Horse RNG guide · updated 2026-05-12
Horse RNG breeds tier list
A deep single-page ranking for every known Horse RNG breed from Scrawny Nag to Stoic.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: How this tier list ranks Horse RNG breeds
Definition starts with utility, not rarity alone: a breed is ranked by the role it fills after food cost, sleep time, race speed, sell price, and breeding luck are placed in the same frame. Data comes from the fan wiki breed index, the public Roblox description, active code trackers, and the local calculator model used on this site. Compared with a screenshot-only list, this page explains when a lower-star horse can beat a rare one for cash flow. To use the list, find your current best breed, read the tier note, and decide whether to breed upward, sell now, or place it on the race podium.
The ranking favors horses that solve a practical bottleneck. A race player values speed and boost synergy, a breeder values luck and food eligibility, and a cash player values sell range against sleep time. Those definitions create different winners than a raw rarity chart. The how-to rule is to move one bracket at a time until your food supply and stable slots can support the next chase.
| Breed | Star band | Tier | Sell model | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scrawny Nag | 0-100 | D | $120 | 18 |
| Carolina Walker | 0-100 | D | $180 | 22 |
| German Standardbred | 0-100 | C | $260 | 31 |
| Haflinger | 0-100 | C | $340 | 27 |
| Thoroughbred | 0-100 | B | $520 | 46 |
| Mustang | 0-100 | B | $610 | 42 |
| Pinto | 0-100 | B | $690 | 39 |
| Percheron | 0-100 | B | $820 | 34 |
| Barb | 0-100 | A | $940 | 49 |
| Hanoverian | 100-500 | A | $1,250 | 55 |
| Russian Don | 100-500 | A | $1,500 | 58 |
| Turkoman | 100-500 | S | $1,900 | 63 |
| Clydesdale | 100-500 | A | $2,300 | 45 |
| Oldenburg | 100-500 | S | $2,700 | 67 |
| Shareef Dancer | 100-500 | S | $3,200 | 72 |
| Morgan | 100-500 | A | $3,550 | 60 |
| Holsteiner | 100-500 | S | $4,200 | 75 |
| Skeleton | 500+ | S | $6,600 | 70 |
| E-Skeleton | 500+ | S | $9,200 | 78 |
| Tidal | 500+ | SSS | $14,800 | 88 |
| Stoic | 500+ | SSS | $21,000 | 93 |
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Quick tier matrix before the breed-by-breed notes
Definition for the quick matrix is a compressed view: SSS means a late-game chase target, S means a strong horse that changes a stable plan, A means high utility with a clear limitation, B means usable bridge, C means early filler, and D means starter-only. The data column combines star band, modeled sell value, and speed. Compared with the long notes below, the matrix is for immediate decisions. To use it, sort your stable by highest tier first, then read the detailed section only for candidates you might keep.
A player with limited food should not chase the highest name blindly. For example, a B-tier Thoroughbred can be a better first race horse than a slower high-sell Percheron, while Stoic beats both only after the player can afford high-star food and longer sleep windows. This comparison is why each entry below includes a practical instruction instead of a single letter grade.
| Tier | Breeds | Primary use |
|---|---|---|
| SSS | Tidal, Stoic | late-game race and sell anchor |
| S | Turkoman, Oldenburg, Shareef Dancer, Holsteiner, Skeleton, E-Skeleton | main progression target |
| A | Barb, Hanoverian, Russian Don, Clydesdale, Morgan | reliable keeper with one limitation |
| B | Thoroughbred, Mustang, Pinto, Percheron | bridge breed for early cash or racing |
| C | German Standardbred, Haflinger | short-term starter upgrade |
| D | Scrawny Nag, Carolina Walker | starter baseline and index fill |
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Scrawny Nag tier note
Definition: Scrawny Nag is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Scrawny Nag. In this guide it sits in D tier because the modeled profile gives it 18 speed, 0 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $120, and a sleep estimate around 8 minutes. Compared with Scrawny Nag, Scrawny Nag leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Scrawny Nag is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Scrawny Nag needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Scrawny Nag for breeding or sell range. If Scrawny Nag wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Scrawny Nag has 0 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Carolina Walker tier note
Definition: Carolina Walker is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Carolinawalker. In this guide it sits in D tier because the modeled profile gives it 22 speed, 1 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $180, and a sleep estimate around 10 minutes. Compared with Scrawny Nag, Carolina Walker leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Carolina Walker is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Carolina Walker needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Carolina Walker for breeding or sell range. If Carolina Walker wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Carolina Walker has 1 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: German Standardbred tier note
Definition: German Standardbred is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Germanstandardbred. In this guide it sits in C tier because the modeled profile gives it 31 speed, 2 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $260, and a sleep estimate around 12 minutes. Compared with Carolina Walker, German Standardbred leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. German Standardbred is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, German Standardbred needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep German Standardbred for breeding or sell range. If German Standardbred wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. German Standardbred has 2 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Haflinger tier note
Definition: Haflinger is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Halfinger. In this guide it sits in C tier because the modeled profile gives it 27 speed, 4 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $340, and a sleep estimate around 13 minutes. Compared with German Standardbred, Haflinger leans more toward breeding or sell value while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Haflinger is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Haflinger needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Haflinger for breeding or sell range. If Haflinger wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Haflinger has 4 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Thoroughbred tier note
Definition: Thoroughbred is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Thoroughbred. In this guide it sits in B tier because the modeled profile gives it 46 speed, 4 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $520, and a sleep estimate around 16 minutes. Compared with Haflinger, Thoroughbred leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Thoroughbred is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Thoroughbred needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Thoroughbred for breeding or sell range. If Thoroughbred wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Thoroughbred has 4 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Mustang tier note
