Brindle
A brindle crested gecko is identified by dark, irregular striping that breaks up the body color, often running vertically or diagonally down the sides and limbs. The term overlaps with tiger in some breeder language, but brindle usually suggests a busier, more broken pattern rather than clean, evenly spaced bands. It can appear on many base colors, from buckskin and olive to red or dark brown, and may combine with dalmatian spots, partial pinstriping, or light cream markings.
Brindle is best treated as a pattern trait selected through pairing decisions, not as a single guaranteed outcome. Pattern intensity can shift as juveniles grow, and fired-down animals may look much plainer than they do at night or after misting. Keepers house brindle crested geckos like any other crested gecko: vertically, with cork, vines, and plant cover that let them climb and retreat. A prepared fruit-based gecko diet, supplemented with insects when appropriate, supports growth without relying on color-enhancing gimmicks.
Colors: Axanthic, Bicolor, Brindle, Cappuccino, Cream, Cream-On-Cream, Dalmatian, Dark, Dashed Pinstripe, Empty Back, Extreme Harlequin, Flame, Harlequin, Lavender, Lily White, Moonglow, Orange, Partial Pinstripe, Patternless, Phantom, Pinstripe, Porthole, Red, Sable, Super Dalmatian, Tiger, Tricolor, White Wall, Yellow