Navigation: | Main Page → Creatures → Horse |
Domestic animals Threat level 2 | |||||||
Horse | |||||||
Basic statistics | |||||||
Disposition | Neutral | ||||||
Armor Class | C2 | ||||||
Pain Sensitivity | 100% | ||||||
Max Blood | 25 | ||||||
Agility | +1 | ||||||
Limb groups | |||||||
HEAD | Head - 12 HP | ||||||
BODY | Body - 84 HP | ||||||
LIMB | 4 legs - 24 HP | ||||||
EXTREMITY | N/A | ||||||
WEAK POINTS | 2 eyes (Head) | ||||||
Secondary statistics | |||||||
Skeleton type | |||||||
Can use Weapons/LBE? | |||||||
Can use Clothing and armor? |
The horse is a creature belonging to the Domestic animals category.
Attacks and techniques
This creature has three attacks: Bite, Kick, and Tramping charge.
Bite
Damage type | Range | MAPT | IS | LDV | Pain (C1) | Pain (C2) | Pain (A1) | Pain (A2) | Pain (A3) | Pain (A4) | Pain (A5) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blunt | Melee | 1 | 5 | +1 | 27% | 24% | 22% | 18% | 14% | 7% | 1% |
Kick
Damage type | Range | MAPT | IS | LDV | Pain (C1) | Pain (C2) | Pain (A1) | Pain (A2) | Pain (A3) | Pain (A4) | Pain (A5) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blunt | Melee | 1 | 9 | +0 | 38% | 34% | 30% | 25% | 19% | 10% | 2% |
Trampling charge
Damage type | Range | MAPT | IS | LDV | Pain (C1) | Pain (C2) | Pain (A1) | Pain (A2) | Pain (A3) | Pain (A4) | Pain (A5) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blunt | Special | 1 | 18 | +3 | 67% | 60% | 54% | 44% | 34% | 17% | 3% |
- This attack is a monster equivalent of the Charge ability.
- To use this attack, the target must not be on the same Side - it is impossible to charge a target within Melee range.
- When using this attack, the creature will move into the target's Side, and should finish their turn on that Side.
Overview
This article or section contains lore-related information. Though not strictly necessary for playing the game, you are encouraged to read this section if you wish to have a better understanding of the game's universe. |
Horses belong to the category of equine creatures. They are a type of domestic animal kept not primarily for their meat or fur, but rather for their strength and ability to carry heavy charges. Farmers have domesticated the horse for nearly as long as humans have existed.
A male horse is referred to as a stallion, a female is a mare, young horses are foals; young males are colts and young females are fillies. On average, an adult horse reaches about 5 feet of height and about 1300 pounds of weight, however, individual horses may reach a wide variety of heights and weights; from four feet and 850 pounds to six foot six inches and 2200 pounds (~1 metric ton). Individual horses with a height of 4 feet 10 inches or less are called ponies.
Horses can possess a wide variety of coat, mane and tail colors. Multi-colored horses may be spotted, blotched, or possess other patterns, and their mane and tail can be a different color from that of their coat. Typical colors include black, white, shades of brown, tan, and gray. Many different names have been given to specific combinations of colors and patterns.
In medieval times, warriors and nobles used horses as riding animals for ceremonial purposes, as a symbol of their elevated stature. They were occasionally used for personal transportation in the Mazes, however, due to certain difficulties in traversing UA terrain (doors and door height, in particular, were constant problems for horse riders), they were eventually abandoned in favor of walking and using horses as pack animals, with their owners walking alongside them rather than riding on them.
Equine halflings share many genetic similarities with horses.
Although horse meat is edible and serviceable, it is not considered to be particularly tasty. Some consider it distasteful to hunt wild horses, seeing it as a waste of a potentially useful work animal. Domesticated horses are typically not butchered, and are instead used for work until they are too old to continue serving as work animals. Certain farmers prefer to bury or cremate the bodies of their horses over butchering, seeing them as worthy of the same respect as sapients.