reasons.
If we can assume that the presence of a large mass (larger than a GG or even a Brown Dwarf) is advantagious for a accurate jump termination, then we get a reason even those that may be known are not used: if you jump in, you are more likely to have a "terminal misjump," technically not a misjump as we think it: the same roll is made as for a misjump, but with the following modifiers: into a space without a mapped star -5, -1 number of parsecs of jump, - number of asteroid belts in target rogue system, using an IISS- or IN- quality survey +2, using a black market survey +1 [only one survey modifier is possible], +(level of Navigation-Astrogation/4)[rounding down], +(level of computer/8)[rounding down]. One roll is made for misjump, but two results are calculated: the "normal" misjump, and the "terminal" misjump. A normal misjump occurence would obviously trump the need for a terminal misjump. The modifiers for a terminal include both the conventional ones, and those in this paragraph; if the results indicate no normal misjump, but a terminal misjump, then the results of the terminal misjump are calculated the same as a normal misjump, except that the distance of any misjump is converted to AU's instead of hexes. (1 AU = about 1.5 x 10^8 km). The terminal misjump is only possible/relevant if jumping into "black space."
Within the Imperium, the IISS is tasked with survey of the "black spaces." Surveys are classified, and any bodies therein are designated as red zones by the TAS and interdicted by the Imperium. As of 1105, the Zhodani Consulate, Sworld Worlds, and Darrian Confederation all have similar approaches. The approaches of the the Vargr appear obscure, shifting, and inconsistent, but some Corsair emergency bases are apparently located within 1 hex of border worlds; roll 11+ on 2D6.
The chance of a surveyed rogue system existing is the same as that an original system, but is rolled seperately from other systems. The presence of GG's is likewise the same, except that if 2 or more GG's are rolled there will be no brown dwarf, but just a single GG.
Black market surveys are available for a given hex at 10+, +(Streetwise/2); a roll of 4- indicates an imperial investigation/sting has occured, by the IISS, INI, or some other imperial intelligence service. Possession of a survey carries a normal sentence of life.
Starship encounters at rogues are rolled on the normal tables for an X starport, except that any encounters with other than naval/IISS ships, are rerolled: only the same result rolled twice in a row is counted commercial ships. For pirates, the roll is repeated not once, but thrice, and any match with the first roll counts.
Well, that's my whack at it.
The meaning is that routine jumps into "the black" at systems are not conducted, but it is possible, and the black is treated by most starfarers as the mariners of the middle ages treated the parts of their charts announcing "Here be Dragons," and for good reason.