Furry Porn Artists

Furry Porn Artists




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Furry Porn Artists

*First Published: Aug 9, 2019, 8:00 am CDT

Posted on Aug 9, 2019   Updated on May 20, 2021, 6:54 am CDT
The furry fandom is an enormous, decentralized community based around one thing: a love for anthropomorphic creatures. While the term “furry” is commonly associated with bears, lions, deer, wolves, cats, and other mammals, it’s better understood as a catchall for all humanlike animal characters. That includes “scalies,” or anthro reptile fans, as well as artists who adore anthropomorphic depictions of monstrous creatures like dragons and giant nagas .
As social psychologist Kathy Gerbasi told the Daily Dot in 2011, the furry community values open-minded and accepting people—hence its laid-back creative vibe. There’s a huge overlap between furrydom and queerness, too. One 2012 study surveying furry con-goers revealed they are “much likelier than the public at large to report a non-straight sexual orientation,” with less than 30 percent identifying as exclusively heterosexual, Vox reports.
Despite anti-furry conjecture during the 1990s and 2000s, furrydom isn’t an inherently sexual experience. Many furries enjoy anthropomorphic creatures for purely platonic reasons and nothing more; others cherish the NSFW side of the fandom, but only as one piece of a much larger fandom experience. That said, there are plenty of fans that draw, develop, animate, and adore furry porn more than anything. Smutty or otherwise, there’s no “right” way to enjoy being a furry. Whatever reason you love the furry community is more than enough.
We’ve gone ahead and picked the best sites around for all sorts of porn for the furry community, from video games to 18+ NSFW communities. For all of your yiffing needs, read on.
Founded in 2005, Fur Affinity is a staple in the furry community. It’s also a fantastic resource for 18+ material. Like DeviantArt, FA lets users run their own online portfolio and meet their fellow creators. Generally speaking, most adult artwork is allowed on the site as long as it has artistic merit and does not feature people or characters under 18. While artists must label their work if it features adult themes, the site otherwise takes a hands-off approach, letting users browse for everything from fursuits to bondage scenes to macrophilia and voreaphilia .
Interested furries can browse through Fur Affinity’s adult content by registering an account. To turn off FA’s adult content filter, head over to your account settings , scroll down to the”enable adult artwork” section, and select “General, Mature, Adult.”
Taifun Riders is the two-person studio behind the furry/human adult visual novel called Space Paws . Part dating sim and part visual novel, Space Paws stars an astronaut who visits far-off planets and meets intelligent, anthropomorphic, and, most importantly, attractive extraterrestrial life. The game features multiple love interests, over two dozen 18+ scenes, branching narratives to unravel, and plenty of planets with cute furry girls to date (and more).
Space Paws is free to play, and players can enjoy the game directly through their browser or by downloading the game’s Flash file. Dedicated fans can support Taifun Riders on Patreon and receive early access builds by pledging $2 or more.
Reddit is a haven for all kinds of furry adult content, from writing to art. But the best 18+ subreddit for furries by far is r/FurryPorn. With over 9,000 subscribers, new content posted daily, and a solid moderation team reviewing material, it’s a top recommendation for ethical furry smut. All submissions are tagged for their sexual content, which means viewers can easily find their preferred content just by searching through the subreddit. Common tags range from “[F]” for solo cis women to “[FF]” and “[MM]” for porn between cis lesbians and cis gay furries, respectively.
But r/FurryPorn doesn’t just offer free adult furry illustrations. All submissions require the artist’s name in parenthesis, and the subreddit lets creators and commissioners file a takedown request to remove any of their content that they don’t want posted on the site. This makes r/FurryPorn a much more ethical porn site than other 18+ furry communities, which may host paid content without the artist’s permission or otherwise disregard copyright infringement concerns.
After the Tumblr NSFW ban went into effect, the Daily Dot profiled some of the best adult Mastodon instances available on the fediverse. But there’s one option we left off the list that queer furries should know about: Yiff.Life.
