Talk:Kagune/@comment-67.162.120.239-20150923175456/@comment-213.66.199.45-20151008162310

^ I´m not going to go into length on how unlikely the odds of getting all four are, so here´s the odds in that kind of genetic gamble...

Inheriting only one kagune: 79%

Two kagunes: 21%

In case of single kagune:

Rinkaku:25%

Ukaku: 25%

Koukaku: 25%

Bikaku:25%

In case for two kagune:

U/R: 3%

U/K:3%

U/R:3%

U/B:3%

K/R:3%

K/B:3%

R/B:3%

The reason the odds for this are so low is because the two pools are K/R and U/B respectibly...

There´s NO genetic preference to develop a chimera kagune as no kagune type from either of the parents have dominance or even genetic combination dominace with each other. The genetics are not litteraly "lego", it´s ruled by dominant genes.

This parental match-up is worse then a mexican stand-off in a western movie...

The odds for the kid to gain a chimera kagune is really low, and this goes without saying about all the negative aspects of having more then two kagune at the same time.

Tokyo ghoul is at least keeping it semi-realistic and have a science behind the ghouls with established rules... so just getting all four because the parents have two each is just a fantasy...

You don´t see a kid from a blonde and a brunette gain multicolored hair now don´t you? Or the offspring from a green-eyed and a blue-eyed set of parents gain one blue eye and one green eye just because of what the parents got, right?

The same thing here.

Genetics will go for dominance...

If anything, it´s more likely that the kid of two chimera parents would only gain one kagune with traits of two different types instead... Like Grave Robbers Bikaku which drains rc-cells like a ukaku despite being a set of tails... or Ayato´s Ukaku which can harden like a Koukaku and turn into a blade... as examples.

So if you want to be a offspring of two chimeras, then go for a single kagune with traits of a second kagune mixed into it...

...that is at least more likely than having all four of them at once.