<p>Assessments of ocean data assimilation (DA) systems and observing system design experiments typically rely on identical or fraternal twin experiments. The identical twin approach has been recognized as yielding biased impact assessments in atmospheric predictions but these shortcomings are not sufficiently appreciated for oceanic DA applications. Here we present the first direct comparison of the fraternal and identical twin approach in an ocean DA application. We assess the assimilation impact for both approaches in a DA system for the Gulf of Mexico that uses the Ensemble Kalman Filter. Our comparisons show that, despite a reasonable error growth rate in both approaches, the identical twin produces a biased skill assessment overestimating the improvement from assimilating sea surface height and sea surface temperature observations while underestimating the value of assimilating temperature and salinity profiles. Such biases can lead to an undervaluation of some observing assets (in this case profilers) and thus misguided distribution of observing system investments.</p>