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furry -rating:g

Artist

  • ? rivrider 5

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  • ? mario (series) 25k
  • ? ↳ new super mario bros. u deluxe 5.9k
  • ? ↳ super mario 3d world 327
  • ? ↳ super mario odyssey 720

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  • ? bowser 1.9k
  • ? bowsette 3.9k
  • ? luigi 2.6k
  • ? mario 5.2k
  • ? princess peach 7.3k

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  • ? 2girls 1.2M
  • ? 3boys 84k
  • ? 4koma 104k
  • ? :d 622k
  • ? aqua eyes 203k
  • ? arm around waist 5.9k
  • ? armlet 48k
  • ? black collar 32k
  • ? black dress 282k
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  • ? bracelet 218k
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  • ? clone 7.5k
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  • ? collar 220k
  • ? comic 596k
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  • ? dress 1.5M
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  • ? english text 292k
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  • ? fang 366k
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  • ? green hat 23k
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  • ? horns 535k
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  • ? long hair 5.0M
  • ? multiple boys 543k
  • ? multiple girls 1.7M
  • ? mustache 33k
  • ? nervous sweating 16k
  • ? open mouth 2.7M
  • ? outstretched arm 74k
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  • ? spiked collar 14k
  • ? spiked shell 2.1k
  • ? spikes 50k
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  • ? spitting blood 233
  • ? strapless 180k
  • ? strapless dress 60k
  • ? super crown 5.8k
  • ? sweat 600k
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  • ? thick eyebrows 113k
  • ? thumbs up 15k
  • ? transformation 6.6k
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  • ? waving 30k

Meta

  • ? commentary 1.7M
  • ? english commentary 598k
  • ? highres 6.2M

Information

  • ID: 3262233
  • Uploader: Squishy »
  • Date: almost 7 years ago
  • Approver: NWSiaCB »
  • Size: 128 KB .png (1320x1386) »
  • Source: dabloons.tumblr.com/post/178316339193 »
  • Rating: Sensitive
  • Score: 64
  • Favorites: 106
  • Status: Active

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This post has 0 children (learn more) « hide
post #3262233
Resized to 64% of original (view original)
princess peach, mario, bowsette, luigi, and bowser (mario and 3 more) drawn by rivrider

Artist's commentary

  • Original
  • Inspired by @haniwahead‘s “Princess Bowser” comic. It’s surprisingly not trending as deep as it is on Twitter.

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    Squishy
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    Follow up scene

    4 Reply
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    MadGeneral
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    Use it.

    0 Reply
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    user 509926
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    "Now neither of us will be virgins"

    5 Reply
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    NegativeSoul
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    I wonder how they determined which would be the girl?

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    UserAccount
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    Squishy said:

    Follow up scene

    I did some research to determine just how messed-up a child born of two people of exactly identical DNA (that is, a person and their clone).

    The answer is, surprisingly, not very much. Yes, the kid would almost certainly have one or more genetic diseases (cystic fibrosis, for example), but only if the parent was a carrier for those diseases in the first place. It wouldn't be a total trainwreck like many (including me) imagined it'd be.

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    godgun213
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    UserAccount said:

    I did some research to determine just how messed-up a child born of two people of exactly identical DNA (that is, a person and their clone).

    The answer is, surprisingly, not very much. Yes, the kid would almost certainly have one or more genetic diseases (cystic fibrosis, for example), but only if the parent was a carrier for those diseases in the first place. It wouldn't be a total trainwreck like many (including me) imagined it'd be.

    well

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    NWSiaCB
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    UserAccount said:

    I did some research to determine just how messed-up a child born of two people of exactly identical DNA (that is, a person and their clone).

    The answer is, surprisingly, not very much. Yes, the kid would almost certainly have one or more genetic diseases (cystic fibrosis, for example), but only if the parent was a carrier for those diseases in the first place. It wouldn't be a total trainwreck like many (including me) imagined it'd be.

