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Furry Studies conference gathers worldwide wisdom at second annual event

The annual Furry Studies academic conference is a multi-field brain-food buffet. Their first event launched in October 2024 as part of a furry arts festival in the Netherlands. It featured scholarship, presentations, and celebration for international authors, researchers, and fans. The second Furry Studies conference happened on Halloween 2025 in Tacoma, WA, and was also virtual to join from wherever you are. They will soon start planning for the 2026 conference. To get future info about how to attend, participate or collaborate, follow them here: https://furrystudies.org/
Here’s an interview about what the conference offers. Many presenters give academic talks about a variety of furry-centric topics. For Dogpatch Press, Patch and Zeldstarro discussed the event with key organizers Spaxe and Jack Newhorse, as well as Hazel, who is the director of gender, sexuality, and race studies at the 2025 host venue, Pacific Lutheran University.

Zeld: What IS Furry Studies? Is this similar to what they do at https://furscience.com, using a scientific approach to collecting surveys from and about furry fandom and interpreting what the data means?
Jack: Furscience are pioneering (IMHO) furry studies researchers. They presented at the 2024 event and this year’s! Their topic was “Furry and Anthropomorphizing Animals as a Response to a Hostile World.”
Spaxe: FurScience is awesome. The biggest difference between Furry Studies and FurScience is that we are a conference organisation and a publication venue. FurScience is a research team, who also happens to have published with us. We are trying to open more doors for furry researchers, and researchers working with furries, to have a home to publish and talk about their work. This includes publishing in journals, like the Journal of Popular Communication that we are doing a special issue on from the 2024 conference.
Zeld: Why study furries in an academic lens? Are we studying the furries themselves, and does it have to involve furry art, or…
Spaxe: FurScience has made a lot of grounds in social psychology on furries. Nuka and his team is following intersectional demographic identities and orientations, attitudes, perceptions, and many trends including neurodivergence and autism spectrum and so on. Social psychology is interested in understanding who we are, and why we are, and conducting experiments to test hypotheses around why furry people are the way they are. They have one-decade-plus data from US furcons, and they started doing work in Eurofurence and Japan Meeting of Furries. It’s important research but not the only way to research furry.
Academic study can produce a lot of things, and one of them is words around describing a phenomenon like being, and feeling furry. I’ve been furry for 18 years and I’m sure most furs have the experience of trying to explain to normies, and having trouble finding words. Furry Studies aims to advance research and knowledge around furry art and community, and we hope that it will also produce language to describe what furry is and can be about. And if I may speak personally, I hope that people who study furries will produce findings that benefit the community in some way. It might not be providing jobs, but it will provide a new voice.
Patch: We announced the first conference in 2024, how did it go?
Jack: I think it went great! All the sessions went as planned and reviews were good. 15 people paid to attend in person with 31 online. Our 2024 page has links to the list of talks given (with their abstracts); and a six-hour video of the whole thing.
Spaxe: Here’s a gallery of photos from the 2024 event. I’m really thankful for Jack to give us the opportunity and space to run Furry Studies. It’s not everyday you’d have a furry conference followed by a furry arts event.


Patch: Does location affect what it does? It moved from the Netherlands to Tacoma for the second event. Is it meant to move each year or is it seeking a permanent venue?
Jack: This was the idea from the beginning. Partly because that’s fairly standard for conferences of this sort; and partly to prevent it from being “owned” by any geography or population. I see that as one of Furry Studies’ big strengths: Like academia itself, it’s truly an international group. That’s reflected not only in the organizers — Spaxe in Australia, Vanguard in England, Hazel in the US, me in the Netherlands — but in the topics covered.
Of course the US is strongly represented, which makes sense given the US-centric history of the fandom. But at the 2024 conference there were talks about being furry in Japan and China; this year there were talks about furry in Europe and Iran. [*The speaker from Iran was unable to make it due to an emergency, so a stand-alone article about them is being planned.]
I think that we all, as individual furries, tend to see only a small slice of the furry world, both in terms of geography and interest. Through Furry Studies we get a much broader view.
Spaxe: For the first year, we invited historian Joe Strike (author of Furry Nation/Furry Planet) to be our keynote and open the day. The lineup was fully peer reviewed. It included furry scholars in the US, Canada, UK, Australia, Japan, China, and it was very global in terms of the voices that were at the conference. In 2025 we had a keynote from Rod O’Riley and heard from places like Portugal, and and it was incredible to be able to host them over zoom for their presentations.
Being an academic conference, moving it from place to place is pretty typical. This of course makes attending really hard, but at the same time you could say it gives people a chance to be in person. So there are benefits and tradeoffs. I think we’re doing something really special, being able to bridge academic conversations with community voices. That’s how research really shines.
Patch: Global fandom opens interesting access, but this has a different emphasis than general fandom events. What made you start it? Could it cross over outside fandom?
Spaxe: I’d really love to know how to do that, and I think that will require growing the team and partnering up! I should mention, I’ve been a student volunteer at academic conferences since 2010, and I’ve run my fair share of academic conferences. This is like my 5th time running one. But I’ve never run a furmeet or fur con of course. For that I go to Jack for help 
Jack: I don’t think of it like a con that does what most people go to cons for, like how only a small percentage of people who speak languages are linguists.
As for me, I like producing, and it was really an honor to be able to be a part of the first one. It was a fortuitous combination of circumstances that made the first one happen. Vanguard and I were in a chat group together about collecting and curating furry history. One of us started talking about a Furry Studies conference, and I was planning the Otterdam Furry Arts Festival at the time as a two-day event, but plans for the first day just weren’t gelling. So it seemed like a perfect match… and it was.
I’m not an academic, but as a furry producer I’m interested in doing things that aren’t already being done in the community — reaching new audiences, exploring new types of venues, seeing This Thing Of Ours
from a different angle. Furry Studies scratches this itch in two different ways. First, because it hadn’t been done before; second, because it’s *about* seeing furry from new perspectives! A look through the abstracts for 2025 and last year shows how rich our culture is, and how much there still is to examine.

