The breeders report basically tells you how good your horse is in strength, speed, stamina, movement, tempo, balance, agility, and intelligence. Gold highlighted comments are the highest comments and are really good, green highlighted comments are the 2nd highest comments and are good, comments that aren't highlighted are the 3rd highest comments and are okay, and finally red highlighted comments are the 4th highest comments and are bad.
This is similar to the breeders report with telling you how good your horse's strength, speed, stamina, movement, tempo, balance, and agility is but this is based off of how your horse looks rather than what your horse can do. Like a longer face gives your horse better stamina. Only players with upgraded accounts can see the conformation panel.
You can buy evaluation books in the book store to put in your inventory. Then go to your horse's profile and click on the tab that says "Eval" and find the book you bought. This compares your horse to the other horses of the breed that you are comparing your horse to. For example, you buy a Thoroughbred Evaluation book and evaluate your Thoroughbred, it will tell you how your Thoroughbred compares to other Thoroughbreds. This is like the real world "breed standards". Breed evaluation is important for when you are breeding a new horse breed.
This tells you how much training your horse has.
"Yes, it is a numerical number representing that stat. But... that stat is the conformation of the horse and not the gene numerical number.. Yes, it is those stats I posted. Yes, they are two separate metrics, however, that hard number, the HGP (Horse Genetic Potential), is the combination of all of the hard genes and also those conformation scores added together." - Original Post by BlackOak2
The COI tells you how inbred your horse is. Inbreeding is when you breed horses that are related together (like breeding a dam to her own colt or breeding a sire to his own filly). The higher the COI is, the more inbreeding there is in the horse's pedigree. 0% COI means that the horse has no inbreeding within it's pedigree. As of now, this has no negative effect on the game horses but most players prefer their horses to have lower COI.
This is where you can put whatever you wish. You can record the times/scores your horse makes in competitions as one of the many things you can do.
This is where the horse's world records, if it has any, are put.
This tells you what tack/costume your horse is wearing and you change it by clicking on the green button that says "Change Wearables". You need to have tack/costumes in your inventory in order to put it on your horse.
Tells you what barn/pasture your horse is in and says the Farm name as well. It also tells you how many horses total are in the barn/pasture out of the maximum the barn/pasture can hold.
This tells you how much you are feeding your horse and what you're feeding your horse. Here is a more in depth explanation written by Silverine about feeding and how it effects the weight and temperament.
Your horses will only age manually by using a turn. A turn usually ages your horses by 0.5 months (or two weeks). A basic account with no upgrades and/or player bonuses will hold up to 6 turns and the turns will regenerate every 20 minutes until you have a total of 6 turns. An upgraded account with no player bonuses will hold up to 12 turns and the turns will regenerate every 10 minutes. After using a turn, your game time will be set to 6:00am and once 10:00pm hits, you have to take a turn in order to do any breeding, entering in local shows, and/or training.
This is basically saying your horse died. Once your horse hits 15 years old, your horse's chances of dying will increase with every turn you use. Most will pass in the early to mid 20s but some can live much longer than that. You can make a mare live longer by breeding her a bunch of times.
Rehoming your horses is a nicer way of saying "killing your horse". When you rehome a horse, you make it disappear from the game forever. Once you rehome a horse, you cannot get it back so be really careful. You can't rehome horses that have foals (to prevent holes in pedigrees), in order to rehome horses with foals you need to first rehome the horse's foals and then you can rehome the horse.
Mares can breed at 4 years old and stallions can breed at 3 years old.
Both horses need to have at least 10% energy (breeding takes 10% energy out of both horses), you'll need to make sure you are skilled enough to own another horse, you'll need to make sure you are skilled enough to own another pregnant mare, you'll want to make sure you have space in the mare's barn/pasture to hold another horse, and you'll want to make sure you have at least 20 minutes of game daylight left.