In the most recent episode of Extraterrestrial Thursday , at 00:38:56began constructing a Frontier Outpost in the system of Ereness in order to expand Blorg borders.Unbeknownst to us, the neighboring slimy lizards had parked a colony ship in the nearby Ziamon System, and upon their colony's completion at 00:49:03, the Blorg construction ship was automatically evicted and forced to cancel the Frontier Outpost that was under construction.Look, I understand why Stellaris restricts border access and requires diplomatic permission like EU4 (as opposed to open borders like CK2), but the Blorg Construction Ship and Frontier Outpost were already there before the scale-skin colony completed (and weren't even in the same star system). I suspect the same sort of nonsense would occur if it had been a Blorg Colony Ship on Ereness--why should Blorg colonists be forcefully evicted without given a choice when some cold-blooded lizards began parking their tails in another star system?Sure, we MAY ultimately want to withdraw peacefully to avoid conflict, but at least give players the option to stand our ground and fight. Allow our Frontier Outpost/Colony to complete at the cost of starting a border skirmish/war, or better yet, giving those despicable fork-tongues a nice CB against us.I've always hated how some other games magically teleport armies back into my borders automatically due to some treaty or forcibly cancel my expensive, long-term monument/wonder construction simply because some other faction had finished building one first... and this forced eviction is no different. When I first saw overlapped boundaries in Stellaris screenshots, I was excited about the prospect of entangled, complicated border conflicts. Please let us stand our ground and compete for our Frontier Outpost/Colony and not resort to this type of heavy-handed game mechanics that overwhelmingly favor "first-come first serve" and "winner takes all" binary outcomes. Yes, I'd exploit and abuse the hell out of this sort of binary system, but I'd much rather have a more realistic system where simultaneous claims are allowed.