Spaxe: We know there is furry research out there. Juniper runs this Academic Animals telegram group for years now, and when I joined, there were ~24 critters in research (now there are 36), from PhD students to established professors. So I thought there was already an audience from an academic conference perspective, and we’ve been running it as such.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t opportunities to broaden our audience (we have been talking about social events and connecting with local communities), but we haven’t gotten to that stage yet. We’ve begun getting folks reaching out to us who are interested in running more events around Furry Studies, so that might help us reach to a broader audience, furries who aren’t already in research!
I know that sounds like we don’t really know how to market but we are a very very small team. We will need more people to help us to make things happen.
Patch: The 2025 programming had categories like, popular culture, counterculture, queer and gender identity politics. They look suitable for mainstream academic conferences, but the furry nature needs no introduction at this one. Could furry-centric talks fit at other conferences? Can those be competitive to get in, and how selective was this one?
Hazel: When it comes to academic conferences, many of these papers/presentations may be viable for various disciplinarily conferences (sociology, American studies, family studies, psychology, cultural studies, etc.). Therefore, a lot of the submissions we received were written by scholars (graduate students and those who hold PhDs), however, they are framed with the audience in mind which is, furries who are also studying furries from a scholarly background. Either way, furry scholars would see this conference as an academic affair, where they could put their presentation on their resume/CV, and have it be seen as professional scholarship/development.
Not everyone who submitted got in. We had a range of submissions, but a few could not make it in due to our schedule. As we are only a one day conference and quite new, we have a limited number of slots where the submission process is peer reviewed by our committee of furries, who are also scholars or are involved in academics in some way.
The theme for this year came from various areas of discourse within the furry community, along with the current public perceptions of furry not only in the United States, but globally.

Not only did we want to attend to the rise of conservative targeting of furry behaviors and expressions (as seen in the FURRIES Act – Texas House Bill 54), but also general attacks on furry expression in a time of queer and trans violence. We also wanted to gain larger perspectives from outside of a Western lens where often many studies on furry have neglected.
I think due to what is happening socially and politically, there has been more interest in this conference not only from furries themselves, but also (in my experience) from various health professional fields such as Social Work, MFT – Marriage and Family Therapy, Nursing, etc. I am an assistant professor of social work, and professional practitioners are more and more curious about furries, due to a desire to want to address their clients in healthy and supportive ways in the face of continued false narratives.
Overall, there seems to be an interest in broadly queer and trans healthcare/wellbeing, and attached to that is the art and expressions of queer and trans people where furry falls into. Various fields are also interested in what furries have to say, as furries have become more popular than ever before.
Also here is my website if you need anything about me: https://hzaman.net
Zeld: Would academic discussion of furries in this official of a capacity make the fandom more “mainstream”, and would you consider that a potential problem?
Spaxe: I remember a meme with a kid (labeled “the furry community”) being shielded from a rain of arrows by a soldier in a camouflage uniform (labeled “weird furry porn”). Furry has always been, and always will be, anti-capitalist and anti-fascism.

I look at where furry is now today that we have more than a dozen clothing brands, many breweries, and even dedicated logistics companies doing furry merchandise fulfilment and storage. We have fursuit makers who charge the same amount of money (or more) than commercial sports mascot makers. And we have many furry artists who are able to make a living thanks to all of the above. Somehow, furry is able to co-exist with mainstream commercial art and artmaking, and every step of the way we are balancing being seen and being “mainstream”. So I think we should all be thinking about that every time someone starts a furry venture or event. Furry Studies is no different.
Knowledge is like technology. The reason to create it may be noble, but it can be misused or abused. For us to be a research venue, peer review is our first line of defense from poorly conducted research or written work. The organising committee is made up of professors and lecturers from many universities and community organisations, and we are all furries ourselves. We want to make sure that each publication has merit, and will contribute new knowledge, and it’s on us if a publication ends up being misinterpreted for the wrong reasons. We know that we can’t account for everything, but we know we will have many good reasons to debunk misinformation and stop bad actors.
Jack: My own personal view on mainstreaming: If *any* community has something of value, people “outside” the community will want a piece of that value. That’s what mainstreaming is. I also believe the furry community has a lot that the larger world will find to be of value. Therefore, mainstreaming is inevitable — and, in fact, a sign that we have something *worth* mainstreaming.
Those who fear mainstreaming are mourning the loss of a clique, an “in-group”. Which is understandable, as unusually close bonds form in such groups. Cliques are small enough that individuals can influence how they develop communication shorthands, moral guidelines, enforcement practices, etc.. But trying to keep a growing group small and insular is bound for failure.
Celebrities show up at furry cons. Parents in Walmart ears and tails bring their kids to fursuit parades. As for mainstreaming, we’re well on our way.
Furry studies is one way to both record and influence that mainstreaming. It represents a kind of “community memory” so that whatever “furry” is tomorrow, it’ll be informed by furry up until today.
I was involved in “the bi community” in the late ’80s and somewhat in the ’90s. Very similar feeling. And I don’t take the disappearance of “the bi community” as a tragedy. Being bi has become less notable, IMHO to the benefit of society.
Patch: How can readers find out more, submit work, or attend in 2026?
Jack: This was the schedule of talks for the 2025 conference. There’s a video of the entirety of last year’s conference, or you can look up individual talks here. Check them out for what you might want to see or share. More information about furry studies generally can also be found on the website. Follow us for updates, and when 2026 event comes up, if you’re unable to travel, you can also attend online.
Like the article? These take hard work. For more free furry news, follow on Twitter or support not-for-profit Dogpatch Press on Patreon. Want to get involved? Try these subreddits: r/furrydiscuss for news or r/waginheaven for the best of the community. Or send guest writing here. (Content Policy.)
S12E3 – Beep boop beep: AI and the Fandom
Is AI a tool to help artists, or is it destroying the fandom? Is AI-generated content really “art”, or is it slop – or worse, outright theft? Let’s talk about what place there is for AI in the furry fandom – or if we’d be better off without it entirely, and the consequences for the furry fandom of living in an increasingly AI-focused world.
Episodes are now be streamed live on Twitch.tv. After which, the video and audio only formats will be posted within the week after the stream. You can find us on Twitch at FurWhatItsWorth!
NOW LISTEN!
SHOW NOTES Thank you!Those that were able to join the livestream!
To all of our listeners! And your continued support!
PATREON LOVETHANK YOU to our patreons! You help us keep the show going!
A Cookie Factory – OwO
*empty*
A Pallet of Cookies

Barnaby Panda, Nuka, Lou Duck (Pic Pending)
A Case of Cookies

Basel the Dragon, Black Baldrik, Ichigo Ookami (Pic Pending), Lufis the Raccoon
A Jar of Cookies

