Why days and not hours?
Moderator: OpenTTD Developers
-
- Engineer
- Posts: 86
- Joined: 07 Sep 2014 09:20
Why days and not hours?
I am wondering if there is a special reason behind the usage of days to count time in the game? Why not hours? Kind of strange that it should take two days to load a vehicle with 16 crates of goods.
- Redirect Left
- Tycoon
- Posts: 7249
- Joined: 22 Jan 2005 19:31
- Location: Wakefield, West Yorkshire
Re: Why days and not hours?
Ask Chris Sawyer.
Re: Why days and not hours?
If it were hours, it'd be weird that after just a couple of hundred or so hours you get new vehicle generations ...
... and either way it's not like passenger trains take hours to load irl either.
You'll end up with weirdness either way. Since TT was meant to be played from 1950 to 2050 or so I think days is a rather logical choice. ^^
... and either way it's not like passenger trains take hours to load irl either.
You'll end up with weirdness either way. Since TT was meant to be played from 1950 to 2050 or so I think days is a rather logical choice. ^^
-
- Engineer
- Posts: 86
- Joined: 07 Sep 2014 09:20
Re: Why days and not hours?
Yes, I agree, either way something would look weird. The more I think about it, the more days seem a very logical choice.
Re: Why days and not hours?
While it won't exactly give you hours, there's the 'Another Daylength Patch' over in the Development part of the forum, which will at least make days longer.
-
- Tycoon
- Posts: 1396
- Joined: 23 Feb 2014 22:02
Re: Why days and not hours?
TTD was meant to be played from 1950 to 2050,but TT was meant to be played from 1930 to 2030.Pyoro wrote:If it were hours, it'd be weird that after just a couple of hundred or so hours you get new vehicle generations ...
... and either way it's not like passenger trains take hours to load irl either.
You'll end up with weirdness either way. Since TT was meant to be played from 1950 to 2050 or so I think days is a rather logical choice. ^^
Re: Why days and not hours?
To me, OpenTTD made a quite good simulation (?) for freight rail traffic, but for passenger service timetabling I tend to treat days like minutes. However, in that "treat day as minute" case, 500 years would be analogous to 126.73 days, which is only 4 months! I feel less guilty for developing slowly when this came into my mind.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 16 guests