User blog:Qwertyxp2000 the second/Qwerty's Fire-Naming Scheme

In My Singing Monsters: Dawn of Fire, there are several unknown elemental monsters yet missing from the game. We get this because monsters are only continuously being added. Whenever we do not yet have a specific Fire monster, I name such theoretical monsters as "Fire-(Monster)". How this works is that I take away the fire element from a theoretical monster, and name whatever is left as whatever original game monster is shown to be left. With exception of the one six-element monster, this system is guaranteed to work effectively and is easily understandable.

To understand how my naming scheme works, we need to know several monsters from the original game. To start off with, we should look at Single Element Monsters, Double Element Monsters, Triple Element Monsters and Quad Element Monsters articles. Once we know each of the monsters, let's get started with the naming scheme. Now take a monster we know as an example, so let's take Sooza (Fire, Plant, Cold).



We take away Fire Element to get a My Singing Monsters monster.



We are lucky to get a monster that actually exists in Dawn of Fire. This monster is a Furcorn (Plant, Cold). So the Sooza is called a "Fire-Furcorn" in the Qwertyxp2000 Fire-Naming Scheme.

Now let's get a Fire Monster whose non-Fire counterpart doesn't exist in Dawn of Fire yet. Let's use Tring as an example.



Taking away Fire...



Ignoring the fact that we have got different types of icons for the same element type, we can see that a Tring is a "Fire-Reedling" in the Qwertyxp2000 Fire-Naming Scheme, because removing Fire from Tring would give only Plant, Air, and Earth, which is a Reedling, the original game monster with such configuration.

Presuming that you now know how to go from Fire Monster to non-Fire Monster, I presume you are ready to understand the Qwertyxp2000 Fire-Naming Scheme from the other way. Now let's use a monster from the original game to predict a monster. I shall use Riff (Air, Earth, Cold, Water) as an example. We do not yet have a "Fire-Riff", nor do we have a Riff in Dawn of Fire, so let's use it.



We got Riff's configuration, so let's add Fire to the elemental set.



Now you see that this theoretical Dawn of Fire monster is a "Fire-Riff"? Luckily, we didn't need to use elemental fusion or elemental fission to a live monster to produce a species of completely different characteristics; this would otherwise be unethical to experiment with! Or we could as well use elemental fusion for monster eggs, though the elemental fusion would not work if a monster of such configuration doesn't exist.