
Kelsey MacAilbert |

Mammalian muscle tissue has a density of about 1.06 kg/liter and an efficiency of about 18% to 26%. Let's say that, in the context of a fantasy campaign setting, I wanted to change that. After all, humans are sharing this world with a lot of dangerous magical creatures. They will have to be incredibly tough to evolve in such an environment.
There are two things I am considering doing. First, up the density of mammalian muscle tissue. I am hoping to increase strength this way, but not sure by how much density could be increased. Would this actually increase strength, would it work without dramatically increasing the physical size of the muscle, and would it effect energy efficiency, or is it just not feasible?
The other idea is, to instead of changing density, change the efficiency. Is that something that could increase strength?
The basic idea here is to create a situation where humans are stronger than they are IRL. Are there any ways to go about this without increasing muscle size drastically other than the two (of dubious workability) that I've come up with?

Azure_Zero |

Than I would look at the differences in the Mammalian muscle tissue from different the various Mammals themselves and compare them.
Is an Elephant's muscle density the same as a mouse's muscle density, than what of the difference in efficiency?
What are the differences between the Wolf and the Loin's muscle density and efficiency?
Wolf muscle is Endurance type, Lion muscle is Strength type

Kelsey MacAilbert |

Muscle tissue does not differ in density within mammals. I'm fairly sure it differences within animal class, but I can't find the numbers. Where mammal muscle tissue differs is in the way it's connected to the bone and the way it's controlled. This can effect strength a great deal. However, to increase human strength via this method fine motor control would have to be decreased and the shape of the body changed.
What I want to do is make muscle tissue stronger all mammals, and therefore by extension humans.

BigNorseWolf |

Don't try to model one theoretical system with another abstraction of reality.
You'll increase strength
Increase caloric intake, which raises the price of food.
Reduce the number of children (quantity vs quality)
Have people mature faster
Increase speed, reducing traveling times
... and probably a thousand other things.
I think i have to ask WHY you're trying to do this, and see if there's a simpler way to get the same result.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

I think i have to ask WHY you're trying to do this, and see if there's a simpler way to get the same result.
I want to make the average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world a bit stronger than the average healthy young adult male of the real world. I'd like even more to kill the gender strength disparity completely, but I can't think of a way, so I'll settle for making everybody stronger on average so that the disparity matters less.

Bitter Thorn |

In terms of world building in the game does the science really matter? It's an interesting thought exercise, but if you want humans to be stronger simply through them a strength bonus. In a fantasy game I don't see any thing too odd about just hand waving a presumption that humans in world X are unusually strong, but they aren't musclebound?
I hope I didn't completely miss your point.

loimprevisto |

A wizard did it.
In sci-fi it might be worth worrying about if you didn't want to take the usual hand-wave approach of 'born on a high-g world'. In fantasy, you're already dealing with dwarves, halflings, kobolds, and other small creatures that are as strong or stronger than humans with twice their muscle mass.

Azure_Zero |

Bitter Thorn, my point is to make humans strong enough that gender disparity matters less, without making individuals look different.
In reality that won't happen due to the properties and amounts of Androgens and Estrogens in the body,
but in fastasy you could bypass these rules.Gender difference and muscle mass

Kelsey MacAilbert |

Kelsey MacAilbert wrote:Bitter Thorn, my point is to make humans strong enough that gender disparity matters less, without making individuals look different.In reality that won't happen due to the properties and amounts of Androgens and Estrogens in the body, in fastasy you could bypass it.
Gender difference and muscle mass
Perhaps change how the female body reacts to testosterone so that it can double for estrogen in their bodies?

BigNorseWolf |

BigNorseWolf wrote:I think i have to ask WHY you're trying to do this, and see if there's a simpler way to get the same result.I want to make the average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world a bit stronger than the average healthy young adult male of the real world. I'd like even more to kill the gender strength disparity completely, but I can't think of a way, so I'll settle for making everybody stronger on average so that the disparity matters less.
Erm.. hasn't that already been done? There's no gender differences in strength scores for pc's OR npc's. Its one of those biology mechanics that has a HUGE effect on culture but isn't modeled in the game at all.

