Understanding Time Zones and SoT's Launch to the Hour.

  • I understand there are likely many people that still don't know when they can play Sea of Thieves. Some of us already have it figured out, and luckily RARE has posted an article today showing when you can start playing your copy down to the hour. So for the TL;DR for the most of you I'm sure, here you go:

    https://support.seaofthieves.com/hc/en-gb/articles/360000719208-When-can-I-start-playing-Sea-of-Thieves-


    For those still interested in a more thorough comprehension of how this works, I'll be discussing it lightly. Firstly, if you don't know your time zone and how it compares to UTC, you really should. It's a nice piece of knowledge to have.

    UTC stands for "Coordinated Universal Time" (even though its acronym doesn't match the word order). It sits right on Longitude 0 and is the mathematical base for the rest of the time-zones. Its also effectively the same thing as GMT, which you will likely see used often by Europeans and people who live in the zone's region.

    For example: I'm in the western US which uses PST (Pacific Standard Time) and is UTC -8:00. Eight hours behind UTC. But we are however currently in Daylight time (PDT: Pacific Daylight Time) which is UTC -7:00. UTC has no Daylight time for itself. It is always the same. Knowing what + or - to UTC you are is immensely helpful in these kind of situations.


    Back to the launch at hand. Sea of Thieves by the charts information will be playable earliest and first By New Zealand, followed up by Australians shortly after. They will be playing the game well into the US's mornings. Fortunately the chart lists PDT for comparison which I explained, the math is easy. NZ will be playing the game at 4:00am on the 19th! Essentially a whole day earlier. 17 hours earlier than the US gets access, to be precise.

    Now, the launch isn't happening exactly to your time zone at midnight, not everyone's anyway. While some countries' time-zones inter-lap, their launch is not the same like the US and Mexico both using Central time, US has a sooner launch time. The whole US will have access as soon as the East coast hits midnight on the 20th, even though PDT is 3 hours behind the East time, EDT. (EDT = UTC -4:00.) So West Coasters will be playing as soon as 9:00pm on the 19th, while East Coasters will have access at 12:00am on the 20th but fret not, any American and Canadian friends you may be looking to start the game right off with will all be getting access at the same time in the grand scale of the universe, not bound by our made up spinning rock segregation.

    Anyway, that's about all you really need to know, at least for Sea of Thieves. I hope it adds clarity to Launch and gets you prepared to play at the right time rather than being let down waiting for the wrong time. More-so, I hope any who read through this walks away knowing more about time and how made up and relative it really is. If you didn't know all of this already of course. Have a wonderful Launch day.

  • 24
    Posts
    27.2k
    Views
  • @ghost-0f-dawn maybe I'm missing something, but why would they structure that table that way?

    E.g. I'm in Australia. It lists PDT and UTC. Neither of those are particularly useful as we (at least, here on the east coast) use AEDT.

    So, why not just have a column for UTC and then a column for when that is in your time zone? Say:

    Time in UTC
    20/3/18 00:00AM

    Your Time
    20/3/18 10:00AM

  • @lewanderous I'm guessing there's a solid technical reason for that. The amount of effort writing up a system that identifies the time zone you are in and then shows a list accordingly may or may not be a lot of work, I don't know, but it's a significant amount more than just posting a commonly known time-zone as comparison. A lot of folk use PST/PDT when announcing things in the western world. I suppose it wouldn't have hurt to also include an extreme + zone as opposed to an extreme - zone, but I didn't write the article, and really just goes back to the point in I made in the more in-depth area about the fact it is useful to know how your time-zone relates to UTC, and this is why.

  • @ghost-0f-dawn said in Understanding Time Zones and SoT's Launch to the Hour.:

    @lewanderous I'm guessing there's a solid technical reason for that. The amount of effort writing up a system that identifies the time zone you are in and then shows a list accordingly may or may not be a lot of work, I don't know, but it's a significant amount more than just posting a commonly known time-zone as comparison. A lot of folk use PST/PDT when announcing things in the western world. I suppose it wouldn't have hurt to also include an extreme + zone as opposed to an extreme - zone, but I didn't write the article, and really just goes back to the point in I made in the more in-depth area about the fact it is useful to know how your time-zone relates to UTC, and this is why.

    Ah, sorry, to clarify - I didn't mean use your actual location, but just on the same line as each region just do the calculation and input what it is. PDT is generally irrelevant for almost all of those regions.

    But, hey whatevs. No biggie.

  • @lewanderous I see what you're saying now I believe. I don't know, that does seem like a better way of doing it really.

    EDIT: Actually I revoke that. It wouldn't work because there are multiple time zones in a number of these countries. The US uses 4 different time zones, so saying the US starts at (12:00am your time) wouldn't be a true statement for the other two regions of the country.

  • @ghost-0f-dawn said in Understanding Time Zones and SoT's Launch to the Hour.:

    @lewanderous I see what you're saying now I believe. I don't know, that does seem like a better way of doing it really.

    EDIT: Actually I revoke that. It wouldn't work because there are multiple time zones in a number of these countries. The US uses 3 different time zones, so saying the US starts at (12:00am your time) wouldn't be a true statement for the other two regions of the country.

    Its honestly not a big deal, so no need to carry on... but while that is true about the time zones -as stated above, only the eastern most time zone counts to 'unlock' for the country. So why not just put the local time in the eastern most time zone?

    But again, doesn't really matter. Bring on the 20th at 10am!

  • @lewanderous Yeah, I don't know man, just having discussion.

  • Can someone tell me exactly when it will be for the state of Oklahoma in central America please?

