
The reward for completing the mission was 750 FP Īs the Rebels again succeeded in completing more missions than the Imperials the Rebels won the Act. You then had to travel to either Dantooine, Dathomir, Endor, Lok or Yavin IV to speak to a Rebel or Imperial Commander. (started 8th October, 2003) started with either a Rebel or Imperial Coordinator and required you to do a series of quests including collecting and assembling six parts of a Dead-eye Decoder. The resulting morale boost was reflected in a 10% increase in all faction rewards for Rebel missions for the following month. The actual messges can be read HERE.Īs the Rebels succeeded in handing in more disks than the Imperials. The winners were Vete Starforge on Tarquinas and Castorius Pollaxa on Chilastra. The first person to email the actual message on the disks to SOE won a special faction point bonus of 5000 FP. These disks are now very rare and normally cost millions of credits. However, there have been unconfirmed reports that if you still have an assembled set of them, you can still hand them in and get the FP reward and badge. and then hand them into a Faction Recruiter for 500 FP. (started 12th August, 2003) required you to collect and assemble disks broken in to 4 parts of either an "Encrypted Rebel Transmission" or "Encrypted Imperial Transmission" (depending on faction) from killing Swoopers, Meatlumps, etc. If any-one has any suggestions or corrections please feel free to post comments.

tiphat to all the other players past and present who provided the other guides. It's based on loads of other guides, the most important of which are credited at the end.

If you have any questions about any of the Cries of Alderaan story arc then hopefully this guide should answer every question. But as the H.265 codec becomes more popular and newer codecs and containers come into the fray, along with 360 and VR video, Media Player Classic will fade into the distance.OK listen up every-one. It’s astonishing to see a project go through 11 years of development only to come to an end, although it is still a superb piece of software that works pretty much flawlessly – at least for those on Windows.


Regardless of people’s preferred media client, it’s sad to see the MPC-HC project come to an end. VLC was also the go-to solution for media streams (before Twitch, at least) and it’s also quite versatile for those who need support on other operating systems. Of course, VLC is supported up and down the internet as well. MPC was also beloved for its snappy interface, wide file support, and more recently, the ease with which it played H.265 files. Media Player Classic has long been one of the preferred free video players for users on the internet, particularly among anime fans as it comes bundled certain packages of the K-Lite Codec Pack.
