Horses

Horses are large fleet-footed mammals that are frequently employed as domesticated beasts of labor by humankind and as food sources by gargoyles. Native to a number of worlds, including Britannia, Serpent Isle and Earth, these generally docile creatures appear in, , , , , , and.

Age of Darkness
Riding horses were commonplace in the earliest days of Sosaria, and were frequently hired by travelers seeking to quicken their journeys across the often perilous wilds of the realm. While horse husbandry appeared to fall into a slight decline during the era of Exodus, canny adventurers could still locate and subdue riding steeds should they travel to the distant lands of Ambrosia, where herds of wild horses still roamed the grasslands (although these swift Ambrosian mounts would frequently require either powerful magic or hard-to-locate items to tame).

Age of Enlightenment
Eventually, however, with the end of the Age of Darkness, groomsmanship slowly reemerged as a profession, and horses were a common component of day to day Britannian life for much of its history – serving to plough fields, draw carriages and convey travelers for many centuries.

The Horse Plague
Sometime during the catastrophic years of the Imbalance and Great Cataclysm, a far reaching and deadly plague affected all the equine species of Britannia, killing all horses throughout the realm. By the time of the Avatar's last journey through the realm, such poor creatures could often be found hanging outside of the boundaries of towns and cities. While a woman known as Cleo was arrested and imprisoned for the creation of this contagion, its exact origin and vectors of travel were never made clear.

Horse Breeds
Several distinct breeds are identifiable, plough horses, mountain horses, steppes horses, and the prominent Valorian steeds.

Valorian Steeds
This distinctive horse hail from the Valorian Isles. Trained Valorians make the best warhorses, and are often sought by knights.

Valorians are notorious for having quirks: some chew wood, necessitating special stabling; other work themselves into a frenzy if left alone, often requiring a smaller animal such as a dog to act as a stall companion; many bite or kick anyone who passes unaware.

Notable Examples

 * Smith the Horse: a talking stallion often found living on the grounds of Iolo's Hut near Yew; famous for giving late advice to the Avatar.
 * Wyatt Earp was turned into the horse Marshall in his nightmare in Martian Dreams.

Trivia

 * In Ultima III, horses could not be left on any terrain other than grassland, though they could be ridden over most other types.
 * In the Ambrosia of, horses could be "tamed" by stopping time, using either a powder or the Altair spell, and then mounted. Due to an in-game bug, this had the curious side-effect of duplicating any horse captured in this fashion (though the duplicate horse appeared as a grass tile while still frozen). In the PC version, mounting a horse while time is paused causes time to restart and the horse to immediately attack.
 * In Ultima V, horses would refuse to bear their riders across swampland.
 * In Ultima V, various stablekeepers such as Kurt, Kraw or Treanna describe differences between the various types of Britannian horses, identifying plough horses, mountain horses, steppes horses, and Valorian warhorses as distinct breeds.
 * When the C64-port of was created, the limits of the system proved difficult to implement horse riding. As a result, horses were removed from the game, with the in-game explanation that the raiding gargoyles had eaten them all (with exception of Smith).
 * Similar technical difficulties also resulted in the removal of horses in the NES-port of, although in this video game the explanation used was that the horse population had been decimated by hungry people (note that horse meat is considered disgusting food in English-speaking countries, but it is normal food in other places).
 * In the SNES-port of, if the Avatar kills a horse, the Guardian will glibly remark "stop horsing around!"
 * One of the horses in the stables of Britain is called Mr. Ed. There is also another horse in the same stables who is called Wilbur.
 * The death of all horses in is lampshaded by Felix and Castro while being locked in Despise. Felix complains that he is hungry enough he could eat a horse. When Castro reminds him all horses are dead, Felix corrects himself that he could eat a giant rat.