Reinforcement learning (RL) is currently a popular research topic in control engineering and has the potential to make its way to industrial and commercial applications. Corresponding RL controllers are trained in direct interaction with the controlled system, rendering them data-driven and performance-oriented solutions. The best practice of exploring starts (ES) is used by default to support the learning process via randomly picked initial states. However, this method might deliver strongly biased results if the system's dynamic and constraints lead to unfavorable sample distributions in the state space (e.g., condensed sample accumulation in certain state-space areas). To overcome this issue, a kernel density estimation-based state-space coverage acceleration (DESSCA) is proposed, which improves the ES concept by prioritizing infrequently visited states for a more balanced coverage of the state space during training. Considered test scenarios are mountain car, cartpole and electric motor control environments. Using DQN and DDPG as exemplary RL algorithms, it can be shown that DESSCA is a simple yet effective algorithmic extension to the established ES approach.