  • Love the concept but the chart just served to confuse the heck out of me.

    It seems easiest to look at it as the earliest time it hits midnight in your country.

    However, unless I am mistaken Rare has not confirmed that the servers will be live. It would seem a bit strange ( However incredibly awesome, as a New Zealander ), for me to be able to log on at midnight my time while others had to wait till midnight their time which can be hugely variable. I wouldn't take the Microsoft stores time and date for release as gospel until Rare confirms it.

  • @prevoyant Central time would be 11:00pm on the 19th.

  • @platypuserotica This is literally a time chart of the Launch from RARE themselves, and is accurate with the store.

  • @ghost-0f-dawn Really? Well shiver my timbers, then. Guess I get a headstart. :D

  • @ghost-0f-dawn Oh okay so basically just the time they tell you in the xbox store

  • I'm in Adelaide, South Australia, looks like 11.30pm Monday 19/03/2018 for me which is what the Microsoft XBOX store also currently shows. I think.

  • @prevoyant for US and Canada 12 am EST March 20th 11 pm central time 10 pm mountain time and 9pm PST on the March 19th
    .

  • Stupid time "savings" schemes! That's the source of confusion. Otherwise, it would be as simple as GMT/UTC plus or minus however much it is year-round for your region.

    The simplest way for anyone to find their local time to play is to find Sea of Thieves page in the Xbox store or Windows store, where the availability time is displayed at the top.

  • Will changing my xbox time and location to New Zealand give me access to the game early even though I’m in eastern standard time?

  • Maybe, @HEADLESSLLAMAS but I would check Rare and Xbox Live's TOS and such to make sure that attempting it is not going to get you banned.

    There are ways around the time zone issue but again it could be against TOS.

  • I'm not sure the release time is correct on that page though.

    I'm in Italy, my time zone is GMT+1 or UTC+1.
    Hence, when in the UK it will be 00:00 of the 20th March (actual date of release, as Rare are UK based), in Italy it will be 01:00, not the 23 o'clock of the 19th.

    With the table written like this, the columns don't have meaning: if you use a time zone (UTC or PDT), then the time is the same for every country: you have to know you time zone difference and add it or substract it.

    The way it's written, again for Italy, it means it start at 23:00 of the 19th march UTC, which means at 00:00 of the 20th UTC+1. But at the 00:00 of the 20th UTC+1, in the UK it will still be 23:00 UTC, and that conflicts with the following row of the table, where the UK launch time is written to be 00:00 UTC.

    So I think the table should like like that:

    START DATE TIME (UTC): 20th March 00:00

    Region Start Time UTC difference
    New Zealand (Auckland) 3/20/2018 13:00 UTC+13
    Australia (Sydney) 3/20/2018 11:00 UTC+11
    Japan, South Korea 3/20/2018 09:00 UTC+9
    Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore 3/20/2018 08:00 UTC+8
    India (New Delhi) 3/20/2018 05:00 UTC+5:30
    United Arab Emirates (Dubai) 3/20/2018 04:00 UTC+4
    Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey 3/20/2018 03:00 UTC+3
    Finland, Greece, Israel, South Africa 3/20/2018 02:00 UTC+2
    Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, France 3/20/2018 01:00 UTC+1
    Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway 3/20/2018 01:00 UTC+1
    Poland, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland 3/20/2018 01:00 UTC+1
    United Kingdom, Ireland, Portugal 3/20/2018 00:00 UTC
    Argentina, Chile, Brazil 3/19/2018 21:00 UTC-3
    Canada (Halifax) 3/19/2018 21:00 UTC-3
    United States / Canada (New York / Toronto) 3/19/2018 20:00 UTC-4
    United States / Canada (Chicago / Winnipeg) 3/19/2018 19:00 UTC-5
    United States / Canada (Denver / Regina) 3/19/2018 18:00 UTC-6
    United States / Canada (San Francisco / Vancouver) 3/19/2018 17:00 UTC-7
    Colombia 3/19/2018 19:00 UTC-5
    Mexico 3/19/2018 18:00 UTC-6

    But if they are doing a staggered release, going around the clock, then I'll just enjoy playing the game one hour before the UK guys ^^.

    EDIT: It is weird though, on the Microsoft Store Page it shows 12:00 AM (or 00:00) of the 20th for my country... So it seems the actual table is correct and they are doing a staggered release. That is weird! Hope there won't be drama because of wrong reported launch time!

  • @molecola You must understand that some of these regions have more than ome time zome, but release at the same time. So listing something like that doesnt work, because youd have America "Start at 00:00 on the 20th (UTC -4:00) but theres 3 other time zones in the US where that would be false.

  • @ghost-0f-dawn if you have read my whole table you would have seen the different US and Canada time zones reported. I've inserted a city for the US and one for Canada, representative for the time zone. Didn't add timezones with 0:30 differences.

  • @molecola except the times posted in your table are pretty much completely wrong.

    It is a staggered release, and generally speaking launching at midnight in each respective time zone, though some exceptions do exist. This, the table posted by Rare and shared in the OP, is the standard release schedule for most Xbox titles.

    Your table would be accurate were it to go live world wide at 00:00 UTC.

    Really puzzled at how folks are making this so complicated.

  • @oldmansutii I wrote that the table was wrong if it was a staggered release. So no biggie. Problem is that information wasn't clear and I thought it was a mistake, just that.

  • @molecola it's not a mistake, the times in the table posted by Rare are accurate, the same I've experienced in launching multiple titles over the last few years.

24
Posts
27.2k
Views
22 out of 24