About 10 billion
The Large Magellanic cloud or LMC is thought to contain about 10 billion stars.
12,600.
The Magellanic Cloud has 422 pages.
From Earth, it is possible to see three galaxies with the naked eye: the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), the Large Magellanic Cloud, and the Small Magellanic Cloud.
2,520.
The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is a satellite galaxy of our own Milky Way. It and the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) are visible from the southern hemisphere, and were named in honor of Ferdinand Magellan, whose crew sailing around the world were the first Europeans to see them.
No you would see an entirely different vista. Most of the stars you can see from earth would not be visible to the naked eye from the galactic core, and they would also be lost in a blaze of glory of the core suns. From within a planetary atmosphere you probably would not be able to see stars even at night, due to the ambient light. The core suns are packed about a quarter of a light year apart.
There are two Magellanic clouds at distances of 160,000 and 200,000 light-years from the Earth. 1 light year is 9.46073E12 kilometres.
There are at least 3000 sentient species in a fictionalized version of the Small Magellanic Cloud (a dwarf barred irregular galaxy 200,000 light-years from Earth, and is 7000 light-years in diameter, and contains 3 billion stars (each star is orbited by an average of 9 planets and 170 moons; as well as asteroids and nebulae)).
Of the naked eye galaxies - i.e. those visible with the naked eye. There are seven. * Milky Way - Ours * Andromeda * Large Magellanic Cloud - Southern Hemisphere * Small Magellanic Cloud - Southern Hemisphere * Omega Centauri - Cannibalised by the Milky Way * Triangulum Galaxy - Very Faint * Bode's Galaxy - Very Faint See link for more details
3 stars
It is impossible to say for sure. Some stars may be very bright, but are much too far away for us to see. All the stars you see when you look outside at night are just from our galaxy. We can only see a few thousand of them, and there are many more than that in our galaxy. There are about 100 billion galaxies out there. Even among the stars we can see, some may be very bright if you were closer to them, but they seem very dim to us. The sun is a star and it seems bright because we are so close to it. There are many stars out there that are a lot brighter than it is, but just seem like tiny points of light to us. So your question cannot really be answered.