Built for the 18+ LGBTQ furry community and run by a trans admin team, Yiff.Life hosts over 1,500 users, making it one of the biggest NSFW communities for furries on Mastodon (as well as one of the top 150 instances based on population). The site hosts strong guidelines that ban hate language and illegal 18+ content, assuring all discussions remain as inclusive as possible. While adult content is more than allowed, it’s also tagged and hidden under content warnings, letting users actively choose what porn they look at (and when). For queer furries that want to hang out, look at porn, and meet other LGBTQ folks in the community, Yiff.Life is a must.
If you’re an adult artist, writer, or roleplayer interested in meeting other furries, you’ll want to create an account on F-List. The site lets players create their own character profiles and fill in their favorite kinks and hard limits. While F-List users commonly create their own profiles to send to play partners, it works just as well as a general resource for documenting furry original characters’ personalities. Give it a spin; accounts are free.
Ana Valens is a reporter specializing in online queer communities, marginalized identities, and adult content creation. She is a former Daily Dot staff writer. Her work has appeared at Vice, Vox, Truthout, Bitch Media, Kill Screen, Rolling Stone, and the Toast. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, and spends her free time developing queer adult games.
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*First Published: Aug 17, 2019, 7:00 am CDT

Posted on Aug 17, 2019   Updated on Feb 10, 2021, 9:36 am CST
Love or hate it, the furry community is here to stay—and so is its porn . Artists, writers, game developers, and creators of all sorts regularly pen 18+ furry material for their fellow anthro fans. And on the smutty side of the fandom, furry porn comics are among the most popular medium.
Comics offer one the few opportunities to see furry characters in motion, interacting with each other and expressing themselves. It’s a rare gift in a community where most porn is created by freelance smut peddlers who are often a tight budget, making animated series difficult or outright impossible. Comics, on the other hand, allow creators to tell stories without technical and financial constraints. Just write a script, illustrate it, and you’re set.
The internet features a wide assortment of furry porn comics. Storylines range from gay pairings to kinky stories featuring fetishes like macrophiliam, bondage, and vore . If you’re looking for the best adult furry comics that furrydom has to offer, read on for our top recommendations.
There are a lot of porn comics for furries out there online—arguably too many. Luckily, Reddit’s r/yiffcomics lets users keep an eye out for new comics and request art they want to reread but lost while browsing the web. The subreddit is extremely friendly to comic requests, too, making r/yiffcomics a great spot to look into new furry porn genres or request the source for a comic’s stray panel.
Not unlike its sister subreddit r/FurryPorn , r/yiffcomics runs on a submission tag system: Users must post the comic’s title, its author, characters’ genders, and any applicable fetishes. The subreddit is relatively inclusive, too. The community bans “cub porn,” or illustrated depictions of underage anthro characters, and racist, homophobic, and transphobic hate speech are all prohibited. This makes r/yiffcomics a great spot to find and discover adult furry comics, particularly on a site like Reddit where laissez-faire moderation is all too popular.
Paying for your porn is one of the best ways to support adult artists, and there isn’t a better furry adult artist to support than Meesh. Well-known within the furry fandom for his smut, Meesh’s Patreon features high-quality furry comics about “characters old and new,” with three new comic pages produced per month at the minimum. Stories feature gay, straight, and bi pairings, and Meesh hosts different tiers for exclusive access. Interested newcomers should start with the Silver Tier subscription, which offers access to his work for $6 per month.
Published by adult furry webcomic site Hardblush, Boystown features a series of collegiate-themed furry comics built with queer men in mind. There are over 200 pages of comics from a wide variety of Hardblush artists, and each of Boystown’s comics feature their own distinct style. While some of these comics are more western-oriented, others are clearly inspired by yaoi hentai, making Boystown a fantastic choice for gay furries with a soft spot for anime porn.
Boystown is available digitally or through a special physical edition . The latter is currently out-of-print on Hardblush, and circulating editions can be quite expensive . But the special edition digital release only costs $19.99 digitally, making its ebook a go-to for gay furry smut.
