Of our findings on male Nidoran, surprisingly, we found that size matters. However, not necessarily in the same way as humans. The size of a Nidoran's horn matters much more their phallus, because when it comes to the competitive breeding of the wild, battle makes much more of a difference. That means that the most dominant out of an entire group of males can even be the least endowed sexually. When our researchers began their field experiments, we temporarily tried to take away the competitive factor, finding a small group of males and providing multiple potential partners each. However, they still fought over who would get which, or who gets the most. Eventually our researchers ended up taking the role of the reward for their battles, which surprisingly may end up a viable way of training Nidoran for those seeking a breeding career. Other than that interesting dynamic, they behave rather sweet when not competitive, and their bodies produce low enough amounts of poison that there weren't as many Pecha berries required to ease negative side effects. Granted, one interesting case arose from a more submissive researcher, who's report detailed them isolating and offering to two "alpha" Nidoran to see what would result. Instead of leaving dejected, the loser of the battle simply received the second turn using the researcher's body. By the time both were completely satisfied, she reported seeing colors, shapes, and hearing vague voices. This was later attributed to intoxication by the amount of lightly poisoned cum ingested orally and anally. After enough detoxification to ensure no addictions arose, that same researcher volunteered to help with other cases for future poison types