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On January 6th, a New Yuan-2B rocket was launched at the Qiongzhou Launch Site, sending another six Explorer IIs to the Moon.
The six Explorer II rovers are expected to land around Kuom Impact Crater at three locations between the 9th and 11th, to further explore the extent and depth of the ice layers.
Due to the rushed launch, this batch of rovers didn't have time to update their detection equipment and had some redundancy, but it wasn't a big issue.
By this launch, the aerospace community around the world had been desensitized.
Mass-producing lunar rovers like cars, while astonishing to everyone before the discovery of ice layers at Kuom Impact Crater, was considered a little foolish—possible, but not particularly meaningful.
But now it's different: every additional rover means another plot of land circled, accelerating the development pace.