Free ethical porn is generally considered an oxymoron, especially among artists. Although furries have strong standards for sharing art, plenty of sites host stolen furry porn either sold by artists or posted without listing its creator, both of which come at the creator’s expense. Yiffer.xyz doesn’t do that. Instead, it offers an enormous free library of furry porn mixed with a rules section that protects artists’ copyright and pulls stolen material.
Yiffer.xyz works a bit like e621, The Yiff Gallery, and other booru imageboards . Users can filter in (or out) specific content and explore tags to find their preferred comics. These range from “kissing” and “feline” to “anal” and “big penis,” promising an enormous collection of adult content with each search. While Yiffer.xyz is much simpler than E621 and its sister sites, the site offers high-quality comics curated for users’ enjoyment on a fast and clean site designed for easy browsing.
Hentai fans know that Fakku is the place to find uncensored games, anime, and—of course—comics. And if you’re looking for a horny monster girl who crushes her enemies while satisfying all kinds of fantasies, Amakuchi’s The Magical Foxgirl Foxy Rena might just be the furry hentai porn comic for you. Imageboard site E621 describes Foxy-Rena as “a buxom young woman” with fox heritage whose mission is to fight armies of monsters “in the name of love and justice!” You can expect lots of explosive smut, too, from creampies to paizuri , the Japanese word for “titty fucking.”
The 10 chapters of The Magical Foxgirl Foxy Rena come at $5.95 apiece. Or, if you’re new to Fakku, you can read them for free for 14 days before committing to a subscription that gets you access to all of the hentai on the site.
On Fur Affinity , users develop their portfolios and interact with other furry creators. Akin to DeviantArt, the forum is an ecosystem of original art and characters—and all it takes is a free account to unlock the NSFW side. Similarly, on first glance, artist SilverEdge’s House Warming may seem quaintly domestic. But things heat up when furry partners Chris and Liam get into “some rough fun after work,” as the artist explains.
The comic dives into several fantasies—”rough sex, BDSM, foot fetish, size difference and body worship,” as SilverEdge explains—all within a consensual and trusting partnership that translates in the quietly beautiful illustrations.
Ana Valens is a reporter specializing in online queer communities, marginalized identities, and adult content creation. She is a former Daily Dot staff writer. Her work has appeared at Vice, Vox, Truthout, Bitch Media, Kill Screen, Rolling Stone, and the Toast. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, and spends her free time developing queer adult games.
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This article went out in January 2017 titled “Yiffing for Dollars”. Here’s a re-edited update a year later, to coincide with a bump in notice and a concerning situation. 
Furries have built their own small industry on creativity worth millions. Their membership is rising and it’s likely to see the “furry economy” grow with it. You can see what’s up by watching the small slice who are devoted enough to make a living in the fandom – Profans.
Adult art can have an edge in dollars because it has more of a niche quality. Clean art is perfectly valid, but perhaps the mainstream is where it succeeds most – making an apples/oranges comparison. This look at indie art business will focus on the naughty stuff, but doesn’t exclude other kinds, and it applies outside of fandom too.
When first looked at in January 2017, fandom member Fek was earning $24,000 per month for making furry porn games. (Quote: “Ditch the dayjob and live the dream.”) He had the stat of #2 best-paid per-patron on all of Patreon. (See his art on Furaffinity. ) Others were in or near the furry ballpark (dogpark?) Most of the NSFW entries in the top 50 had furry content. #12 was the Trials in Tainted Space NSFW game, earning $27,000 per month. #30 was the kinda-anthropomorphic-NSFW artist Monstergirlisland , earning $20,000 monthly.
I haven’t checked these numbers since early 2017, and I think the list changed from “amount of money” to “number of patrons” which knocks furries down the list, but… Artists are getting rich from this, no joke.
Since late 2017, Kotaku has given strong attention to adult art on Patreon:
These show growth being overshadowed by trouble. They aren’t just about furries, but notice – the first one is about a theft site that targeted furry porn first, then spread to any and everyone. Theft, instability, and creator-hostile regulations are looming. It even involves politics.
