#169517: "Active player clocks do not show that time remaining is decreasing during animations."
Vad handlar denna rapport om?
Vad hände? Välj från alternativen nedan
Vad hände? Välj från alternativen nedan
Vänligen kontrollera om det redan finns en rapport om samma ämne
Om detta stämmer, RÖSTA på denna rapport. Rapporterna med flest röster har PRIORITET!
| # | Status | Votes | Game | Type | Title | Last update |
|---|
Detaljerad beskrivning
-
• Var vänlig klipp och klistra in felmeddelandet du ser på skärmen, om något.
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU -
• Varsågod och förklara vad du ville göra, vad du gjorde och vad som hände
• Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Var vänlig kopiera/klistra in texten på engelska istället för ditt eget språk. Om du har en skärmdump av den här buggen (bra vana att ta en), så kan du använda en programvara (snipboard.io som till exempel) för att ladda upp bilden och klistra in länken här. Är denna text tillgänglig i översättningssystemet? I så fall, var det mer än 24 timmar sedan den översattes?
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU • Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vänligen förklara ditt förslag exakt och koncist så att det är så enkelt som möjligt att förstå vad du menar.
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU • Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vad visades på skärmen när du blockerades (Blank skärm? Del av spelets användargränssnitt? Felmeddelande?)?
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU • Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vilken del av reglerna respekterades inte av BGA-adaptionen?
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU -
• Är regelbrottet synligt i återuppspelning? Om ja, vilket nummer är det på draget?
• Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vilken spelhandling ville du göra?
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU -
• Vad försöker du göra för att sätta igång denna spelmekaniken?
-
• Vad hände när du försökte göra det här (felmeddelande, meddelande i spelstatusrad, ...)?
• Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• På vilket steg i spelet kom felet (vad var den aktuella instruktionen från spelet)?
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU -
• Vad hände när du försökte utföra en spelhandling (felmeddelande, meddelande i spelstatusrad, ...)?
• Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vänligen beskriv visningsproblemet. Om du har en skärmdump av den här buggen (bra vana att ta en), så kan du använda en programvara (snipboard.io som till exempel) för att ladda upp bilden och klistra in länken här.
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU • Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Var vänlig kopiera/klistra in texten på engelska istället för ditt eget språk. Om du har en skärmdump av den här buggen (bra vana att ta en), så kan du använda en programvara (snipboard.io som till exempel) för att ladda upp bilden och klistra in länken här. Är denna text tillgänglig i översättningssystemet? I så fall, var det mer än 24 timmar sedan den översattes?
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU • Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vänligen förklara ditt förslag exakt och koncist så att det är så enkelt som möjligt att förstå vad du menar.
In Carcassonne, scoring animations occur after a player completes features during their turn. In other words, the animations occur at the beginning of the following player’s turn. Unfortunately the time-remaining clock of the following player doesn’t reflect the fact that their time is being consumed while the animations are running.
Hitting refresh (F5) does fix the problem (during the current animation only), and it would no longer be a problem if players could disable animations (see suggestion here: boardgamearena.com/bug?id=169514 ), but hopefully there is also another way to address this predictable clock discrepancy that works well with animations.
Additional details:
The “time remaining clocks” of players and spectators do not count down while animations are occurring. This can be seen in two streaming video excerpts showing an 8 second delay and a 17 second delay (links pasted below). Although the active player’s clocks resume counting down once the animations have finished, they start with the time remaining that the player had before their turn started, rather than with the correct time remaining that also reflects the time it took for the animations to run. Because of this, even under the best connection circumstances, players and spectators see a clock that suggests that the active player has more time remaining than they actually have. Although the active player’s time remaining is “reset” to be consistent with the BGA server’s time once they’ve finished their turn, the time discrepancy persists throughout their turn, making it possible for them to run out of time without realizing it. The two video clips show that clock discrepancies due to animations can be as much as 17 seconds.
Examples:
8 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/Ugkxa58R5JPxlensRsux1AWFtNnmj_h38GVm
17 second delay: www.youtube.com/clip/UgkxSoBfYPO4q_W3AFiMh3sxiDCX5ClGa7ZU • Vad har du för webbläsare?
Google Chrome v136
Rapporthistorik
Lägg till något till denna rapport
- Ett annat spelbords-ID / drag-ID
- Löste F5 problemet?
- Uppträdde problemet flera gånger? Varje gång? Slumpmässigt?
- Om du har en skärmdump av den här buggen (bra vana att ta en), så kan du använda en programvara (snipboard.io som till exempel) för att ladda upp bilden och klistra in länken här.
