Hyper in Nature

Hyper in Nature is a system of genders which are subsets to hypergender. They are used by individuals who may identify with a term such as hyperboy, but do not identify with being called a "boy" or other masculine terms. Prefixes and suffixes may be added to any of these terms, ex. "parahyperfeminine" or "hyperneutralflux."

The first term in this system to be coined was hypermasculine, as the coiner wanted to accurately describe his experience as a non-binary, genderfluid, trans man, in which he occasionally felt hypergender but did not want to be called a boy. However, these terms are not exclusive to any specifically gendered group, and may be used however one sees fit.

Main terms
These are the original three terms the coiner decided on, however if one would like to identify as something such as hyperxenine, they may substitute 'masculine,' 'feminine,' or 'neutral' for their specific feeling.


 * Hypermasculine - an individual identifies with the definition of hyperboy but doesn't identify with being a boy or dislikes being called masculine terms, specifically a boy. This means that they feel more masculine than most individuals with a masculine gender, ex. if binary males were 100% masculine, a hypermasculine individual could be 100-150% masculine.
 * Hyperfeminine - an individual identifies with the definition of hypergirl but doesn't identify with being a girl or dislikes being called feminine terms, specifically a girl. This means that they feel more feminine than most individuals with a feminine gender, ex. if binary females were 100% feminine, a hyperfeminine individual could be 100-150% feminine.
 * Hyperneutral - an individual identifies with the definition of hyperandrogyne but doesn't identify with being "one who is androgynous" or dislikes being called androgynous terms. This term could also be called hypernon-binary or hyperGNC.

History
This system and the three main terms were coined by Remus of the Circe System, aka FANDOM user Iwillregretthisuwu, on November 12, 2021. Remus does not take ownership of hypergender, however any terms based on this system should be listed as his own.