#169517: "Active player clocks do not show that time remaining is decreasing during animations."
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Detaljert beskrivelse
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• Vennligst kopier/lim inn feilmeldingen du ser på skjermen, om mulig.
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 -
• Vennligst forklar hva du ønsket å gjøre, samt hva du faktisk gjorde og hva som skjedde
• Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vennligst kopier / lim inn teksten som vises på engelsk i stedet for språket ditt. Hvis du har en skjermdump av denne feilen (god kutyme), kan du bruke en bildelagringstjeneste (snipboard.io for eksempel) til å laste den opp og lime in lenken her. Er denne teksten tilgjengelig i oversettelsessenteret? Hvis ja, har den vært oversatt i mer enn 24 timer?
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 • Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vennligst forklar ditt forslag nøyaktig og konsistent slik at det er så enkelt som mulig å forstå hva du mener.
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 • Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Hva ble vist på skjermen når du ble blokkert (Tom skjerm? Del av spillgrensesnittet? Feilmelding?)
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 • Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Hvilken del av reglene ble ikke respektert av BGA-tilpasningen
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 -
• Er regelbruddet tydelig i spilloggen? Hvis ja, Hvilket trekknummer?
• Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Hva var spillhandlingen du ønsket å gjøre?
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 -
• Hva prøvde du å gjøre for å trigge denne spillhandlingen?
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• Hva skjer når du prøver å gjøre dette (feilmelding, meldingsstatus for meldingsfelt, ...)?
• Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• På hvilket tidspunkt i spillet oppsto problemet (hva var den daværende spillinstruksjonen)?
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 -
• Hva skjer når du forsøker å gjøre en spillhandling (feilmelding, spillstatusfeltmelding, ...)?
• Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vennligst beskriv visningsproblemet. Hvis du har en skjermdump av denne feilen (god kutyme), kan du bruke en bildelagringstjeneste (snipboard.io for eksempel) til å laste den opp og lime in lenken her.
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 • Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vennligst kopier / lim inn teksten som vises på engelsk i stedet for språket ditt. Hvis du har en skjermdump av denne feilen (god kutyme), kan du bruke en bildelagringstjeneste (snipboard.io for eksempel) til å laste den opp og lime in lenken her. Er denne teksten tilgjengelig i oversettelsessenteret? Hvis ja, har den vært oversatt i mer enn 24 timer?
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 • Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
-
• Vennligst forklar ditt forslag nøyaktig og konsistent slik at det er så enkelt som mulig å forstå hva du mener.
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 • Hvilken nettleser bruker du?
Google Chrome v136
Rapporthistorikk
Legg til noe i denne rapporten
- En annen bord ID / flytt ID
- Løste F5 problemet?
- Oppstod problemet gjentatte ganger? Hver gang? Tilfeldig?
- Hvis du har en skjermdump av denne feilen (god kutyme), kan du bruke en bildelagringstjeneste (snipboard.io for eksempel) til å laste den opp og lime in lenken her.