Definition: Mustang is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Mustang. In this guide it sits in B tier because the modeled profile gives it 42 speed, 6 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $610, and a sleep estimate around 17 minutes. Compared with Thoroughbred, Mustang leans more toward breeding or sell value while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Mustang is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Mustang needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Mustang for breeding or sell range. If Mustang wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Mustang has 6 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Pinto tier note
Definition: Pinto is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Pinto. In this guide it sits in B tier because the modeled profile gives it 39 speed, 8 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $690, and a sleep estimate around 18 minutes. Compared with Mustang, Pinto leans more toward breeding or sell value while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Pinto is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Pinto needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Pinto for breeding or sell range. If Pinto wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Pinto has 8 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Percheron tier note
Definition: Percheron is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Percheron. In this guide it sits in B tier because the modeled profile gives it 34 speed, 10 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $820, and a sleep estimate around 20 minutes. Compared with Pinto, Percheron leans more toward breeding or sell value while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Percheron is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Percheron needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Percheron for breeding or sell range. If Percheron wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Percheron has 10 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Barb tier note
Definition: Barb is a 0-100 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Barb. In this guide it sits in A tier because the modeled profile gives it 49 speed, 9 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $940, and a sleep estimate around 21 minutes. Compared with Percheron, Barb leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Barb is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Barb needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Barb for breeding or sell range. If Barb wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Barb has 9 modeled luck and lives in the 0-100 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Hanoverian tier note
Definition: Hanoverian is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Hanoverian. In this guide it sits in A tier because the modeled profile gives it 55 speed, 11 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $1,250, and a sleep estimate around 24 minutes. Compared with Barb, Hanoverian leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Hanoverian is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Hanoverian needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Hanoverian for breeding or sell range. If Hanoverian wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Hanoverian has 11 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Russian Don tier note
Definition: Russian Don is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Russiandon. In this guide it sits in A tier because the modeled profile gives it 58 speed, 12 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $1,500, and a sleep estimate around 26 minutes. Compared with Hanoverian, Russian Don leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Russian Don is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Russian Don needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Russian Don for breeding or sell range. If Russian Don wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Russian Don has 12 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Turkoman tier note
Definition: Turkoman is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Turkoman. In this guide it sits in S tier because the modeled profile gives it 63 speed, 15 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $1,900, and a sleep estimate around 29 minutes. Compared with Russian Don, Turkoman leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Turkoman is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Turkoman needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Turkoman for breeding or sell range. If Turkoman wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Turkoman has 15 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Clydesdale tier note
Definition: Clydesdale is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Cyldesdale. In this guide it sits in A tier because the modeled profile gives it 45 speed, 18 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $2,300, and a sleep estimate around 31 minutes. Compared with Turkoman, Clydesdale leans more toward breeding or sell value while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Clydesdale is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Clydesdale needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Clydesdale for breeding or sell range. If Clydesdale wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Clydesdale has 18 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Oldenburg tier note
Definition: Oldenburg is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Oldenburg. In this guide it sits in S tier because the modeled profile gives it 67 speed, 17 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $2,700, and a sleep estimate around 34 minutes. Compared with Clydesdale, Oldenburg leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Oldenburg is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Oldenburg needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Oldenburg for breeding or sell range. If Oldenburg wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Oldenburg has 17 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Shareef Dancer tier note
Definition: Shareef Dancer is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Shareefdancer. In this guide it sits in S tier because the modeled profile gives it 72 speed, 19 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $3,200, and a sleep estimate around 37 minutes. Compared with Oldenburg, Shareef Dancer leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Shareef Dancer is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Shareef Dancer has enough modeled speed to deserve podium testing. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Shareef Dancer for breeding or sell range. If Shareef Dancer wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Shareef Dancer has 19 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Morgan tier note
Definition: Morgan is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Morgan. In this guide it sits in A tier because the modeled profile gives it 60 speed, 22 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $3,550, and a sleep estimate around 40 minutes. Compared with Shareef Dancer, Morgan leans more toward breeding or sell value while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Morgan is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Morgan needs a favorable enchantment before it should replace a dedicated racer. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Morgan for breeding or sell range. If Morgan wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Morgan has 22 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Holsteiner tier note