A tiny slice of Profans having positive success is also vastly outweighed by those who do it for less than a living – but more than a hobby. Competing as business with lower-expense hobbyists makes things complicated. Fandom is full of young, struggling artists who are figuring out how to use their talents, and deserve all the support they can get. Making money from art has never been easy, and this makes me think about the current state of things.
There’s a lot to say about being an artist in troubled times.
The planet is in trouble and every species has a complaint, so let a dog bark about politics for a minute. If I had a crystal ball to see into a future with Trump in power, I bet it would show nothing but murk with occasional mushroom clouds. Expect isolationism, extreme nativism, and turmoil. He gives lip service to bringing back jobs, but has no plan beyond drunkenly slashing and burning everything – corporate regulations, facts, and the social contract. Don’t be surprised when it simply helps rich people hoard money and leaves burger-flipper work and a Limbo-game race to the bottom for wages for everyone else. What I’m saying is, Millenials are facing poverty and instability beyond what their parents faced.
This space needed a graphic so have Old Economy Steve.
It’s scary, but even downsides contain opportunity. Not like in the old economy before they had robots doing all the jobs, but if nobody’s hiring for jobs worth doing – what’s better than making your own career? Look at the indie level.
This business article caught my eye: “Can This Startup Reinvent How Doggie Portraits Are Sold? ” Forbes explains that pet industry spending hit a record $60.28 billion in 2015, and MyPoochFace.com got a half million. It’s “the first venture launched by Niche Digital Brands”, who target “massive markets with specialized and differentiated products”, according to the owner: “‘Basically, if Amazon sells it, or has the ability to sell it, we are not interested.'” The part that stood out is “specialized and differentiated” and “Amazon can’t sell it”. Robots and Chinese manufacturing aren’t such a risk for that.
Doggie portraits? Isn’t that familiar to furry commission artists who make unique custom art for every client? They do all kinds from Disney to dirty, and you can’t lump everything they do together, but there already is a Disney. What people don’t have is a stable business for adult media companies. ( Even the weird kind is having trouble, like Kink.com closing shop. ) The centralized production studio concept is going away, in general.
That’s why furries are poised for a little opportunity on the naughtier side. A modern “go west, young man” is “go yiffy, young furry.” Any person can get naked and it’s not very special when people do it – but who does “specialized and differentiated” better than fantasy artists?
Appreciate furry porn because it’s hot and cute and fun, and you can commission your own to match your desire – but also because it’s so independent. You can complain like hell about being broke and having no health care, but it may even be one of the few places to still find the American Dream.
Does furry erotica even fight modern entropy? (Slate: How Can Literature Resist Islamophobia? One Writer Answers: Gay Muslim Furry Romance.) My feeling is a subtle yes – in ways like expressing queerness that lets individuals gain confidence to break barriers – and in being countercultural against stifling values that pit people against each other. In times when fear of strangers is fired up to the point of war, if you can say “hugs are the furry handshake” – hugging a stranger is a statement.
Free love and expression may not be overt “politics,” but it matters. It especially matters to people who make a living from this. We can find a small vision of a kinder, happier way to treat each other, in the fantasy and international conspiracy of fandom.
With risks on the rise, how can furries look out for themselves?
Furry artists should think of a guild or trade compact for group interest. Forget arguing "that's the internet", this is basically about thoughtless people using others. One solution - pooling info about who runs this site for group response. Send tips. https://t.co/QlzHRQTLkY
I had hoped Patreon would do exactly this but so far their silence has been deafening...
The article is missing a key detail, IMO. The owner of yiff[.]party doxxes artists who file DMCA takedown requests as retaliation. It's not just about stealing art. It's about a systematic attack to ruin the lives of mostly marginalized artists. https://t.co/WudF8LuPKA
It's worse. A wide variety of artists/content creators is affected. Bot accounts scrape paywalled content and post it to that site. Since it's run by 8chan, aka guys who thought 4chan wasn't Nazi friendly enough, they dox creators who speak up and incite harassment.
I honestly can't believe in that article about yiff party it quotes the creator s
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