MephistophEli, Plug, Tenax
A Box of Cookies
- Benji
- Lygris
A Delicious Cookie
- Ausi K
- Christian
- Citrus Fox
- Icy Solid
- Ralley
- Sage Lightfang
- TyR
- Victor Mutt
- Intro: RetroSpecter – Cloud Fields (RetroSpecter Mix). USA: Unpublished, 2018. ©2011-2018 Fur What It’s Worth. Based on Fredrik Miller – Cloud Fields (Century Mix). USA: Bandcamp, 2011. ©2011 Fur What It’s Worth
- Patreon: Inflammatus – The Tudor Consort, Creative Commons 2019
- Closing: Cloud Fields (RetroSpecterChill Remix), USA: Unpublished, 2018. ©2011-2018 Fur What It’s Worth. Based on Fredrik Miller – Cloud Fields (Chill Out Mix). USA: Bandcamp, 2011. ©2011 Fur What It’s Worth
The Whale of Inspiration
Recently at Cartoon Brew we found out about a new CGI feature film currently in production. The Last Whale Singer is on its way from Telescope Animation in Germany. “Written and directed by Reza Memari, the film follows Vincent, an orphaned teenage humpback whale destined to become the next Whale Singer, a guardian whose mystical song can heal and protect the oceans. But Vincent’s journey to find his voice is both literal and spiritual, mirroring the struggles of anyone learning to overcome fear and self-doubt.” There’s no word yet on the when and where of a release for the film, but the first trailer is in English, so it’s definitely looking for distribution in North America.

image c. 2025 Telescope Animation
TigerTails Radio Season 16 Episode 42

TigerTails Radio Season 16 Episode 42 Join the Discord Chat: https://discord.gg/SQ5QuRf Join the Telegram Chat: https://t.me/+yold2C77m0I1MmM0 Visit the website at http://www.tigertailsradio.co.uk. See website for full breakdown of any song credits, which is usually updated shortly after the show. Credits: Opening music: Magic by Hedge Haiden (Double Hedge Studios) Character art: Fitzroy Fox - https://www.furaffinity.net/user/lunara-toons / https://bsky.app/profile/fitzroyfox.bsky.social Background art: Charleston Rat - https://www.furaffinity.net/user/charlestonrat / https://bsky.app/profile/charlestonrat.bsky.social If you like what we do and wish to throw some pennies our way to support us, please consider sending a little tip our way. https://streamlabs.com/tigertailsradio/tip * Please note, tips are made to support TigerTails Radio and are assumed as made with good faith, so are therefore non-refundable. Thank you for your support and understanding.
Steam's Animal Fest Highlights 2100+ Games

Steam has just debuted the "Steam Animal Fest" for 2025, and it features over 2100 games, either already released or upcoming, that have animals of some sort in them. Of course, there are way too many games for us to list all of them here, and luckily Steam gathered them all together conveniently already. We're sure to cover many of these games in the coming months here on GF!
New Steam Points Shop Items for Animal Fest 2025 are also available!
Pokémon Legends Z-A Mega Dimension DLC confirmed for Dec 10, 2025

As the narrator of the Pokémon anime famously says: “The adventure continues!”
Right off the heels of our recently published Legends Z-A review, Nintendo and Pokémon Company released new information to the anticipated(and divisive) upcoming Mega Dimension DLC along with a confirmed release date. And this DLC certainly promises to take things to a whole new dimension. Storywise, this DLC is intended to begin after the events of the Legends Z-A’s main story. The premise is that distortions have begun appearing around the city that lead to a strange place known as Hyperspace Luminose. Team MZ will have to team up with new allies including mysterious donut chef Ansha and her partner Hoopa as well as a returning character in the form of Korrina, Mega Evolution Successor and Gym Leader of Shalour City(also in Kalos).

Hyperspace is no joke. Not only does it look trippy, but there are also Pokémon there that can’t be found in normal Lumiose, such as Galarian Mr Mime, Corviknight, Alolan Marowak and more! Even stranger, these Pokémon have been hyper powered up to become over the normal cap of level 100 for the first time ever! It wouldn’t be a Mega Dimension without new Mega Evolutions, and those are a major point of Z-A. In addition to the versions of Mega Raichu that were recently announced, two new Megas have been revealed: Mega Chimecho and Mega Baxcalibur. Chimecho was the last Pokémon I ever thought to see get a Mega but I kinda like it. And I’m excited for Baxcalibur since I used one in my Scarlet playthrough a long time ago.
What secrets await in Hyperspace? We’ll have to find out when the DLC story drops on Dec 10, a month away. In the meantime, the DLC is available for purchase now if you so desire. You’ll get the new Holo-X and Holo-Y outfits as soon as you do and a gift of special Pokeballs(3 Level Balls, 3 Lure Balls, 3 Heavy Balls and 3 Fast Balls) is currently available as an early purchase bonus.
Outside of the DLC, trainers can also get Diancite from Mystery Gift. Doing so unlocks a special side mission which can let players catch the mythical Diancie in-game. Additionally, as of November 6th, a new season of Ranked Battles is available in which trainers can obtain a Delphoxite as well as another opportunity to get the Greninjite for Mega Delphox and Mega Greninja respectively. Later seasons will add the mega stones for Chesnaught and the previously mentioned Baxcalibur. There’s still plenty to see and do in Lumiose city, DLC or no. Happy catching trainers! Don’t forget to check out the Mega Dimension trailer as well as our review of Legends Z-A!
"Brew"ing a Roguelite - An Interview with Isak Wahl, CEO of Snow Leaf Studios

We have the very exciting opportunity today to talk with Isak Wahl, the CEO of Snow Leaf Studios, developers of the newly released roguelite title, Brew! I spent time playing the demo of Brew over the Summer and absolutely adored the characters, gameplay loop, and unique story that their team is putting together. It’s clear that the direction and mission of the team is full of unique experiences and drive, as evidenced by the well-developed demo and intriguing taste of the world we now get to blast, brew, and dodge our way through. With that said, we couldn’t wait to get some additional insight into the development of this furry character-filled world.
Pokémon Legends Z-A Review: Looking Forward To The Future

The year is 2013. Pokémon X and Y released on Nintendo’s highly successful 3DS console and marks the first time a main series Pokémon game has been fully rendered in 3D. This is the best Pokémon has looked up to this point and it’s the start of an exciting new era. Beyond the pretty visuals however, X and Y also left a legacy of unfulfilled ideas and wasted potential. The rumored Pokémon Z never materialized and we inevitably left Kalos and Mega Evolution behind…that is, until recently. 
The time has finally come to talk about Pokémon Legends Z-A, the second entry under the Legends moniker following the success of Arceus back in 2022. Unlike Arceus, which took place in the distant past, Z-A takes place in the future, at least as far as X and Y are concerned. This time the setting is the massive Lumiose City, crown jewel of the Kalos region.
TigerTails Radio Season 16 Episode 41