Azure_Zero |
1 person marked this as a favorite. |

or you change how the female muscle tissue reacts to Estrogens.
read the data in the link or quote
On average, males are physically stronger than females. The difference is due to females, on average, having less total muscle mass than males, and also having lower muscle mass in comparison to total body mass. While individual muscle fibers have similar strength, males have more fibers due to their greater total muscle mass. The greater muscle mass of males is in turn due to a greater capacity for muscular hypertrophy as a result of men's higher levels of testosterone. Males remain stronger than females, when adjusting for differences in total body mass. This is due to the higher male muscle-mass to body-mass ratio.
As a result, gross measures of body strength suggest an average 40-50% difference in upper body strength between the sexes as a result of this difference, and a 20-30% difference in lower body strength. This is supported by another study that found females are about 52-66 percent as strong as males in the upper body, and about 70-80 percent as strong in the lower body. One study of muscle strength in the elbows and knees—in 45 and older males and females—found the strength of females to range from 42 to 63% of male strength.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

or you change how the female muscle tissue reacts to Estrogens.
read the data in the link or quoteWiki-Link wrote:On average, males are physically stronger than females. The difference is due to females, on average, having less total muscle mass than males, and also having lower muscle mass in comparison to total body mass. While individual muscle fibers have similar strength, males have more fibers due to their greater total muscle mass. The greater muscle mass of males is in turn due to a greater capacity for muscular hypertrophy as a result of men's higher levels of testosterone. Males remain stronger than females, when adjusting for differences in total body mass. This is due to the higher male muscle-mass to body-mass ratio.
As a result, gross measures of body strength suggest an average 40-50% difference in upper body strength between the sexes as a result of this difference, and a 20-30% difference in lower body strength. This is supported by another study that found females are about 52-66 percent as strong as males in the upper body, and about 70-80 percent as strong in the lower body. One study of muscle strength in the elbows and knees—in 45 and older males and females—found the strength of females to range from 42 to 63% of male strength.
So, if estrogens had the ability to encourage muscular hypertrophy just like testosterone, the gender strength gap could be closed a bit?

Azure_Zero |

Oh, I know I can't completely close the gap. I just want to do so enough to make a high commonality of female warriors realistic.
It'd be cool to close the gap completely, but I know it won't happen. Closing a big piece is good enough for me.
In that case you might not like my Paradox RPG system as it is using a lot of realistic data converted into character variation equations and variables.
Their is a reason why this system is called Paradox
Female warriors are still very viable in the system though as the Female warriors may not hit as hard, but hit more often in return.

Sieglord |
May I suggest that instead of changing the physiology of human beings, you simply examine the world and culture a little bit?
Your stated goal is to "make the average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world a bit stronger than the average healthy young adult male of the real world"...that being said, I am working from a couple of basic assumptions here. 1) That the level of technology available to the average human being of your milieu is roughly equivalent to a standard, "medieval" fantasy setting, and that 2) While magic exists, it is not widely available to every member of the populace. Everything that I am about to say rests on those two assumptions...if they are incorrect, please correct me.
Your "average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world" is by default stronger than her real-life male counterpart because of the world she grew up in. Without electricity, running water, or various mechanical contraptions (internal combustion or steam engines, for example) to perform work for people, people will have to do all that work themselves. The real-life modern male you speak of has most likely never had to fetch 10-15 buckets of water a day from the village well...every single day for 13-15 years of his life. Likewise, it is highly unlikely that our modern man has ever needed to shoe a horse, plow a field, tend a garden, slaughter a hog, or do any of the many, many other labour intensive tasks required to sustain a common medieval subsistence. (The modern man may be doing some of those things for hobby or diversion, but the fantasy lady didn't have a choice...she HAD to do these things if she wanted to eat
Likewise, while our modern man may have better access to medical care and information regarding health and fitness, our fantasy lady has (for the most part) been eating much healthier food, and has had no exposure (or minimal exposure, at least) to the toxic by-products of modern life. In short, our fantasy lady simply grew up in an environment that is, in many ways, much healthier than our own.
In other words, her biology doesn't have to be any different...the environment she grew up in has made her physically stronger. She doesn't need more muscle than her male counterpart if she is using that muscle more than her male counterpart.

