Accurately/precisely determining your position WITHIN the empty hex after breakout ... potentially more difficult than average, although spending "enough time" on the problem would reduce the difficulty back down to standard.
Ya know, that's the funny thing.
Galactic positioning is a trick.
In theory, I guess the common knowledge is to rely on pulsars. Scan the sky, find the pulsars, grab the sextant, and you can get some solid idea of your location at a galactic scale.
And that's all fine.
What we don't know, is how long do pulsars last? I guess the Cosmology wonks assure us that they last for at least 1000's perhaps 100's of thousands or millions of years. "Good enough" for most Imperial measurements.
But, see, if my ship is yanked 100,000 LY to Random Place...well, we're now 100,000 years up or down the time line in the life span of the pulsar.
Is the pulsar of 100,000 years ago "pulsing" the same as it was "today"? or, 100,000 years later? does it even exist?
Likely this is not a problem with our little parsec jumps. Few years here or there aren't going to matter...much.
But it's an intriguing problem.