There is no such animal. Raccoons and badgers are from different families and not closely enough related so could not produce offspring.
Both would lose. The raccoon would be killed by the badger but the badger would end up being infected with rabies and die a week or two later.
Both the raccoon and the badger are mammals but, otherwise, share little in common.
A zebracoon.
According to UrbanDictionary.com, a Fadger is a cross between a fox and a badger.
Badger
Mujina is an old Japanese term primarily referring to the badger. In some regions the term refers instead to the raccoon dog (also called tanuki) or to introduced civets.
Badgers are nocturnal mammals with stocky bodies, powerful claws, and distinctive facial markings, while raccoons are also nocturnal but have a more slender build, ringed tail, and distinctive facial mask. Badgers primarily dig for food like worms and small mammals, while raccoons are omnivores that may eat fruit, insects, and small animals.
You may be referring to the raccoon dog, an Asian species of wild dog that looks similar to the raccoon.
The beavcoon is an animal that is a cross between a beaver and a raccoon. Its size is near that of an otter. It has the same vocal sounds of a raccoon which are hissing and high-pitched squealing noises.
A juvenile beaver is a "kit" and a juvenile raccoon is a cub. There never has been and probably never will be a cross between these two animals which in fantasy myth can be called "bevecoons".
Nothing. You can't cross breed a lynx with a badger, because they're about as closely related as a human and a lemur. Either that, or you get a Balynx.
no it cant