TigerTails Radio Season 16 Episode 41 Join the Discord Chat: https://discord.gg/SQ5QuRf Join the Telegram Chat: https://t.me/+yold2C77m0I1MmM0 Visit the website at http://www.tigertailsradio.co.uk. See website for full breakdown of any song credits, which is usually updated shortly after the show. Credits: Opening music: Magic by Hedge Haiden (Double Hedge Studios) Character art: Fitzroy Fox - https://www.furaffinity.net/user/lunara-toons / https://bsky.app/profile/fitzroyfox.bsky.social Background art: Charleston Rat - https://www.furaffinity.net/user/charlestonrat / https://bsky.app/profile/charlestonrat.bsky.social If you like what we do and wish to throw some pennies our way to support us, please consider sending a little tip our way. https://streamlabs.com/tigertailsradio/tip * Please note, tips are made to support TigerTails Radio and are assumed as made with good faith, so are therefore non-refundable. Thank you for your support and understanding.
FWG Newsletter November 2025
I hope everyone had a great Furry Book Month! It’s over for another year and now we’re heading into the holidays with frightening speed.
Thanks to everyone who picked up this year’s Furry Book Bundle. We had our best year of sales yet, which helps both the guild and all the authors involved. All the money will be divided evenly among the authors, with the guild getting a share too. Authors, we’ll try to get your payments sent before December.
If you’ve been writing a lot lately and finding your energy flagging, take a break and read a book or stories written by other authors. Reading is a great remedy for burnout and stress. It helps refill your creative well! *points at all the great new books available below* If you’ve been reading a lot instead of writing, maybe it’s time to open your work-in-progress file.
I’m the last person to discover anything new, so I only just saw K-Pop Demon Hunters yesterday. I’ve been dancing around all day to the soundtrack, another stress reliever. These days we have to take joy where we can.
Here are the current open markets for your short stories:
Indecent Exposure – Deadline December 22, 2025
CLAW Vol. 2 – Deadline April 30, 2026
This Is Halloween – Deadline When Full
Children Of The Night – Deadline When Full
Please also check out the latest book releases from our members:
Dragon’s Soul, by J.F.R. Coates, Released June 7, 2025.
Two Strikes and I’m Out, by Michael H. Payne (poetry), Released June 16, 2025.
Lesser Gods: Reckoning, by Alex Frey, Released June 17, 2025.
Tales from the Guild: Blood and Water, Released June 30, 2025.
A Portrait for Tomorrow, by Raynarde, Released June 30, 2025.
Winterfall, by Lauren Rivers, Released July 15, 2025.
The Bones Behind the Glass, by Renard Avec-Histoire, Released August 18, 2025.
Gravitational Pull, by Ty Fox, Released August 19, 2025.
Tikadi’s Gift, by Moth Flutterby, Released October 17, 2025.
Legend of Ahya: A Divinity Decayed [Book 5], by Matthew Colvath, Releasing Nov. 30, 2025.
The Wideness of the World: An Early Modern Anthology, Releasing December 13, 2025.
Happy writing!
Kate Shaw
Aethermancer Early Access Review

Monster capturing plus roguelite, turn-based battling is a combo that seems tailor-made for the current gaming landscape. With that much potential, it’s no surprise that the folks at moi rai games, developers of the popular indie hit Monster Sanctuary, would decide to bring their new game Aethermancer to Steam in an Early Access format. Luckily, the game debuts at an exceptionally playable place, and is teeming with taming goodness mixed with a deep, robust skill and gameplay loop that will benefit even more with some tinkering as the development cycle continues into their Early Access Roadmap. For now, let’s check out what’s good (and needs some work) when it comes to Aethermancer in its current state.
And They Can Talk To Her
Good news for Sixteen South, an independent animation studio in Northern Ireland: Their CGI mystery/comedy series The Retrievers won the MIP-Junior Pitch competition this year, something that major international distributors of course pay attention to. Here’s the rundown of the show: “The series is about an extraordinary girl and her loyal dog as they tackle the most strange crimes in the city of Paris with an unusual bunch of stray animals. On her 11th birthday, she discovered she had the ability to understand and talk to animals, and that includes her police dog, Otis. This blew her mind because it would be really useful for Otis. There have been so many crimes in the city of Paris that have been going unsolved and now the dog thinks, finally, he can communicate with a human being and this might be the key to unlocking some of them.” Now we’ll see where they get to take it from here. (And oh yes: Happy Halloween!)

image c. 2025 Sixteen South
Now THAT’S Diversity!
Recently we visited Lightbox, an animation industry trade show held annually in Pasadena, California. Lots of presentations by major studios, lots of how-to seminars for upcoming artists, and lots of people trying to get hired! We have a whole boatload of new and interesting projects — of the furry kind — that we learned about there. Among other things, Animation Magazine has a big list of new shows that are being marketed at this hears MIPCOM. First off, one that’s been in the works for nearly a year now: Tuiga, created by Copa Studio in Brazil. “Imagine a giraffe in a balloon making deliveries around the world, accompanied by a girl pilot, a not-so-easily impressionable flower and an enthusiastic little rock. This strange team is Tuiga, the most fun delivery service in the animal, vegetable and mineral kingdoms! Tuiga the giraffe, Amelia the girl, Nail the flower and Porridge the pebble bring their own specific qualities and very different characters as members of the balloon’s crew. An explicit diversity, starting with physical characteristics — such as sizes, shapes and colors — which also reflect personalities, moods and behaviors, offering young viewers a vivid exploration of how differences can complement one another in fun and unexpected ways.” Stay tooned to find out if this is coming to a streaming service near you soon.

