[@Slime] Nope, there are none. Go for it. Back to the calendar stuff, this is what I have in mind so far. - I reckon we could pick a start date from the following major events that had a worldwide effect (these are listed here in chronological order): -- Phantasmogoria -- Vowzra's death -- The Blinding Purge - I reckon that adopting the urtelem stone calendar is probably the most appropriate as it's the closest thing to a worldwide calendar right now. - Backdating events with the calendar should be done only with approximate dates to let the temporal consistency remain relaxed. - Dating posts from the adoption of the calendar should be optional at most. Anyone who wants to use approximate dates may do so. - Problems would only arise if two different timestreams hit a third timestream out of order. If this happens, there may be some pigeon-holing of plots that prevents their interaction. In light of this, I think it'd be useful to restrict plots to a time range of +/- 200 solar years from a given date that is set at the beginning of every turn and just contain temporal inconsistencies to within that range. Of course, this could alternatively be a range of 100 years instead? Or 50 years? It's up for discussion. The central date could either advance regularly with every turn or arbitrarily at GM discretion. This way, everyone can stay in around about the same time frame as each other, allowing for mortal lifespans and long, slow events. What does everyone think? Any opinions or suggestions?