- Nov 28, 2016
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Then why would anyone use the label in real life? It would be rendered completely useless.Honestly? Yeah. That's probably a lot if not most people with fetishes on the internet.
Probably most people that like futas or femboys wouldn't suck their dick if they existed in real life.
Imagine if you went around saying you were bisexual when anyone asked, and then when someone of the same gender hit on you, you had to clarify that you meant specifically for anime characters.
What would even be the point?
There's just sooo many holes in this, it doesn't hold up. Starting with the idea of what "like" even means: what if you like watching something but not participating? Is sexuality predicated on your viewing preferences or what you'd be willing to actually do?It's a spectrum, not a single setting. You can be 99.9% on the straight side but you still like a dick on a girl putting you that .01 over to bi. Male genitalia is male genitalia, it doesn't change by location.
I have no interest in fucking or being fucked by a futa, but I enjoy watching/reading futa on female. Does that constitute attraction?
And that's before the concept of abstraction, given the media we're talking about. If you don't like something in real life, but you find it hot animated, what does that change? What if you only like it when it's cartoony and unrealistic?
What about text? What if you only find specific acts or gender combinations appealing when its through words and not visible at all? What then?
I just don't think your "yes/no" holds up to any kind of scrutiny. Too many variables.