Inbreeding
May 21, 2020 12:18:12 GMT -6
Post by Admin on May 21, 2020 12:18:12 GMT -6
Breeding
Inbreeding
It is a member’s responsibility to ensure that their breeding pairs are healthy. We are no resposible if you happen to miss that a pair is inbred.
Inbreeding is only checked to the 4th generation, so the parent’s full lineage.
Inbreeding is ‘measured’ by how many times IDs appear in the lineage.
Each foal gets it’s own set of rolls based on the number of shared ancestors. Say we roll 2 times because there’s one shared ancestor, each geno would get 2 rolls for pros and cons.
There are still chances of a healthy foal with only minor stat loss though, so not every foal is going to be extremely messed up in that way.
Every inbreeding comes with risks when it comes to the pro and con list, one top of that though, all inbreeding will have a slight stat loss to them.
2-6 rolls - 2 pt loss to 3 stats
8-12 rolls - 3 pt loss to 4 stats
14-18 rolls - 4 pt loss to 5 stats
20+ rolls - 5 pt loss to 6 stats
Stats are randomly rolled for losses.
Checking the inbreeding is quite easy, all you need is the lineage of a sire and a dam.
To check if there’s any inbreeding, you simply compare and see if there are any repeated IDs. If you breed two starters together, both will have a lineage that looks like this, and won’t have any kind of inbreeding.
------------------------------------------ SSS: Unknown
----------------- SS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SSD: Unknown
Sire: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
Now, let’s say you breed a great grandsire to his great-granddaughter. All IDs are used simply to provide an example
Grandsire: 05
------------------------------------------ SSS: Unknown
----------------- SS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SSD: Unknown
Sire: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
Granddaughter: 102
------------------------------------------ SSS: 05
----------------- SS: 20
------------------------------------------ SSD: 17
Sire: 29
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: 24
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: 36
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
In this case, there is only one ID that repeats, 05. His ID is in both lineages, kind of. When comparing, you also have to look at the parent’s IDs to make sure they don’t repeat anywhere as well.
So, 005 repeats twice. So we would roll from the pro and con list, twice.
Now then, let’s do one more example that’s a bit busier.
Say we breed 102 to her own foal, 200.
Dam: 102
------------------------------------------ SSS: 05
----------------- SS: 20
------------------------------------------ SSD: 17
Sire: 29
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: 24
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: 36
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
Foal: 200
------------------------------------------ SSS: Unknown
----------------- SS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SSD: Unknown
Sire: 05
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: 20
----------------- DS: 29
------------------------------------------ DSD: 24
Dam: 102
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: 36
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
In this case, we have 6 different IDs that all repeat twice, meaning we have a total of 12 repeats. So for the breeding admins, they would roll from the list 12 times for each geno in the breeding note.
102, 29, 36, 20, 24, and 05. Even though you won’t see 05 twice on the foal’s lineage, he would still count for inbreeding as he appears in both parent lineages twice.
Possible Pros
Healthy
No Stat Loss
Curly Coat
Piebald
Albino
Corrupted Piebald
Mealisim
Double Uterus
Multiple Magics
Chimera
Dwarfism
Hermaphrodite
Somatic
Identical Twins
Long Ears
Split Tail
Tail Feathers on Demons
Overgrown Tail Feathers on Angels and Nephilims
Possible Cons
Infertility
Still Born
Missing Limbs
Extra Limbs
Two Heads
No Magic
No Wings
All Stats Halved
Stunted Wings
Blind
Deaf
Bald
Conjoined Twins
Short Ears
Eyeless
Toothless
No Tail Feathers on Angels and Nephilims
Inbreeding is only checked to the 4th generation, so the parent’s full lineage.
Inbreeding is ‘measured’ by how many times IDs appear in the lineage.
Inbreeding Risks
Each foal gets it’s own set of rolls based on the number of shared ancestors. Say we roll 2 times because there’s one shared ancestor, each geno would get 2 rolls for pros and cons.
There are still chances of a healthy foal with only minor stat loss though, so not every foal is going to be extremely messed up in that way.
Every inbreeding comes with risks when it comes to the pro and con list, one top of that though, all inbreeding will have a slight stat loss to them.
2-6 rolls - 2 pt loss to 3 stats
8-12 rolls - 3 pt loss to 4 stats
14-18 rolls - 4 pt loss to 5 stats
20+ rolls - 5 pt loss to 6 stats
Stats are randomly rolled for losses.
How to Check
Checking the inbreeding is quite easy, all you need is the lineage of a sire and a dam.
To check if there’s any inbreeding, you simply compare and see if there are any repeated IDs. If you breed two starters together, both will have a lineage that looks like this, and won’t have any kind of inbreeding.
------------------------------------------ SSS: Unknown
----------------- SS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SSD: Unknown
Sire: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
Now, let’s say you breed a great grandsire to his great-granddaughter. All IDs are used simply to provide an example
Grandsire: 05
------------------------------------------ SSS: Unknown
----------------- SS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SSD: Unknown
Sire: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
Granddaughter: 102
------------------------------------------ SSS: 05
----------------- SS: 20
------------------------------------------ SSD: 17
Sire: 29
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: 24
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: 36
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
In this case, there is only one ID that repeats, 05. His ID is in both lineages, kind of. When comparing, you also have to look at the parent’s IDs to make sure they don’t repeat anywhere as well.
So, 005 repeats twice. So we would roll from the pro and con list, twice.
Now then, let’s do one more example that’s a bit busier.
Say we breed 102 to her own foal, 200.
Dam: 102
------------------------------------------ SSS: 05
----------------- SS: 20
------------------------------------------ SSD: 17
Sire: 29
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: 24
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: Unknown
----------------- DS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSD: Unknown
Dam: 36
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
Foal: 200
------------------------------------------ SSS: Unknown
----------------- SS: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SSD: Unknown
Sire: 05
------------------------------------------ SDS: Unknown
----------------- SD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ SDD: Unknown
------------------------------------------ DSS: 20
----------------- DS: 29
------------------------------------------ DSD: 24
Dam: 102
------------------------------------------ DDS: Unknown
----------------- DD: 36
------------------------------------------ DDD: Unknown
In this case, we have 6 different IDs that all repeat twice, meaning we have a total of 12 repeats. So for the breeding admins, they would roll from the list 12 times for each geno in the breeding note.
102, 29, 36, 20, 24, and 05. Even though you won’t see 05 twice on the foal’s lineage, he would still count for inbreeding as he appears in both parent lineages twice.
Pros and Cons we Roll
Possible Pros
Healthy
No Stat Loss
Curly Coat
Piebald
Albino
Corrupted Piebald
Mealisim
Double Uterus
Multiple Magics
Chimera
Dwarfism
Hermaphrodite
Somatic
Identical Twins
Long Ears
Split Tail
Tail Feathers on Demons
Overgrown Tail Feathers on Angels and Nephilims
Possible Cons
Infertility
Still Born
Missing Limbs
Extra Limbs
Two Heads
No Magic
No Wings
All Stats Halved
Stunted Wings
Blind
Deaf
Bald
Conjoined Twins
Short Ears
Eyeless
Toothless
No Tail Feathers on Angels and Nephilims