Azure_Zero |

May I suggest that instead of changing the physiology of human beings, you simply examine the world and culture a little bit?
Your stated goal is to "make the average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world a bit stronger than the average healthy young adult male of the real world"...that being said, I am working from a couple of basic assumptions here. 1) That the level of technology available to the average human being of your milieu is roughly equivalent to a standard, "medieval" fantasy setting, and that 2) While magic exists, it is not widely available to every member of the populace. Everything that I am about to say rests on those two assumptions...if they are incorrect, please correct me.
Your "average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world" is by default stronger than her real-life male counterpart because of the world she grew up in. Without electricity, running water, or various mechanical contraptions (internal combustion or steam engines, for example) to perform work for people, people will have to do all that work themselves. The real-life modern male you speak of has most likely never had to fetch 10-15 buckets of water a day from the village well...every single day for 13-15 years of his life. Likewise, it is highly unlikely that our modern man has ever needed to shoe a horse, plow a field, tend a garden, slaughter a hog, or do any of the many, many other labour intensive tasks required to sustain a common medieval subsistence. (The modern man may be doing some of those things for hobby or diversion, but the fantasy lady didn't have a choice...she HAD to do these things if she wanted to eat
Likewise, while our modern man may have better access to medical care and information regarding health and fitness, our fantasy lady has (for the most part) been eating much healthier food, and has had no exposure (or minimal exposure, at least) to the toxic by-products of modern life. In short, our fantasy lady simply grew up in an environment that is, in many ways, much...
One problem with your thoughts, the male would also be in that environment and thus working his butt off as well.
And given his androgens will still be stronger.You'd have to change to physiology to really narrow the gap.
Read the data below
On average, males are physically stronger than females. The difference is due to females, on average, having less total muscle mass than males, and also having lower muscle mass in comparison to total body mass. While individual muscle fibers have similar strength, males have more fibers due to their greater total muscle mass. The greater muscle mass of males is in turn due to a greater capacity for muscular hypertrophy as a result of men's higher levels of testosterone. Males remain stronger than females, when adjusting for differences in total body mass. This is due to the higher male muscle-mass to body-mass ratio.
As a result, gross measures of body strength suggest an average 40-50% difference in upper body strength between the sexes as a result of this difference, and a 20-30% difference in lower body strength. This is supported by another study that found females are about 52-66 percent as strong as males in the upper body, and about 70-80 percent as strong in the lower body. One study of muscle strength in the elbows and knees—in 45 and older males and females—found the strength of females to range from 42 to 63% of male strength.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

May I suggest that instead of changing the physiology of human beings, you simply examine the world and culture a little bit?
Your stated goal is to "make the average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world a bit stronger than the average healthy young adult male of the real world"...that being said, I am working from a couple of basic assumptions here. 1) That the level of technology available to the average human being of your milieu is roughly equivalent to a standard, "medieval" fantasy setting, and that 2) While magic exists, it is not widely available to every member of the populace. Everything that I am about to say rests on those two assumptions...if they are incorrect, please correct me.
Your "average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world" is by default stronger than her real-life male counterpart because of the world she grew up in. Without electricity, running water, or various mechanical contraptions (internal combustion or steam engines, for example) to perform work for people, people will have to do all that work themselves. The real-life modern male you speak of has most likely never had to fetch 10-15 buckets of water a day from the village well...every single day for 13-15 years of his life. Likewise, it is highly unlikely that our modern man has ever needed to shoe a horse, plow a field, tend a garden, slaughter a hog, or do any of the many, many other labour intensive tasks required to sustain a common medieval subsistence. (The modern man may be doing some of those things for hobby or diversion, but the fantasy lady didn't have a choice...she HAD to do these things if she wanted to eat
Likewise, while our modern man may have better access to medical care and information regarding health and fitness, our fantasy lady has (for the most part) been eating much healthier food, and has had no exposure (or minimal exposure, at least) to the toxic by-products of modern life. In short, our fantasy lady simply grew up in an environment that is, in many ways, much...
The issue here is that the males would also be a great deal stronger. I want to close the gender gap a bit so that having a military that is around 30-40% female in it's frontline combat elements is realistic.
The assumption as to available technology would also be wrong. Firearms aren't available, so medieval weaponry is relied upon, but magic is widely available to most individuals, electricity exists (it is used to recharge magic items), and the causes of disease are (thanks to magic) understood and combated. Magic is also used for transportation and agriculture, meaning urbanization is taking hold. Despite fighting with swords and bows, this world looks like the modern world in a very large number of ways. The average person of this fantasy world hasn't been working harder or exposed to more disease, or eating a healthier diet for that matter, than the average modern person, and the military is mostly commoners who had never trained with a weapon before enlisting (Feudalism and the knightly classes are dead due to the economic effects of all this magic, so there isn't a professional warrior caste to turn to.).

