Search Results

Found 1 results for "f32a03a0c24e3be6fa8352999da7b81a" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous /v/714122931#714129258
7/1/2025, 2:56:18 AM
King Halo Factoids

>Her in-game story is loosely based on the life of his first jockey; In Uma, King Halo’s mother didn’t want her to participate in racing, like how Yuichi Fukunaga’s mother didn’t want to become a jockey after his father, Youichi Fukunaga.
>Hee and King Halo made a good pair. Despite not winning any GIs, Yuichi owes his jockeyhood to him.
>Yuichi’s life path was almost identical to King Halo’s: Both have famous parents, successful rookie years, hit the wall in big races, and peaked in later life.
>When King Halo finally won the Takamatsunomiya Kinen (jockeyed by Yoshitomi Shibata), the second place finisher, Divine Light, was actually jockeyed by Yuichi. >He was so happy that King won at last but regretted that it wasn’t him on King Halo’s back.
>Finding the right race for him was hard, because while he couldn’t win, he wasn’t doing particularly badly in any type of race (except dirt).
>His team made the weird mistake of running in the February Stakes, which King Halo just couldn’t do. The dirt reference is present in-game for that reason.
>King Halo is actually decent in all distances and shouldn't be just thought of as a sprinter. The reason for his many losses in classical distance races was contributed to the existence of golden generation members (Spe, Sky, etc.) — he was giving 100% but everyone else was giving 110%.
>While he wasn’t an excellent racer, he was a successful sire.
>King Halo is the father or Kawakami Princess. This is why Princess looks up to her in the game.
>King Halo met their end on March 19th, 2019 due to old age. Five days later, Yuichi won the Takamatsunomiya Kinen on Mr. Melody and the top five were coincidentally made up of these numbers: 3-4-7-13-5. This can be read as Sa (3) Yo (4) Nara (7) King Halo (13; the number he had when he won the Takamatsunomiya Kinen) Go (5; a polite title for horses, like sama). Ergo, “Goodbye, Mr. King Halo.”

>>714127903