OMG I LOVE the blue roan snowflake coat! I have a blue leopard and the snowflake blue roan and they are the jewels of my stable. I love Bub! I'm trying to breed silver, mostly. I want a silver black blanket appy and silver bay roan appy.
The only thing that is rather irritating me is that silver chestnuts exists in the game... they don't exist in real life, silver is simply not visible because red based horses (chestnuts) don't have any black pigment to get diluted by silver.
Could it be that they call them that because of the white/grey in the mane/tail? I haven't bought this game yet, but I remember Rocky Mountain horses being referred to as like... silver chestnut, bay or chocolate if they have a white/flaxen mane/tail.
@@stefyroxanne7567 red based horses with light mane (white or yellowish) are never called silver as if would be genetically inaccurate, they're simply flaxen chestnut. Although for some odd reason, bay or black based horses with light manes are sometimes referred to a having a "flaxen" mane.
So underrated
❤
OMG I LOVE the blue roan snowflake coat! I have a blue leopard and the snowflake blue roan and they are the jewels of my stable. I love Bub!
I'm trying to breed silver, mostly. I want a silver black blanket appy and silver bay roan appy.
Thank you and good luck!!
How do you get appaloosas tho?
you can get them from the Legendary section in the Auction House, might be able to find some in wild herd too
The only thing that is rather irritating me is that silver chestnuts exists in the game... they don't exist in real life, silver is simply not visible because red based horses (chestnuts) don't have any black pigment to get diluted by silver.
You're totally right and that was fixed in the newest update! 🥳
Could it be that they call them that because of the white/grey in the mane/tail? I haven't bought this game yet, but I remember Rocky Mountain horses being referred to as like... silver chestnut, bay or chocolate if they have a white/flaxen mane/tail.
@@stefyroxanne7567 red based horses with light mane (white or yellowish) are never called silver as if would be genetically inaccurate, they're simply flaxen chestnut. Although for some odd reason, bay or black based horses with light manes are sometimes referred to a having a "flaxen" mane.