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How the system decides how compatible two characters are, species-wise — the number you see when you check breeding/mating compatibility. No math background needed; if you can read a pie chart, you’re set.

1. Every character has a “species makeup”

Think of each character as a pie chart of what they’re made of.
  • A purebred is a single-flavor pie — 100% one species.
    • Example: a purebred Fennec is 100% Fennec.
  • A hybrid is a mixed pie — slices of two or more species.
    • Example: a “Fenser” might be 70% Fennec, 30% Sergal.
That pie chart is the heart of everything below. We call it the character’s species makeup.

2. Where the makeup comes from: your family tree

A character’s makeup isn’t just a label someone typed in — it’s inherited from the parents, all the way back up the family tree. The rule is simple:
You are 50% your mother’s makeup and 50% your father’s makeup.
Apply that at every generation and it naturally blends down to the original purebred ancestors at the top of the tree.

A quick example

  • Mom is a purebred Husky → her pie is 100% Husky.
  • Dad is a “Sledge” hybrid → his pie is 60% Husky, 40% Malamute.
  • Their child is half of each:
    • Husky: half of Mom’s 100% (= 50%) plus half of Dad’s 60% (= 30%) → 80% Husky
    • Malamute: half of Dad’s 40% → 20% Malamute
    • Child = 80% Husky, 20% Malamute.
Notice the Husky slice grew past 50% because Husky came in from both sides of the family. That stacking is exactly the point.

3. The kinds of species

You’ll see species described one of three ways. It just depends on how many ingredients are in the recipe:
KindIngredientsExample
Purebred1 speciesFennec
True Hybridexactly 2 speciesFenser = Sergal + Fennec
Composite Hybrid3 or more speciesFenserbold = Sergal + Fennec + Kobold
Each ingredient has a percentage (its slice of the pie), and the slices always add up to 100%.
  • Fenser (true hybrid): 30% Sergal, 70% Fennec
  • Fenserbold (composite): 30% Sergal, 50% Fennec, 20% Kobold

4. How compatibility is scored: the “shared slices” rule

To compare two characters, we line up their pie charts and look at the species they both have. For each shared species, we count the smaller of the two slices — because compatibility is limited by whoever brings less of it. Then we add those shared amounts up.
Compatibility = add up the overlapping slice of every species you share. For each shared species, use the smaller of the two percentages.
That’s it. The more species you share — and the bigger those shared slices — the higher the score.

Why “the smaller of the two”?

Imagine two cups of juice. One is 70% apple, the other 50% apple. How much apple do they truly have in common? 50% — you can only match up to the lesser amount. The bigger cup’s extra apple has nothing on the other side to pair with. Taking the smaller slice keeps the score honest.

5. Worked examples

Let’s use three characters:
  • A = 30% Sergal, 70% Fennec (a Fenser-type)
  • B = 30% Sergal, 50% Fennec, 20% Kobold (a Fenserbold-type)
  • C = 100% Fennec (a purebred Fennec)

Example 1 — A with B

SpeciesABShared (smaller)
Sergal30%30%30%
Fennec70%50%50%
Kobold20%0% (A has none)
Total80% compatible
They share Sergal and Fennec, so the score is high. Kobold doesn’t count — only B has it.

Example 2 — A with C

SpeciesACShared (smaller)
Sergal30%0% (C has none)
Fennec70%100%70%
Total70% compatible
They only overlap on Fennec, so the score is just that overlap: 70%.

Example 3 — two mixed grandkids

Breed A with C, and separately breed A with B, and you get two new characters:
  • D (from A × C) = 15% Sergal, 85% Fennec
  • E (from A × B) = 30% Sergal, 60% Fennec, 10% Kobold
SpeciesDEShared (smaller)
Sergal15%30%15%
Fennec85%60%60%
Kobold10%0%
Total75% compatible

6. Things that are good to know

  • Same species = perfectly compatible. Two purebred Fennecs share 100% Fennec → 100%.
  • No shared species = zero. A pure Kobold and a pure Husky have nothing in common → 0%.
  • It’s mutual. Compatibility of A with B is always the same as B with A.
  • The score can’t go over 100%. It’s a percentage of genuine overlap.
  • More shared species helps. Sharing two species (Example 1) beats sharing one (Example 2), even when the headline species is strong — that’s the system rewarding a richer common ancestry.
  • Distant ancestry still counts. Because makeup is inherited, a species far up your family tree still shows up as a slice of your pie and can create compatibility you might not expect from the character’s label alone.

7. Quick FAQ

Q: My character is “a Fennec,” so why isn’t it 100% Fennec? Its label might say Fennec, but its family tree decides its makeup. If a grandparent was a hybrid, some of that mix is baked in, so the pie isn’t pure. Q: Why did sharing a second species only some of the time help? The system always rewards shared species. In Example 1 the second shared species (Sergal) added a full 30%. If a shared species’ slice is tiny on one side, it adds only that tiny amount — but it never hurts. Q: Does a bigger slice always win? Only the overlapping part counts. Being 90% Fennec doesn’t help against someone with 0% Fennec — there’s nothing to match. Compatibility is about what you have in common, not how strong any one trait is on its own. Q: Can two very different characters still score high? Only if they genuinely share a lot. Two characters that are mirror opposites (say, 90% Fennec / 10% Sergal vs. 10% Fennec / 90% Sergal) overlap only on the small matching parts — about 20% — which correctly reads as “not very compatible,” even though they technically contain the same two species. In one sentence: we turn each character into a pie chart of species, overlap the two pies, and add up the shared slices — bigger and more numerous shared slices mean higher compatibility.