Breeding your horses in Legacy is important for producing horses that better fit your goals. On the surface, breeding your horses in Legacy appears easy - just press a button to breed a mare, and wait til the next rollover to see if she took, then wait 11-12 game months for the foal. But, there is actually a lot more to management of your broodmares and studs than this, and this guide will tell you all you need to know.
Mares can be bred manually via live cover or artificial insemination. To live cover a mare with one of your studs, simply go to her breeding tab on her page, and select the stud you want from the drop down, and click Breed.
If you would like to live cover a mare to one of your studs on a different ranch, or a stud from another player's ranch, you will need to find him in the Public Studs listings, go to his breeding tab, select your mare in the drop down, and click Breed. You will be charged his stud fee for covering your mare.
To use artificial insemination, you can either collect one of your studs, or purchase semen from the Public Semen listings. To breed your mares, you will need to go to your Ranch page, find the Semen Storage tab, select the stud you want, select the number of straws you want to use (4, 8 or 12), select the mare, and click Breed. The number of straws you use does make a difference. See the Artificial Insemination section under Stud Management below for more information on that.
You've bred your mares, so now what? Well, not every breeding results in a pregnant mare, so you will have to wait a bit to see if she is or not. Don't worry you won't have to wait long though! Your vet will automatically do a preg check at the next rollover* (which costs $50) and you will receive a notification if your mare took. If she didn't, you will need to try again. Mares only cycle 1x a month though, so you will need to wait 1 full game month (2 rollovers), to breed her again.
*If you cannot pay the vet's ultrasound fee of $50, then a preg check will not be done at 2 weeks. Instead, you will have to wait 3 game months to do a visual check for pregnancy. Doing this is free, but your mare may not be pregnant, and you will have to wait until then to try breeding her again.
If your mare became pregnant, the date she was covered and the stud she was bred to will be listed on her Breeding tab. Gestation takes 11 to 12 game months from the date of cover, so you will unfortunately have to wait some time for the foal to be born, but we promise it will be worth the wait!
One more thing, a mare's gestation length is somewhat genetic. They won't always foal after the same length of time, but some mares will be more likely to foal at 11 months, some at 11.5 months, and some at 12. If you pay attention, you could breed for mares who foal earlier!
Mares must be at least 3 years old to breed.
Horses are seasonal breeders, and are most likely to become pregnant late spring to early fall. This ‘breeding season’ lasts from May to September in Legacy, and during this time, mares will be at their peak fertility.
However, you can still breed in the ‘off-season’ (October to April), but your chance of getting a pregnancy will be cut in half, so you will probably have a difficult time getting mares pregnant.
Your mare's condition also plays a big role in her fertility, because having a little fat is important for her to cycle! So, in order for a mare to be at peak fertility, her Condition will either need to be Moderate or Moderately Fat. The further she is from this range, the harder it will be to get her pregnant.
Also, be aware that pregnancy demands an increase in calorie intake! If your mare becomes pregnant, you should switch her feed to ‘Concentrated’ to prevent her from losing weight. If she is on any of the other feeds, she will lose Condition while pregnant, and may be underweight by the time the foal is born. This won't affect the foal at all, but, if you planned to breed the mare again after she foals, this will make it difficult to get her pregnant again!
In addition to manually live covering or artificially inseminating a mare, you can also set her out in a pasture with a stud that you would like to breed her to. There is a chance the stud will breed her at rollover, though, be aware, he may not! If you want to ensure she gets bred, you should probably manually breed her.
Mares obviously can only be bred once a year, but stallions can breed many mares in a year. How many mares they can cover or inseminate depends on their genetics! Each stud will be able to breed 10-20 mares, or be collected that many times, in 1 game month, during the breeding season. Keep in mind, 1 semen collection = 1 mare cover, so if he has 10 breedings available in a month, and you collect him 5 times, he can then only live cover 5 mares in that month.
Stallions can be bred or have semen collected as early as 2 years old, but their fertility does not reach its peak until they are 6 years old. Age also affects their Breeding Frequency as well, and their Breeding Frequency will not peak until they are 6 years old too.
Horses are seasonal breeders, and are most likely to become pregnant late spring to early fall. This ‘breeding season’ lasts from May to September in Legacy, and during this time, stallions will be at their peak fertility.
However, you can still breed in the ‘off-season’ (October to April), but your chance of getting a pregnancy will be cut in half, so you will probably have a difficult time getting mares pregnant. In addition, he won't be able to breed as many mares as he would during the breeding season.
Stallions can be used to live cover or artificially inseminate a mare. To live cover a mare with one of your studs, simply go to the mare's Breeding tab on her page, and select the stud you want from the drop down, and click Breed.
Using a stud for Artificial Insemination is easy, but also more complicated. The easy part is, you just need to go to your Ranch page, find the Semen Storage tab, select the stud you want, select the number of straws you want to use (4, 8 or 12), select the mare, and click Breed. There is a lot more to it than that though.
