Post by Nikki on Jul 20, 2005 14:56:49 GMT -5
This is a very complicated chapter, so I will try and break it down.
A horse must be trained in its Disciplines. When you create a horse, it gets two disciplines, but has no experiance levels. This will be explained.
To learn a new discipline: If you want to train your horse in something it HAS NOT LEARNED BEFORE, you must take him/her to a trainer, unless you are a certified trainer yourself. You pay for the trainer to train the horse. A dice will be rolled, each number with a meaning. The training may be succesful, and you get to add the discipline to the horses list, and you can now show in classes of this discipline.
A horse is more likely to win a show, if he has higher levels of training. Once your horse knows the basic discipline, he can be trained by a certified Trainer to higher levels. Once you have paid the trainers prices, a dice is rolled to see the result. The best is he grows two levels or more, depending on the trainers skill, the worst he is hurt or loses levels. The last two are very rare though.
If your horse does gain a level, it will help in shows. The results of a show are decided by rolling a die twice, and the highest 'score' wins. If your horse is trained at a skill with a lv.1, his score will get 1 extra point. If hes trained at lv.2, he gets two points, and so on. The highest a horse can be trained to is level 5.
As your horse tries to level up from a higher number, such as 4 to 5, the odds are less likely he will succesfuly level up. It is harder to train the horse the higher he is already trained. It also may cost more. The better the trainer is, the more expensive his/her classes are, but the results are more likely to be better.
A horse must be trained in its Disciplines. When you create a horse, it gets two disciplines, but has no experiance levels. This will be explained.
To learn a new discipline: If you want to train your horse in something it HAS NOT LEARNED BEFORE, you must take him/her to a trainer, unless you are a certified trainer yourself. You pay for the trainer to train the horse. A dice will be rolled, each number with a meaning. The training may be succesful, and you get to add the discipline to the horses list, and you can now show in classes of this discipline.
A horse is more likely to win a show, if he has higher levels of training. Once your horse knows the basic discipline, he can be trained by a certified Trainer to higher levels. Once you have paid the trainers prices, a dice is rolled to see the result. The best is he grows two levels or more, depending on the trainers skill, the worst he is hurt or loses levels. The last two are very rare though.
If your horse does gain a level, it will help in shows. The results of a show are decided by rolling a die twice, and the highest 'score' wins. If your horse is trained at a skill with a lv.1, his score will get 1 extra point. If hes trained at lv.2, he gets two points, and so on. The highest a horse can be trained to is level 5.
As your horse tries to level up from a higher number, such as 4 to 5, the odds are less likely he will succesfuly level up. It is harder to train the horse the higher he is already trained. It also may cost more. The better the trainer is, the more expensive his/her classes are, but the results are more likely to be better.