There's no reason to generate a date in PHP just to do some date arithmetic in MySQL. You can do this far easier within mysql as is:
UPDATE chars
SET data=DATE_ADD(data, INVERVAL 30 SECOND)
WHERE id=$id
Of course, this assumes you've made data a datetime type field. If it's just an int, then why bother with all the date math, and just do data=data+30.
As well, you're generating your time value in a highly inefficient manner. You format the current date as a string, convert that string to a number, and add 30 to it. Why not just do
$data = time() + 30;
instead? time returns the current date/time as a single integer (a unix timestamp), saving you the round trip through String Land.
mysql_error()to output any errors. – Pekka 웃 Jan 1 '11 at 14:43