Dzoms

Satyrs and fauns have the least complications arising from crossbreeding, the resultant children are known as dzoms. Even so, male dzoms are often stillborn due to complications arisen from genes linked to those responsible for ornamentation (horns or antlers). Female dzoms usually survive, and have ewe horns about 50% of the time. These horns are smaller than truebreed fauns, and grow much slower. Male dzoms that survive may grow horns, antlers, or a form of either than is atypical of the parent species, ie: horns that grow in antler-like shapes, or vice-versa. Male dzoms will never have neither horns nor antlers.

Dzoms are referred to as stags, does, ewes, or rams interchangeably, according to the context and preference of the individual dzom. Some dzoms may be assigned whether, but this is rare, and only happens in faun-dominated areas.