That depends on the breeds and GP of both horses. The best results are always gained from breeding two 100 BLUP horses.
Both of the parents have to have good skills and 100% BLUP. You get BLUP up by training, going on rides and competitions. -Kатнячп•Fυııэя
Breed horses with high skills and a high blup (preferably 100) The higher the blup the better quality the horse will be. Or you could buy one in the sales.
A howrse has -100 BLUP when it is born, as you train it, it gains BLUP. Quest/ Objective 22 is asking you to use one of your howrse that was bred by you (Producer= your user name) and train it until it has positive blup.
All horses have a blup, the blup can be between -100 and +100. I think that you can only see your horses blup once you have reached riding level two or something but I think howrse may have changed that. Happy Howrsing Also add me on howrse, im AMMMYAMMMY :)
about 75 BLUP is good on Howrse, -100 is the worst, 100 is the best, and 0 is neutral
If your horses blup has a - in front of it -0.78 is better than -78 because it is negative numbers! Once you are in positive numbers higher is better. the maximum amount of blup is 100 and the least is -100. Tinybry
You can get a higher BLUP by training you horse in its three best skills, having it win competitions, (the best number of wins is 20) and to get it to 100 BLUP it has to be at least 10 years old.
It's called BLUP. It's an indicator of how well your horse is trained and how well he has done in competitions. A positive BLUP (up to +100) is good, a negative BLUP (-100) is bad. The BLUP of both parents decides whether their foal has inborn skills or not, and how many it will have.
You enter them in competitions. It usually takes around 20 first-place wins to make 100 BLUP.
All howrses are born with -100 BLUP. It is raised through riding, training, and competing.
For your horse to have 100 blup it needs:To be 10 years old (your horses blup increases as it ages)To finish training in its top 3 skillsWin 20 competitionsHappy HowrsingAlso add me on howrse, im AMMMYAMMMY:)
What is BLUPOn Howrse, BLUP is an evaluation of how your horse will improve its offspring when bred. BLUP starts at -100.00, and as your Howrse ages, trains, and wins competitions, the BLUP will move towards 100.00. To get maximum BLUP, the horse must have won 20 competitions, completed training in its three best skills, and be at least 10 years old.How BLUP points are gained:You get 130 points for completed training in your best three skills, this includes rides and comps., the skill must go bold before this requirement is met. BLUP gain with agingwhen your horse ages 1 month, BLUP = + 0.33333when your horse ages 2 months, BLUP = + 0.66666(max gain is 40 when horse reaches 10 years)BLUP gain with competitionswhen your horse wins 1 competition, BLUP = + 1.5(max gain is 30, for 20 competitions victories)40 points for reaching the age of 1030 points for winning 20 competitions.All these points are gained over time a little each day until you reach 100.From the Howrse guide:The BLUP is a genetic index. It plays a role in the reproduction since the parents's BLUP influences the potential of a foal at its birth. It is calculated depending on the training level reached by the horse in its best three skills,the number of competitions won by the horse, the ideal being 20 victoriesand its age. The BLUP can only reach 100 after 10 years' old.It is therefore interesting to select trained horses as reproducers and those that have excelled in competitions. Depending on these parameters, the BLUP will always be between - 100 and 100, - with -100 being the minimum BLUP and 100 the maximum BLUP that a horse can achieve.If the parents's average BLUP is 0, i.e. neutral, it will not have an impact on calculating the foal's genetic potential. If it is less than 0, the foal will have more chance of seeing its potential lower than its parents's potential and vice versa if the average BLUP is more than 0.To have the best reproducers and have every chance of having the best foals possible, it is preferable to select horse with a high, or at least a positive, BLUP, i.e. mainly well trained individuals.