Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
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Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
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Damn youse, P! Stop reanimating things!!! Halloween isn't for a couple more months. |
Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
Personally I'd prefer to see an old thread revisited rather than starting a new one every time there is something additional to contribute.
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Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
ARISE!!!
I re-found this thread when searching for ways to create a horse form for a shapeshifter. Anyone notice how these riding horses with move 16, 14, and 12 and around ST 20 lead to full out sprinting speeds of 19, 16, and 14 mph? Assuming medium encumbrance which is what any adult would put the horses at. Does this only seem slow to me? The world record for horse sprint with rider is 55 mph. Should that really be literally more than 3 and 1/2 times that of a riding horse? That would be like Usain Bolt's record 24 mph leading to most human runners sprinting at 6.8 mph. |
Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
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Also consider that these are medieval horses — modern horses are noticeably better in most ways. |
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My comparison still stands. Unless you're saying Usain Bolt isn't very fast or strong. Jockey weights are more about that fraction of a second than making medium encumbrance light in Gurps' terms. |
Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
The encumbrance rules in GURPS are fairly poor.
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Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
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I can easily believe record-breaking horses have a speed 3.5 times more than that of a typical riding horse, especially since the average canter (a medium-to-long distance pace) is only 10 to 17 miles per hour as established in numerous veterinary science publications. The book I would recommend as an overview of the subject of equine speeds is Horse Gaits, Balance, and Movement, but I cannot find an ebook or excerpts available online. |
Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
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I know very little about horses, but that seems bizarrely slow for a specially bred riding horse. |
Re: Medieval Horse Types and Traits
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