A 40-second bomb countdown, the tense kind that ticks down in tactical shooters and action films once the bomb is planted: forty seconds to defuse it or get clear. The big red clock counts straight to zero, and a final flurry of beeps marks the moment it goes off — drama on demand for a stream, a party game, or a class activity that needs a ticking clock.
Forty seconds is the classic defuse window, but the editor takes any length: drop it to ten for a movie-style cliffhanger, or stretch it out. It is an inspired-by timer, not tied to any one game — just a countdown built to feel like the bomb is live.
The longest countdown there is: 99:59:59, just over four days — the maximum a timer can run.
The maximum a timer can show — ninety-nine hours, fifty-nine minutes, fifty-nine seconds, just over four days.
Survive 12 AM to 6 AM in real time — about eight and a half minutes, counted hour by hour like the game.
A Minecraft-style day: ten minutes of day, then ten of night, for a full twenty-minute cycle. Set the rounds to loop.
A 90-second entrant countdown, thirty times over — the full field, with the ten-second buzz-in into every entrance.