A crossbreed is an organism with purebred parents of two different breeds, varieties, or populations. Crossbreeding, sometimes called "designer crossbreeding", is the process of breeding such an organism. While crossbreeding is used to maintain health and viability of organisms, irresponsible crossbreeding can also produce organisms of inferior quality or dilute a purebred gene pool to the point of extinction of a given breed of organism.[1]

A domestic animal of unknown ancestry, where the breed status of only one parent or grandparent is known, may also be called a crossbreed though the term "mixed breed" is technically more accurate. Outcrossing is a type of crossbreeding used within a purebred breed to increase the genetic diversity within the breed, particularly when there is a need to avoid inbreeding.


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In animal breeding, crossbreeds are crosses within a single species, while hybrids are crosses between different species. In plant breeding terminology, the term crossbreed is uncommon, and no universal term is used to distinguish hybridization or crossing within a population from those between populations, or even those between species.

A designer crossbreed or designer breed is a crossbred animal that has purebred parents, usually registered with a breed registry, but from two different breeds. These animals are the result of a deliberate decision to create a specific crossbred animal.[2] Less often, the animal may have more than two pure breeds in its ancestry, but unlike a mutt or a mongrel, its entire pedigree is known to descend from specific known animals. While the term is best known when applied to certain dog crossbreeds, other animals such as cattle, horses, birds[3] and cats may also be bred in this fashion. Some crossbred breeders start a freestanding breed registry to record designer crossbreds, other crossbreds may be included in an "appendix" to an existing purebred registry. either form of registration may be the first step in recording and tracking pedigrees in order to develop a new breed.

There are disadvantages to creating designer crossbreeds, notably the potential that the cross will be of inferior quality or that it will not produce as consistent a result as would breeding purebred animals. For example, the Poodle is a frequent breed used in creation of designer crossbreeds, due to its non-shedding coat, but that trait does not always breed true when it is part of a designer cross.[2] Also, because breeders of crossbred animals may be less careful about genetic testing and weeding out undesirable traits,[6] certain deleterious dominant genes may still be passed on to a crossbreed offspring. In an F2 cross, recessive genetic traits may also return if the parent animals were both carriers of an undesired trait.

The many newly developed and recognized breeds of domestic cat are crossbreeds between existing, well-established breeds (sometimes with limited hybridization with some wild species), to either combine selected traits from the foundation stock, or propagate a rare mutation without excessive inbreeding. However, some nascent breeds such as the Aegean cat are developed entirely from a local landrace population. Most experimental cat breeds are crossbreeds.

In cattle, there are systems of crossbreeding. In many crossbreeds, one animal is larger than the other. One is used when the purebred females are particularly adapted to a specific environment, and are crossed with purebred bulls from another environment to produce a generation having traits of both parents.[7]

Results of crossbreeding classic and woolly breeds of llama are unpredictable. The resulting offspring displays physical characteristics of either parent, or a mix of characteristics from both, periodically producing a fleeced llama. The results are increasingly unpredictable when both parents are crossbreeds, with possibility of the offspring displaying characteristics of a grandparent, not obvious in either parent.[9]

A crossbred dog is a cross between two (sometimes more) known breeds, and is usually distinguished from a mixed-breed dog, which has ancestry from many sources, some of which may not be known. Crossbreeds are popular, due to the belief that they have increased vigor without loss of attractiveness of the dog. Certain planned crossbreeding between purebred dogs of different breeds are now widely known as "designer dogs" and can produce puppies worth more than their purebred parents, due to a high demand.