image c. 2025 Copa Studio
TigerTails Radio Season 16 Episode 40

TigerTails Radio Season 16 Episode 40 Join the Discord Chat: https://discord.gg/SQ5QuRf Join the Telegram Chat: https://t.me/+yold2C77m0I1MmM0 Visit the website at http://www.tigertailsradio.co.uk. See website for full breakdown of any song credits, which is usually updated shortly after the show. Credits: Opening music: Magic by Hedge Haiden (Double Hedge Studios) Character art: Fitzroy Fox - https://www.furaffinity.net/user/lunara-toons / https://bsky.app/profile/fitzroyfox.bsky.social Background art: Charleston Rat - https://www.furaffinity.net/user/charlestonrat / https://bsky.app/profile/charlestonrat.bsky.social If you like what we do and wish to throw some pennies our way to support us, please consider sending a little tip our way. https://streamlabs.com/tigertailsradio/tip * Please note, tips are made to support TigerTails Radio and are assumed as made with good faith, so are therefore non-refundable. Thank you for your support and understanding.
Bearly Furcasting S6E9 - Movie Night: Young Frankenstein
MOOBARKFLUFF! Click here to send us a comment or message about the show!
Welcome to another episode of BFFT! All the regulars are here this episode. Taebyn, Rayne, TickTock, Cheetaro and Ziggy are all here! Since Halloween is just around the corner we decided to switch things up this episode and discuss that timeless Classic from 1974: Young Frankenstein. So,if you have nothing to do for about 90 minutes, why not tune in for another T-Riffic (that is Taebyn-Riffic) episode of BFFT! Moobarkfluff everyfur!
Please feel free to email us at: bearlyfurcasting@gmail.com
This podcast contains adult language and adult topics. It is rated M for Mature. Listener discretion is advised.
Thanks to all our listeners and to our staff: Bearly Normal, Rayne Raccoon, Taebyn, Cheetaro, TickTock, and Ziggy the Meme Weasel.
You can send us a message on Telegram at BFFT Chat, or via email at: bearlyfurcasting@gmail.com
N64-inspired Soulslike 'Mouseward" from Void Sols dev Announced

Independent developer Finite Reflection Studios has announced Mouseward, an N64-inspired Soulslike, coming to PC. Featuring a modern take on retro aesthetics, the game is "a nostalgic love letter to the golden age of 3D adventures."
Watch the Mouseward announcement trailer:
Become a Wolf, Raccoon, & Raven in Edenfall: Legacy of the First Wardens Demo

