Generic potentials impact how much skills your horse can gain. It shows the top 3 skills, which are necessary when bluping.
If you want to find the genetic potential of a certain horse, just click on the 'genetic' tab that is right next to the 'characteristics' tab (where his health, energy, morale is etc) and you should see it in the top right corner.You can go to help it will say genetics!
if you are under a certain level, you will not be able to see but it is under the genetics tab on your howrse. Sometimes they need their genetic potential! on howrse i am popcorn rocks please congratulate me ! hope this works xx
You find the genetic potenial under genetic. That is just telling you how good the horse is.
If you are under a certain level, You will not be able to see it, but it is under the Genetics tab on your howrse. Sometimes they exceed their genetic potenetial!! On Howrse I'm KarenjustLOVEShorses please congratulate me.
genetic potential if it is like 500 or more it is classes as a starred horse it shows how good ur horse is
when you log into howrse go to your horses page on the one where you want to check its GP. click on the tab: Genetic (the one beside charcteristics) and it should be up the top of the tab. hope this helped :]
On Howrse, GP means genetic potential. Genetic potential calculates how many green stars a horse has. The higher the genetic potential, the more green stars, and the better the horse is. Eventually the horse has so many green stars that he or she gets a red star, or excellence star. These traits are much admired, and when successfully bred down may produce a breed variation.
It is a horse that has about 380 G genetic potential (GP). The star is a green star. The green stars represent how high the genetic potential is. The higher the GP, the better.
Positive BLUP which is found on the genetics tab on your horses page and genetic stars plus high skills.
scaler electric potential vector magnetic potentials retarded potentials
graded (local) potentials
Postsynaptic potentials are changes in the membrane potential of the postsynaptic terminal of a chemical synapse. Graded potentials are changes in membrane potential that vary in size, as opposed to being all-or-none, and are not postsynaptic potentials.