Sieglord |
"One problem with your thoughts, the male would also be in that environment and thus working his butt off as well."
That might be true, but the OP specifically stated that her basis for comparison was a healthy, adult male from modern real life, NOT a fellow male resident of her fantasy milieu.
If we are changing the conditions of the thought exercise to comparing her strength to that of one of her male contemporaries, then it's a good thing we are dealing with a fantasy setting. Magic, the intervention of a deity, or some sort of breeding program carried out on a slave race (which would still, incidentally, lead to a vastly different-looking lady) might be able to achieve the (re)stated goal, but science and physiology can not (at least, not without resorting to genetic manipulation or cybernetic modification...both generally considered to be well beyond the bounds of a "fantasy" setting).
Then again, this is one of those areas where DM fiat would seem to work just fine. It is (presumably) the OP's own setting, and as a long-time DM myself, I have found that there are some questions/issues that are settled just fine by, "I'm the DM and I said so." (Actually, there are some that can ONLY be settled in that fashion)
Take giants, for instance. Physiologically, in the real world, a hill giant can't possibly exist (assuming they are proportioned as depicted, the hill giant in question would snap every bone in his legs every time he tried to take a step...they wouldn't have the density or tensile strength to support his weight). The point is that we just accept all sorts of things from our fantasy games without requiring explanation. If Pathfinder had tried to explain or justify the physiology of gnolls, giants, centaurs, or the jabberwock, the Beastiary books wouldn't be able to fit inside the Library of Congress, and people would think it's a worse game than F.A.T.A.L

Sieglord |
"The issue here is that the males would also be a great deal stronger. I want to close the gender gap a bit so that having a military that is around 30-40% female is realistic."
Well, that's even easier...simply remove sexism. Real-world history has demonstrated time and again that whenever given the chance, women prove to be just as good at soldiering as men...better in some ways (women tend to instinctively cooperate and work together as a group, whereas most men have to be extensively trained...brainwashed, even, to do the same thing).

Kelsey MacAilbert |

"The issue here is that the males would also be a great deal stronger. I want to close the gender gap a bit so that having a military that is around 30-40% female is realistic."
Well, that's even easier...simply remove sexism. Real-world history has demonstrated time and again that whenever given the chance, women prove to be just as good at soldiering as men...better in some ways (women tend to instinctively cooperate and work together as a group, whereas most men have to be extensively trained...brainwashed, even, to do the same thing).
In modern warfare, yes. Dressed out in heavy armor and carrying a sword, however, the disparity begins to cause problems. Carrying a 100 pound pack and shooting a rifle is very different from trying to smash through armor with a weapon. The 50% disparity in average upper body strength causes problems there.

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BigNorseWolf wrote:I think i have to ask WHY you're trying to do this, and see if there's a simpler way to get the same result.I want to make the average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world a bit stronger than the average healthy young adult male of the real world. I'd like even more to kill the gender strength disparity completely, but I can't think of a way, so I'll settle for making everybody stronger on average so that the disparity matters less.
Umm... the game doesn't have any gender disparity. If you put your +2 to strength, it matters not what gender the character is.
If you want to create a new Human race with different modifiers, that's really all you need to do. Last I heard, not even Tolkien bothered to measure the muscular density differences between Elves, Humans, Numenoreans, and Orcs.

Sieglord |
Also I would like to point out that unless you are arming all of your human armies with the axes of the Housecarls, making women stronger might actually DETRACT from their abilities as soldiers. While it is true they don't possess the same muscle mass as men, they generally have much greater sensory acuity, as well as slightly better hand-eye coordination. A phalanx of female archers supported by a formation of pike men is a fearsome opponent for any fantasy army, regardless of its composition.
Now that I have a better handle on what you are actually trying to accomplish, I guess my real question is "Why?". Why change women so they can serve in an army? Why not let women serve in armies by playing to their (considerable) strengths, rather than making them more like men?

Kelsey MacAilbert |

Kelsey MacAilbert wrote:BigNorseWolf wrote:I think i have to ask WHY you're trying to do this, and see if there's a simpler way to get the same result.I want to make the average healthy young adult female of this fantasy world a bit stronger than the average healthy young adult male of the real world. I'd like even more to kill the gender strength disparity completely, but I can't think of a way, so I'll settle for making everybody stronger on average so that the disparity matters less.Umm... the game doesn't have any gender disparity. If you put your +2 to strength, it matters not what gender the character is.
If you want to create a new Human race with different modifiers, that's really all you need to do. Last I heard, not even Tolkien bothered to measure the muscular density differences between Elves, Humans, Numenoreans, and Orcs.
I want to explain WHY the game stats lack gender disparity, and why the cultures lack gender disparity.