Austrian developer Everflux Games is excited to announce their debut title, Edenfall: Legacy of the First Wardens is coming to Steam in 2026. Edenfall: Legacy of the First Wardens is a single-player action-adventure set in a charming, hand-crafted environment. Players will play as Venya, a young shapeshifting heroine, on her journey through a whimsical world. Eden has been overrun by evil creatures. It's your task to drive them out and heal the world. Discover your people's past and uncover your magical abilities, including the power to transform into animals, including a wolf, raccoon, and raven.
Key Features- Explore | Traverse a magical world in four forms: human, wolf, raccoon, and raven: each form comes with a unique movement system and combat toolset.
- C-C-Combo! | Master an intricate combat system and unlock mighty combos by chaining attacks from different forms.
- A journey of growth | Join our hero on her path to reflection and growth to find inner peace. Find magical crystals to learn new combos and complete sidequests to gain more customisation features.
- Heal the world | Cleanse parts of the world from corruption and be rewarded with the breathtaking experience of the once-corrupted land being restored.
The demo for the exciting new single player experience has just released and is available to play right here!
What Is the Furry Fandom? Everything You Need To Know
What Is the Furry Fandom
The furry fandom is a worldwide community built around an interest in animals with human-like traits, such as expression, speech, and emotion. People who take part in the fandom, known as furries, use this shared interest as a way to create art, stories, and friendships that celebrate imagination and individuality.
At its core, the furry fandom is about self-expression and creativity. Many members design animal-inspired characters that reflect parts of their personality or simply explore a world they enjoy. These characters often appear in drawings, costumes, and stories that help fans bring their ideas to life.
The community thrives both online and in person. Fans connect through digital spaces like Discord groups, social media platforms, and art-sharing websites where they can showcase their work and meet others who share their interests. Offline, they gather at furry conventions and local meetups to trade art, celebrate creativity, and build lasting friendships.
The furry fandom is open to anyone who enjoys creativity and storytelling. Some people focus on drawing, others on costume building or writing, and many simply enjoy the sense of community it offers. It is a space defined by diversity, acceptance, and passion for creative freedom.
A Brief History of the Furry Fandom
The furry fandom began as a small creative niche and has since grown into one of the most expressive online communities in the world. Its roots stretch back to the late 1970s, when fans of science fiction and animation began creating stories and art featuring animals with human-like qualities.
The idea of mixing human emotion and animal design had always existed in media: from classic cartoons to early animated films, but this period marked the first time people started forming a community around it. Fans shared illustrations, created original stories, and met through small gatherings at science fiction conventions.
By the 1980s, the movement had developed a clear identity. Dedicated events started forming, giving artists and writers a place to connect and collaborate. These gatherings would eventually grow into the large-scale conventions that the community enjoys today.
The rise of the internet in the 1990s and early 2000s allowed the fandom to expand globally. Artists could share their creations instantly, and fans from around the world could communicate through online forums and art platforms. This period also helped define the cultural identity of the community, distinguishing it from other forms of anthropomorphic art.
Today, the furry fandom continues to thrive through online spaces, creative collaboration, and social gatherings. It remains a place where imagination and individuality are celebrated.
Why People Join the Furry Fandom
People join the furry fandom for many reasons. For some, it begins with an interest in art and storytelling. For others, it becomes a way to express themselves, meet new people, and explore identity in a creative and accepting space.
At its heart, the furry community offers a mix of creativity, friendship, and personal growth that continues to attract members from all over the world.
A Place for Creative ExpressionThe furry fandom gives people the freedom to create. Members design original characters, write stories, draw digital art, and perform through costume or animation. These outlets allow fans to explore ideas that may not fit into traditional creative spaces.
Many enjoy designing or commissioning artwork that brings their characters to life. This shared love for creation is one of the main reasons the fandom has continued to grow.
A Sense of BelongingFor many fans, the furry community feels like home. It is a welcoming environment where people can share their interests, make friends, and express themselves without fear of judgment.
This inclusivity has helped the fandom become one of the most positive and supportive creative communities online. People come together to celebrate art, creativity, and individuality.
Exploring IdentityCreating a character gives people a chance to express parts of themselves that might be hard to share in everyday life. Some fans build characters that reflect who they are, while others create entirely new versions of themselves through fantasy.
The process of building a fursona can lead to greater self-understanding and confidence. It can also help people express personality traits or emotions that feel more natural through their character.
The furry fandom thrives on shared enthusiasm. Whether online or at conventions, people gather to collaborate, trade art, and celebrate creativity together.
People join the furry fandom for their own reasons, but they all share a love for creativity and expression. Whether through art, performance, or friendship, the community offers a space where imagination feels at home.
Common Misconceptions About the Furry FandomLike many creative subcultures, the furry fandom has often been misunderstood by people outside it. Misconceptions tend to come from a lack of information or from media portrayals that focus on the unusual rather than the everyday reality. In truth, the community is built on creativity, art, and connection.
The fandom includes artists, performers, writers, and fans from all backgrounds. Most members take part because they enjoy the artistic side of the community and the sense of belonging it provides. Still, a few common misunderstandings have shaped how outsiders view it.
Misconception 1: The Furry Fandom Is Only About CostumesWhile fursuits are one of the most visible parts of the fandom, they represent only a small portion of what it is about. Most furries do not own or wear suits, and many focus instead on digital art, writing, or online roleplay. Costuming is just one of many creative outlets within the fandom.
Misconception 2: Furry Art Is Always SexualA common stereotype is that furry art is primarily adult-focused. In reality, the majority of the art within the fandom is not sexual at all. Most artists create wholesome character portraits, comics, or fantasy illustrations that highlight storytelling and creativity.
Like any large community, there are adult areas, but they are separate from the main fandom. Reducing the entire community to that one aspect ignores the thousands of artists who focus purely on creativity, character design, and worldbuilding.
Misconception 3: Furries Cannot Tell Fantasy from RealitySome outsiders believe that furries think they are animals or wish to live as them. This is not true for most members. While some enjoy roleplaying or exploring animal traits through art, the majority simply use their characters as creative avatars or symbolic representations.
For many people, their fursona is a way to express identity, personality, or emotion through storytelling and design.
The furry community is often more inclusive than it is given credit for. It welcomes people of all ages, backgrounds, and interests who value creativity and kindness. Most community spaces focus heavily on respect, safety, and collaboration.
This inclusivity has helped the fandom grow into one of the most diverse and supportive creative communities online.
Understanding the truth behind these misconceptions shows what the furry fandom really is — a community based on imagination, friendship, and expression. It thrives because people support one another and celebrate creativity in all its forms.
How the Furry Fandom Expresses Creativity
Creativity is at the heart of the furry fandom. The community thrives because its members are always finding new ways to bring imagination to life. Every person contributes something unique, whether through art, writing, music, or costume design. This variety of expression is what keeps the fandom vibrant and welcoming.
Art and IllustrationArt is one of the most recognisable parts of the fandom. Thousands of artists draw original characters, comics, and portraits that bring fursonas and stories to life. These artworks connect people from around the world and form the visual identity of the community.
Digital tools have made it easier than ever for artists to collaborate and share their work. Some focus on stylised character art, while others experiment with 3D models, digital painting, or animation. For many, art is both a hobby and a way to build friendships within the community.
Writing and StorytellingWriting is another cornerstone of creativity within the fandom. Many furries create stories that explore their characters’ personalities or entire fictional worlds. Some use writing as a way to express emotions, develop character backstories, or explore themes of identity and belonging.
Fan fiction, webcomics, and collaborative storytelling groups all play a big role in keeping the community active and inspired.
Costuming and PerformanceCostume creation, known as fursuiting, combines craftsmanship with performance. Each suit is designed to match a character’s personality and appearance, and wearing it allows fans to perform and interact in character.
Fursuiters often take part in photoshoots, parades, and meetups where they perform for others or express themselves in playful, creative ways. It takes a mix of sewing, sculpting, and imagination to bring these characters to life.
Music and the Furry Rave SceneThe furry fandom has a strong and growing connection to electronic music. Many conventions host late-night dance events known as furry raves, featuring DJs and producers from within the community. These events combine lighting, visuals, and sound to create an atmosphere of energy and freedom where attendees can perform or dance as their characters.
The music itself often blends electronic subgenres such as house, trance, drum and bass, and synthwave. Some artists write original songs that reflect themes of transformation, freedom, or emotion, ideas that resonate deeply with the community.
Furry music producers frequently share their work online, sometimes using their fursona as their stage identity. This has led to a small but passionate music scene where furry DJs and composers collaborate, remix each other’s work, and perform at conventions across the world.
Community Collaboration
Creativity in the fandom often happens through collaboration. Artists, musicians, and writers work together on themed projects, charity events, and digital showcases. These group efforts have helped raise funds for animal charities, support small creators, and even launch professional careers that began inside the fandom.
This spirit of teamwork keeps the community connected and ensures that creativity continues to evolve in new and exciting directions.
The furry fandom’s creative range goes far beyond art and costume design. From digital illustration to live DJ sets, it continues to grow as technology and artistic trends change. At its core, the fandom remains a celebration of imagination, performance, and the shared joy of creating something meaningful together.
ConclusionDrawing furry poses and proportions might feel challenging at first, but with practice and a solid understanding of anatomy, you’ll start to see real progress. Whether your fursona walks on two legs or runs on all fours, the balance between human and animal features will become second nature as you continue to draw. Remember to keep experimenting with expressions, body language, and poses to make your characters truly unique.
Most importantly, enjoy the process. Your fursona is a reflection of your creativity and personality, so don’t stress about getting everything perfect right away. With time, you’ll develop your own style, and your characters will come to life in ways you never imagined.
Happy drawing, and keep creating!
Xege Kheiru
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Who runs your community? Five stories about predators with powerful friends in fandom

