Pepsi Jedi wrote:It likely depends on the specific flight.
Like.. Hummingbird flight doesn't work with soaring or Raptor as they're 100% different... functions.
That's sort of how I feel about it. It really depends on the physical wing structure of the base animal. Think about the bird in question and how it moves IRL. Then purchase the flight powers as common sense and biology would allow. I would only allow combo's/stacking for traits the actual base animal would have.
Soaring flight + raptor flight for soaring (duh!) predatory birds.
Raptor flight + silent flight for Owls Only
Wing shapes and the type of flight they're used forGlide: Every (flying) bird, except hummingbirds, ought to be able to take Glide.
Chickens can Only choose glide (Not capable of long distance flight. Short distances yes, like over a fence or into trees. What a chicken does I wouldn't consider Basic Flight. It's more of flapping their wings really hard to get a little extra oomph behind a jump.
[url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken#General_biology_and_habitat][/url] .
Domestic/Farm/Pet ducks in the same category as chickens. With a couple of exceptions (small mallards and call ducks) they are unable to achieve more than a short flight.
https://www.efowl.com/2009/08/24/will-my-pet-ducks-fly-away/Domestic Turkeys are to fat to fly (see point #2). I would let them take glide but only as a (mostly ineffective) buffer against fall damage. Wild Turkey's are a whole 'nother story.
https://www.livescience.com/7630-5-surprising-turkey-facts.htmlDomestic Geese. Probably the best fliers of the traditional farm birds. Glide and short to med range basic flight would be my call. "Flight: Due to their large size and upright posture, domestic geese can't really fly, although when alarmed - and with a good tail wind, they can get off the ground several feet and can remain in the air for up to a quarter a mile - particularly when moving downhill."
https://www.beautyofbirds.com/domesticatedgeese.htmlBasic Flight: Works for all birds except as listed above. If your bird has the capability of other flight powers but doesn't take them I'd play it off as if it were bizarrely mutated away (a birth defect? Does it set them apart from other birds of the same species?
Horatio was never invited on any of the Owl tribe hunting parties. The mouse clans could always hear him coming.)
Soaring Flight: Birds with the Active or Passive Soaring wing shape. Should be limited to birds such as eagles, most hawks, storks, albatrosses, gulls, and gannets. These are birds that spend long periods of time in the air riding thermals or wind currents.
Silent Flight: Pretty sure this is exclusive to Owls.
Raptor Flight: Seems most likely to be for birds with the High Speed wing shape from the image above. Examples are swifts, ducks, falcons, terns, and sandpipers.
Acrobatic Flight Birds with an Elliptical wing shape. Examples of birds that
have this wing type are crows, ravens, blackbirds, sparrows, and
thrushes (such as the American Robin).
Birds and their wing shapes - The Cornell Lab of OrnithologyBird Flight&Wing Shape