Sieglord |
One more thing to think about (and then I'm done, I promise). Due to their much greater ability to empathize, it is perfectly rational to suppose that women might make excellent cavalry troops. Certainly, they could form a closer, stronger bond with their mount (which would lead to more effective cooperation and battlefield capability), and the problem of strength is certainly ameliorated (if not outright solved altogether) by the assistance a good warhorse can provide.

Azure_Zero |

Also I would like to point out that unless you are arming all of your human armies with the axes of the Housecarls, making women stronger might actually DETRACT from their abilities as soldiers. While it is true they don't possess the same muscle mass as men, they generally have much greater sensory acuity, as well as slightly better hand-eye coordination. A phalanx of female archers supported by a formation of pike men is a fearsome opponent for any fantasy army, regardless of its composition.
Now that I have a better handle on what you are actually trying to accomplish, I guess my real question is "Why?". Why change women so they can serve in an army? Why not let women serve in armies by playing to their (considerable) strengths, rather than making them more like men?
He's got a very good point and has listed some true facts
Heres a list and who winsPerception: Females
Strength: Males
Endurance: Males
Hand-eye Coordination: Females
Logical Processing: Males
Memory: Females
Languages: Females
Spacial Perception: Males
Resist Disease: Female
Resist Poison: Male

Kelsey MacAilbert |

Also I would like to point out that unless you are arming all of your human armies with the axes of the Housecarls, making women stronger might actually DETRACT from their abilities as soldiers. While it is true they don't possess the same muscle mass as men, they generally have much greater sensory acuity, as well as slightly better hand-eye coordination. A phalanx of female archers supported by a formation of pike men is a fearsome opponent for any fantasy army, regardless of its composition.
A phalanx of female archers and a phalanx of male archers would either perform about the same, or the male phalanx would perform a bit better do to their strength (which does matter with a longbow or crossbow). This increased sensory acuity would have no measurable effect in combat, because it is mostly for figuring out fine details like shades of color to make foraging easier. As for hand eye coordination, it's only slightly better, which wouldn't effect much.
Now that I have a better handle on what you are actually trying to accomplish, I guess my real question is "Why?". Why change women so they can serve in an army? Why not let women serve in armies by playing to their (considerable) strengths, rather than making them more like men?
Because women don't have considerable strengths in medieval warfare.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

One more thing to think about (and then I'm done, I promise). Due to their much greater ability to empathize, it is perfectly rational to suppose that women might make excellent cavalry troops. Certainly, they could form a closer, stronger bond with their mount (which would lead to more effective cooperation and battlefield capability), and the problem of strength is certainly ameliorated (if not outright solved altogether) by the assistance a good warhorse can provide.
Just one problem. The horse is constantly replaced. Cavalry troopers generally didn't have a lot of time for bonding with a horse, as they would usually own several, and switch as necessary.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

Sieglord wrote:Also I would like to point out that unless you are arming all of your human armies with the axes of the Housecarls, making women stronger might actually DETRACT from their abilities as soldiers. While it is true they don't possess the same muscle mass as men, they generally have much greater sensory acuity, as well as slightly better hand-eye coordination. A phalanx of female archers supported by a formation of pike men is a fearsome opponent for any fantasy army, regardless of its composition.
Now that I have a better handle on what you are actually trying to accomplish, I guess my real question is "Why?". Why change women so they can serve in an army? Why not let women serve in armies by playing to their (considerable) strengths, rather than making them more like men?
He's got a very good point and has listed some true facts
Heres a list and who winsPerception: Females
Strength: Males
Endurance: Males
Hand-eye Coordination: Females
Logical Processing: Males
Memory: Females
Languages: Females
Spacial Perception: Males
Resist Disease: Female
Resist Poison: Male
Perception: Females
For fine details that don't matter in a battle.
Strength: Males
Endurance: Males
Hand-eye Coordination: Females
Not a large enough gap to effect much.
Logical Processing: Males
Memory: Females
Useful in many circumstances, but not a fight.
Languages: Females
Useful in many circumstances, but not a fight.
Spacial Perception: Males
Resist Disease: Female
Not a factor (Healthcare).
Resist Poison: Male

Kelsey MacAilbert |

Don't get me wrong. Women can fight, and well, and I do support allowing female infantry. Women can do just fine in modern warfare. The issue is that modern warfare is not medieval warfare. Women are only about half as strong as men. That is a MASSIVE disadvantage in a fight with medieval weaponry, and female advantages over males do not make up for it. I also don't want to put males in some roles and women in others, as was suggested above to take advantage of the female advantages. I want to put males and females into the same roles and the same units, not different roles or segregated units.
I think the idea of the gods deciding to eliminate gender disparity is an excellent way of going about this. I'll go that route.