Sick of bad news? Want some good news? Here’s how to make it. Get armed with knowledge to demand better for your community. When there is injustice, getting justice starts with reporting it. Bad media likes to linger on gross details of crime, but helpful media investigates and criticizes patterns, issues, impact, policy and leadership. This public service is often requested by people who need help — especially when leaders and police don’t help — like when there’s internet activity outside their reach, or news has to reach sources they need to come forward. It’s a job for independent reporting, so it can’t be suppressed when leaders are corrupt or protecting friends. This is news by us, for us, because outsiders and bad people don’t run your community… you do.
Five stories get their own headline posts. Here’s the short versions.
(1) Tennessee furry group leaders corrupted with predators and drug death; two evidence documents. MurfreesFurs, a furry group in Tennessee with around 1000 members, was the subject of an evidence document with 30 sources alleging that organizers covered up nazis and zoophiles in their inner circle, and failed to protect the community from predators. Sources face retaliation, and Dogpatch Press was pressured for suppression before even reporting. The shocking thing is, it was only part of the problem. A second evidence document came out independently from the first, alleging more serious complicity by MurfreesFurs organizers in CSAM, drug dealing and a fentanyl death. Sources include police reports and prison records.
(2) Mephit Furmeet put one of the world’s most infamous zoophiles on stage to represent the fandom. For years, furry conventions have hosted Charles Alexander Berry, AKA Toggle Rat. He runs a podcast that launders animal molesting as identity, like NAMBLA for zoophiles, while hiding their victims offstage. In 2021 he was outed as a zoophile with his husband running a furry group in Tennessee. Many people’s effort to protect the fandom went unheard in August 2025, when despite protest, Berry was given a platform on stage at Mephit Furmeet, the furry con running since the 1990’s in Memphis, TN.
(3) UK furry event founder and outed zoosadist ring member is still running events 7 years later. A series of international furry events under the name Club Animalz (and others) has been held in Manchester and Berlin since 2017. The founder, Foxb/Foxberance, AKA Ben Mills, was exposed as an animal rapist in the 2018 zoosadist leaks. Mills raped animals on video, in a fursuit made for him, that he kept using for years afterward. In 2025, his events are still popular and partnered with large cons in the mainstream of furry like Confuzzled.
(4) Mare Fair enabled shady crypto nazis and a zoophile organizer who preyed on horse rescues. Florida’s Mare Fair is an adults-only My Little Pony convention. It crosses fandom for a kid’s show with the edgy chanboard culture seen in The Atlantic’s article about the MLP fandom’s Nazi problem. The con is organized by 4chan users and bounced between 3 venues in 3 years while raising a reputation for hateful behavior. The management also teamed up with a zoophile, Kyle “Lightsolver” Foster, to help run Mare Fair and found a new con. Two horse rescue charity operators claimed that Foster manipulated their operations after keeping a crippled horse alive in pain for years of sex abuse. Foster’s enablers in management include Joshua “Corpulent Brony” Hope, who runs a website to host bestiality videos. Hope milks fandom with silver coin sales and his own cryptocurrency. This allegedly ties con finances to shady donors with crypto-wealth, who break charity records set by other cons — conveniently buying a PR front.
(5) Nazifur sex offender keeps going in and out of jail while misleading furries to trust him. In Colorado, Jacob Kovar was a nazifur sex offender who was convicted after his arrest warrant credited investigation by Dogpatch Press. Kovar did crimes as head of security for a furry convention, until they got tipped and fired him. After years in jail, Kovar returned to the community with friends in a regular furry group, while he was allegedly violating parole to be online. Kovar had his parole revoked and was arrested again in late 2025.
Click through to the full stories or read on for more context.
A system problem
It’s pointless to debate about whether our groups are good or bad. The issue isn’t psychology of ordinary people with ordinary problems. It’s structural. We have internet-based subculture where users also meet in real life, but we don’t own the foundation. Social media is broken with a mountain of analysis about why. There’s so much to say about dependence on corporate internet, with unaccountable management and profit above principles. Furries rely on it for a loose and insecure network of local bubbles, but it also enables manipulators and abusers to have their own networks. Sometimes they gain influence over yours.
While the platforms are a fundamental problem, there’s the idea that furries are above it by being tolerant and loving. That has a dark side. Love is blind and goodwill doesn’t exclude favoritism for bad friends. Volunteerism without money doesn’t exclude predators from social influence. It makes our own work to do internally, on top of broken platforms that make complacency with the status quo.
Sometimes the community organizes to force bad leadership out. That happened in New Jersey, where the corrupt con Garden State Fur The Weekend was replaced with Furgeddaboutit. It would be nice to call such a victory the norm, but the norm is that there isn’t one. Change only happens if enough people organize to force it. It’s all too easy to settle for the status quo. In internet terms, that’s network-effect.
Corruption isn’t fate, it involves settling for it. Awareness can help, but it’s often suppressed by toxic-positivity and anti-media hostility, with a pretext about protecting the fandom by keeping it in the family. This enables more of the problem, and needs external reporting while transparency is withheld. It doesn’t have to be that way, but if it doesn’t get reported, expect soothing lies…
The lies start with good intentions. Furries love pride in community, but pride can be fair-weather and two-faced. Membership works like identity when people want to claim it, but anyone can be a furry by saying so, and then when someone behaves badly, “we don’t know them”. That includes people who have been among us for decades and run things. If we want to take pride in building and running things, that goes with media literacy and telling THE FULL TRUTH about things we’re not so proud of.
Truth or consequences
The five current stories aren’t about random bad people at random events. These involve a higher level of decisions, favor and influence at the top. When leadership fails, the community has to ask someone else for help.
All too often, selfish leaders gain power through “everyone’s welcome” enabling and negligence, even with evidence in their faces. That’s how problems go without consequences, get swept behind PR and blamed on outsiders for noticing, and become circular. PR is often used for evil this way, and deserves the same bad reputation that “the media” gets. Don’t expect any reporter to shut up and report more good news, because their job is not to be a gutless PR mouthpiece. It’s everyone’s job to make problems unwelcome if you don’t want them reported.
More attention can bring help, but independent reporting doesn’t help by itself without action. When it isn’t paid, there’s a disparity of resources and underreporting. We can’t possibly do enough after something goes wrong, compared to the need to Just. Stop. Supporting. The. Wrong. People. Stop giving them money, platforms, and excuses.
Why can’t we just have nice things by being nice and doing good? When we build community for the love of it, how do some insiders keep acting worse than made-up characters in the imaginations of hateful outsiders?
The problem is that volunteering and donation can make some people indispensable, and occasionally they take advantage of the inability to get rid of them. When someone volunteers specialized skills for free, you can’t just fire and replace them! The worst manipulators can create reliance, with cronies willing to back them with pressure or even walk out together to get what they want, like silence about abuse. Suppression starts with friends protecting friends. Twisted loyalty can be as bad as top-down authority.
It’s pretty simple to say furry events are parties and hobby fun, and there are bigger priorities. Why not just withdraw and let them die when they’re corrupt? So what if someone doubts our commitment to Sparkle Motion? What is this, a cult? The saddest part is, some people would rather have selfish power than priorities. Parties and petty power in them are the only thing they care about.
Letting problems go is self-defeating. It gives hateful outsiders the facts to say much worse than stories they can make up, handing them ammo to use against us if we don’t defuse it by transparency. Outsiders didn’t ruin our image in these stories, we already did it before they came out. That’s the truth; don’t shoot the messenger, and go organize to make better news. Even if you can’t fix broken platforms, you can demand better in real life.
This is the kind of good news we can accomplish:
Shout out to @laelaps.fyi and @heika.dog for being a guiding light of can-do community service.
dogpatch.press/2025/08/08/a…
— Dogpatch Press (@dogpatch.press) October 13, 2025 at 10:53 PM
Like the article? These take hard work. For more free furry news, follow on Twitter or support not-for-profit Dogpatch Press on Patreon. Want to get involved? Try these subreddits: r/furrydiscuss for news or r/waginheaven for the best of the community. Or send guest writing here. (Content Policy.)
Nazifur sex offender keeps going in and out of jail while misleading furries to trust him
SERIES: Who runs your community? Five stories about predators with powerful friends in fandom.
Trust put a predator in a power position
In Colorado, Jacob Kovar was a nazifur sex offender who was convicted after his arrest warrant credited investigation by Dogpatch Press. Kovar did crimes as head of security for a furry convention, until they got tipped and fired him. After years in jail, Kovar returned to the community with friends in a regular furry group, while he was allegedly violating parole to be online. Kovar had his parole revoked and was arrested again in late 2025.
This is an update to a 2021 story. To review, Kovar first came to notice as right-hand man of notorious nazifur Lee “Foxler” Miller. Kovar was already a convicted sex offender when Miller made him admin for his Furry Raiders nazifur group. The Furry Raiders acted as a revolving door for numerous predators loyal to Miller. When Miller himself was charged with three child sex felonies, Kovar jumped in front of the bullet. His bright idea — while on parole — was to intimidate a witness in Miller’s case to get the charges dropped. Kovar briefly became a con head of security, and targeted Dogpatch Press with hope to cause false reporting against the witness. Instead it was reported to police, Kovar and a Furry Raider accomplice were arrested, and Kovar got a new sex offender record with jail he completed in 2024.
This update looks at what happened between Kovar’s return from jail and going back in 2025.
How did he get trusted again?
In 2019, when Kovar used a false cover identity, he became real Head of Security of a small new furry con. The con hadn’t started and he got no access to goers, but he used the title for influence for crimes. When a sex offender on parole can do that, and a reporter has to figure it out, what diligence are we getting from leaders? On the other hand, fandom and volunteerism built the new convention without established organizers, who were also misled by a predator. When the con got tipped about Kovar’s new arrest, they gave straightforward engagement and took action to fire him, so there wasn’t more criticism towards the con.
After Kovar spent several years of jail, he had his chance to do better, but in 2025, multiple sources made contact after reading about him. Some of them weren’t in the furry community and were noticing ongoing shady behavior.
Here’s what tippers believed. With Kovar’s parole conditions, he wasn’t supposed to be online, but had enablers who allegedly kept a fursuit for him and gave him an account under someone else’s name to get around parole conditions. Dogpatch Press reviewed a hobby group he used and found nearly 1800 posts by Kovar, and his identity wasn’t a well-kept secret. Members referenced knowing his workplace and shared photos with his face and tattoos. They apparently also made Kovar admin for over 150 members.


