*shakes head* I didn't mean disrupting them while in bed or napping elsewhere. Even when they've woken up from bed, they have to fiddle at the nightstand, walk down near the entryway, look back toward the bed, and then back toward the entryway before they actually get the resting energy.

I've been studying how they gain/lose energy- and their energy only goes up in increments of | | with each "going to bed". This means an incredible time that they have to be sleeping... and even "Reading an Email" takes half that much energy. If they do manage to become exhausted, it takes roughly 20 minutes to get them back to a safe energy level. That's not "hard", that's time-devouring.

Another thing is that I cannot get the adults to get a bit of extra sleep. If they're no longer Tired, they won't go to bed and will rarely nap on the hammock. Which means... they do one action and suddenly they're Tired again. Perhaps making the energy gained when sleeping would ammend this without taking away from the need to adapt to each person?


Edited by Marian Frae (04/30/09 07:21 AM)