AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |
Back to Blog
Dilo kibble1/19/2024 ![]() ![]() Hover your cursor over a color to display its name and ID. The colored squares shown underneath each region's description are the colors that the Equus will randomly spawn with to provide an overall range of its natural color scheme. For demonstration, the regions below are colored red over an albino Equus. This section displays the Equus's natural colors and regions. From the dossier it appears to be comparable to larger horse breeds in terms of size, such as the Shire horse. It has a long wild mane, zebra like stripes, a tail like a horse and a shaggy beard like a goat's. ![]() The Equus appears like a mixture of zebra and a large modern breed of domestic horse. Overall their behavior is similar to that of modern wild horses. If you wish to get near one to tame, use a Ghillie Suit. If a player gets near one, they will flee. The Equus will trot around the island and poses no threat to any survivors. This tool is sometimes effective for self-defense as well, as Equus is limited in battle on its own.at least compared to aggressive prehistoric carnivores. Some survivors employ Equus to herd and wrangle other creatures with a specialized lasso. Although not as robust as what you might find within a village, this utility helped him live a nomadic, solitary lifestyle. I even encountered a man who added extra saddle-pouches that doubled as mobile crafting stations for chemical supplies, foodstuffs, and other items. In fact, Equus' reliability has lead some survivors to construct special saddles for them. Taming an Equus has proven interesting, requiring carefully approaching the creature in the wild, mounting it, and then carefully soothing over time by feeding it vegetables. In Equus, survivors will find a trusty steed or pack animal that can carry them swiftly across land. ![]() Horse and man have long been partners in survival, and this remains true on the Island. Its behavior in the wild is similar to that of other wild members of the Equus genus - it sustains itself by grazing, while keeping safe from predators by living in herds and outrunning its attackers via superior speed and stamina. Based on its stripes, it may be the African variant of Equus giganteus, which appeared in North America during the Ice Age, but that is pure conjecture. Equus magnus appears to be an ancestor of the modern horse. ![]()
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |