this post was submitted on 08 Jul 2024
899 points (98.0% liked)

Microblog Memes

5876 readers
3567 users here now

A place to share screenshots of Microblog posts, whether from Mastodon, tumblr, ~~Twitter~~ X, KBin, Threads or elsewhere.

Created as an evolution of White People Twitter and other tweet-capture subreddits.

Rules:

  1. Please put at least one word relevant to the post in the post title.
  2. Be nice.
  3. No advertising, brand promotion or guerilla marketing.
  4. Posters are encouraged to link to the toot or tweet etc in the description of posts.

Related communities:

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago (2 children)

At that time the galaxy was home to over one hundred quintillion (100,000,000,000,000,000,000) sapient beings.

That...seems like too many. Earth will probably cap around 10B people. That's 10B planets with Earth-like populations. A search says Coruscant has 1T people on it, so that'd be 100M Coruscants. But I have to assume Coruscant is on the outer edge of population densities. Most would probably be lightly colonized like most of the world we see in the movies.

But then Star Wars is well known for just being waay out there will numbers and not being even close to realistic. :p

[–] Telodzrum 6 points 4 months ago

Honestly, it may not be enough. People, including sci-fi writers, chronically misunderstand the scale of space and how populations could fill in that space in a true galaxy-wide civilization.

Estimates place the number of stars in the Milky Way at 100 billion. This would work out to 10 billion lives per star in the galaxy. That doesn't seem unreasonable, when we know that ecumenopoli exist and smaller versions of them exist in much larger numbers. We also know that terraforming of otherwise non-hospitable worlds is readily achieved in the SW universe. On top of that there are 5-25 million different species of sapient life, bringing even more classes of planets into this calculation.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago

Space is big, bruh. I'm not sure if there's a source on the size of the SW galaxy, but for the milky way, it's estimated to have upwards of 400 billion stars. Assuming most of those have planets, that's plenty of worlds for life given a galactic ecosystem like SW's.