Topic: predator/prey relations tag

Posted under Tag/Wiki Projects and Questions

predator/prey relations

came across this yesterday and it's kind of an odd tag. seems to me like its use would depend on the situation shown in the pic tagged with it.

imo it seems less fitting on a pic like post #789676 than say, a pic where one animal is stalking/hunting another. with so many potential species out there, if expanded, it could spread to vastly more pics than it has already.

Updated by Maxpizzle

I really like this tag, though your specific example is a less exciting version of it since it's happy-sex and there's no clear power difference, the kink here is just about the forbidden love between certain species though.

For one character hunting another, I think it should be separately tagged without destroying the current species-based tag, but I can't really think of a name that matches. The hunting tag doesn't seem to be used, but it also doesn't really capture the whole predator/prey behaviour. prey tag isn't used much either, kind of ambiguous too. I wouldn't want to even suggest tags like power_play or power_difference, and that would encompass a whole lot more than just hunting.

Unless there's a tag name that exists that I can't think of right now, I'm stumped.

Updated by anonymous

Not against the tag or anything, but can't most of the prey/predator posts be found through interspecies + the two species in the image the predator and prey species the user is looking for?

Might not be the case, I guess, since the method prob' won't work as well for images with many species in it.

Updated by anonymous

Peekaboo said:
Not against the tag or anything, but can't most of the prey/predator posts be found through interspecies + the two species in the image the predator and prey species the u?

Might not be the case, I guess, since the method prob' won't work as well for images with many species in it.ser is looking for

That only works if you already know the exact pairing you're looking for. In my experience, that isn't a typical case when searching predator/prey_relations.

Updated by anonymous

  • 1