If you would like to collect semen from a stud, you can easily do so by going to his page, selecting his Breeding tab, use the slider to select how many times you would like to collect that stallion, and then click ‘Collect.’ Each collection will yield 4 straws, and the straws will automatically be put in your Semen Storage on the Ranch page. Also, a single semen collection will cost you a little bit from the vet ($50/collection), and you may need to purchase a liquid nitrogen tank to store the semen ($200).
During the ‘off-season’, stallions can only be bred to or collected half as many times as they would during the breeding season. This is true for both live covers and collecting semen.
A semen ‘tank’ is created automatically when you collect or purchase straws. Each tank holds up to 120 straws for one stallion, and will cost you $200 to purchase. Each ranch can have an unlimited number of tanks, but you will have to pay $10/tank/game month in order to maintain them (refill them with liquid nitrogen to keep the semen frozen). These charges will be automatic.
Each has its pros and cons, or reasons why you might want to pick one method over the other. The benefits of using live cover largely come down to one thing: it's free, if you own the stud. Artificial insemination has two different benefits though:
When using artificial insemination, you are given the option to use 4, 8 or 12 straws to breed 1 mare. Using 4 straws is the equivalent to 1 live covering, both in chance of getting a pregnancy, and by the number of breedings/collections it took from the stud to get the straws. If you use 8 straws, then that took 2 collections from the stud to get, but you will only get to breed 1 mare. Similar for using 12 straws, which takes 3 collections, but only breeds 1 mare. So, why would you want to do this?
Well, when breeding, both the mare's and the stallion's fertility affect your overall chance of pregnancy, but using more straws increases the stallion's chances specifically. But, this benefit is greater for stallions with poor fertility, and the increase in pregnancy chance will probably be small for stallions with great fertility. It will be up to you to you to decide then, if it is worth using the extra straws.
Well, that's difficult to answer, because the mare's fertility also comes into play. Let's take a look at some charts though to help answer this.
Let's say we have a mare whose individual fertility rating is 70%, but we have a whole lot of stallions with different fertility ratings. Below is the chance of pregnancy (y-axis), depending on the stallion's fertility rating (x-axis). The 3 colored lines represent pregnancy chance depending on how many straws you use. Also, remember, 4 straws = 1 live cover, so you can think of the blue line as the chance with live cover too.
You may have looked at the above graph and thought, artificial insemination is so much better! Why would anyone want to use live covers then?? Well, that graph is a bit deceptive.
You see, it just compares pregnancy chance of using different numbers of straws. But, that comparison really isn't fair, because 8 straws actually is equivalent to using a stallion twice, and using 12 straws is like using a stallion 3 times. Your odds of getting a mare pregnant from two or three liver covers are much higher than just one live cover. So, how does 8 straws compare to 2 live covers, and 12 straws compare to 3 live covers?
Again, let's use a mare with 70% fertility, and the x-axis will be stallion fertility, and the y-axis will be their chance of pregnancy.
The important comparison here is the red and yellow lines, 8 straws vs. 2 live covers, respectively. The blue line, 4 straws/1 live cover, is just for reference. As you can see, 8 straws is still better than 2 liver covers, but the benefit is much smaller, and is better for poor fertility stallions. The next graph will do the same for 12 straws vs. 3 live covers.
Again the benefit of 12 straws (red line) isn't that much higher than 3 live covers (yellow line), but it is better, considerably for low fertility studs.
So, as you can see, there is no simple answer. Yes, using more straws does increase your chances no matter how you look at it, but, you also have to pay to collect those straws, pay to store them, and, if you no longer have the stallion and have a limited supply of semen, is using more really worth it? That will be up to you.
If you are like us and you like graphs, here's one more, showing the data a different way. This graph shows the % increase you would receive over the equivalent amount of live covers if you were to use 8 or 12 straws, depending on the stallion's fertility. Mare fertility was again kept at 70% for this.
Basically this graph just shows how poor fertility studs benefit from using 8 or 12 straws more than high fertility studs.
Like pretty much everything in Legacy, Fertility is genetic, and each horse has their own hidden Fertility number. Horses will never be fully infertile, or fully fertile in Legacy, but they can have such poor fertility that they may be difficult to get a foal from. Don't worry though, you can breed away from this so long as you are careful. See our page on Fertility under the Horses tab for more information.
As for the change of pregnancy for a specific mare and stud pairing, both horses' fertility are multiplied by each other to get their pregnancy chance. But, keep in mind, if you are having trouble getting a mare pregnant, it may not be because she or the stud have poor fertility. Be sure to check the Season, the mare's Condition, and the stud's Age too. All that is to say, it's complicated!
You have the option of gelding any stallion you own. Gelding a stallion will mean he can no longer be used to live cover mares, and you won't be able to collect any more semen from him, but you can still use straws you previously collected.
Why would you want to geld though? There are two benefits:
No, gelding will not increase their maximum achievable score. It just decreases their variability a bit. This means their average show score will be a bit higher, but their maximum stays the same.
You can geld a stallion on their Management tab on their page.