Portable Star Labs are the method by which new stars may be discovered, for use in the Test of Pyrotechnics. Each university starts with the same two basic recipes, and can gain additional ones using Star Labs. Each university that has opened the Pyrotechnics technology will distribute approximately two Portable Star Labs to players per week, apparently at random intervals. After use, a lab can be turned in at any University that has opened Pyrotechnics? (note: not necessarily the one from which it was received). Once a single university has received seven labs, the scientists there, also known as a random number generator, will select one of the seven submitted stars, and players will then be able to learn that recipe from that university, and only that university.
Star labs are pre-loaded with materials to fire 60 shots. After each shot, the owner is given the option of naming the shot that was just fired, selecting the shot that was just fired as the best so far, refiring the last shot without changing it, or firing a new random shot. Players other than the owner can register as watchers of the display, and will be able to see the stars as they are launched, and read the costs of the most recently-launched star. The owner of the lab has sole discretion over which star is selected as the "best" - it is not a voting process - but typically the owners solicit input from the watchers and make a collaborative decision. Once a final decision has been made and named, the lab can be turned in at a university. At this point, the number of watchers becomes important: this number is a weighting factor on how likely it is that that particular star design will be selected, once 7 total have been turned in. (Example: six labs are turned in with 1 watcher, and a seventh is turned in with 14 watchers. There will be a 70% chance that the seventh lab is the one selected)
Star labs seem to produce several basic kinds of stars: (not an exhaustive list yet)
Stars are typically a single basic color, but there are occasional instances of two-color stars. In some cases, both colors are present in the star, and in others, the star has a multi-coloured trail.
Star Costs: Stars seem to have their costs randomly generated, along the following parameters:
Notes: