
You know that moment when the witty, sarcastic remarks you’ve been coming up with for the last few hours all just dry up? This is that moment.
My friend
spottea recently told me about
fatbunnyagenda's "Fat Bunny Week!" That spawned the idea of drawing this!
A drawing of a character from zootopiacentral's upcoming fanfic, where Nick comes home from the ZPD academy training expecting to pursue Judy, only to find that Judy is already dating another rabbit. And not just any rabbit, but a Flemish giant!
My friend


A drawing of a character from zootopiacentral's upcoming fanfic, where Nick comes home from the ZPD academy training expecting to pursue Judy, only to find that Judy is already dating another rabbit. And not just any rabbit, but a Flemish giant!
Category Artwork (Digital) / Fanart
Species Rabbit / Hare
Size 850 x 1200px
File Size 57 kB
The Disney Wiki on Zootopia lists five different Domestic species as existing in world, so the concept of selective breeding can't be completely alien to them.
Chances are that, if such a species did exist, it would be stigmatized and viewed similarly to the way we view white supremacists (IE: dumb and inbred), especially if they are proponents of the continuation of that line. Though, dating a common rabbit, all that negativity will be reserved for for his parents, and the only questions will instead be about how they. . . You know. . .
Chances are that, if such a species did exist, it would be stigmatized and viewed similarly to the way we view white supremacists (IE: dumb and inbred), especially if they are proponents of the continuation of that line. Though, dating a common rabbit, all that negativity will be reserved for for his parents, and the only questions will instead be about how they. . . You know. . .
I actually saw a fan theory that domesticated species in the Zootopia universe could be explained by, at some point in that world's history (after animals became sentient but before they "came together in peace and harmony"), animals being used as slaves/food and intentionally being bred for domestication.
Slavery tends to produce *ahem* exceptional stock, intentional or not, due to the extreme conditions under which such people are forced to live and work. It's certainly plausible.
Me though, I always had the opposite interpretation. Since the "go back to the forest!" guy, and the movie's main antagonist, are both members of a domestic species, I always figured those were likely the first species to settle and become civilized, with all of the others either being recruited by, or allying against, said domestics as they consolidated and expanded their territories, and that, because they were so early civilized, they were the only ones who ever lived in entire cultures obsessed with the "purity" of their species (up until their armies got downright curbstomped by a much more diverse and adaptable mixed-species alliance), allowing for them to become the "domestic" species.
Me though, I always had the opposite interpretation. Since the "go back to the forest!" guy, and the movie's main antagonist, are both members of a domestic species, I always figured those were likely the first species to settle and become civilized, with all of the others either being recruited by, or allying against, said domestics as they consolidated and expanded their territories, and that, because they were so early civilized, they were the only ones who ever lived in entire cultures obsessed with the "purity" of their species (up until their armies got downright curbstomped by a much more diverse and adaptable mixed-species alliance), allowing for them to become the "domestic" species.
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