I have an application that generates some number of tokens around the current location of the user using a certain distance radius. The user will then have to run to some of those locations. The problem is that some tokens can be created in a lake,forest,ocean, or some other physically unreachable location. As a quick fix I just generate extra tokens and increase the proximity distance that determines if a user reached a certain location. I now want to improve this so that each token is located at a reachable location.
The only solution I have been able to come up with is using the Google Directions API to determine a path from the user to the token and use the last coordinate in the polyline as the new reachable location of the token. My problem with this is that I potentially have to post up to 30 requests to the Directions service simultaneously and I am worried that I might hit the query rate limit. I have not found anything definite about query rate limit.
So my question is whether anyone knows of a better solution or can give any input on the Directions query rate limit? Waiting 1 second between each request and forcing the user to wait up to 30 seconds is not a reasonable solution. Thanks.
UPDATE Using the solution that I described in the question does produces an OVER_QUERY_LIMIT, even if I wait 1 second between each request. Other then that the logic was sound and tokens that got a request thru were appearing on the road.