| What Happens when a Genetic Child Mates? | Chao DNA | ||||
| Lets say the child of the Gold and Silver Chao [first time they mated] is a Gold Chao. If it mates with a Silver Chao it will always be a Silver Chao. If it mates with another Gold Chao, it could be Gold or a Gold-Silver Chao but it will never be a Silver Chao. Why? Because when a Silver and 2 Golds add together Gold outnumbers it so the Chao is most likely to be Gold and if it is a Gold-Silver Chao it's because the Silver genes came through and mixed but did not outnumber. | Whenever your chao mates each of their genes
gets transferred to the other ones body when the egg is hatched. Lets say
a Silver Chao and a Gold Chao mate. You will probably get a Silver Chao or
a Gold Chao. You now mate a Garnet Chao with a Silver Chao. Since the
Silver Chao still has genes from the Gold Chao the chao has three
different options. It can be a Garnet, Silver or Gold Chao.
Jewel Chao is not the only chao involved with genes. What happens when you mate a Jewel Chao with a Shiny Chao? Doing this has a lot of results 1. Transparent Chao 2. Shiny Colored Chao 3. Jewel Colored Chao 4. Clear Chao 5. Genetically Mated Chao [Considering the that Chao mates mates with another chao]. So lets say you mate a Sapphire Chao with a Shiny Blue Chao. The result will be Shiny Blue, Transparent Blue, Clear, or Sapphire. Now lets say the Sapphire Chao mates with a different Shiny Chao. It have more results. Now, you probably want to know about Translucent Chao. What if a Translucent Chao mates with another Translucent Chao? The result is a REGULAR Translucent Chao. Lets say a Blue Translucent Chao mates with a Green Translucent Chao. It can be Regular Translucent, Sapphire, Shiny Blue, Gold Chao or a Shiny Red Chao. |
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Revised: January 29, 2005