Crossbreeding in horses is often done with the intent of ultimately creating a new breed of horse. One type of modern crossbreeding in horses is used to create many of the warmblood breeds. Warmbloods are a type of horse used in the sport horse disciplines, usually registered in an open stud book by a studbook selection procedure that evaluates conformation, pedigree and, in some animals, a training or performance standard. Most warmblood breeds began as a cross of draft horse breeds on Thoroughbreds, but have, in some cases, developed over the past century to the point where they are considered to be a true-breeding population and have a closed stud book. Other types of recognized crossbreeding include that within the American Quarter Horse, which will register horses with one Thoroughbred parent and one registered Quarter Horse parent in the "Appendix" registry, and allow such animals full breed registration status as Quarter Horses if they meet a certain performance standard. Another well-known crossbred horse is the Anglo-Arabian, which may be produced by a purebred Arabian horse crossed on a Thoroughbred, or by various crosses of Anglo-Arabians with other Anglo-Arabians, as long as the ensuing animal never has more than 75% or less than 25% of each breed represented in its pedigree.

One of the most ancient types of hybrid animal is the mule, a cross between a female horse and a male donkey. The liger is a hybrid cross between a male lion and female tiger. The yattle is a cross between a cow and a yak. Other crosses include the tigon (between a male tiger and female lion) and yakalo (between a yak and an American bison). The Incas recognized that hybrids of Lama glama (llama) and Vicugna pacos (alpaca) resulted in a hybrid with none of the advantages of either parent.[11]

At one time it was thought that dogs and wolves were separate species, and the crosses between dogs and wolves were called wolf hybrids. Today wolves and dogs are both recognized as Canis lupus, but the old term "wolf hybrid" is still used.

A mixed-breed animal is defined as having undocumented or unknown parentage, while a crossbreed generally has known, usually purebred parents of two distinct breeds or varieties. A dog of unknown parentage is often called a mixed-breed dog, "mutt" or "mongrel." A cat of unknown parentage is often referred to as a domestic short-haired or domestic long-haired cat generically, and in some dialects is often called a "moggie". A horse of unknown bloodlines is called a grade horse.

I thought some people want new races but some including me thinks that having a new race like quaggans would be slot of work for instance new intro story, new voices, new gear looks and more.But then I thought why not have crossbreed races like human/char, Char/Asura, Human/Asura... Think like a character looking more like an Asura but with fur and horns and a tail for example. I thought that even that way there can be crossbreed classes with Human/Tengu or Asura/Quaggan.By having crossbreed classes they could use the existing voices, body models, and main race storyline.... Many.

Lore-wise they are not the same race - they are even from different worlds. Humans are literally aliens in Tyria - they were brought here from another place in the Mists, basically a different planet/dimension.

Let's say ANet threw away the lore reasons why cross-breeding doesn't exist and allowed norn-human or human-norn. Let's say they took the OP's idea and just re-used the norn (or human) voices, story, and base armor. What would be the point of such an addition to the game? It wouldn't satisfy the interests of those who want to play a new race, because it misses all the fundamental excitement of a new breed. It would still require a ton of prep work on ANet's part, as well as additional future maintenance (just not as much as a new breed).

Someone with way more experience in GW than me thinks the next story will be oceanic. I am hoping for some amphibious race. I do love Quaggans i think they are so cute, but i doubt they will be a playable race.

@Illconceived Was Na.9781 said:Let's say ANet threw away the lore reasons why cross-breeding doesn't exist and allowed norn-human or human-norn. Let's say they took the OP's idea and just re-used the norn (or human) voices, story, and base armor. What would be the point of such an addition to the game? It wouldn't satisfy the interests of those who want to play a new race, because it misses all the fundamental excitement of a new breed. It would still require a ton of prep work on ANet's part, as well as additional future maintenance (just not as much as a new breed).

What would be the point though? Human/norn is basically intermediate humans. I think another beast race but amphibious in nature would be cool. Some people want real elves, but we have the plant people and they are elfin enough imo. Why add a cross race when you can add a whole new looking race. Cross races are still the same basic thing we already have, i find that boring. So i agree i dont think crossbreeds should be it.

I know, and that infuriates me.If they're nor a human subrace, why do they look exact.There are giants in Nordic folklore, why didn't they look more like that.Or if the kodan design was at their basis.

Let's not waste the devs time with something like this please. I would much rather have deeper engaging gameplay (or even an entirely new race brought in) than having an abomination of an asura and charr. Let's move on, shall we? 152ee80cbc

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