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Use the comparison table below to explore every timing option across the full DGT clock range. Whether you need e-Board compatibility, Scrabble modes, or tournament-grade FIDE compliance, this guide highlights the features that suit your play style.
Experiment with different time controls and mix settings like bonus, delay, and periods to create the perfect match experience.
Some DGT clocks allow different settings in separate periods—for example, a traditional time control followed by increments or delay. This lets you tailor your matches to any standard, from casual play to professional tournaments.
If you set a one-minute move time and allow two stages, the clock shows two minutes but snaps back to one minute whenever a move exceeds the per-move limit. Players can agree whether exceeding the limit is a loss or if they continue with another minute per move.
DGT 3000 and DGT XL feature dedicated connection ports for DGT e-Boards. Use the supplied connector cables and follow the e-Board manual for pairing instructions.
DGT 3000, DGT XL, DGT 2010, and DGT North American all support multi-period controls. DGT Easy models do not.
Bronstein adds the delay time after each move, while US Delay counts a short pause before the main time decreases, common in USCF events.
DGT 3000, DGT XL, and DGT 2010 include Byo-Yomi settings specially designed for Go/Baduk timing systems.
DGT 3000 and DGT XL offer the hourglass option. Both players’ clocks balance each other as one counts down and the other counts up.
DGT Cube supports up to six players. DGT Pyramid supports four and displays each player’s clock independently.
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