In game, I'll usually take the saddle off my horse for a bit and brush him, and feed him. The same is true for real horses, I'm always amazed when I see my horse foamed up, so much realism in this game. No doubt lack of feed would increase this if your horse isn't "fit" (perfect condition). If you notice what appears to be white "foam" around the saddle area and chest, that is actually sweat, particularly if your horse is overworked, such as a long distance of galloping. I don't know if feeding them will have the same effect as it did on my own horse, but it might.Īnyway, I am much more careful about my own horse's feeding routines now. I think the look of the Murfree horses is meant to show that they are emaciated from lack of proper feeding. I gave him a few carrots and oak cakes and the gray area faded away and was replaced by the black sheen again right before my eyes. But then, I noticed the rib cage look to some of it and realized that it had been some time since I had fed him. I was immediately confused because where normally the horse would have returned to it's normal black and purple sheen there remained a large patch of grey area showing just below the saddle in the stomach, rib cage areas exactly as you have pictured above. So I hopped off and gave it a good brushing. After a long session of travel and fighting and camping and fighting I noticed that my horse was looking a little dirty. Has anyone else encountered this at all, or have any idea what it might be in relation to? I've encountered "zombie" humans in the game, so perhaps it's something to do with that? Or it may be something completely different!įor online play I have the black thoroughbred from the ultimate edition. It seems to act as any other horse, in the sense of building up bonding levels and being stabled: the stablehand didn't seem to have anything unique to say about the horse. Neither of these variants are capable of being fed so they cannot breed whatsoever. It looks almost zombie-like, with a dreadlocked mane and tail, and patches of hairless, almost green skin. The only exception to this are Skeleton Horses and Zombie Horses. ![]() Nonetheless, the really weird thing was the horse's coat. Studying it showed it was a Blanket Appaloosa, which is already strange since they're classed as "work" horses, not race horses. However, what spawned was something rather different. Last time I did that I got a Thoroughbred, and it seemed apt since my horse had buggered off and I was surrounded. Skeleton horse at level 89 gives 35.6 arrow damage while riding pet. To put this into perspective: Skeleton pet at level 89 gives 17.8 arrow damage. Hey! I was recently messing around with some cheats on my Xbox, and while messing about destroying Blackwater, spawned in a racehorse using the "Run! Run! Run!" cheat. So I purposely bought a much lower leveled skeleton horse pet to compare with my level 89 skeleton pet.
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