Honestly, I wish Frontier would confirm if every animal has a variant skin (so people breeding for them aren't wasting their time on any animals that don't have one).I bought one "albino" in the market when there was no albino icons there, and of course it was a fake. Now breeding wolves but still nothing, and I have never seen it in the market, I am waiting for special wolves too, hope someone will be lucky and we will see it soon
Well I'm not the poor sod who's inbreeding 50+ pairs of animals to try for an albino so I guess it doesn't technicaly make a difference to me.Maybe i'm alone in this one, I hope they don't confirm anything on different variant skins..
It's a lot more fun to suddenly see a picture of an 'albino' on this forum..
I like surprises![]()
Any plan on giving the animals that don't have albino/leuc sightings an alternate variant skin?Not all animals have albino variants, noI believe it's been based on what albino/leucistic animals have been sighted/occurred in the wild.
So why don't wolves have a variant? Wolves are literally the most color diverse wild mammal on the planet and definitely come in white, black, etc, yet ingame they are one of the ONLY animals that not only have no normal coat variation, but also no albino variant??Not all animals have albino variants, noI believe it's been based on what albino/leucistic animals have been sighted/occurred in the wild.
It's possible they just havent been bred yet. Albino thompson's gazelles exist so they should be in game, and I've yet to see one. Same for the elephants. No brown giant pandas either.So why don't wolves have a variant? Wolves are literally the most color diverse wild mammal on the planet and definitely come in white, black, etc, yet ingame they are one of the ONLY animals that not only have no normal coat variation, but also no albino variant??
Why were wolves given the short end of the stick here? Why didn't they get any attention at all compared to other animals?
I read that post from Bo as a confirmation that wolves don't have an albino variant?It's possible they just havent been bred yet. Albino thompson's gazelles exist so they should be in game, and I've yet to see one. Same for the elephants. No brown giant pandas either.
People seem to have mainly focused on white tigers/lions, but maybe now they're common the breeding programs will branch out.
She just stated not all animals have an albino variant.. Nothing about a specific animal..I read that post from Bo as a confirmation that wolves don't have an albino variant?
Not all animals have albino variants, noI believe it's been based on what albino/leucistic animals have been sighted/occurred in the wild.
Can you confirm if some animals have multiple variants as well? It seems everyone very badly wants to know if melanism or other mutations [such as king cheetahs] are actually present in the game.
Gotta wait for that leopard/jaguar DLC for melanism.Can you confirm if some animals have multiple variants as well? It seems everyone very badly wants to know if melanism or other mutations [such as king cheetahs] are actually present in the game.
Can you flat out confirm whether or not wolves, specifically, have an albino variant or not?Currently we only have albinism as a variant.
Currently we only have albinism as a variant.
Does albinism cover both albinos and leucistics? I guess leucism is completely different? It's a bit vague on wikipedia:Too bad that 80% of the albino variants aren't even albinos.![]()
Albinism is a congenital disorder characterized in humans by the complete or partial absence of pigment in the skin, hair and eyes. Unlike humans, other animals have multiple pigments and for these, albinism is considered to be a hereditary condition characterised by the absence of melanin in particular, in the eyes, skin, hair, scales, feathers or cuticle. While an organism with complete absence of melanin is called an albino, an organism with only a diminished amount of melanin is described as leucistic or albinoid.
Since all pigment cell-types differentiate from the same multipotent precursor cell-type, leucism can cause the reduction in all types of pigment. This is in contrast to albinism, for which leucism is often mistaken. Albinism results in the reduction of melanin production only, though the melanocyte (or melanophore) is still present. Thus in species that have other pigment cell-types, for example xanthophores, albinos are not entirely white, but instead display a pale yellow colour.
Does albinism cover both albinos and leucistics? I guess leucism is completely different? It's a bit vague on wikipedia:
So albino animals don't actually have to be white depending on the species? The eye colour also seems to vary by species/type of albinism.
Should have just called them variant skins like ZT2. Less confusion.![]()
Yeah was looking at boas in the main albino thread - someone was saying those yellow boas aren't albino but amelanistic (no idea if that's true or not). If nothing else reading up about albinos and colour mutations in animals is quite fascinating. Dug up the ball python mutations image I posted over there - adorable.There are different types of albino and if you really want to get into the genetics it gets confusing. Like from your quote albino is a lack of melanin. So some animals, snakes are a good example, aren't pure white as albino. Their markings turn to yellow or yellowish orange. Look at albino ball pythons. Leucistic ball pythons are nearly pure white. Sometimes you can see a hint of pattern in them, depending on the genetics behind them. And oddly if you use a UV/black light on them you can see the pattern they have.