    The problem with that conclusion is that you're presuming the number of people who have some sort of potentially problematic genetic material are small, but nearly everyone has some. In fact, this is THE reason that inbreeding is dangerous to start with. (And self-fertilization is actually TWICE as bad as brother-sister incest on the inbreeding coefficient, since you only share roughly half your DNA with a sibling.)

    Let's take a well-known example of sickle cell anemia, for example. Using the typical Punnett Square setup of having SS be totally normal blood, Ss being a carrier of one sickle cell gene, and ss being a carrier of two sickle cell genes, then only the person with ss genes actually displays sickle cell anemia. By contrast, the Ss person may carry sickle cell genes, but not only doesn't suffer from sickle cell anemia, but actually gets a benefit in the form of resistance to malaria, which is why genetic material that can cause a serious disease was actually naturally selected to perpetuate instead of go extinct.

    Even in populations where sickle cell is relatively common, only about 10% of the population carries it, so it's still a relatively small percentage of the population that actually falls victim to sickle cell. In the case of self-fertilization (instead of a direct cloning), a Ss carrier of sickle cell genes, however, has a 25% chance of producing sickle cell anemic offspring.

    And that comes to the big problematic assumption you're making - that most people don't have any genes that can carry genetic diseases... which is just plain wrong, most people carry several different potential genetic diseases, because there are tons of different things like sickle cell just waiting to give people Hapsburg Jaws. It's just that keeping genetic diversity flowing by not intermarrying prevents most of these because every ethnicity has their own distinct set of potential genetic problems.

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    Moriyama
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    My thought is pointing at Bowser (and Mario) and why he's sweating so much...

    3 Reply
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    YouWillFearmyLaserNipple
    almost 7 years ago
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    Moriyama said:

    My thought is pointing at Bowser (and Mario) and why he's sweating so much...

    For the exact same reasons we are

    2 Reply
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    malus
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    NegativeSoul said:

    I wonder how they determined which would be the girl?

    They probably take turns wearing the crown

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    YuRanRan
    almost 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    NWSiaCB said:

    The problem with that conclusion is that you're presuming the number of people who have some sort of potentially problematic genetic material are small, but nearly everyone has some. In fact, this is THE reason that inbreeding is dangerous to start with. (And self-fertilization is actually TWICE as bad as brother-sister incest on the inbreeding coefficient, since you only share roughly half your DNA with a sibling.)

    Let's take a well-known example of sickle cell anemia, for example. Using the typical Punnett Square setup of having SS be totally normal blood, Ss being a carrier of one sickle cell gene, and ss being a carrier of two sickle cell genes, then only the person with ss genes actually displays sickle cell anemia. By contrast, the Ss person may carry sickle cell genes, but not only doesn't suffer from sickle cell anemia, but actually gets a benefit in the form of resistance to malaria, which is why genetic material that can cause a serious disease was actually naturally selected to perpetuate instead of go extinct.

    Even in populations where sickle cell is relatively common, only about 10% of the population carries it, so it's still a relatively small percentage of the population that actually falls victim to sickle cell. In the case of self-fertilization (instead of a direct cloning), a Ss carrier of sickle cell genes, however, has a 25% chance of producing sickle cell anemic offspring.

    And that comes to the big problematic assumption you're making - that most people don't have any genes that can carry genetic diseases... which is just plain wrong, most people carry several different potential genetic diseases, because there are tons of different things like sickle cell just waiting to give people Hapsburg Jaws. It's just that keeping genetic diversity flowing by not intermarrying prevents most of these because every ethnicity has their own distinct set of potential genetic problems.

    Prtty much everyone has alleles that can cause disease. There seems to also be lot of people who *should* display a disease phenotype based on gentypic analysis, but they don't. Last time I looked at a paper on this (the team was looking at a bunch of SNPs), it seems most people have 36 to 60 or so problematic recessive, disease inducing alleles. Even if you have both alleles only around 10% of people with that genotype (based on what the team was able to pick up on analysis) will actually have the syndrome or disease. So it's not as bad as most would make this issue out to be. Epigenetics and the like make this all very complex to say the least.

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