A tail is like a necktie for your butt.
- Recognized, goldstar furry
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Logo design credit goes to: tubbadu
A tail is like a necktie for your butt.
Not a furry but I see the appeal. The character design possibilities greatly expand, and they tend to look cute or cool. If it didn't work, Disney wouldn't do it so often!
Been friends with a few furries for a while. Can say a lot of the answers I've read here encompass what I would say is majority of furries. There's some that get into it exclusively for kink, it's okay if they do, but even the furries have a strong disdain for pedophilia, zoophilia, and non-consensual in real life and in most instances drawn art.
Wants to touch on the zoophilia aspect as well, given most interactions of a sexual nature within the fandom are with is dubbed your persona/furrsona, it doesn't fall under that term. Especially as well nearly all of them are at least human level intelligence but may not be able to vocalize like one. It's a thin line there but real life practitioners are detested because surprise surprise, people in the fandom have some fairly strong moral convictions.
Don't know if I'd call myself a furry, but I did go to a convention with some friends awhile back, for the experience.
My big takeaway can kinda be summed up with, "Punk's not dead, they just all became furries". It was a very radically inclusive space, there were tons of openly queer people, lots of very political accessories (Anarchy A or Hammer and Sickle patches, keffiyehs, one person had a hand painted tshirt that said "Death before Detransition", etc.), and there was a very DIY, countercultural vibe to the whole thing. At one point I talked to a Skunk about his collection of old PC sound cards.
It was super cool! I'd go again

I ‘found’ the community so long ago I don’t quite remember if it was a strangely good fan comic about cartoons I watched, a general interest in “hey what do these animal people do on the internet”, or porn. It was definitely online, though. Either way, I simply decided I was going to be part of it at one point after learning about it, and that was that. I always appreciated the art of animation in all its forms, and it just so happens that a lot of animated things are anthropomorphic animals, so that could also be why I was initially interested in exploring it. As with all things in life, it just happened, I didn’t wake up one day with a total understanding of wanting to be a furry, it was gradual and took months or close to a year to fully embrace it and learn self-expression.
I consider ‘being a furry’ to be a general positive interest in anthropomorphised animals, but with some special sauce that’s very hard to explain. In my head, there’s a subtle difference between working for Disney being the character designer for Nick Wilde, and being a furry. It can be a hobby, it can be a kink, a profession, an outlet, a mask, a way to socialise, can be all of that at once and more, or just one of those things. There is no solid definition. A lot would agree that “interest” covers it as an umbrella definition - and that interest goes in various directions and to various degrees.
I personally like a lot of things to do with the characters/fursonas - character design, character art, how expressive they are, and how much soul and raw human creativity OCs have in relation to their creators. I appreciate art, expression and self-expression, and with furries those things are ubiquitous and highly visible once you’re in and go beyond the sex pest surface that ‘normies’ see or the top-100 score on e926.
I’m not the social kind, at all, and that gnawed at me for a while. I found refuge in being part of the community, even if I am practically silent.
The community has a ridiculously high number of really cool people in it that I seriously enjoy talking to, keeping up with and sharing a lot of interests with. Don’t confuse this with me saying it’s perfect - as with all social gatherings, there are truly evil and weird people, but everyone has been good to me.
I like how welcoming it is and how open and friendly everyone is to newcomers. I also like how shamelessly weird you can be as part of it - no one really judges absolutely degenerate “I’m the only person with this” kinks or very niche and weird interests. And while now this applies to more corners of society, and internet in particular, than it did 10 or 20 years ago, and there are wholesome communities out there, it’s still rare. The furry community has always held itself to a higher standard of acceptance, being the constant victim of abuse and trolling and the eternal lulcow, it kind of had no choice. I related to that part too and wished to be that resilient. And even today as more and more places get invaded with astroturfing, politics, self-pity, bots, trolls, AI slop, and generally evil people, it remains a good refuge for me.
There’s something inherently special I feel that I can’t quite quantify in various such niche-but-numerous communities, I feel the same about certain TV fandoms or more obscure memes or tiny invisible-to-the-public trends. Big communities and even society at large have never been particularly kind or accepting to me, being a furry helped me understand that it doesn’t have to be that way.
Ive kinda always liked things related to it (spent my childhood reading warrior cats and redwall, would always choose humanoid animal characters in games over humans when available, because I found humans kinda ugly somehow, etc) but never really considered myself one until after high school because it was considered "cringy" and I had to grow out of worrying about that. Actually was unfortunately rather judgmental towards furries myself at a certain age just out of denial.
Kinda warmed up to it in college after growing a bit and getting away from my old classmates, but it's difficult to say what the initial draw was because, well, Ive had some sort of a liking for characters designed as humanoid animal people as far as I can remember (or, given that those are pretty common in kids media, I guess I didn't really stop preferring them because they somehow felt easier to look at and imagine interacting with than more realistic human characters. I do have social anxiety and autism, which I suspect might have something to do with that feeling but I cant say for sure).
