Privacy Policy
Effective Date: June 1, 2025 · Last Updated: June 1, 2025
Time Is Precious — So Is Your Privacy
Clock Tick is a game where every second matters. We apply that precision to privacy: we are exact about what we collect, how long we keep it, and what we do with it. Your high score is stored in localStorage under clck_best. One key. One value. That is the complete extent of data the Game writes. It lives in your browser, not on our servers. If the clock resets — if you clear your browser data — we cannot recover your score.
Server Logs and External Requests
Each visit to Clock Tick generates one HTTP server log entry: your IP address, browser identifier, timestamp, and URL. We retain these log entries for exactly 30 days for security and server monitoring purposes. We do not run analytics on them. We do not share them. The Oswald typeface is loaded from Google Fonts at page load — one request, per Google's own privacy terms. After that, no further external requests are made during gameplay. Clock Tick contains no analytics SDK, no advertising pixel, no error tracker, and no social integration. We are precise about this because precision is the point of the game.
Children, Rights, and Policy Updates
Clock Tick runs for everyone. All ages. No parental consent required. No personal data collected. If future versions add any data collection, this document will be updated before the feature goes live, with the specific data described in concrete terms.
Your Data Rights
Players in jurisdictions with formal privacy rights — including GDPR, CCPA, LGPD, and similar legislation — may request information about data we hold. Because we retain only brief, anonymised server-access logs, such requests will ordinarily confirm that we hold no personal data linked to any individual. We respond within legally required timeframes. To submit a request, use the official Clock Tick website or repository contact channel.
No Sale, No Sharing
We do not sell, rent, trade, or share any data with third parties for commercial purposes. If we were ever legally compelled to disclose server-log data — for example, by a valid court order — we would comply with applicable law. We would not do so voluntarily for commercial reasons, because we have no commercial relationship with any data buyer or broker.