One thing I had never really managed to do was to land on the Mün. A task, the first goal of many, I had failed over and over. I had given up after innumerable failures. But I decided to rise up, and try again, with the codenamed "Project Interjection", a sister craft to the many crafts of the failed Interception series.
After some mucking around with handling the craft, I decided to try the stupid method of getting to the moon. No orbit, no space station refueling, nothing fancy like that. I decided to just fly up. This was my old strategy of trying to get to the Mün before I became more informed on how KSP worked. However, my new strategies were plagued by a lack of fuel, and the flying up strategy used a lot of guess work and often ended in frustration. The introduction of control nodes and the target system, however, changed everything. There was no more guess work, I could finally make massive, random paths towards the Mün and make them work!
So I did just that. The craft turned out to be a one way trip, due to lack of fuel, but I didn't care. The craft crashed onto the Münar surface, leaving a trail of fire that destroyed all of the scientific equipment, but I didn't care. I have finally landed on the Mün!
Picture time!
And that sums up the Mün trip in a nutshell.
Now, I need to redesign the probe the craft had been carrying, and make the trip two way to the Mün and possibly one way to Minmus.
Quick bit of trivia: ü=ue. As such, another, technically correct, way to spell 'Mün' is 'Muen', and that the pronunciation of 'Mün' is very similar to the pronunciation of 'Moon'.