Definition: Holsteiner is a 100-500 star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Holsteiner. In this guide it sits in S tier because the modeled profile gives it 75 speed, 24 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $4,200, and a sleep estimate around 44 minutes. Compared with Morgan, Holsteiner leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Holsteiner is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Holsteiner has enough modeled speed to deserve podium testing. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Holsteiner for breeding or sell range. If Holsteiner wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Holsteiner has 24 modeled luck and lives in the 100-500 star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Skeleton tier note
Definition: Skeleton is a 500+ star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Skeleton. In this guide it sits in S tier because the modeled profile gives it 70 speed, 30 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $6,600, and a sleep estimate around 56 minutes. Compared with Holsteiner, Skeleton leans more toward breeding or sell value while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Skeleton is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Skeleton has enough modeled speed to deserve podium testing. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Skeleton for breeding or sell range. If Skeleton wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Skeleton has 30 modeled luck and lives in the 500+ star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: E-Skeleton tier note
Definition: E-Skeleton is a 500+ star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Eskeleton. In this guide it sits in S tier because the modeled profile gives it 78 speed, 34 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $9,200, and a sleep estimate around 68 minutes. Compared with Skeleton, E-Skeleton leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. E-Skeleton is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, E-Skeleton has enough modeled speed to deserve podium testing. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep E-Skeleton for breeding or sell range. If E-Skeleton wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. E-Skeleton has 34 modeled luck and lives in the 500+ star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Tidal tier note
Definition: Tidal is a 500+ star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Tidal. In this guide it sits in SSS tier because the modeled profile gives it 88 speed, 42 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $14,800, and a sleep estimate around 92 minutes. Compared with E-Skeleton, Tidal leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Tidal is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Tidal has enough modeled speed to deserve podium testing. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Tidal for breeding or sell range. If Tidal wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Tidal has 42 modeled luck and lives in the 500+ star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Stoic tier note
Definition: Stoic is a 500+ star-band breed listed by the Horse RNG fan wiki as Stoic. In this guide it sits in SSS tier because the modeled profile gives it 93 speed, 48 breeding luck, a base sell marker near $21,000, and a sleep estimate around 110 minutes. Compared with Tidal, Stoic leans harder into race speed while still staying inside its own progression bracket. To use it well, place it into the stable role that matches the current bottleneck instead of treating the name as a trophy.
Data interpretation matters because Horse RNG turns every breed into a timing problem. A horse that sells for more but sleeps much longer can slow a small stable, while a faster horse that earns race rewards can create steady cash without consuming more food. Stoic is best judged against the food threshold required to keep producing similar foals. Compared with a lower bracket horse, it demands more patience; compared with a higher bracket horse, it is usually easier to repeat. The how-to instruction is to test one breeding cycle, record the sell result, and keep the horse only if it improves your next two cycles.
For racing, Stoic has enough modeled speed to deserve podium testing. The comparison should be made against your actual podium horse, not against the top of the public tier list. If the current racer wins more often, keep Stoic for breeding or sell range. If Stoic wins even with a weaker boost, it becomes a keeper. The data rule is simple: one race sample is noise, but three repeated finishes against the same track show the direction.
For breeding, the key definition is parent quality after food affordability. Stoic has 48 modeled luck and lives in the 500+ star band, so it should be paired with a parent that does not drag the average down too far. Compared with chasing a perfect pair, a practical pair saves food and keeps the stable moving. The how-to path is to combine it with a similar or slightly better breed, add food only to the point where the S or SSS probability improves, and avoid wasting a Coffee Cup unless the next foal can become a racer or high-value sale.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: Tier movement rules after future Horse RNG updates
Definition for movement is the reason a breed changes role after a patch or new code cycle. Data should be rechecked when Tou Interactive adds new food, raises race rewards, changes sleep behavior, or adds a stronger enchantment. Compared with static tier lists, this page treats every ranking as a dated recommendation, not a permanent law. To update your own stable plan, record your best race finish, sell result, and breeding cost before replacing a kept horse.
The safest movement rule is conservative. If a breed gains speed value but loses sell value, it should move only inside its current tier until race rewards prove the change. If a new food item lowers the cost of breeding a high-star pair, late-game breeds can move upward because more players can actually use them. That is why Tidal and Stoic are SSS in this version but still include warnings about timing and cost.
Definition / Data / Comparison / How-to: How to combine the tier list with the Breed Calculator
Definition for calculator use is a pre-spend check: the tool estimates what a parent pair can produce before food and enchant resources are committed. Data includes parent star averages, tier distance, food slider, enchant slider, sell range, and speed result. Compared with reading the tier list alone, the calculator catches mismatched parents that look strong separately but produce mediocre odds together. To use it, set Parent A and Parent B, move food to the level you can afford, then compare the S and SSS bars against the sleep timer you can tolerate.
The best workflow is page-to-tool-to-game. Read the breed note, run the pair, then return to the game only after the expected result makes sense. If the calculator says the race tier is weaker than your current podium horse, sell the foal instead of replacing your racer. If the sell range is low but the SSS bar improves, keep breeding only when you have a Coffee Cup or enough time offline.