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Anonymous commented at 2016-11-14 14:28:05 » #2049149

Gamera at his finest, what else to say? They are gorgeous.

18 Points Flag
Anonymous commented at 2016-11-14 17:39:10 » #2049234

I... I'm confused...

...my dick is confused!

13 Points Flag
Anonymous commented at 2016-11-14 18:50:22 » #2049264

What will happen if they impregnate themselves(if it's possible of course)? Will they give birth to a clone of them?

5 Points Flag
kikkatelier commented at 2016-11-14 19:08:26 » #2049272

how do i shot semen?

23 Points Flag
Anonymous commented at 2016-11-14 19:44:10 » #2049285

^
Yeah there's a little mistake here, it's suposed to be "shoot" and there's also one with "thrust".

2 Points Flag
Retropretzel commented at 2016-11-14 20:01:29 » #2049293

^ He was making a reference.

9 Points Flag
Anonymous commented at 2016-11-14 21:06:18 » #2049318

The real question is.....
Why would (gender-descriptive/possibly-offensive pronoun goes here) get all dressed up, just to stay home and masterbate?
Definitely not even close the oddest thing I have seen in last week, so who cares?! Let love love, I say!

3 Points Flag
banana-pudding commented at 2016-11-16 17:29:52 » #2050106

How and where do their lower bodies connect?

3 Points Flag
Anonymous commented at 2016-11-16 18:19:35 » #2050143

^ Seems at their waist. We can't really see but I guess at navel's point the lower body splits in two having a part on the front and another on the back.

2 Points Flag
Anonymous commented at 2016-11-16 19:08:57 » #2050155

@Anonymous >> #2049264:

Almost certainly not. Remember that each person has two of each chromosome, but only passes one of them to their offspring.

This means that for each of these pairs of chromosomes they have that isn't an exact match, there's a 50% chance that they'll end up with a pair that's different from their parents.

You're guaranteed to have some chromosome pairs that aren't exact matches, otherwise you would almost certainly have genetic disorders. In fact, the increased risk of exact matches in your chromosome pairs is the reason why incest increases the risk of genetic issues.

It only takes 2 chromosome pairs that aren't exact matches for the chance of producing genetically identical offspring with a twin to drop to 25%, and it only gets worse from there. The human genome has 23 chromosomes. We'll set aside the pair that controls gender in this case, which leaves us with 22 pairs. If none of these pairs are exact matches, there's less than a 1 in 2.5 million chance they'll produce a genetically identical child each time they conceive. These are your upper and lower limits - at best 1/4, at worst 1/2,500,000. It's more likely to have fewer matching pairs than many matching pairs, so they're more likely to be closer to the worst case side than the best case side.

Even if they do, it's unlikely that they'll produce another pair of conjoined twins - those are a result of conditions in the womb rather than genetic coding. There's about a 3/1000 chance that they'll produce identical twins, and there's only a 1/49,000 chance at best that these identical twins will be conjoined. Combining all of these probabilities together, you get a 1/50,000,000,000 chance. They'd almost certainly have to produce more offspring than the total number of humans than have ever lived before they produced a conjoined twin exact duplicate of themselves.

22 Points Flag