I would consider furry generally a subculture. I can see why some people would consider it a kink, given that furry culture seems to have a weaker taboo about sexual stuff than wider society does and that the community makes a lot of porn, but I don't think it really qualifies as one for a given person unless one is just there for that and doesn't have some interest in the wider community or furry characters in other contexts. For my part, I tend to imagine or prefer furry characters in any context that would generally involve human characters. Ie, if I draw or write or just fantasize about something, I'm very likely to work furries in regardless of the content, so them popping up in horny stuff is less a matter of finding those characters an inheritly sexual thing, and more a matter of sexual stuff being included in "everything that normally has humans".
As far as my participation goes, that social anxiety I mentioned does limit me a bit, Ive not been to any conventions for example despite hoping to eventually. It's mostly limited to art and internet communities for me at the moment, though most of my current friend group are also furries just cause those places are where I went looking for them.
Okay that's a pretty interesting way to lay it out. The interest never going away makes sense as does the way you explained the sexual aspect. Thanks for the answer!
I'm a furry because I think anthropomorphic animals are neat. It's kind of just that simple. Participation as a furry to me is just a minimum of making an avatar (a fursona) and talking to or hanging out with other furries. Honestly, it's hardly different than modern VTuber obsession -- our community just happened to start with early western animation rather than more recent eastern animation.
Furry is a "lifestyle" and can be taken as far as you want it to take it. We are a community you can chill in, a hobby you can participate in as any kind of creative person from artist, to musician, to 3D modeling, to the person developing the extremely complicated sex stuff going on in VRChat, or a kink you can dress up and fuck in. You can either make everything yourself, buy your way in, or it's honestly totally normal to just hang around artists enough that they end up making things for you when they're bored -- although it's good manners to actually participate in that person's area of the community rather than begging for art.
Furry being more of a lifestyle than a hobby means it's very easy to just include it in your daily rituals. There are hundreds, if not over a thousand furries in the greater Seattle area. I can go to dinner with other furries, I participate in a furry Twitch community, I game online with furries, and I'm currently about to go on a camping trip out in the woods of Washington for an event called Furwood that takes place at an exclusively queer campsite called Triangle Recreation Camp with nearly a hundred people (though many are dropping out due to the expected rainy weather this weekend).
What furries are NOT is:
Great answer, thanks for contributing! I appreciate the NOT section.
Also want to commend the not-section. Very healthy to know as a non-furry myself, as I think furries are one of the social groups which are hardest to accept due to their extremely queer nature. I still think I probably have very little in common with someone who is a furry, but I do try to be accepting of all innocent people so this is a good thread for people like myself.
One other small addition addition that I didn't know where to fit is that, as a non-neurotypical gay man, wrapping my life around furries makes it more comfortable to unmask around people. People literally do not bat an eye if I want to gush about Fat Bear Week, or throw out a hear-me-out about that one undead werewolf monster that "kisses" the priest in Castlevania.
Fat Bear Week
As a bear (my sona is a hybrid wolf-tiger-fox), I got really excited, and then disappointed :p
Be the Fat Bear Week you want to see in the world. Make your Fat Bear Weakness your strength.
A ton of factors, but I've been a fur for 22 years and I give zero fucks about what others think about it/me, so an unfiltered view.
Most of my friends are furry, and all of them are at least neutral on the topic. I had a clan I was in during my 'okay yes fine I am a furry let's make a sona I guess' awakening, and I was booted for that fact. So everyone I'm friends with has to not be a dick, or you're getting blacklisted.
Most of my friends are weird, and the furry ones especially. I know no innocent furries, we all have our vices, and I love that. A space where I can be weird, suggestive, kinky, lewd is liberating. But even beyond sexy stuff, it's just this melting pot of weird interests, hobbies, aspirations, and everyone wants to see everyone else succeed. The 'vibe' as the kids call it, online or in person, is always positive. Compared to gestures to the outside world, yeah nah I'm staying in the happy bubble.
Most of us are quite intelligent, lots are STEM, many are post-secondary grads. Most are okay with atheists/non believers. I thiiiink the majority are gay/les/bi. Basically, a group of smart people who aren't dicks to each other. Again, nice place to be.
With the exception of my first relationship, which was never made 'official' but we were together for a couple of years, I only date furries. For the above reasons and more, I limit the dating pool from like a billion+ to hundred-thousands (maybe millions?), then further by being gay (very limited homoflexibility). But I want to be with someone (one or several) who share my interests, excitement, ideas and topics; and who shares similar values, like not being a dick to others. These simple traits are... less common, in the general population.
And of course, the kinky stuff. I'm all over the place and with the exception of some obvious 'yeah nah' topics that are generally assumed unless stated otherwise by people, I am will to/have tried a lot of things. Again the sort of non-judgemental environment let's me say something that would be absolutely wild anywhere else, and others will respond like it's nothing at all. Being free of judgements is absolutely unique, in my experience.
There are a few shady characters, bad apples, and all that - every group has them. But I haven't interacted with one myself, and it's been over two decades, so I'm pretty confident in saying that the bad characters are a rounding error, and that 'we are all in this for the positivity of each other'.
Most of us are quite intelligent, lots are STEM, many are post-secondary grads.
