The Broken, Non-broken, and Charlie genes.

 The Broken, Non-broken, and Charlie genes.

All these genes are basically the same gene lettering just a either adds or takes away the En part but changes a lot of the way the bunny looks, basically each gene consists of either En or en or both, when breeding you can change it or keep it the same but it's basically the same gene your working with but can change if a different part is added or taken away. The genes are En-en (broken), en-en (the one I'm calling non-broken), & En-En (charlie). As you will see none of them are dominant or recessive the rearranging is what makes up the gene.

 The Broken gene (En-en).

 The broken gene makes your rabbit have color as well as white splotchy patterns.

 The Non-broken gene (en-en).

This gene makes it so that the bunny is fully colorful without white splotches.

 The Charlie gene. 

This gene can look like a broken but it usually has less than the usual amount of color than the broken ones. 

How the genes react when breeding:

when you breed a broken with a non-broken then you get 50% brokens and 50% non-brokens, if you breed a broken and a charlie then you get 50% brokens and 50% charlies, when you breed a charlie with a non-broken you get 100% brokens, if you breed a brokens you get 25% charlies, 25% non-brokens, and 50% brokens, when you breed non-brokens you get 100% non-brokens, when you breed charlies you get 100% charlies.

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