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Furry Game Night!
If I hosted a new Saturday game night, all furs invited, who would come play? I was gonna start with "Cards Against Humanity" we could voice chat over skype/steam.
So.. Who would come and play stupid fucking video games with me?
submitted by TheLonelyGecko[link] [10 comments]
Stray
Here is a student film by Jasmine Moody called Stray… All I can say is DAWWWWWWW!
Do you go fursuiting on campus?
Do you think it would be weird to go fursuiting at college/university? I'm a little unsure about the social climate surrounding furries in post-secondary education...
submitted by Abnormalous[link] [23 comments]
Furries By College or University
Given that it's September and many of us are now returning to school, I thought it would be a neat idea to start a thread where we can post the school we are attending.
Mods: If this could get stickied for the next few days so everyone gets a chance to see it, that would be awesome.
ED: Thank you mods! You guys are awesome!
submitted by mayupvoterandomly[link] [337 comments]
Strange question...Are there any furry half-marathons or races?
I'm new to the whole fandom and an unrelated half-marathon I've been training for was just cancelled. I decided to see if there any furry-themed races anywhere. If not, I'm actually kind of interested in trying to plan something like that. Would there even be an interest in that sort of thing?
submitted by the_samburglar[link] [5 comments]
No furries in Southern California
Why is there so little furries in Southern California (excluding Barstow and beyond) and there are even less furries under 18... (i'm 16)
submitted by Cloud-The-Wolf[link] [comment]
He Needs to Try Again before Giving Up on This Relationship
Why do the traits of domestication co-exist in multiple species?
Don Newgreen and Jeffrey Craig writes for The Conversation:
Take a look at several domesticated mammal species and you might spot a number of similarities between them, including those cute floppy ears.The famous naturalist and evolutionary theorist Charles Darwin even observed in the first chapter of his On the Origin of Species that:Not a single domestic animal can be named which has not in some country drooping ears […]And it’s not just the ears. Domesticated animals share a fairly consistent set of differences from their wild ancestors such as smaller brains, smaller teeth, shorter curly tails and lighter and blotchy coats: a phenomenon called the “domestication syndrome”.Fascinating how selective breeding solely for tameability can have an adverse affect on the appearance of future generations.