Unironically if a plane crashes heading to a furry convention it would literally bring western software to its knees overnight. There would be outages. "He's our most experienced engineer! Only John knows how this system works!" Bank of America goes dark
Different scale, but a couple years ago at Anthrocon one of my servers in my homelab threw a warning that the cache drive was running low on health/remaining writes. Odd since it was like, not even 6 months old, but whatever, I'll fix it once I'm home. Literally like 6 hours later the drive went read-only and died. I had to head to the hotel and make sure the system didn't lose any data, and would recover successfully, on one of the laptops I brought to the hotel. Then shop and order two new drives, so when I got back home I can do a swap and config. Then back to the con space.
If I was on that plane or whatever, my family and to a small extent my friends, would be totally fucked. I have stuff automated as much as I can across all systems, but eventually something will require manual intervention and the cards start to fall. And I'm the go-to guy in my social circle, so everyone will just start screaming and panicking.
That all seems pretty pleasant. I'm honestly kind of jealous by how nice you make it sound.
Can I ask an honest question? My impression is that a large proportion of male furries are gay compared to non-furries. Is that just prejudice on my part or is there any validity and/or data on that?
Many of them are from just inferrince, but there is actually science on this realm: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/376353096_Furscience_A_Decade_of_Psychological_Research_on_the_Furry_Fandom
Chapter 16, page 497. I remember there being more graphs but maybe they've updated the data. My data points are included, as I've been taking their surveys for a decade now.
What counts as "being a furry?" On a scale from Garth to 'I identify as a non-human animal', where's the cut-off?
I feel like there are probably a lot of people who don't consider themselves to "be furries," as such, but wouldn't say no to Lola Bunny, for instance.
(Also, compare: Kinsey scale vs. furry scale.)
Identifying as a non-human animal is not really a furry thing. That would be a "Therian", which can overlap with being a furry, but doesn't have to.
Ultimately, I'd say whether someone is a furry or not comes down to the personal choice if you want to be identified as such.
Finally someone asking a real question. Been a whole bunch of bots recently.
If it isn't bots it's people taking their grievances here to be validated. (And usually not getting it)
What’s the point of bots on Lemmy?
Hot bot on bot action, knowing the internet.
I've liked Anthro characters since I was a child. Grew up watching cartoons like Redwall, Rescue Rangers, Ducktales etc. First stumbled upon some furry art as a teenager while "exploring the internet", as one does. And I guess from that point it was obvious to me that I'm a furry. It's definitely not exclusively a kink for me though, but a general interest. I just enjoy seeing those characters in pretty much any context. Throw some anthro characters in a video game and I'm at least twice as likely to buy it than if it were regular humans. It's also a generally friendly and open-minded community to interact with.
when i look at some furry art it can be quite appealing and i sometimes have unusual feelings. i don't seek it out or anything though. my theory is it's some vestigial thing from our evolution. we are just mammals, after all
I have a happiness fetish and those drawings are often happy.
In contrast to porn in general, where participants often seem miserable.
Thank goodness, I knew I couldn't be alone in this! So much adult live content has people looking like trafficking victims or has things that are just way too aggressive or violent to seem fun to me. If people aren't smiling or laughing, I got no interest. Sexy time should be fun, at least IMO.
Im not a furry but I can tell you the answer is all and some combination. I used to go to cons and con folk could range from those who just like sci fi, fantasy, anime, etc to those who are really into one particular aspect to those who its like their whole lives. Many con folk over time sorta developed a consona. They bought clothing and such and over time what they wore to the con would be pretty consistant. My wife has a story about them stopping off at a guys house and he opened the door and when he saw it was confolk he closed it and after a few mins was back in his con outfit. Like no one at the con should see him without it. For me furries are just one of the interests people could be big on at cons. I missed them when they got their own con because the general con they used to go to had two dances and the fur dance had the AC cranked to max. You could go dance at the reg dance and once you were hot and sweaty go crash the fur dance.
Crystal in Star Fox Adventure, I'd say its an interest in furry art though as I don't care to have anything else the scene likes. It mostly seems to form from environmental pressures and experiences.
It's who I am and basically it's who all my friends are. It's a community. It's a safe space. It's a counterculture. It's an overflowing font of creativity and expression and new ideas It's queer and kinky and holds the fucking line against puritanism and fascism. It's a rejection of human exceptionalism and solidarity with the beings we share the planet with that so much of humanity is indifferent or even outright genocidal towards.
Furry is so deeply intertwined into nearly every part of my life, because it feels right to me.
Guy I used to date said he thought people would just be cuter with tails.
tl;dr it’s a creative hobby
Not a furry per se (yet maybe) but I’m in the same social circles, ymmv. Basically it’s just oc cosplay, and like all hobbies and crafts some people have a more enthusiastic, personal approach to it; and some like it surface level.
Essentially, it’s a joint art style in a large art community. People get to create their own characters and share in that art culture, and for some it’s a very powerful escape and a way to explore yourself in a different way.
Not a furry per se (yet maybe)
Your Pathowogen infection has already progressed to Stage 3. I'm afraid it's terminal.
I like cartoon animals. Especially foxes and wolves.
Fair