¿Can you play without a right-click?
weird question but my mouse set-up us a little strange right now and i wanted to ask what right-click does in-game...
weird question but my mouse set-up us a little strange right now and i wanted to ask what right-click does in-game...
i didn't even wanna get sucked into doing it again last night but it happened anyway, haha! ¡got a new PB though, managed to name 1395/4299 off the top of my head (many of them on accident)
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https://www.jetpunk.com/user-quizzes/309965/all-first-level-subdivisions-of-the-world-with-a-map
https://store.steampowered.com/app/4045480/Drawquarium/
for those that wanna see the game
"Sulto Ğeskele, Sŕao Tebul Forenu Hakat."
{not-want brag [i], but not-know happen [i] now}
"Not to brag but I have no idea what's going on."
i've been making languages since before i knew conlanging was a shared hobby, and despite finding out other people online do this too, i never really looked too far into the community, so there's a lot of conlanging lingo and common knowledge i'm still not very familar with. despite that though, i've still been able to compare aspects of my conlangs with both other conlangs and irl languages. but i still haven't seen anyone share my circadian conjugation system yet, and i wouldn't think it would be so rare.
basically, there's six vowels (a/o/u/e/ı/i) and the day is split up into six sections.
5:00 - 9:00 (u)
9:00 - 13:00 (o)
13:00 - 17:00 (a)
17:00 - 21:00 (e)
21:00 - 1:00 (ı)
1:00 - 5:00 (i)
(this language is also spoken close to the equator in a worldbuilding project so 5:00 is always sunrise and 17:00 is always sunset)
every verb has synchronised vowels, and the base form is the culturally percieved *normal time* to do whatever the verb is, so base form for sleep would be "Dılı"
but if you wanna specify that you were sleeping in the afternoon, you can say "Dala"
maybe i'm just oblivious, or haven't looked in the right spots yet, but i feel like i haven't seen something like this before. most conjugation systems seem to be for similar things: person, tense, plurality, etc.
¿any of you have a system like this, or know of a system like this?