Quote from Kapra;1269571:
That's cuz there's no hot spring for gaining or lose lower body muscles. There is one for upper body, and weight, but not lower.
Yeah I figured which is why I never really resort to the hot springs. I have to rid of the lower fat with food anyway so that's why I might as well eat berries and do it all at once instead of wasting time in that place.
Do sweet pumpkins also take away lower bodyfat though? I've never used them yet, seeing as I always resort to my collection of berries but if so I might as well use them seeing as you get 10 as a reward for the fattening event.
Also the muscle thing always confused me. When you eat food and get fatter, do you also gain muscles? Or sometimes when the game says: You gained some weight, your legs got thinner. I always thought this was really illogical sounding but now that I think about it... Does this mean the type of food I ate causes weight gain for upper but weight loss for lower?
Is there a list somewhere with the food and the type of effect for weight gain/loss also depending on whether or not you are hungry, how much percentage of the stomach they fill up, etc? I do notice, sometimes a food fills me up more than other times, so I do assume that sometimes when the same type of food makes me gain 1 whole percent more than the time before when I ate it, that there are also numbers behind a comma we can't see, such as 53,75%.
And as mentioned before I wondered about that too, if a food that causes weight loss replenished 5% for example, and 3% of the food eaten replenished my food meter back to 100% then there is still 2% basically going over the 100%, does this mean I will lose weight, or gain weight? Or will it be in the middle where I just lose less weight than when I'd eat it on a full meter, or where I'd gain less weight since I did eat some of the food that applied below the 100%, or perhaps both? I lose some, but also gain some, and if that is the case this also may explain those "contradicting" messages about gaining weight but legs getting thinner at the same time. I've never really paid much attention to it, but now that I think about it, it's sort of interesting to understand these physics seeing as they seem to be somewhat complex.