[QUOTE=Nalin;39774]The only way that would happen is if the clock on the computer the gserver is hosted on is messed up.[/QUOTE]
So no matter what, time would always catch right up then?
So everyone would be EXACTLY on the same time at all times. So far with my little experiment it runs perfectly the way I want it to since I want to use AUTO Events, and AUTO re-stocking, as well as a “Seasons” system where it’s divided into 13 months, 4 seasons, 24 hour days. So I would kinda need something controlling all of this unless I go and add “hacks” wouldn’t I? xd
[QUOTE=Beholder;39791]It’s a clock. Generally they’re binded by minutes, people won’t even notice a potential 5 second difference. Also, 13 months? Trippy.[/QUOTE]
In reality we should be using a 13 month system, the 12 month system came by greedy people wanting names out there.
There is 13 general moons (full) in a year, so one month = one full moon
Instead, we make up for this by dividing the left-over days of the 28 last day into other days, thats why some months have 30, or even 31 days in them.
The blue moon that happens (Second moon in a month) Should belong to month #13. (Or Month #11 or whatever, if december has a blue moon it should be #13’s) I’m just a realist, I think this is how we should do it in real life, but why change to what we already know and have adapted to fairly well, unless it’s in a game Then it seems unique, when it’s really not.
So that’s the only thing I guess that’s noticed and out of Evi, 28 days, 13 months, 4 seasons. xd But nobody knows what the months are named after ;D OOOOOOHHH the only secret.
The Calender was originally ten (lunar) months long beginning March ( the vernal equinox) and ending in December ( December means 10th month) with the time between the end of december and the next equinox being 'outside the calender. The Calender existed to regulate religious festivitys, and define the lengh of political offices, the romans had no ‘weeks’ .
The calender was reformed into 12 months ( precise date unknown the Romans believed approximately 713BC) and two months where added to the end of the year, ( January and February) Eventually March ceased to be new year in 153BC when political changes meant that the two chief roman magistrates ( the Consuls) began to be elected on February the 1st.
The Calender spread with the Roman Empire and being integral to the liturgical year of the Catholic and Orthodox Christian faith spread with those religions as well.
Ethiopia was heart of the Kingdom of Axum in Roman times and was NOT part of the Roman Empire, There christianity came from being directly evangelised by Early christian missionarys and so is not an offshoot of Catholic or Orthodox church. This means they put the christian festivals on there own calender rather than adopting the one of the Roman empire."
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27.3 days would make the month, not 28* sorry for the mix-up. But lets round it. 28 it is.