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Is there a way to change from Celsius to Fahrenheit?


Go to solution Solved by Dark Thoughts,

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Posted

I didn't see an option in the settings, so thought I would ask here. I live in the U.S., where we are still using Fahrenheit. I'd love to just know the temperature without having to use a converter, if at all possible, lol. :)

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Posted

You don't need a converter, just learn some very basic ranges.

0 = freezing temperature of water, 10 is pretty cold, 20 is mild spring like temperature and roughly your average indoor & t-shirt temperature and 30+ is very hot summer / heat wave type of temps. Everything below 0 just gets more and more frozen wastelandy and is kinda irrelevant as far as the game goes anyway.

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  • 5 months later...
Posted (edited)
46 minutes ago, AHorseNamedBeef said:

Very rude responses. Guy asked if there was a setting for conversion not for your insecurity about other people having different methods. Answer the question without being a snob next time.

Not being rude. I don't personally use any of those mods that do that, so can't recommend anything. I was trying to put a little more light-hearted response than the other one of "Just deal with it"

But I can nudge in the right direction. Go to the mod page and you can find something with pretty much any reasonable search -- temperature, fahrenheit, freedom, etc.

TRIGGER WARNING: Joke in preceding sentence.

Edited by Thorfinn
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Posted
16 hours ago, AHorseNamedBeef said:

Very rude responses. Guy asked if there was a setting for conversion not for your insecurity about other people having different methods. Answer the question without being a snob next time.

Nobody had an issue of it 4 months ago.  The OP even reacted positively to both "rude" responses.

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  • 6 months later...
Posted (edited)
The ironic thing here, @Thorfinn, is that Fahrenheit is a European unit of measurement and was commonly used in the UK up until around the 1960s. The imperial system of units weren't developed by America, they were developed by the British, and they were defined in the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824. Hence the name, "imperial". Edited by cryptagion
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