For those who like a challenge, there are two supernovae that are visible right now, one in constellation Ophiucus and the other one in Serpens. With magnitudes +15.3 and +14.9 respectively, you can easily see them with the S50 in 1-hour exposures, even from high light pollution areas (I am in a Bortle 8-9 zone) but you have to hurry, as they are fading fast.
The first one, SN2024afyu, a Type IIb supernova, is harder to find, because it is located in a far away galaxy, 2MFGC13744. The closest target you can center on in the Seestar app is star HD155714, which is also impossible to find in StarAtlas. The easiest way is to create a Favorite at RA=17h13m43s Dec=+7°37'31" and use that as the target:

The second one is a Type Ia supernova called SN2025fvw and is located in galaxy NGC5957, which fortunately can be found directly with SkyAtlas search:

I have attached Stellarium screenshots to each image, to help find them and prove that they are indeed "new" stars.