A tip was received about Kovar going back on an ankle monitor in July 2025:
Wanna laugh… read the first screenshot. The Furry Raiders have such a bad memory about their group admin Jacob Kovar and his recidivist felonies, some of them committed while using Foxler’s house. I was just tipped that Kovar is back on an ankle monitor.
dogpatch.press/2021/02/25/f…
— Dogpatch Press (@dogpatch.press) July 29, 2025 at 12:05 PM
Kovar was arrested again in September 2025:
Dogpatch Press was shown a private document with protected source that officially revoked his parole. A nonfurry source also sent a tip that police brought Kovar to his former workplace in the back of a squad car, to ask what contacts with minors he had at work.
Results of further investigation
Several points stood out about Kovar’s activity in a furry hobby group:
(1) The September arrest shows Kovar really was breaking parole like July tips said. Please send tips if you have more information about enablers.
(2) The chair of the con that fired Kovar in 2019 was interacting with him in the group. Reporter questions about it got straightforward engagement. The furry group didn’t belong to the con chair, who was using it for help with personal projects, and took action to make Kovar’s behavior unwelcome at the con.
(3) Why did the furry hobby group make Kovar an admin? Questions to the group owner found it wasn’t what it looked like. The owner said that the admin title was just a tag, and he wasn’t part of the actual admin chat. Kovar told them he was making effort to change and be a better person, while downplaying his charges to mislead about what they were. The owner was surprised to see legal records, said he was misinformed, and took action about it.
In personal life, sometimes people choose to stay friends with someone who got charges and give them second chances. In this case, it appears that a recidivist who manipulated trust and power hasn’t changed that much.
Furries may learn that fan-based loyalty can be vulnerable to manipulation. We can be understanding but ask for better. Some leaders who hide suspicious behavior can be criticized for corruption, but straightforward engagement makes a big difference.
UPDATE:
You just read sensitive handling of associates in the story. After it was complete, the appearance of straightforward engagement was taken back by the group owner Distortion with his car hobbyist group Chasing Tails.

Distortion claimed that Kovar was tolerated in the group because of a convincing story about doing better after “domestic” charges, which would clearly be a lie to cover up without accountability for his crimes. Distortion was shown legal documents of Kovar’s sex offending, did not deny the identity match, and said Kovar would be removed. Kovar was not removed from Chasing Tails. Distortion removed the messages from Telegram with a block to cover for Kovar.
It was already known that Kovar had friends helping him to weasel around limits, and now including this story in a series about corruption makes a lot more sense. That weaseling violated his parole, so these helpful friends are why he is back in jail — and that doesn’t solve the problem with the group itself.
MORE IN THE SERIES
- Tennessee furry group leaders corrupted with predators and drug death; two evidence documents.
- Mephit Furmeet put one of the world’s most infamous zoophiles on stage to represent the fandom.
- UK furry event founder and outed zoosadist ring member is still running events 7 years later.
- Mare Fair enabled shady crypto nazis and a zoophile organizer who preyed on horse rescues.
Like the article? These take hard work. For more free furry news, follow on Twitter or support not-for-profit Dogpatch Press on Patreon. Want to get involved? Try these subreddits: r/furrydiscuss for news or r/waginheaven for the best of the community. Or send guest writing here. (Content Policy.)