funfact from a biologist: same-species animals fighting does tend to look more like this than full-on brawls! animals tend to dance around fights, feign hits, and/or do sizing-up contests, etc, instead of actually hitting each other (at least for the majority of the fight). this is called agonistic behavior and it evolves when avoiding dangerous, costly fights lets an animal live long enough to reproduce more than animals who rush right into combat.
I guess you're not wrong but you make it sound like they practically don't even fight when they absolutely do. It's also different from fight to fight.
The animals are so well made in this game, what bugs me is that all of them appear to have such short necks. Their head starts right where their shoulders ends.
The herbivores with the horns put up badass fights...reminds me of when I was around 5 years old and I used to read the Bambi fight over and over again in my book because it was so cool...and then I wanted to re-enact the Bambi fight with my dad lol.
Jeez you humans think everything is so cute...you even think vicious blackbird fights are cute...smh...I am from another planet by the way so I do not count as human.
Also, if you think those the fight between the arctic foxes are cute, then I think the fight between the fennec foxes and the snow leopards are also cute.
14:01 - 14:02 - 45:20 - 45:21 - está parecido com o tai lung ? do filme kung fu panda ? ( um leopardo das Neves ? ) a clouded leopard , or a snow leopard
@@silashurd3597From what I've seen, zebras tend to bite more when fighting eachother rather than kick. Stallions face eachother head-on, and resort only to kicking when they get into a bad position or are fleeing and being chased, it appears. Female zebras don't seem to get into fights with eachother much, but in horses, mares tend to fight with kicks at eachother more than stallions do. Horse stallions usually bite, especially at legs and neck, sometimes the rear end. Just an interesting thought.
As a Swedish person (our national animal is the European moose), nah. It's about right. Although, moose don't tend to rear up like that, just brace themselves and dive downwards with their front end and antlers into the opponent.
I'd prefer you say "dominance" rather than "alpha status", because alphas imply it's a social group being ruled over. Not all animals live in social groups. Besides, a lot of social groups tend to be more about parents / relatives of the group being leaders, showing the youbger generation what to do and helping eachother survive. An alpha means more of a leader in a non-related social group, when it was first made up at least.