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1 person marked this as a favorite. |

If it makes humans strong enough that gender disparity matters less and female soldiers are common, I'm happy. If it kills gender disparity altogether, I am happier. Those are my goals here.
Consider including in your game world a 0-level cantrip or orison that drastically shortens the length of a pregnancy (like, to a month or even a week). Women didn't fight much in medieval times because they were biologically shoehorned into reproductive roles. A man's role in reproduction is over in minutes. A woman's role takes 9 months, or longer if she takes care of the kids herself, during which time she's essentially incapable of anything resembling combat or heavy labor. Men had to do those things because women were too busy preventing the species from dying out.
Short pregnancies + availability of child care (perhaps wet nursing is a full-time occupation, or a community's elderly take care of the children) mean that women's time would not need to be taken up with reproductive concerns, allowing them time to do other things... like train as a soldier. Or carry heavy things around to build upper body strength. If the magic to make pregnancies short and safe exists and is common enough that every village priest or hedge-witch can cast it, there would be drastically less occupational gender selection.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

Kelsey MacAilbert wrote:If it makes humans strong enough that gender disparity matters less and female soldiers are common, I'm happy. If it kills gender disparity altogether, I am happier. Those are my goals here.Consider including in your game world a 0-level cantrip or orison that drastically shortens the length of a pregnancy (like, to a month or even a week). Women didn't fight much in medieval times because they were biologically shoehorned into reproductive roles. A man's role in reproduction is over in minutes. A woman's role takes 9 months, or longer if she takes care of the kids herself, during which time she's essentially incapable of anything resembling combat or heavy labor. Men had to do those things because women were too busy preventing the species from dying out.
Short pregnancies + availability of child care (perhaps wet nursing is a full-time occupation, or a community's elderly take care of the children) mean that women's time would not need to be taken up with reproductive concerns, allowing them time to do other things... like train as a soldier. Or carry heavy things around to build upper body strength. If the magic to make pregnancies short and safe exists and is common enough that every village priest or hedge-witch can cast it, there would be drastically less occupational gender selection.
I like this. Perhaps when the deities decided that gender disparity needed fixing and made female muscles stronger than male muscles to compensate for womens' lower muscle mass they also shortened pregnancies to about a fortnight.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

I can see various severe problems with that short a pregnancy, And with very severe consequences.
If the pregnancy were 4-5 months minimum it would be better.There are reasons why pregnancies are that long, one is to keep things in check.
Could you extrapolate so that I can figure out ways to avoid these problems and consequences?

Azure_Zero |

Azure_Zero wrote:Could you extrapolate so that I can figure out ways to avoid these problems and consequences?I can see various severe problems with that short a pregnancy, And with very severe consequences.
If the pregnancy were 4-5 months minimum it would be better.There are reasons why pregnancies are that long, one is to keep things in check.
Sorry, if any of the below offends
One of the reasons pregnancies are long is to do population control,
Imagine if you will a nymphomanic woman, gets done every night and gets pregnant 25% of the time.
Over a month (30 days) she'll gain 7 or 8 kids,
She needs to feed, cloth, and raise a very rapidly growing family.
Say they all grow up and half inherited the nymphomanic gene.
That code will quickly spread and multiply.
And resources (food, land, water etc) are not infinite.
Soon you'll have population overload in less a century.
And to a degree inbreding because some genetic codes have been overwritten with a now common gene.
And you'll have swedish rat syndrome or Behavioral sink constantly.

Kelsey MacAilbert |

What if the deities anticipated this and made women sterile for several months to a year after giving birth? That would nip this issue in the bud easily. It also still allows for multiple children, because the sterility is temporary, not permanent. It would be sort of like a divinely mandated recovery period.

Azure_Zero |

What if the deities anticipated this and made women sterile for several months to a year after giving birth? That would nip this issue in the bud easily. It also still allows for multiple children, because the sterility is temporary, not permanent. It would be sort of like a divinely mandated recovery period.
Or have a very low fertility rate.
Below is close to your option
Or Given certain other features and settings in the reproductive system
as a fertility controller.
i.e. still breast feeding a baby, no chance of pregnancy, because the month cycle is not on.
(meerkats have this biological function, I believe)